From Deseret News archives:
Utahns think Halloween's a treat
Utahns say most children will be trick-or-treating this year.
Trick-or-treating is especially welcomed in heavily Roman Catholic neighborhoods in the Northeast, home of the Irish immigrants who introduced their ancient festival to the New World 150 years ago.
Halloween is least welcomed, or even observed, in Southern states, where evangelical Christians are becoming increasingly worried about growing secularism and the resurgence of paganism in popular culture.
A survey of 1,005 adult residents of the United States conducted by the Scripps Survey Research Center at Ohio University found remarkable variation in attitudes about Halloween and even in the numbers of trick-or-treaters who were received last year.
"It's an old holiday. Halloween is particularly popular in places where people have been doing it for years and that's the Northeast," said University at Albany sociologist Richard Lachmann.
"There is not a whole lot that fundamentalists find acceptable about Halloween or even All Saints Day, which, after all, is primarily a Catholic holy day," said Jo Paoletti, an American studies scholar at the University of Maryland. "They are pretty unhappy with all of the pagan symbols that accompany Halloween."
"We'll go to a party and Halloween carnival at our school," said Utah college freshmen Mandy Swainston. The holiday is no doubt good and wholesome, she said. "Kids get into their costumes and have fun with it."
Fellow freshman Janae Struder agreed, "I think it's a great holiday," she said. "It's a chance to escape normal life for a night."
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