Celebrations planned for state quarter
PORTLAND (AP) — The Oregon quarter makes its appearance next
month, and state officials are planning quite a coming-out party
for the commemorative coin featuring Crater Lake.
Travel Oregon, Gov. Ted Kulongoski's office, Crater Lake
National Park, and Southern Oregon tourism organizations hope
the quarter will encourage visitors and raise money for the
Crater Lake National Park Trust.
Tourism is worth $7 billion a year in Oregon.
With an estimated 140 million Americans collecting the state
series, the hope is that Oregon's quarter, which features Crater
Lake on the reverse side, will generate publicity.
The quarter's actual release date is June 6.
The summer-long promotion kicks off in cooperation with the U.S.
Mint on June 15 at the Oregon Historical Society in Portland.
There will be an outdoor party on the South Park Blocks in
downtown Portland where people age 18 and under will receive a
free quarter and the public can buy $10 rolls of uncirculated
quarters, one of the last chances to do so before the coins work
their way into circulation.
A southern Oregon group is also working on plans for a
late-summer event in the Crater Lake area.
Several commercial sponsors are celebrating their own
quarter-related activities.
For the Portland Rose Festival, PGE will create a float
celebrating the state and the Oregon quarter for the Starlight
Parade on June 4 and the Grand Floral Parade on June 11.
PGE will also host an Oregon Quarter Night at PGE Park in
Portland on July 4, featuring a Beavers baseball game, fireworks
and special Oregon quarter activities.
"Travel Oregon's goal is to use the quarter as an invitation to
enjoy our great state's scenic attractions, arts and culture,
outstanding cuisine and historic treasures,'' said Todd
Davidson, chief executive officer of Travel Oregon.
Crater Lake was designated in 1902 as one of the first national
parks in the country.
The Crater Lake National Park Trust is providing private funding
to enhance the park's attractiveness and help create a new
Science and Learning Center due to open in 2006.
With a donation of $25 or more, people can become members and
receive a new Crater Lake quarter.
The quarter's design was one of four finalists. The others were
Mount Hood, a wagon and Indian village on the Oregon Trail, and
a leaping salmon.
The quarters are being released the order that states ratified
the U.S. Constitution or were admitted into the union. The
Oregon quarter will be the 33rd quarter released and the third
to be released in 2005.
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