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Show Thursday, February 19. 1987 The Magna Timet ypirus CYPRUS HIGH SCHOOL HONOR ROLL 3.79 - 3.50 2nd Term 86-8- 7 SENIORS Kathy Moerman, Clinton Hayward, Joshua Pettersson, Eileen Farrell, Linda Jensen, Barbara Spradling, Travis Thomas, Angela Daybell. Jeanie Stapley, Tamra Tuttle, Shelli Muir, Laurie Abbott, Ryan Anderson, Darren Backman, Rachel Bennett, Trent Dea, Kristin Hurdsman. John Perfih, Robin Powell, Brian Smullins, Mindi Qualls, Lachelle Myers, Elisabeth Pettersson, Todd Breinholt, Jody Frampton, Bobette Pendleton, Ryan Quintana, Melinda Morrill, Lori Watkins. Diana Adams, Holly Hutchinson, Lotte Odgaard, Misti Metcalf, Suzanne Twelves, Kori-An- n Thurman, Melinda Daybell, Glen Nelson, Carl Arnold, John Bogue, Larry Cheney, Frank Disera and Hui Kim. Hoglh JUNIORS Jamie Herrmann, Sandra Moss, Mark Rasmussen, Cynthia Kennard, Sherri Muir, Brandon Cox, Charmion Dickinson, Lara Cheng, Randy David, Tom Dnffill. Susan Abbott, Derek Hathaway, Jason Hayes, Lorie Porter, Greg Walker, Heidi Whitman, Karen Forster, Ryan Spanton. Brook Sadler, Rebecca Evans, Joseph Fratangelo, Jennifer Clark, Ann Holman, Jacquelin Parker, Jason Petty, Scott Schaefermeycr, Richard Payne, Kathleen Lang, Andrea Larabee, Margery Olsen and Traci Richards. SOPHOMORE Danny Grondahl, Janalynn Synda Stohl, Mindy Johan-soDawn Lewis, Lata Taufa, Kristen Thomas, Jon Watkins, William Barkley, Jason Dirkson, Danielle Dodge. Beddie Hill, Katie Judkins, Richard Smith, Michele Wilding, Jennifer Jones, Patricia Curtis, Robert Ken-ningto- n, n, Short-ter- m training vital, educator says Utah Technical College at Salt Lake works with employers, too, to create short-terclasses to meet custom-fi- t specific job needs. Our instant society now demands concise skills training, says John Anjewierden. As a Division Chairman he oversees Management, Marketing and Office Administration programs in the School of Business and Industry at Utah Technical College at Salt short-ter- Local TV station Lake. Workshops, seminars, courses and custom-fi- t wants original channel position short-ter- programs of less than nine months duration are becoming more popular than ever, according to this administrator. We arc a generanon brought up on fast foods, instantaneous computer and satellite transmission, breakneck rapid transportation, immediate bionic body replacements, spontaneous TV entertainment and, yes, even speed reading! Students are insisting that education, too, needs to compress its teaching time industrial plants but of American workers, schools and training systems, he adds. Giving emphasis to his position he lists eight points: 1. Quick-fi- x classes are needed now to reduce high unemployment in Utah and throughout the United States. 2. Many old jobs have disappeared. 3. International competition has closed in, and many American jobs have moved overseas. 4. Nearly every new job classification prediction ends in the word technician, implying less than baccalaureate degree learning. 5. It is predicted that workers will turn over careers every decade, with major revisions occurring about every two years. The speed of new innovations is compounding so fast that workers must have professional training to secure promotions, better positions, and sometimes just to be able to stay in their jobs. 6. At least 24 percent of high school students in Utah are not graduating. They need immediate job oriented help. 7. Displaced homemakers need training, particularly those who are presendy on the welfare system. 8. Many people cannot financially e afford one, two or more years in school. But they can take a class or two before or after work, or even fulltime if the end is really in sight. Anjewierden points to his divisions k clerical program as an extraining. The ample of short-tercourse assists homemakers eight-wee- k and some others who have a general background in clerical work, but who have been out of the market for a long time. Their revitalized office skills almost certainly ensures them remunerative employment. full-tim- $8.95 Kwikset Double Cylinder Entry Locksets Tylo 1 0.95 8.95 We rekey. most locks ACE Dafivar 2111 HI 'Santcsii Guilders mari 3353 Wall 3500 South In c, CYPRUS HIGH SCHOOL HIGH HONOR ROLL 4.00 to 3.80 2nd Term 7 86-8- SENIORS 4.0 gpa, Tecce Anderson, Linda Buethe, Kaye Cole, Darlene Dillcy, Jay Higley, Susan Judkins, Patricia Matz, v Gregory Snow, Jcjemy Taylor. Jandcen Jackson, Shellic Nielsen, Gayna Chapman, John Pearce, Paul Fisher, Valorie Olsen, Jeffrey Olsen, Kristan Kennard, Dawn Langford, Wesley Egbert, Jodi Hoopes, Kimberly Webb, Deana Jones, David