March 30, 1978 Pg. 2-3 |
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"Th. Dafly Collegian" Mwch 30, B7j WONDER WART-HOG "The jWu Swgjwgg School" .■ i , . — aw «ag ——1 r- _m«_thm.iM«_a«J3r- THErW00$5L«RrB»eS6<_d0OL600». INAPrTeae5»WtB0uJ^IJ.Dr>^^ byGatoertShefton datVnStOWn by Tim Downs "The Daily CoHeflan'' Handball hindered Racketball: the hottest sport around Once upon » time In the 1Ka]A of Sport, there existed a game known as Handball. Now Handball, mind you, contained an tbe active elements of any other sport, sheer competitiveness and an energetic trive to win, but there was something wrong, which Is to say, not right, with tbe way tbe game was being played. As we an know, God did not create everyone to be ambidextrous, (Godknows he tried), nor did be create ever /one with bands of steel, which frustrated many Handball players who wanted to slap the ban against tbe wan with an equal amount of power from either hand. Also, tbe bruises began to show, along with tbe pain whenever a handbell player would shake bands: "Good game, Jack," "Yeow!" Gloves soon appeared on tbe bands to relieve tbe pals, but tbe awkwardness ot unequal bandpower still prevailed. It got to where only tee devout Handball player r e malned on tbe courts. But for tbe others, though, there had to be an answer... and there was ... Racketball (fireworks!) Yes, the t Dear slwanPerfwie: Felicitations! Yoohav/ewona m7 Trite Award! "t&urnew Mnter- tocttnaborties' TTicrttrnaswcri 1st place in the %best sexual innuendo' eatery. I should also mention ycer 2nd pla^finisV-an-the 'sfAxYle^'caie^cry. Rretslarevjenr totbeNoxzema lady, sorry. rS $ i ^fe^ffi pl!SSlI Vititiculture Club honors students, leaders Three riHeultare students and three agribusiness leaders were honored Saturday by tbe CSUF Viticulture Club during its annual spring banquet. Snyder Award as tbe outs tanding senior in viticulture for 1978. Tbe award is based on scholastic achievement, leadership and service to tbe viticulture program. Don Blsbel of Madera, ebb historian, was presented tbe OF Award for to tbe VIHcul- tore Club. E.L. "Ted" But. Jr., a grape played at 78 s sport around, (< with your neighbors* wife), and was quickly accepted with open hands, er, According to Pete Conrad, CSUF director of tntramuralactivltIes,"Hand- ' hall has almost become non-existent Ninety-five per cent of aU tbe ccurts are now being used to play Racketball. "if a tournament were put on for Handban, maybe six or seven people vould participate, but put on a Racket- ball tournament, and you'll get as many as sixty people to play," be said. For the m-Urformed, CSUF did put tor three days, March 8, 4, and 5, and these were the results: in Womens' Novice, Lori Prutsos detested Terri Jnra, 15-7t 15-3. In Womens' Intermediate, Joan Quian defeated Rosie Alvarado. In Mens' Novice, Rod Saikj defeated Jose Plasencla. In Mens' Interned E rgln defeated Dave Johnson, 15-8,5-15, 15-9. In Mans* Open, Mike SWnteku Open was not held for lack of signups. As an emcfional vent, Raekettan could easily be defined as: Hitting that damn ban with tbe damn racket, against the damn wan and hopefUly, to where your damn opponent can't get to itl Dammitl is a more peat , basic RacketbaU rules: Raekefban, which is quite similar to riandnall, can be played as either singles or doubles. A player starts a game tn tbe service box (5-foot wide cone near the middle of the eourtX He or she drops the ban on the floor and strikes it with tbe racket on the first bounce, driving it against the front van. Tbe ban must strike tbe front wan before bitting tbe floor or celling or another wan. After totting the front wall, it must bounce back over the short line (center line across tbe width of the court). If the ball falls in front of the abort line, the server serves again. Another snort, and the other player serves. When tbe ban is' In play, players cannot block each other from hitting tbe