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Page Label | 1995-12-19 The Scroll Vol 107 No 15 |
fhtitleno | Ricks College |
Creator | 1995-12-19 |
Title | 1995-12-19 The Scroll Vol 107 No 15 |
Volume | Vol 107 |
Number | No 15 |
Day | 19 |
Month | 12 |
Year | 1995 |
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 | 1995-12-19 The Scroll Vol 107 No 15 |
fhtitleno | Ricks College |
Creator | 1995-12-19 |
Title | 1 |
Volume | Vol 107 |
Number | No 15 |
Day | 19 |
Month | 12 |
Year | 1995 |
Description |
December 19, 1995
croll
N c w v • 5
Volume CVII • Issue IS
Students witness
Olympic
preparation.
Basketball hoops
it up against
Dixie, Snow.
e dne s day
eather
High: 32°
Low: 10°
I n s i d e
Arts 18
Comics 25
O p i n i o n 6
Sports 21
World 10
Alive at 65
Idaho one of few states in West with no current plans to change
By Melanie Foster
Don't rev your engines with such vigor — just yet.
For the holiday travelers, Idaho is one Western state
that hasn't made any changes since Congress and
President Clinton gave states the right to decide on
their own speed limit.
But that doesn't mean there won't ever be any
changes. Those won't be discussed until January, Idaho
Rep. JoAn Wood, R-Rigby, who chairs the House
Transportation Committee, said.
"Our committee will try to look at what the states
bordering us are doing" Wood said, "but we definitely
won't do what Montana has done."
The fact that Idaho hasn't made any changes yet
causes some mixed emotions among student drivers.
Freshman Lydia Curtis travels often from her small
town of Driggs, Idaho, to Rexburg. She said she wishes
that Idaho would adopt a system like Montana's, on
some roads.
"On the roads I travel on, I hardly ever see anyone"
she said. "Why should there be a limit if no one's
around?"
Whether or not someone's going too fast should be
determined by what's "reasonable" she said.
Although a system with no daytime limit, like
StatesHplans
• No daytime
• Change to
mit: Mont.
7(5 on interstates
or rural highw |
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