Wednesday, November 1, 2017 // The Statement
8B
Ypsilanti resident Aya Ibarishi makes a craft at the Family Halloween Party at the Natural History Muse-
um.
Ann Arbor resident Hodaka Suzuki.
Ann Arbor residents Elizabeth and Amia Bower.
Natural History Staff member Cameron Trinh holds a python for children at the Family Halloween Party at
the Natural History Museum.
Ann Arbor residents Tao and Henry Peng.
South Bend resident Julia Mannor points at a rabbit.
V I S U A L S T A T E M E N T
H A L L O W E E N W I T H T H E
D I N O S A U R S
Photos by Max Kuang
When I was in elementary school, my parents used to take me and my sisters trick
or treating at the University’s Museum of Natural History. My mom would dress us
up in some last-minute costume so we could hang out with dinosaurs the Sunday
before Halloween. So when the Natural History Museum announced it was closing
this December and moving to the new Biological Sciences building, I knew I had
just one last chance to experience Halloween in the Hall of Evolution. As I gazed
upon the line of trick-or-treaters at the museum last Sunday, all those memories of
me in costume came back.
Families enjoy the Hall of Evolution.