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TIME: Almanac 1990s
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Time_Almanac_1990s_SoftKey_1994.iso
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1994-03-25
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<text id=90TT0820>
<title>
Apr. 02, 1990: Moving Up In The World
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Apr. 02, 1990 Nixon Memoirs
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SPORT, Page 72
Moving up in the World
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Wall climbing is the latest indoor-sport craze
</p>
<p> When they're not hitting the books, most college kids like
to hang out. Now some of them are hanging out by hanging on--to rocks. On a growing number of campuses from Berkeley to
Princeton, the latest sport craze is indoor climbing walls,
structures of concrete and stone that replicate sheer mountain
faces. Fans say that climbing the walls, armed with no special
equipment, offers a new high in concentration, exertion (and
sheer terror) that leaves jogging and aerobic dance
flat-footed.
</p>
<p> The nation's largest such facility opened this week at
Cornell University. Measuring 30 ft. high and 160 ft. wide, the
$160,000 wall utilizes concrete blocks and specially designed
pieces of real rock as hand- and footholds. For safety's sake,
climbers wear helmets, are attached to emergency lines and work
in teams. One partner on the ground mans his buddy's belaying
line. In some places on the wall it is necessary to press one's
face against the rock and inch upward clinging perilously to
golf ball-size projections and toe-pinching crannies. Such
realistic action thrills ascension aficionados. Says Ken Gerow,
a Cornell graduate student who likes to scale real mountains
when he has the chance: "Nothing trains you better for climbing
than climbing."
</p>
<p> Popularized in France in the mid-1980s, the indoor version
of the sport is catching on in the U.S., both on campus and
off. Climbing walls at health clubs in Atlanta and Fort
Collins, Colo., are doing landslide business. Seattle's
Vertical Club, the U.S.'s first rock gym, built in 1987, now
has some 400 members who pay $225 a year to scale its heights.
The reason for success, according to Chris Grover, president
of Entre Prises, the U.S. affiliate of a French wall
manufacturer, is the result of removing real climbing's dangers.
</p>
<p>attitude of `Let's see how close we can get to killing
ourselves and still be able to talk about it in the bars
afterward.'"
</p>
<p> Hard-core climbing buffs may soon be able to approximate
such death-defying thrills indoors. In Chicago, a new cliff
will soar a breathtaking eight stories from base to summit, and
the French are experimenting with ever more realistic
simulations of the rugged outdoors, complete with frozen indoor
waterfalls.
</p>
<p>By J.D. Reed. Reported by Linda Williams/New York.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>