ban. A player can use a combination of side walls or ceiling with tbe front wan, or be can htt tbe ban directly into tbe front van. If the server misses a returned ball, be loses tbe serve. If his opponent misses, tbe server scores a point and serves again. Fifteen points wins a game. Amateh consists of the best two out of three. Whew, fun, huh? Val Valverde. CSUF assistant director of intramural sports, .says you can obtain a card tn the Men's P.E. building, room 106 or 106, which win have your name and L D. number on it and will allow you to make reservations for a court much easier. Reservations can only be made on tbe day you wish to play and for Just one hour. If you can, do so after nine a.m. Tbe number Is 487-2587 or 487- (Photo by Loonle Eskridge) rJO-JU-PA-fS, ME**-.? EVS-tWE accwts TH-.T -rue uMvo-se sTw-TtpwrrwAr NO ONE CW p*3URe OUT HOW rrSGOWOTDEND/ received tbe Grape Industry Award of Appreciation presented by tbe Club. Barr was cited for his years of support of tha students In tbelr viticulture projects, particularly tn tbe marketing of tbelr table grapes. Robert Steinbaner, a CSUF graduate who Is now vineyard manager.for Napa Valley Vineyard Company, received Ihe Viticulture Alumni Award of Appreciation. Steinbaner was instrumental in the establishment of the Viticulture Onb Alumni unit He is the first chairman. Earlier, Steinbaner announced an alumni drive to raise $3,000 done from one of PetnecPs favorite photographs. Richard R ' was honored with a special ap- room located within the newvitl- research laboratory on tbe CSUF campus. He also pre- 1 Vincent Petrueel, professor of viticulture, with an oil portoit of Petrueel inspecting a grapevine. The portrait vas 469 N. Blackstone ___268_-_7449_ _# Custom designs - lettering stuxi©rit,_Sc g ra_xxp j
Object Description
Title | 1978_03 The Daily Collegian March 1978 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1978 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif. |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | March 30, 1978 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1978 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif. |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search | "Th. Dafly Collegian" Mwch 30, B7j WONDER WART-HOG "The jWu Swgjwgg School" .■ i , . — aw «ag ——1 r- _m«_thm.iM«_a«J3r- THErW00$5L«RrB»eS6<_d0OL600». INAPrTeae5»WtB0uJ^IJ.Dr>^^ byGatoertShefton datVnStOWn by Tim Downs "The Daily CoHeflan'' Handball hindered Racketball: the hottest sport around Once upon » time In the 1Ka]A of Sport, there existed a game known as Handball. Now Handball, mind you, contained an tbe active elements of any other sport, sheer competitiveness and an energetic trive to win, but there was something wrong, which Is to say, not right, with tbe way tbe game was being played. As we an know, God did not create everyone to be ambidextrous, (Godknows he tried), nor did be create ever /one with bands of steel, which frustrated many Handball players who wanted to slap the ban against tbe wan with an equal amount of power from either hand. Also, tbe bruises began to show, along with tbe pain whenever a handbell player would shake bands: "Good game, Jack," "Yeow!" Gloves soon appeared on tbe bands to relieve tbe pals, but tbe awkwardness ot unequal bandpower still prevailed. It got to where only tee devout Handball player r e malned on tbe courts. But for tbe others, though, there had to be an answer... and there was ... Racketball (fireworks!) Yes, the t Dear slwanPerfwie: Felicitations! Yoohav/ewona m7 Trite Award! "t&urnew Mnter- tocttnaborties' TTicrttrnaswcri 1st place in the %best sexual innuendo' eatery. I should also mention ycer 2nd pla^finisV-an-the 'sfAxYle^'caie^cry. Rretslarevjenr totbeNoxzema lady, sorry. rS $ i ^fe^ffi pl!SSlI Vititiculture Club honors students, leaders Three riHeultare students and three agribusiness leaders were honored Saturday by tbe CSUF