NOW, YOU TOO CAN BE
“AS DANGEROUS AS A HUNTER
WITH AN ELEPHANT GUN.”*
4¢hY
“A SPOOFY, GOOFY TREATISE that includes everything from a
letter alerting the Secretary of Defense to this cheap-yet-
allegedly effective weapons systems to the techniques behind
tossing cards through the air with the greatest of ease.”
—Chicago Daily News
“AN ESSENTIAL HANDBOOK FOR THE URBAN DWELLER.”
—Newsday
“EVEN IF YOU HAVE NO INTEREST AT ALL IN FLIPPING
CARDS, YOU'LL STILL ENJOY THIS BOOK. In addition, the
volume contains complete instructions—clearly illustrated—on
how to become a card tosser of Olympic caliber’. . . within a
few short months, you'll be ready to face a sneering rhino or
charging wino with equal nonchalance.” —Circus magazine
“DECK-DEFYING . . . ostensibly a straightforward study of
how ordinary playing cards can be used to ward off muggers,
slay wild animals or remove a spleen . . . a cosmic spoof of the
How-To genre.” —Los Angeles Times
“DELIGHTFUL . . . with a Pepys-like frankness Ricky Jay
dispels any sceptic’s thoughts on the validity of
playing cards as a martial art form of self-defense . . . presents
a rich embroiling history of the art of card throwing along with
in-depth methods.” —The Grapevine Press
“A MOST AMUSING BOOK.” =—Sam Francisco Chronicle
a¢nY
“Die Transvaler, a South African newspaper, when describing Jay's card-throwing
featsCARDS
WEAPONS
Ricky JayA treatise on the art of throwing, scal-
ing, juggling, boomeranging, and ma-
nipulating ordinary playing cards with
particular emphasis on impressing one's
friends and providing a deadly yet inex-
pensive means of self-defense.
History: 2cosicvns seine cesiais eos 1
A brief account of the origins of playing
cards with some subtle speculation as to
~ when they were first thrown.
Cards and the Martial Arts .. 7
A reflective look at the shuriken and
other deadly throwing weapons of the
venerable Orientals with a lucid parallel
to the modern card assassin.
| Magicians and Card-
Scaliig, masa evesmesewess 17
Historical accounts of the scaling of
! cards into the far reaches of small thea-
ters. A feat of skill included in the stage
shows of famous magicians, with par-
ticular emphasis on Herrmann the Great
and the Amazing Thurston.
Technique ... - 25
The basics of card-throwing (illustrated);
the Herrmann method, the Thurston
method, and the Jay method. The hand,
the wrist, the grip, and the all-important
follow-through.Advanced Technique ...... 37
How to throw a card and make it return
to the hand, a sumulacrum of the Austra-
lian boomerang. Also: fancy one-hand
throws and catches for the serious
student.
How To Practice
and Stay Fit ... . 53
The hows and wheres of practice; tech-
niques to keep the fingers limber and a
short medical study of card-thrower’s
arm and its relationship to tennis elbow,
surfer's knobs, and Frisbee finger.
Self-Defense .. » 65
A prejudiced enquiry into the advan-
tages of cards over more conventional
weaponry. Special sections on self-
defense against plastics and humans,
and pertinent discussion of cards as a
pest control. Also, an added bonus: The
secret fighting technique against multi-
ple adversaries, the lethal “four-card
fist.” And a second bonus: The consum-
er’s guide to mechanical card-throwing.
Stunts To Impress
One’s Friends ........... 89
An effective battery of crowd-pleasing
demonstrations from the author's own
repertoire. Included are award-winning
throws such as: card over building, the
classic card through newspaper, and the
kudo-copping card-cuts-cigarette-in-
mouth.g
Personal Anecdotes = 99
In which the author recounts with clari-
ty and excessive exaggeration how he has
helped the elderly, abetted the police, and
assuaged the plight of young damsels
with the help of his trusty cards.
Afterword «.0....ceee eres 119
A sad footnote. The death by suicide of a
San Quentin inmate who blew himself to
a netherworld with a bomb fashioned
from a pack of cards. For those who
doubt the seriousness of the subject or
the tone of the tome.On a pleasant, breezy day
a short while ago, a letter of
great significance was received
by the Secretary of Defense.
The letter is reproduced
on the following page.
