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Vol. 99, No. 42
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F O R E S T PA R K
REVIEW
Forest Park Answer Book 2016-17
REVIEW FOREST PA R K
Forest Park Chamber
Special pullout section
Answer Book 20 Fo res t Pa rk
16-2017
OCTOBER 19, 2016
Free ride, entry to Boo! At the Zoo Ferrara Candy and the park district team up for a sweet deal By TOM HOLMES Contributing Reporter
F
as the commission’s seventh member. The body’s founding ordinance, which Calderone and the council approved in
errara Candy Co. is partpart nering with the Park DisDis trict of Forest Park, its neighbor on Harrison Street, to provide resiresi dents of Forest Park with free bus transportation to Brookfield Zoo and free admission to the zoo’s annual Boo! at the Zoo event on Oct. 22, 23, 29, 30. This is how it will work: An adult (18 and over) must come to the Park District building at 7501 Harrison St. at least two days before the date on which they want to participate, show proof of residency in Forest Park, and register for up to six tickets for the day the group wants to go. On each of the four days, a bus will leave The Park at 9:30 a.m. and drop a group of about 55 Forest Parkers off at the gate to Brookfield Zoo, where they will be greeted by a zoo staff members who will take them to an “animal encounter.” There they’ll be able to experience a zoo animal “up close and personal.” After that, children and the adults accompanying them will be free to enjoy the zoo on their own. John Conversa, Ferrara’s director of U.S. Operations and the plant manager of the Forest Park facility, said the zoo has a special section called Boo! at the Zoo where six 10-by-8-foot “facades,” designed by Ferrara’s graphic design team will be erected. The facades depict whimsical combinations of Halloween themes, such as monsters and haunted houses, plus, of course, Ferrara candy. Picture Franken-
See DEBORAH STARKS on page 8
See BOO! AT THE ZOO on page 9
WILLIAM CAMARGO/Staff Photographer
CEMETARIAN: Tyler Watkins, addresses attendees at the Tales of the Tombstones walk, Sunday, which was sponsored by the Historical Society. See more photos on page 5.
Diversity Commission becomes more diverse Deborah Starks becomes the first African American member By THOMAS VOGEL Contributing Reporter
The Forest Park Village Council, Tuesday evening, unanimously ap-
proved the addition of the first African American member to the Diversity Commission. Deborah Starks, who has lived in the community for over a decade, will serve
IN Big Week . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 THIS Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 ISSUE Crime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6
A time capsule it wasn’t
Proviso East Homecoming Parade
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Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
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