Who remembers the black cat in Bedknobs and Broomsticks?

"I don't believe in giving animals ridiculous names," says Mrs. Price. "I call him Cosmic Creepers, because that's the name he came with." So some Disney felines are more memorable than others. But there have been some good ones:

In Alice in Wonderland, Alice's cat Dinah and the elusive Cheshire Cat; the harrowing barn tabby, Sgt. Tibbs, who discovers the puppies at Cruella De Vil's house in 101 Dalmations, (and it's a good thing he did;) Lucifer, the devilish mouser belonging to Cinderella's wicked stepmother. Slinky Si and Am from Lady and the Tramp; tuxedoed Figaro from Pinocchio; and, of course, Thomas O'Malley and The Aristocats.

But it's time now for you to meet another cast of Disney cats, perhaps more like Mickey's rival Pete (see photo), a real bully, fleshy chin and belly. Meet the 200 or so feral cats of Disneyland.

By day, they reside in five permanent feeding stations hidden within the park's 85 public acres.

But by night, they're on the prowl for any mice who haven't removed their costumes and gone home.

It's true. I didn't believe it at first, either. Park officials decided in 1955 that feral lurkers from Orange County wouldn't be treated as nuisances; they made them employees.