®*’* ^orttani» (Observer
Page 8
O c to b e r 2 9 , 2 0 1 4
ENTERTAINMENT
T r i c k - o r - T r e a t A l b e r t a S tr e e t
Halloween invite for
costumed children
Trick-or-Treat Alberta Street will take
place on Halloween, Friday, Oct. 31, giv
ing costumed kids a chance to trick-or-
treat Alberta businesses for a fun, safe
Halloween experience.
The third annual event, presented by
the Wax Skin Spa, will take place rain or
shine from 3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. Businesses
with Trick-or-Treat Alberta Street posters
on display will provide treats to costumed
children up-and-down the thoroughfare
from Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard to
Northeast 31st Avenue.
More than 45 businesses and restau
rants will be taking part. Many of the shops
go beyond candy for the kids to provide
coupons and treats for adults as well.
“It’s a great event. I loved all the adorable
costumes and enjoyed handing out candy
to the kids and couples to the adults,” said
Angie Heiney, owner of Frock, who partici
pated last year and is excited to do it again.
The first 400 kids who trick-or-treat at
Umpqua Bank on Alberta will get a limited
edition trick-or-treat bag.
I I
1
A reusable trick-or-treat bag from the business and commu
nity group Alberta Main Street. They will be available free to
the first 400 costumed kids to trick-or-treat on Halloween at
Umpqua Bank on Alberta between 3:30 p.m. and 6 p.m. The
bags were designed by Super Runaway with printing by The
Make House. Visit albertamainst.org. for more information.
AUGUST WILSON’S
through
PRODUCER SPONSORS:
Harold Goldstein and Carol Streeter
Könnt LaCroute
NOVEMBER l b , n
The detail from one of two Native American totem poles that
have been restored and reinstalled at the Oregon Zoo.
Native Totem Poles Restored
Carvings have
awed visitors
for decades
Two Native American totem
poles that loom tall in Oregon Zoo
history have reappeared on the
zoo campus— newly refurbished,
brightly painted and more striking
than ever.
The totem poles — one crafted
by Chief Don “Lelooska” Smith
and another by father-and-son
artists Rex and Ray Losey —
have been at the zoo for decades,
becoming familiar visual cues for
visitors over the years.
The totem poles were previ
ously located near the zoo con
cert lawn and along the old train
route. They were reinstalled at
new locations this month near the
mountain goat habitat, and just
off the visitor pathway between
the viewing area for cougars and
black bears.
Lelooska’s Northwest coastal
style totem pole — 50 feet tall and
42 inches in diameter — was
carved from cedar during the 1959
Oregon Centennial Exposition. The
work honors Oregonian soldiers
who participated in Operation Deep
Freeze, a famous multinational se
ries of exploratory missions to Ant
arctica during the late 1950s.