Viticulture Club during its annual spring banquet. Snyder Award as tbe outs tanding senior in viticulture for 1978. Tbe award is based on scholastic achievement, leadership and service to tbe viticulture program. Don Blsbel of Madera, ebb historian, was presented tbe OF Award for to tbe VIHcul- tore Club. E.L. "Ted" But. Jr., a grape played at 78 s sport around, (< with your neighbors* wife), and was quickly accepted with open hands, er, According to Pete Conrad, CSUF director of tntramuralactivltIes,"Hand- ' hall has almost become non-existent Ninety-five per cent of aU tbe ccurts are now being used to play Racketball. "if a tournament were put on for Handban, maybe six or seven people vould participate, but put on a Racket- ball tournament, and you'll get as many as sixty people to play," be said. For the m-Urformed, CSUF did put tor three days, March 8, 4, and 5, and these were the results: in Womens' Novice, Lori Prutsos detested Terri Jnra, 15-7t 15-3. In Womens' Intermediate, Joan Quian defeated Rosie Alvarado. In Mens' Novice, Rod Saikj defeated Jose Plasencla. In Mens' Interned E rgln defeated Dave Johnson, 15-8,5-15, 15-9. In Mans* Open, Mike SWnteku Open was not held for lack of signups. As an emcfional vent, Raekettan could easily be defined as: Hitting that damn ban with tbe damn racket, against the damn wan and hopefUly, to where your damn opponent can't get to itl Dammitl is a more peat , basic RacketbaU rules: Raekefban, which is quite similar to riandnall, can be played as either singles or doubles. A player starts a game tn tbe service box (5-foot wide cone near the middle of the eourtX He or she drops the ban on the floor and strikes it with tbe racket on the first bounce, driving it against the front van. Tbe ban must strike tbe front wan before bitting tbe floor or celling or another wan. After totting the front wall, it must bounce back over the short line (center line across tbe width of the court). If the ball falls in front of the abort line, the server serves again. Another snort, and the other player serves. When tbe ban is' In play, players cannot block each other from hitting tbe ban. A player can use a combination of side walls or ceiling with tbe front wan, or be can htt tbe ban directly into tbe front van. If the server misses a returned ball, be loses tbe serve. If his opponent misses, tbe server scores a point and serves again. Fifteen points wins a game. Amateh consists of the best two out of three. Whew, fun, huh? Val Valverde. CSUF assistant director of intramural sports, .says you can obtain a card tn the Men's P.E. building, room 106 or 106, which win have your name and L D. number on it and will allow you to make reservations for a court much easier. Reservations can only be made on tbe day you wish to play and for Just one hour. If you can, do so after nine a.m. Tbe number Is 487-2587 or 487- (Photo by Loonle Eskridge) rJO-JU-PA-fS, ME**-.? EVS-tWE accwts TH-.T -rue uMvo-se sTw-TtpwrrwAr NO ONE CW p*3URe OUT HOW rrSGOWOTDEND/ received tbe Grape Industry Award of Appreciation presented by tbe Club. Barr was cited for his years of support of tha students In tbelr viticulture projects, particularly tn tbe marketing of tbelr table grapes. Robert Steinbaner, a CSUF graduate who Is now vineyard manager.for Napa Valley Vineyard Company, received Ihe Viticulture Alumni Award of Appreciation. Steinbaner was instrumental in the establishment of the Viticulture Onb Alumni unit He is the first chairman. Earlier, Steinbaner announced an alumni drive to raise $3,000 done from one of PetnecPs favorite photographs. Richard R ' was honored with a special ap- room located within the newvitl- research laboratory on tbe CSUF campus. He also pre- 1 Vincent Petrueel, professor of viticulture, with an oil portoit of Petrueel inspecting a grapevine. The portrait vas 469 N. Blackstone ___268_-_7449_ _# Custom designs - lettering stuxi©rit,_Sc g ra_xxp j |