,+ PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JULY 26. 1966 "r a:ra.vi aJ avca..a.y 0 UiA R. f V. AOUIJ "J S ivig: A Growi, AS P- 4 f '. - -' '- dulling Do wn After a hard week of studying, what could it be that would keep the members of the University's7 Sport Parachute Club from follow- ing their fellow students into the' nearest pub? Skydiving-that's what! The members of the UMSPC would' rather spend their time jumping out of airplanes than doing almost anything else. And it's easy to become addicted. All a potential; student of sport parachuting has to do is come to the drop zone- Richmond Field--between Hell and Gregory, Michigan, and he' will find himself included in the First Jump Course of the Jump Company, the organization with which the club operates. Alan Beach, who made his first jump in I61, when only "luna- tics" look up the sport, subse- quently organized students at the University into a club. The results of his efforts are a group of happy jumpers whose instructors are all qualified for the ranking of "D- expert" under the rules of the Parachute Club of America. In the beginning, a student's rip country to have completed 1000 cord is pulled automatically as he jumps. The sport includes women leaves the plane. From there he progresses under the watchful eye of his expert instructor to more difficult and challenging activities, leading up to the point when the jumper can gracefully join hands; with another skydiver falling at 120 mph. Skydiving holds an attraction! for everyone, from the casual' spectator to Alan Beach, who will be among the first 50 men in the' of course, and many University co-eds have found skydiving to be an excellent way to spend the weekend. With last year's membership of 39, the University club was the largest in Michigan, and it is ex- pected to grow with the popularity of the sport. As Alan Beach says, "From your first schnarden jump to your 500th frobit, it's better than sex." Alan Beach, former University physics student and veteran skydiver, makes an exit from the Sport Parachute Club's Cessna 172 at an altitude of 7500 feet. Beach, on his .75th mp. sa ;I wasn't ireJ on my first jump, but I was a lot less scared on my second . . ." He fails away from the plane in the basic dtabe 'ri Al ja Gion at on c 1-0 miles per hour. By varying his body position, the veteran skydiver can perform barrel rolls, hack loops frit:l l . fly aeru1- the ground at over 70 mph., and easily catch another freefalling jumper to join hands or pass a baton in an ismp t u y o. riw . h Instructor Them Ilod s n helps student Don Dodgers inflate his parachute on the ground to remove tangles in the suspension lines, as dashing, debonair deBeauclair's sporty '63 Ford Fairlane looks on. A jumper, under a "paracommander" parachute, nmkes his final tree-top level approach In the six-inch diameter target. A sport parachutist, by rotating his parachute to allow wind to rush through the holes or modiications can control his ground speed and direction, enabling him to achieve an amazing amount of accuracy. Dashing, debonair, instructor-jumper Russ de"eau.lair, with 255 Jumnps to his (redit, elidlurs thme necessar hut aggravating job of pacing the parachute. Experienced members of the club instruct students in the lasics of parachute packing. ;r :f ..,.. ?:? ' .. r' .rik"i:'+. :....'' :t!.. mss. .. ..r,.:: i:: :" ::.: :........ ' fii .'i:!?:.:r"; ";";: .. ui " .., r ... .... ...r rlS ". f . .. . ., .. ., .. . . ..,... .. .n ....., I >:w 5; ::, u;ti.k;y'" ;r..";;:;.,; : ii4 *?, ""? :< ;k2 ?c5: N".<:: ; .NtX;K+;v;;N;*XN4 :; :t : \ . s$ A... ,%+'