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Look Ma, No Monsters

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SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

You readers are simply frightening.

It’s spooky how many of you--5,626 to be exact--have bizarre enough imaginations to submit entries to our fifth annual Halloween scary story contest. And, yes, blood-draining as it was, we closely eyeballed each and every one.

Oh, the gore, the guts, the annoying sisters who meet deservedly bitter ends, the green zombies who masquerade as elementary schoolteachers, the outer space guys who turn little boys into ground meat (yes, bones and all).

Martha Stewart moves to our house!

Christmas season presents Tickle Me Donny Osmond dolls!

Marv Albert asks, “Do you have that in a 40 short?”

Stop, stop, stop. Life in Southern California is scary enough.

Well, here are the winners--four adults and four children in the writing category, and an adult and a child in the drawing category. These lucky 10 each win four tickets to Disneyland.

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Here are a few samples from those who didn’t make it:

Understatement of the Pile: “Two years ago there was a boy named Max. He was not very nice. He robbed an old lady. He felt bad. So did the old lady.”

Best Last Line: “It’s been a year since Scott’s death. I’m sad about this tragedy, but at least I’m popular.”

Call David Letterman: “It would be a scary Halloween this year when . . . your mother generously volunteered to provide entertainment (defined as singing and doing the polka) at the annual school dance.”

Take me to Funkytown: “The Boogie Man wore a white polyester suit and a gold chain around his neck. . . . Gerald could feel the life drain out of him as he was compelled to do the Disco Duck and then the Hustle.”

And now the winners:

In a faraway land there lived ghosts, goblins and vampires. One time, I went there and explored the house that was a mansion. The mansion was sticky, soft and gooey but I felt something slimy. It was a swamp monster but I wasn’t scared because I didn’t believe in monsters until I saw a whole gang of them. I didn’t know what to do but I had a secret weapon--a toothbrush! It sounds kind of silly, but monsters hate to be clean. Then I yelled to them, “Sit down so I can brush your teeth!” and they all ran away to another mansion and lived a horrible life.

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* Samuel, 7, is a third-grader at Monroe Elementary School in Fountain Valley.

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