family traditions are being replaced by mall traditions You'll be invited down to the mall, bring your family, come see this, come do that It real ly robs the family of the ability to create their own traditions and for children to participate in them ” Indeed, most malls and shopping centers hold events designed to lure shoppers Lloyd Center in Portland schedules a tree lighting ceremony and the crowning of Oregon’s Lucia Queen of Light each year right after Thanksgiving as well as ap pearances by choral groups on a daily basis And in 1985. the Meier & Frank store in Portland was the host to a grand entrance from Santa Claus after he was escorted through downtown Portland on a convertible limousine by the Portland Police Mounted Horse Patrol The media also play a role in upholding and perpetuating the commercial Christmas Magazines, for in stance, frequently carry ar tides such as “Fifty nifty tips for Christmas promotion “Christmas in July time to starl planning for the sell ingest’ season." and "Deck the aisles with lots of basics as well as shopping tips that encourage people to "get go ing the week before and after Thanksgiving, keep a list of everyone’s sizes in vour pocketbook, and take full ad vantage of many mail and phone order catalogs Gift guides art; another b». item, both tor newspapers and retailers The Rvgistei Guard, for example, will put out special sections in support of local merchant groups and three gilt guides during the ll)St> holiday season “We do it in response to a perceived need on the part of the merchants in a given area says Michael Ra/ retail advertising manager for 1 he Register Guard Its our answer to their request in helping them organize a group project And, of coutse, we philosophically agree that that's .1 good way for folks in a geographic locale to promote There . been few change’s in tlv gift guides The Register Guard has put out |J»4BT Wife *4?fVtCH t'Vfc*W$ nound the 1 .'jntiv was nor*, t ijndeav ned to pul » sunier type of news in them to help support the advertising message of the advertisers, Ha/ say> Ra/ believes much of the commercialism found today during Christmas can be blamed on a changing marketplace "It used to he that business was a lot easier In the boom years after the war (World War ID and with dips in the economy right up through ll)7l) SO, you opened your doors, you stayed close to your business, you promoted a little, and everything work By the 1940s, the number of magazine and newspaper ads designed for the Christmas shopper had increased fivefold. Time (magazine) carried dozens of ads for distilled spirits and alcohol, clothes and household items, including a ‘Daylight Television with automatic sound’ by General Electric. ed well.” Ra/ says “With the advent of the mass merchan disers. the Bi Marts, the Fred Meyers, the Pay Lesses. the Meier & Franks of the world, business gets tougher The competition for the dollar is keener than it's ever been before We contifiually come up with ways to meet the needs of those folks According to Robinson, however, the media has fallen into the commercial Christmas trap "I really have yet to see a serious look at the celebration by the media I'm actually apalled The effect on this country (by commercialism) is enormous It distorts everything we do for about six or eight weeks It increases depression Child abuse goes up 200 percent There’s an incredible debt burden And I don't see a serious examina non of that at all.” Robinson advertising for Christmas gifts by retailers was minimal at best The Dec 17. 1923 edi tion of Time magazine only carried three ads aimed specifically at the holiday shopper One was for a “Lees Clampable Ash Receiver another was for a subscription to Time that carried the heading, “Christmas is at hand Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their friends," and the third was for holiday gifts from A C> Spalding and Bins dv we i'hus nioer of maga/ine vinci newspaper ( hnstma playing a big part in v hnstmas advertising Today .vis for Christmas gifts can be found in ail types of media During thi ABC Monday Ni ;ht I ootba! Cam. Dec 1. a number of Christmas commercials aired during the broad, ist Bi Mart ran five spots Mr Donald s ran one highlighting its Christmas ornament promo tion, and there were Others urging consumers to buy dia mond jewelry. Liberty coins and poinsettias. But according to Robinson. football fans aren’t the only target “Television is certainly the most effective advertising medium, especially for children What is happening is that the toy manufacturers are able to determine in ad vance what gifts we buy our children by what they manufacture, how they distribute it and how they advertise it So actually what were doing is fulfilling the manufacturers expectations each Christmas, not our children's," she says In Seattle, meanwhile, retailers and car dealers are seeing dollar signs and are taking out ads with news that Boeing Co employees will receive bonus checks worth $200 million Dec 15. Of the estimated 115.(XX) Boeing workers countrywide. HO.(MM) are in the Seattle Everett area car dealers have taken out ads in Seattle newspapers ca pling Boeing workers to part with their bonuses Kirkland Mazda's ad said. "Attention all Boeing employee credit union members this is your weekend.’’ while Perfor mance Dodge's ad read, “Public notice to Boeing employees Before you purchase your new car or truck, you owe it to yourself to shop us LAST' According to Jim Con aghan. head of economic and media analysis at the Newspaper Advertising Bureau in New York City, the Christmas season is when advertising peaks "If you look at the retail component of newspaper ad expenditures, naturally the November December period is going to be the largest That may mean November being 10 percent, December another 10 percent of the en tire year's distribution.' Con aghan says According to Ongstad, Nordstrom follows much the same pattern “I know my buyers love to run ads during the holiday season And we do have a very heavy ad schedule We do run more during that time of the year.'' she says To Robinson and others, the increase in advertising helps distort the Christmas season "I think that's one of the things people resent most, that the good feelings they do have about Christmas are co opted: that the beautiful decorations that mean a lot to people, the songs that give them great pleasure are used to manipulate them to buy things." Robinson says "Most of the television commercials and the sales on television remind me of the old carnival barker. -'ays Ralph Smith, executive