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Show 101 Sunday, May 19, 1931 Standard Graduation By TAD BARTIMUS AP Spt-ou- l Corespondent - ESTES PARK. Colo. For folks who still think Vanilla Ice is something you drink, it was a chance to go back to a night nearly everybody remembers all their lives. The Prom. That special dance just before graduation, that social event of the high school year, that night when a teenager has hysterics over a pim hasnt change ram; it You, can threats of grounding you until retirement if you scuff the whitewalls on your dads tires, cheap shots about your dates table manners. Yes. everybody remembers the weight ple. or angst over a gam. or tears over not finding that absolutely perfect dress. And thats just the girls. The guys have to take time out from baseball practice to get haircuts that give prom. But wait. What if you got to do it all over again, in your 40s. know-m- g what 25 years of living have taug,ht you about romance and relationships? What would you see? ilow would you fed? them cowlicks. Tuxedo rentals average 90 bucks. Add on a corsage and dinner in a fancy restaurant and that's a lot of yards to mow. Then there arc the parents. Lectures about drinking and driving. There were puffy white clouds n sky when Boating in a car ignition the on turned date my and the dulcet tones of the Tour Lads came wafting from the radio: " ... the day we tore the goal posts down ... we will have these moments to remember." Taking that as a sign that this peek into the past was meant to be. we were ofT to the 1991 Estes Park High School prom, ostensibly as full-moo- chaperones but really as time travelers looking for Peggy Sue. As we walked through the door with the old bearskin nailed above it. lights and balloons signaled a festive occasion in full swing. Reflecting the sophistication of punch, a rcassurine m that same nondeserm were a trendy teal and silver. tinof crepe paper, high-tec- h sel draped the rafters. Sirobe lights played havoc with bifocals. But the hair also todays teenagers, the class colors ad m 1965. J The dance Boor u 'v'th girls m white tu'M But miniskirts rh," vverc Instead of a 1 popj,'9 band at TT ? ; I ; f t v i Utah State University UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY THROUGH PROGRAMS CURRENTLY AVAILABLE DEGREE THE USU OGDEN AREA AND BRIGHAM CITY CENTERS i JUNE 24, 1991 J Master of Business Administration (Ogden and Brigham City) Master of Computer Science (Ogden) Master of Secondary Education in Health, P.E., and Recreation (Brigham City and Viewmont High School) Master of Social Science: Emphasis in Public Administration (Ogden) Master of Social Science: Emphasis in Human Resource (Ogden and Brigham Cm Master of School Counseling (MS) and State Certification (Clearfield High Schoci Master of Education: Instructional Technology-Maste- r Resource Teacher (Oaen and Brigham City) Master of School Library Media Administration (Ogden and Brigham City) Bachelor of Business Administration (Ogden and Brigham City) Bachelor of Psychology (Ogden and Brigham City) Administrative Supervisory Endorsement for Educators (Ogden, Farmington ' T Brigham City) Elementary Education Endorsement in Gifted and Talented Education (Clearfield KA School) Applied Ornamental Horticulture (Farmington USU Botanical Gardens) Diploma j (2 years) Landscape Maintenance and Installation Certificate (1 year) (Farmington) Associate Degree in Ornamental Horticulture (2 year) (Farmington) i Alternate Library School Media Aides Programs (Farmington Jr. High School) Master of Special Education in Rehabilitation Counseling I Independent Home Study (Over 100 courses offered) Concurrent Enrollment for Qualified High School Seniors j Others upon request For further information and to receive your free brochure on any degree prograri call: The Ogden Area Education Center or Brigham City Education Center. f t t ROB CLARK J ! JR.Standard-Examirw- a- Weber High School senior Melinda Favero sells splash blocks for rain spouts. Job From II ny makes concrete splash" blocks that are placed beneath rain gutter openings. The purpose of the block is to divert water away from the foundation of the house." she said. Favero said Big Splash started out as a family effort. "Our family has always had some kind of project going and when a neighbor told us there was a demand for the splash blocks, we looked into it and decided to do it. It ended up being bigger than we thought." she said. Its really nice because I'm my own boss, so I can work around my school schedule and at the same time gain some work experi- ence." she said. The said she spends I three days a week making the blocks, which she delivers on t t t We sell them to lumber yards and nurseries and sometimes to rain gutter companies and individual contractors. All homeowners arc required to have one, so we stay pretty buSy," she said. 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