Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Soturdoy, July 10, 1976 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, July 10, 1976 On tour wit By STU McCONNELL SUSAN ANDI WERE standing on the beach of an inland lake in the wilds of northern Michigan, tossing a frisbee back and forth. Both of us being relative ama- teurs, we missed more fancy catches than we made. But it felt good to participate after having played the .spectator's role at the International Frisbee Tournament for the past two days. Nearby a young boy watched us with idle interest. "I saw a guy on TV once who could catch it between his toes," he remarked to a friend. I wanted to tell the boy that only fifty feet away, in shallow water, stood John Sappington, who can tip the disc with his feet, catch it between his knees - in short, do everything but make a frisbee tap dance. But I restrained myself, perhaps because such feats sometimes seemed in- sigificant. Though they shouldn't. -OHIIN, A MEMBER of Ann Arbor's Hum- bly Magnificent Champions of the Uni- verse frisbee team, was standing in the water to soothe his bruises - prizes of the previous day's match of "guts frisbee," a sort. of five-person pistol duel fought out with plastic discs. Consider the injustice - John, who can catch a frisbee in his sleep, has to play for nothing and work at the University Cellar for his living, Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN while Johnny Miller hits balls into holes eg catch during a "freestyle" routine and has a whole line of clothes named after him. The Humbly Magnificent Champions C the Universe, "Humblies" to anyone wh knows them, are six of the country's to players in a game which most peop: equate with croquet or lawn darts Bu in the days I spent with the team rne bers, en route to and at the Internation Frisbee Tournament (IFT) in Iloughto Michigan, I saw just how serious the can petition can be. Frisbee is not a sport to the great nm jority of enthusiasts. It's sometting yt throw around the park on Sundays. i to me," sa' ' lumbly Scott Dickssna practice ofa =o y, "That's what footba is. They've r.,: their 100,000 seat stadig and their marching band and eserthic but it's the same. They just have ms mnoney." There are several frisbee spots, ran ing from the ballet-like rhythms of "fre style catch," to "frisbee golf," to "g. frisbee," which is the oldest game an the mainstay of the IFT - frisbee'siof est tournament at a ripe 19 years. (1UTS IS PLAYED by two five-pers teams, standing 15 yards apart at alternating throws, which often travel excess of 90 m.p.h. The throwing tea scores a point if the receiving team dro the throw, traps the disc against the ba or catches it with two hands. The recei ing team scores a point if the throw too high, too wide, or hits the gro HUMBLY Vaughn Frick demonstrates an un der-the-l' o Waterma By MIKE NORTON William Shepherd and I stood in the dappled shade of the Diag elms, looking up at the bulk of Waterman- Harbour gymnasium. There it sat: squat and unlovely, poking its red brick r snout at us. Crows called to one another across its broad roof; shadows flitted dimly behind the high, old windows. I was struck by how much homely personality the building had, architectural nightmare though it is. Unlike most of the structures springing up on campus, n: Demolition blues Waterman is not a sterile aluminum and concrete modular unit. It was itself. Shepherd sighed. "There are people running this University who hate old things simply because they're old," he said. "People who just like to see things ripped apart." THE BUILDING has been standing for nearly a cen- tury. The Waterman side was built in 1894; the Barbour addition - for women students - in 1902. But the structure's long history as a part of University life may soon be coming to an end. In March, the Administration approached the Uni- versity Board of Regents with the request that they approve demolition of the Waterman-Barbour com'slex, The building was too old, they said; it didn't snte sire and safety codes anymore. Besides, the Chemer7 De- partment needed extra room to expand. The Regents agreed, and voted 7-1 to tear down the gym. But reaction was swift in coming. At the April Re- gents' meeting, Shepherd (an economics professor) and student Kathie Gourlay delivered a passionate re- proach to the Board, begging it to reconsider its deci- sion. They produced documents of support from local' historical groups which pointed out the unique histori- cal and architectural features of Waterman-Barbour. IOR YEARS, SAID Shepherd and Gourlay, the gyms had been living centers of student life. Dances, balls, plays, exhibitions - all were carried on in those gyms. Three generations of Michigan students had ett- joyed themselves there; didn't that count for any thing? The Regents listened politely. But saving old build- ings just because of a few cobwebbed memories spu off by a couple of history enthusiasts is no longer it vogue omang administrators. The demolition order was not rescinded, and the first steps toward destruc- tion are already being taken. WE WALKED SLOWLY up an interior flight tf stairs. Shepherd pointed out arches and windows, rapped on the wood paneling to demonstrate its sound- ness. "Nothing elaborate," he admitted. "Just good solid oak." le wanted to show me a pair of classrooms, but they were being used. And down the hallway, two dozer women in tights flexed and stretched their legs whLE a pianist played a polonaise for them. Shepherd led mte out to the second-story jogging track that overlooks Waterman gym. An immensity of space suddenly stretched out V front of me. Blue-painted brick, wood. and a spider- webbing of girderses a thickhbeams of sunlight stat "Here's the big problem, of course," he said. "b See WATERMAN, Page 10 Mk4.e JN'oet nis a Daily Copy Editor. Dsily Photo by STEVE KA AN Shepherd and Gourlay in Waterman Gym