The plausibility of this idea
and its importance to each and
every citizen is the subject
of this book.Columbia School of Card Throwing
37 RIVERSIDE DRIVE, NEW YORK, N.Y. 10023
Richy Jey, President
31 May 1976
Martial Projectiles
‘The Honorable Secretary of Defense
‘The Pentagon
Washington, DO.
1. [have spent the last ten years actively engaged in
researching and analyzing the military applications of the
ordinary playing card.
2. Drawing on techniques used hundreds of years ago by
“ninja” assassins, I have developed my own system of self-
defense based solely on a pack of cards.
3. I have simplified the techniques to a degree where
they could be taught to our servicemen in a matter of weeks.
I would be willing to go to Fort Dix in Nutley, New Jersey
to give a demonstration of these skills. My cousin Stanley
Felber was stationed there some years ago and when I visited
him I found the camp quite pleasant although the goldenrod
did bother my rather sensitive sniffer just a little.
4, Currently there is widespread concern about our
economy; fiduciary matters are on the tip of everyone's tongue.
I believe I have discovered a viable method of reducing the
national Defense budget while keeping a few steps ahead
of the Russkies.
5. I have also given thought to the serious problem of
peacetime morale and am convinced that playing cards could do
@ great deal to solace and uplift our men before an actual
attack.
Please do not misconstrue my meaning; I of course abhor
the evil of gambling and the onanistic pleasures of solitaire.
I have, however, discovered that the deck of cards can serve
one as Bible, Prayer Book, and Almanac:eitsdgiiae tl se
atl ijn
sutiiigiiany GAG
riaelay 70
5 Haat fF iy
ge ge@as 3 8
Hate
un nin EK,
i
Heli es Hay
3
eaadtas nel a asta
@
@)
I am awaiting your reply so that a meeting may be
RICKY JAY
President and
Pasteboard Projectilist
It would be unwise to further elucidate the subject
arranged at our mutual convenience.
So you see, Mr Honorable Secretary, the cards can serve
as Bible, Prayer Book, and Almanac, thus providing a deadly yet
inexpensive means of self-defense.
6.
v
of this missive for fear the information would fall into the
‘wrong hands.Ricky JayA brief account of the
origins of playing cards
with some subtle
speculation as to when
they were first thrown.
HistoryZp
A Lobster
Divinatory Arrows
T: determine the inventor of the playing
card is as difficult as determining who
ate the first lobster. And if it was a very
hungry man who wrestled that bizarre crusta-
cean to his mouth, so it must have been a very
bored man who fashioned the precursor to the
card by carving symbols on a stick or stone.
Noted scholars have suggested that both
cards and chess were derived from the arrow.
In fact, divinatory systems with the arrow are
frequently cited as the basis of all games, as
well as the classification of all things. The
entire structure or order of known things, in
almost every ancient culture, was based on
the Four Directions expressed by crossed
arrows. All things not shown in this obvious
scheme of things were considered different,
hence magical. It seems that from the very
earliest times, the roots of cards lay in both the
mystical and martial thoughts of man.
Picture, if you will, a single card, inscribed
with a magical prayer, hurled through the air
with the speed and accuracy of the mighty
arrow. Whish! Swat! Swoosh! Thwack! And a
hated adversary stumbles, desperately clutch-
ing his furrowed brow, where that card, that
weapon, has become implanted. Watch now: a
spurt of blood, and the insidious foe crashes
thunderously to the ground! The day is won. The
city is saved. And the weapon, the use of the mighty
card, is seen as a natural evolution of a process with
its roots in all antiquity!
Excuse me.
These systems of arrow divination were
integral to the peoples of ancient China,
Korea, Egypt, Persia, and the American In-
dians. At some time in the dim past arrows
gave way to gaming sticks, pebbles, and what
we now call dice. Soon thereafter symbolsProof of the
existence of cards
as weapons during
the Viking
invasion of North
America.
Further proofRicky Jay and Professor Carl Sagan of Cornell
University and Jet Propulsion Laboratories
discuss trajectory of thrown cards and the
possibility of throwing cards on Mars.
were marked by hand on strips of paper and
playing cards were born.
And if it is difficult to trace the origins of the
playing card, it is equally difficult to speculate
as to where or when the first card game was
played; or at what point mysticism gave way
to idle pleasure, mathematical diversion, or
gambling skill.Realizing, however, that we are inclined to
believe that all peoples who preceded us were
savages, we can no doubt assume that shortly
after the first card game, an enigmatic Egyp-
tian, inscrutable Oriental, or self-righteous
Hindu picked up the pack of cards and
clouted his more successful partner over the
head with them.
