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March 15, 1977 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1977-03-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Tut' sday, March 15, 191-t

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PA MA" wver

Tuesday, March 1 5, 1 971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY
F

r4$lQ Jvverz

rl

They fling, flip and flop
at Fourth frisbee festival

By STU McCONNELL behind the back, off the toes,
For the frisbee diehard, disc from handstands and on tipped
has no season. The park was passes from other players. Van
muddy, the Diag deserted, and Sickle and two other New York-
if you looked hard enough there e's teamed with Canadian Ken
was still snow in the shade of Westerfield to capture the free-
some buildings, but over .200 style championship.
frisbee players and about 300 Freestylers are the graceful
fans went indoors last weekend darlings of the television cam-
for the fourth annual Ann Arbor era, and tend to look down their
Frisbee Festival. noses at the enthusiasts of
The festival, sponsored by frisbee's other, and more nean-
Ann Arbor's modestly-named erthal game - "guts".
frisbee team - the Humbly Guts frisbee is a simple game,
Magnificent Champions of the but then so is Russian roulette.
Universe - drew slingers, fling- It consists of two five-person
ers and flippers from Alabama, teams, which under ordinary
New York, Chicago, and other circumstances like each other
"hotbeds of frisbee", as the1 and indeed may often practice
Humblies' John Sappington glee- together, standing 15 yards
fully puts it. apart and trying to kill one an-
other with frisbees.

hour, and bruised and broken
fingers are commonplace.
Many teams at last weekend's
festival were organized on the
spot, but the winners were old
standbys of the sport - Hough-
ton's Library Bar team, and the
runners-up were the world guts
champions - Troy's Air Aces.
Ann Arbor's Humblies, har-
ried by the demands of running
the tournament, failed to place
in any of the events, and the
"guts" team was bumped from
^ompetition after two wins. "We
were kind of burned out," offer-
ed the Humblies' Scott Dickson.
I It was also difficult to plan
and competeat the same time."
RFAD and USE
DAILY CL.ASSIFEDS

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Contact your placement office for an interview with
our representative.

EVEN THOUGH it was 80
feet from the throwing line, the
back wall of the Central Cam-
pus Recreation Building proved
to be an obstacle to the best
tossers in the distance compe-
tition, and New York's Crae
Van Sickle was judged the win-
ner because three of his four
throws hit the wall.
"The other major events of the
festival were for teams-"guts"
frisbee and group freestyle.
The best way to describe a
freestyle routine is to call it
an extended game of catch, but
with the routines turned in at
the festival that would be like
describing a circus tightrope
act as an extended walk.
CONTESTANTS snagged discs

THE RECEIVING team gets
a point if a throw is high or'
wide; the throwing team scores,
if the receivers drop the disc.
lop guts players can fling the
frisbee at over 90 miles per

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CALL 769-1776
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THURSDAY, MARCH 31
The Institute for
Paralegal Training
235 South 17th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103
(215) 732-,600
Operated by Para-Legal,. Inc

I

Two members of the Air Aces freestyle team (above) execute a tip and leaping under-
the-leg catch in the fourth annual Ann Arbor Frisbee Festival, held last weekend at the
Central Campus Recreation Building. Also ii the freestyle event, New York's Moses Gar-
cia (below) demonstrates "maintaining" - keeping the frisbee spinning on the tip of the
finger, much as basketball tricksters do with the roundball.

Q
A"'"
C E L E1 LRALT E
YOUR BIRTHDAY fl
WPITEZLESLL
PRETZEL BELL

"Live," in Ann Arbor
MON-WED
MAR 14.15-16
BRAINSTORM
COVER 5,3.00
STARFIRE
DISCO
THURS.- FRI.-SAT
FINE DINING
11:30A-9:00P
DAILY
Odv-'-SF -rr pino S-9 9p

SPRING
ALL-NIGHTER PARTY
SAT. MARCH 19
9 P.M. ti 9 A.M.
YOU CAN SEE

We've G ot I t All'

"