Kenner, Stephanie Mecham and Stacey JUNIORS Hill and Julie Thompson. Cheryl Campbell, Corey Cattcn, Mamie Colton, Ember Eskelson, Susie Inskeep and Emily Taylor, 4.0 gpa. Kim Murray, Jeri Lynn Brown, Troy Blanchard, Larry Gunn, Kimberly Duckworth, Shauna Harwood, Christie Holdaway, Daniel Johnson, Dianna Gibson, William Masina, Nick Pasternak, Todd Crawford, Branda Earl, Kristyn Osborn, Dustin Hardman, Denise McGehce, Joey Novak, Laura Watson, Brandon Bezzant, Sharline Granger I SOPHOMORES and Jeffrey Jensen, Todd Otteson Son Vu, 4.0 gpa Robert Twitchcll, Daniel Sadler, Jaimec Lloyd, Wayne Stanworth, James Goble, Shelly Hayes, Lenina Masters, JefEFcy Pco, Corey Thompson, Blaine Haskell, Pamela Hopper, Carina Richmond, Stephen Lougy, Joni McIntosh, Marcy Wright, Michelle Johnson and Michele Taylor. Kiss and TelF being staged Kiss and Tell by F. Hugh Herbert and directed by Sally Hale Swenson is the funniest play to come out of the World War II era and yet it all takes place on the Archers back porch in Middletown, USA. Because the Archers blame Mildred Pringle for corrupting their 1 5 year old daughter Corliss, by having her help sell kisses for the Red Cross, the two families are at each others throats. They never dream that 1 8 year old Mildred Pringle and 20 year old Lenny Archer are secretly married and in a family way. Corliss is in on the secret but things get all mixed up and Mrs. Pringle thinks that its Corliss who is in the family way instead. When Kiss and Tell opened on Broadway in 1943 the critics wrote, Loud laughs and plenty of them shook whatever the Biltmorc Theatre uses for rafters last' night. Kiss and Tell is a fresh, funny, completely beguiling comedy. Kiss and Tell stars HCT favorite Richard Wilkins as Mr. Archer. Wilkins has delighted audiences with his portrayal of Scrooge in the theaters yearly production of A Christmas Carol. Melany Wilkins plays Mrs. Archer and was last seen as Ruths mother in Dear Ruth. Newcomer to the Hale Center Theater is Tara Meyrick who is playing Corliss alternately with Jani Rade-baugThe role of Raymond, the brat-thtdc brother, is shared by Richy McAffy, Ryan Radebaugh and Nate h. y, Hale. Brent Jorgensen and Jason Barrus arc double cast as the gawky Dexter Franklin. Deanna Walker and Bob play the love interests and have both been seen in other HCT productions. Mark Inkley is cast as Private Earhart and Nathan Hale and Stan Conrad alternate as the house painter, Mr. Willard. Mrs. Pringle is played by screenplay writer Vicky Ann Mallock. Bc-do- re Virgic Osder takes the part of Mrs. Pringle also and shares the role of Louise, the maid with Stephanie Hofeling. The part of Uncle George, the Naval Commander, is played by 40s buff Roger Barker, and Mr. and Mrs. Franklin are played by Bob and Sally Hale Swenson. Kiss and Tell plays Mondays, Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays at 8 p.m. Feb. 27 through April 20. Prices range from $3.50 to $5. HCT also offers the childrens matinee Cinderella each Saturday at 1 p.m. For more information call 2801 S. Main. 484-925- 7, Adults are returning to school Adult students make up the fastest growing segment of the college-bounpopulation, says Mrs. Ann Erickson, Dean of the School of Technology and General Education at Utah Technical College at Salt Lake. We have seen the trend growing steadily for many years. At Utah Tech, for example, in the last five years our records show an increase of eight perpoints in numbers of students centage , account for 25 dder halfour total eadcount cn. d al snow-remov- DEAO BOLTS Cylinder Kirt Allredge, Jonathan Gardner, Danielle Schaefermcyer, Mandy Ogil-viRyan Hubbard, Julie Caldwell, Steven Mecham, Lori Twelves, Barbara Ward and Jinkec Lopez. snow-remov- m Kwikset Single Tim Taggart, Kimberlec Tibbitts, William Bennett, Brad Rammell, Juliet Wiersma. fight to eight times during their adult careers. Those changes frequently require additional skills, often learned only by going back to college for more classwork. Societal changes arc forcing more single parents back into the work force. For some, job skills have been forgotten from many years of professional inactivity, Dean Erickson comments. At Utah Tech were more aware of this problem than are many colleges Displaced Homemakers program which same credentials as others at work. ' The technologically sophisticated helps men or women who qualify to make choices in higher education world in which we live requires us to be courses. constantly learning, says Dean Erick- Many adults feel inferior and fearful son. Theres safety in numbers, and about going back into the classroom, adults returning to