It is this moment, difficult to document but
sure to exist, about which we are curious.
The major documentary studies of weapons
seem to overlook cards in much the same way
our contemporaries overlook the beauty of a
rich thick fog. As the accompanying evolu-
tionary chart will show, playing cards have
their proper place in the developmental se-
quence of martial projectiles.
There is little doubt that cards are one of the
earliest of impractical weapons.
The Evolutionary
Chart of WeaponryA reflective look at the
shuriken and other deadly
throwin: ng weapons of the
venerable Orientals with a
lucid parallel to the
modern card assassin.The Horse-
and-Carriage
Buck-and-Wing
ards and the martial arts may be cou-
( pled in the same fashion as many of
the most famous pairs in American
song and food: the horse-and-carriage, the
ham-and-egg, the buck-and-wing.
The martial arts have always stressed spiri-
tual control based on physical and mental
accomplishments. Cards lend themselves
wonderfully well to this process. In the right
hands, cards will become a meditative tool
similar to the Indian mantra, and the esthetic
pleasure in holding and feeling a deck of cards
cannot be denied. One can become so relaxed
and engrossed with the cards that he may
soon be transported to another world; such is
the special power of the pasteboards.
Dai Vernon, the dean of American magi-
cians (and, in this author's opinion, the great-
est living contributor to the magical art), has
said that cards are like living breathing human
beings and should be treated accordingly.
‘Tomes have been written on the divinatory
and predictive powers of the cards and from
their earliest history to the present day, many
people have made this study their life’s work.
These concepts may be more readily fath-
omed by the Eastern mind. In fact, to para-
phrase an ancient parable, he who masters his
art (be it karate, the tea ceremony or the
handling of cards), masters the art of life.
Itis, therefore, necessary to trace the origins
of cards and card-like devices used in self-
defense before a complete understanding of
our subject may be reached.
The ancient Chinese and Japanese have
documented the origins and use of many
classical weapons and it is best to start our
study with these
E.T.C. Werner, H.B.M. Consul, Foochow(retired), Barrister-At-Law, Middle Temple,
and Member of the Chinese Government
Historiographical Bureau in Peking, wrote the
classic English work on Chinese weaponry in
1932. Chinese Weapons, Werner's book, was
recently republished in the United States
(Ohara Publications, Los Angeles, 1972). The
book deals with the origins and use of Chi-
nese weapons. Though Mr. Werner limits in
large part his discussions of hand-thrown
weapons to spear-like devices, he makes some
observations which are relevant or at least
interesting enough to be mentioned. Werner
traces the origin of iron caltrops, devices
which look like children’s jacks, but with
highly sharpened points. These were thrown
in the path of pursuing foes and were an
effective deterrent. The ninja or “invisible
assassins” of Japan used these caltrops which
they called tetsu-bishi but Werner finds them
mentioned in the time of Emperor Wen Ti
(179-156 B.C.) and the Emperor places their
origin at a much earlier period.
The use of the caltrop is the forerunner to a
self-defense technique called “Springing the
Cards.” A deck of cards is held with thumb on
the bottom edge and all the fingers along the
top in the cupped right hand. The cards are
bent until they are under great pressure and
then are released directly at an assailant’s face;
they leap out in a confusing spray giving the
dealer ample time to escape.
Crossbows invented by the Chinese around
2600 B.C. came to be made in a variety of
materials and designs. Some of the earliest
wooden models used to launch arrows bear a
marked similarity to a product called Zing-It,
marketed by one R.A. Hamilton of Plainfield,
New Jersey. Mr. Hamilton is also the inventor
Springing the
Cards10 of Whippersnapper, Zoomerang and Mr.
Molasses. We will discuss Mr. Hamilton’s
product at some length in the chapter dealing
with mechanical devices, but for the moment
it will suffice to say that Zing-It is a crossbow-
like T-shaped piece of wood which propels a
playing card a considerable distance.
Werner also mentions a secret weapon
named hsien-chien “which caused death when
hurled at an enemy’s forehead.” To this the
author adds his own subtle conjectures: first,
that this weapon is a rectangular piece of thin
metal very similar to a playing card; and
second, that it required hitting the enemy's
forehead to cause injury, let alone death.