"GENO" THE CLOWN
MOVIE "THE GODFATHER"
SYNCRO-SWIMMING "MICHIFISH"
BELLY DANCING "SUHEYLA"

YOU CAN DO
* DANCE TO "ALL DIRECTIONS"
9 OPEN RECREATION ALL NIGHT
" VARIOUS SPORTS TOURNAMENTS
" CHECKERS, CHESS, BACKGAMMON

CENTRAL CAMPUS,
RECREATIONAL BLDG.
"THE HUMAN CONNECTION"

RcRMTIMd Spoas

Photos by STEVE KAGAN
U .nited S aleS
how to
es capes

ir ®TH AINNAIREOR Ir1IL/
rC rA11 F LAR3DI I1/f2
!119710000000000'
wREENING INFORMATION:
Screenings are held in the old Architecture and Design Auditorium at 7:00, 9:00, 11:00 p.m. daily-
1:00, 7:00, 9:00 p.m. on Saturday. Winners and highlights are screened on Sunday at 7:00, 9:00,
11:00 p.m. in both the old Architecture and Design Auditorium and Auditorium A of Angell Hall
Single admission is $1.25. Series: $16.00. Advance sales begin at 6:00 p.m. for that day only. Series
tickets are on sale on Tuesday, March 15th at 5:30 p.m.
N-11 HI NI3 1/ 'ly/Vl H
00/'0000000000000000000.0

ADMISSION $1

MMMEMMMMMMIPM

No I.D. Necessary

I

{

WHY RIDE THE BUS?

Enter AATA's "Reason To Ride" Contest.

Enter AATA's "Reason To Ride" Contest.

..-...._.......

t 10 a*'/c PRIZES

p

* *1000 PRIES *.

TOP 10 ENTRIES
RECEIVE INDIVIDUAL
1m1 NON-TRANSFERABLE
MONTHLY PASSES
FOR APRIL, 1911.

-low

DR. JAMES KIRSCH
Dr. James Kirsch, a distinguished author and Jungian analyst, is a
guest-in-residence this week at Canterbury House.
Dr. Kirsch studied with C.G. Jung in the late 1920's and was in continual contact with
him until Dr. Jung's death in 1961, When Hitler came to power, Dr. Kirsch left Germany
for Palestine where he practiced until 1935. He moved to Los Angeles in 1940 where
he now lives and works. Dr. Kirsch was one of the founders of the C.G. Jung Institute inf
Zurich and of several other training centers.
Dr. Kirsch will be available for informal discussions on Tuesday through
Friday afternoons from 3 to 5 p.m. He will also make remarks on the
following subjects. All-events will be at Canterbury House, except for
the Tuesday evening presentation.
Tuesday, March 15, 8 p.m. "Issues of a Religious and Psychologi-
cal Nature for the Current Generation." AT EAST QUAD, GREENE
LOUNGE.
Wednesday, March 16, 8 p.m. "Personal -Recollections of Dr. Jung"
Thursday, March 17, 8 p.m. "The Practice of Jungian Analysis: A
Corwersation Across Two Generations" with Kathleen Carlson, a
newly trained Jungian analyst and Dr. Kirsch.

1. On the entry blank below, or on a piece of paper, please state in'.50
words or less why people should ride AATA buses and Dial-a-Ride, It
may be a general statement or your own experience.
2. Mail to: "'Reason To Ride" Contesti
3700 Carpenter Rd.
Ypsilanti, Mich. 48197
Include your name, address and phone number.
3. Entries are limited to one per person. No AATA employees or immediate
families of employees are eligible.
4. All entries must be postmarked by 1 1:59 P.M. Wednesday, March 23, 1977
5. All entries become the property of AATA and may be published or either-
wise used by AATA. Judging will be done without knowledge of en-
trants' names.
Your Tansit Connectionfit? '
~
ann arbor ranaportatlon auptrty
Name tr-anepartalenrw
SPhone afhrodi y
U Address I
i -I

:- --t zn '..::.

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