school arc no longer especially as they compare themselves to in the minority. For all those who ques-theperceptions of classrooms full of tion, and who love to find out the whys nimble-minde- d young people. At the and hows, the whats and wheres, time adults tend to be much more turning to college provides a veritable anxious to learn fast and well, to im- - paradise of answers. prove themselves so they, too, have the ir re-sa- across the country. For years our Womens Center has been involved in helping women make the transition back to school and then into the work force. Right now we are offering a clerical program for this population, as well as a Single Parents- - ("flee tou cAccatr me Back-To-Wo- A K W . The queen bee lays her weight in eggs each day. Use caution please Back-to-Wor- 6 honor stedeimte noted The Utah Broadcasters Association has called on a Utah Cable Company to return television stations KB YU and KSTU to their original channel positions on its local cable systems. In a strongly worded letter to Dan McCarty, State Manager of Commun- rojjmcnt ity Television of Utah, UBA President nmasc has ofthe reason for L. Brent Miner called the recent remov- to do with the The economy. fluctuating al of KSTU and KB YU nu,"1 u.lcir V11 rapid change in required job skills also grnal cable channels, an indication that m cffc. k is MncraU acccptcd the cable company is giving preferential most workers do6chan oh at kast E treatment to national satellite services which do not serve the unique needs of Utah television viewers. Miner said his association feels Community TVs recent removal of KBYU Drivers should use extra care when and KSTU from the channel assignequipment, driving near ments they have held for many years sets the Utah of Transportation Department threatens which a dangerous precedent suggests. every broadcast station in Utah and It is likely that motorists will encoun- national allows one companys corpoter UDOT crews and equipment clear rate interests to negatively impact the ing the roads of ice and snow. When degree of local television available to the passing snowplows, drivers should give people of Utah. them a wide berth, since often the plow Studies show that viewers are less blades arc wider than the vehicles car-inclined to tune to the upper channels in rying them. The plows also throw off the spectrum. Giving imported net- snow and ice, which could prove to be works the channels which have behazardous to passing vehicles. longed to the local stations is a slap in If you arc following a the face of local television said Miner. vehicle and cannot see to pass, it is best He noted that in many states where to wait. UDOT drivers arc trained to Community TVs parent company, The UBA also challenges the cable TCI, has mandated similar channel changes, organizations and individuals companys claims that technical reasons have been able to convince the local have forced the change noting that it is cable operator to return the stations to no more difficult to include KB YU and KSTU on their channels than the other their original channel assignments. UBA board members have learned of broadcast stations which have been left incidents in numerous states where such at their original channel assignments. reversals have occurred including It is also significant that the stations in question have spent considerable reTexas, South Carolina, and New Mexico. Efforts to affect similar changes are sources over a period of many years to establish in the minds of viewers where taking place in North Dakota. more effectively, says Anjewierden. We no longer talk about Page Ilpjohn drive cautiously and courteously and will usually allow drivers to pass where practical. Motorists should realize that road conditions can change in an instant. slush or black ice could appear suddenly on a road that appears to be clear and dry. Safety should be a primary concern in winter driving, FOR COUGHS THERES NOTHING STRONGER WITHOUT A PRESCRIPTION! The main priority of UDOTs snow removal crews is to clear the interstate highways, then primary and secondary routes. Clearing other roads which are not on the state highway system is generally the responsibility of city or county road crews. they can be found. Their images are directly tied to their channel numbers. The UBA feels that a change like this can be disastrous for them. Miners letter calls on Community Television of Utah to consider the well being of both Utah television viewers and the stations that serve them and promptly return KB YU and KSTU to their original channel allocations. 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