page 16 daily nebraskan friday, September 25, 1981 ,A Nr " - f ''A j j ) Free-falls float into fashion for fledgling flying fanatics Ever on the lookout for new things to do, many UNL students are taking to the skies to experience a new sport - parachu ting. Karen Steele, a junior studying journal ism, made her first parachute jump three weeks ago and is now, by her own admis sion, a confirmed skydiving fan. - "True tush of adrenalin you get is incre dible, she said of her first jump. "You just want to run around all day (after the jump.)" "It's like being in a theater seat in the sky,' Kathy Roth, a junior studying speech communications, said. "It's a very peace ful, floating feeling." Steele, Roth and other UNL students made their first parachute jumps at Brown's Airport in Weeping Water after receiving training from instructors at Lin coln's Blue Sky Jump School, 929 Furnas St. The training takes about 2.5 hours and is conducted the day before the jump, Dave Beaurivage, an instructor at the school, said. Steele said she received about four hours of training before she made the jump. Training for the first jump costs $65, with prices decreasing after each successive jump. The school offers training for indi viduals and groups every Friday evening, but will train at other times by appoint ment, Beaurivage said. The parachuters jump at about 8 a.m. every Saturday at Weeping Water, Neb., when the weather permits. The school trains beginning jumpers to fall from the plane by first having them fall to the ground from their feet and then by jumping off picnic tables. Roth said. They also are insturcted in emergency proce dures, such as avoiding power lines, trees, or water. Beaurivage claimed accidents rarely oc cur in parachute jumping, but the most common accidents result from falling im properly. Equipment for a parachute jump con sists of the parachute backpack, a cotton jumpsuit a pair of high-laced boots and a helmet. "We use the best equipment on the mar ket today," Beaurivage said. "We figure a person has about $1,500 worth of equip ment on them when they walk into the air plane." The fledgling parachutists first jump from 3,000 feet with a "static line" con necting them to the plane until they jump. "The first jump is basically 'hop and pop'; that is, the jumper leaves the plane and immediately pulls the string," Beauri vage said. After the first five or six jumps with a static line, a jumper is graduated to "free fall" jumping without a static line. Free-fall chutists jump from 7,500 feet, although some jump from as high as 10,000 feet, Beaurivage said. The added height lets the jumper wait from 5 to 20 se conds after the jump before pulling the rip cord. Parachute backpacks are equipped with a reserve chute which immediately opens if the first chute fails. Parachutists who have attained free-fall status can become members of the Lincoln Sport Parachute Club, the organization which operates the jump school. Member ship costs are $5.50 per jump. The Blue Sky Jump School is affiliated with the United States Parachute Associa tion and uses USPA rules and regulations, Beaurivage said. Under USPA regulations, students must be 18 years old to jump. L - ' t ' "J ft f' 1 I'll ( mm i I I ir p 4 Jin N cy. v:- V r is i h w - i if mm -V ; Clockwise from top: Blue Sky Jump School instructor Jim Hesson (left) teaches student Jamie Burks the finer points of skydiving. Hesson takes the plunge. An unidentified jumper begins to pull in his chute after a suc cessful jump. Story by Mary Louise Knapp Photos by Kent Morgan Olsen