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Page Label | 1987-12-01 The Scroll Vol 99 No 26 |
fhtitleno | Ricks College |
Creator | 1987-12-01 |
Title | 1987-12-01 The Scroll Vol 99 No 26 |
Volume | Vol 99 |
Number | No 26 |
Day | 01 |
Month | 12 |
Year | 1987 |
Format | Application/pdf |
Language | English; eng; en |
Collection | The Scroll |
Description | The Scroll newspaper has been in print since 1905, when BYU-Idaho was known as the Ricks Academy, a locally run school with a newly-developed high school program. At the time this newspaper was known as the “Student Rays,” and was printed monthly. In 1933 the name of the newspaper changed to “The Purple Flash.” In 1937 the name was changed again to “Viking Flashes,” and in 1938 the name finally changed to “The Viking Scroll.” The paper continued under this name until 1972, when it changed to “The Scroll.” The Scroll is still in print at BYU-Idaho as its official newspaper. |
Rights | Permission is granted for the contents of the “Historical Ricks College/BYU-I Scroll” digital collection to be copied for the limited purposes of private study, scholarship, or research. Any copying of the contents of “Historical Ricks College/BYU-I Scroll” collection for commercial purposes is not permitted without the express written consent of BYU-Idaho. |
Description
Page Label | 1987-12-01 The Scroll Vol 99 No 26 |
fhtitleno | Ricks College |
Creator | 1987-12-01 |
Title | 1 |
Volume | Vol 99 |
Number | No 26 |
Day | 01 |
Month | 12 |
Year | 1987 |
Description | Sports Men's basketball team is 7- 2 Page 19 This week in depth A photo essay of Ricks' victory at the Centennial Bowl Pages 12- 13 The SCROLL World News Star Wars arises in superpower summit Page 2 1888- 1988 Vol. 99 No. 26 Ricks College, Rexburg, Idaho 8344Q December 1,1987 College rejects proposal Apartment owners ask college t o limit new off- campus housing By JOBIE GRETHER Scroll Senior Writer A new 340- unit student apartment complex located next to Ricks College has many other apartment owners worried about the profitability of their Rexburg housing investments. The owners have presented several proposals in the past few weeks to tighten up on controls of off- campus student housing. • The Off- campus Housing Association has proposed that Ricks College restrict the amount of approved student housing to guarantee a 3 percent vacancy rate. • The association also has requested the Rexburg City Council guarantee that new apartment units have more parking space available for students. The 3 percent vacancy proposal was an attempt to curb vacancies in off-campus housing units by limiting the number of units able to receive the seal of approval by the Ricks College Housing Office. Association President Ross Farmer presented the proposal in the form of a letter to President Christensen early this month stating a need for such a limitto prevent " excess housing* from becoming a " permanent part of the Rexburg economy." Farmer warned in his letter that although student enrollment has always caught up to housing gluts in the past, this time is different. There is talk of an enrollment ceiling curtailing continued growth of the Ricks College student body. " It is conceivable that with a cap on enrollment, vacancy could escalate into the 10 to 15 percent range as we saw during the 86- 87 school year" he wrote. Farmer continued outlining the Association's view of the college's obligations concerning the problem. " From our perspective the College and the off- campus householders have a moral commitment to one another. The commitment for the householder is to administer the elements of the Honor Code that apply to him/ her and ( Continued on page 8) A season to hit the ski slopes Steve Chamberlin, a Ricks freshman from Idaho Falls, took to the slopes at Grand Tar ghee ski resort last weekend. Skiers are waiting for more snow to cover the exposed rocks at the resorts. Photo by Kasey Mitchell. Two student dummy strippers apprehended by campus police By JOBIE GRETHER Scroll Senior Writer Two Ricks students were apprehended by campus police after they were caught stripping stuffed dummies hanging in the quad area north of the Manwaring Center Wednesday night Nov. 18. The students were allegedly taking Ricks College football uniforms off of the dummies which were hanging from lightpoles in the quad area as part of a publicity stunt to rally support for the Centennial Bowl. Campus police officials believe that there were others involved in the incident after hearing the testimonies of the students. A similar incident which took place the following night appeared to confirm the belief as another dummy was " attacked" Thursday. According to responding officer Mark Jaynes, the students had taken the dummies down and stripped them of their uniforms and proceeded to rip them apart and throw the stuffing out on the ground. The three uniforms stolen from the dummies Wednesday night were immediately recovered from those involved. The two students were charged with theft and released. Artist Friberg's newest painting to be presented at campus concert LDS artist Arnold Friberg's most recent painting, " The Prayer in the Grove" will be unveiled at Ricks on Saturday at an ASRC- sponsored concert at 6: 30 p. m. in the Hart Auditorium. Friberg is known for his series of paintings that are printed in some editions of the " Book of Mormon." His new painting is his first gospel- related work in 30 years. Following a concert featuring LDS singers Stephan Kapp Perry of Provo, and Shannon Denton of West Jordan, Utah, and concert pianist Kendall Ross Bean of Salt Lake City, Friberg's painting will be on display until 10 p. m. in the Hart Auditorium. |
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