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PICCOLO PETE:
When I was a kid, experimenting with fireworks was a part of growing up, at least around here. I had a big Bangsite cannon that was perfect for shooting marbles across the street into the neighbor's garage door. Did that a lot. Using powder from Red Devil fireworks—sold by a local Boy Scout troop—I used to make “bombs” and blow stuff up in my backyard, too.
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I recall that, years later, a friend of mine—a spoiled brat whose dad was the team physician for the “California Angels”—blew up the plumbing in a restroom at Cerro Villa Junior High (in Villa Park). I think he used a Cherry Bomb or an M80. The incident was all hushed up. They had money.
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According to this morning’s OC Register, “Earlier this year, Buena Park banned the sale of the popular Piccolo Pete and the Orange County Fire Authority urges residents to abandon personal fireworks parties in favor of taking in one of the many public displays.”
Well, I’ve gotta say, that makes sense. If kids today are anything like I used to be, then they should have zero access to fireworks.
The Reg article is about some knucklehead who dubs himself the “unofficial ‘Fireworks Historian of California.’” The guy builds miniature fireworks stands in his garage and spends the rest of his time carping about increased fireworks restrictions.
The Reg quotes Capt. Stephen Miller of the OCFA: “I've never really understood the Fourth of July in that we teach our children not to play with fire and yet we allow them [to do that] during that day. It just makes no sense."
You are correct, sir.
THE DEAD BARON:
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The Reg has an article about the closing of one of the biggest used book stores in California: Book Baron in Anaheim turning the page:
Bob Weinstein is writing the final chapter on his career as a bookseller…He's closing Book Baron in Anaheim, the used bookstore he opened in 1980 and nurtured to its current size of 400,000 books spread over 20,000 square feet….
…The departure of the Book Baron…is part of a nationwide wave of used bookstore closures. In recent years, the ranks of well-established secondhand bookstores that have shut their doors include Gotham Book Mart in Manhattan, Wessex Books in Menlo Park and Black Oak Books' Berkeley branch.
Locally, the venerable Acres of Books in Long Beach, an institution known for its dusty, maze-like corridors of books, is closing its downtown location, which is slated for redevelopment. And what was the oldest used bookstore in Orange County, Apollo Book Shop in Costa Mesa, closed its doors recently.
I remember going to Acres of Books about thirty years ago. I recall thinking: If there’s an earthquake right now, we’re toast. It made Acres special; a portal to a dangerous past, full of unreinforced masonry and lethal shattering windshields.
I still get that special feeling when I go to some of those antique shops in Old Orange. I get it bad when I’m in the basement of one of those places. Sometimes, you hear the creaking of the old wood somewhere above your head. I remember once, in the 80s, hearing some of that and meeting Kathie’s eyes. “Let’s get the fuck out of here,” I said. We nearly ran.
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In the early seventies, I worked at a Mobil gas station on Fourth Street right along the Newport Freeway. I was just a kid. In those days, gas was like 39 cents a gallon. I don’t recall exactly.
The assistant manager was Mr. Orange County All-American, a former High School football star. Very clean cut. Very straight. The owner, a bit of a redneck, was grooming this kid for big things, gas stationwise.
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I’d always say, “Hey, isn’t that dangerous?”
“Shut up, Royston! Go back to the front! And don’t tell Haight!”
That’s right. The owner’s name was Haight.
THE CASE OF THE SYRUPY ANGEL:
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I remember those dopes running into camp and diving into their tent. They told me what they did. They were scared shitless. Soon, this big Hell’s Angel (well, that’s the way I remember it) came stomping right at me, demanding to know where those “fuckin’ kids” were. I saw ‘em run “way over there,” I said.
Later, the biker, still dripping molasses, showed up with a cop. We got a lecture.
I’ve gotta say, the Hell’s Angel guy was pretty nice about the whole business. I mean, he didn’t bring any of his friends.
I remember studying the cop’s face. Even he appreciated that.
7 comments:
Typical liberal. You people want to restrict everything! Like guns. There should be more guns, lots more.
How did we ever survive childhood? That's what I want to know!
Simpler times. The things many of us did as kids will now get you 10 years to life.
Nicely expressed, Roy.
Are there any used bookstores left in the area?
Try Bookman on Tustin in Orange. Between Chapman and Glassell.
Lots of books. Some of them good.
Yeah, the Bookman is way fun. The owners are not the bookish sorts at all, on the usual definition. They're the type who might think about buying books by the yard. But you gotta love them for their enthusiasm and their chock-full-o-books store. Sometime you can find treasures in there. Don'tcha just love the smell of old books? I do.
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