Another weapon thrown by the ancient
Chinese was a large jar filled with the whites
of goose and duck eggs mixed with the oil of
the dryandra tree. This was thrown on the
deck of attacking war vessels, the combination
of the pieces of the bottle and the incredibly
slippery solution making it difficult for the
sailors to keep their footing. The solution was
flammable and when sparked by fire arrows it
caused the vessel to ignite. “Possibly,” says
Mr. Werner, “this was the prototype of the
stinkpot. . . .”
The ninja mentioned briefly a short while
ago were one of the most amazing groups of
men ever assembled. Originating in Japan
during the reign of the Empress Suiko (593-
628 A.D.), their early work was as secret
agents gathering information for civil actions.
They grew to be an incredible group of almost
superhuman spies and assassins. By the thir-
teenth century the art of ninjutsu or “stealing
in” had been developed to include proficiency
in the use of almost all the weapons and
martial arts of the day.Ninja were trained from childhood in all
methods of self-defense in addition to such
special skills as muscular and breath control
(especially under water), disguise, acting,
concealment, medicine and pharmacology.
According to Ninja, The Invisible Assassins
(Ohara Publications, Los Angeles, 1970) by
Andrew Adams, “The ninja was a superb
escape artist who would have made Houdini
look like a rank amateur. He could dislocate
his joints at will to slip out complicated knots.
He hid in bells, above ceilings, under floors,
remained under water by breathing through
teeds and tobacco pipes, concealed himself in
trees and wells and even disguised himself as
a rock or tree stump. In fact, this ability to
appear unobtrusive and disappear into the
surrounding scenery was what probably gave
tise to the tales that the ninja could make
himself disappear at will. It should come as no
surprise then that ninjutsu has been defined
as the ‘art of invisibility’.”
Here then is something for every would-be
conjurer to think about.
One of the ninja’s chief weapons was the
shuriken, a flat sharp pointed object of metal
that came in a variety of shapes and sizes.
There were at least ten different types of
shuriken; the five-pointed star and four-
pointed or card-shaped were the most com-
mon. Great amounts of time were spent in
learning to throw these articles from unusual
positions and with a minimum of arm motion.
It was also important to be able to hurl the
shuriken while running at top speed. The
expert could throw them into dime-size tar-
gets at distances of up to thirty-five feet.
Though the ninja were banned by the
Tokugawa Shogunate in the seventeenth cen-
11
Shurikena :
4A ES
A
Razor-Bladed
Card
tury, their methods have intrigued scholars
and students of the martial arts to this day.
Some martial arts supply houses carry a sort
of deck of thin rectangular shuriken which are
held in the left hand and flipped outward by a
sharp pressure of the right thumb against the
back of the metal. Care must be taken to see
that the right thumb does not hit the edge of
the metal which is extremely sharp. With the
proper stroke, an incredible repeating action
can be mastered and a number of steel cards
sent flying in less than a second.
This parallels a modern card propelling
method used by the very inventive Dutch
conjurer “Flip.” He places his extended right
forefinger flush against the center of the pack
which is held firmly in the left hand. By
moving the forefinger sharply forward and
creating friction against the rest of the pack,
the top card is propelled forward with surpris-
ing speed and velocity.
Many present-day scalawags have taken
ordinary playing cards and inserted razor
blades ‘strategically around the edges. This
makeshift tool of terror can cause great harm,
but so too can a large stick in adept hands.
Unless experts are using this technique there
is little to fear.
The use of poison-coated cards is nearly as
ancient as the cards themselves. Over the
years many substances have been used to
hasten the demise of princes and peasants
alike. There is no time to explain all these
toxins but the author will discuss what is, in
his opinion, the most effective of these termi-
nal additives.
First, get a blowfish. Not just any blowfish,
but one of the poisonous variety. The cogno-
scenti will use only the fugu fish found primar-ily in the Sea of Japan. This fish possesses
a poison called tetrodotoxin which adds
verisimilitude to an otherwise bald and un-
convincing fish. This poison, like the curare
employed by the Jivaro Indians of South
America, produces its deleterious effects by a
paralysis of the central nervous system (CNS),
death usually occurring by suffocation as the
respiratory apparatus gasps to a halt. This
poison may be spread on playing cards (the
specific quantity and method of application
have been omitted from this manuscript at the
request of certain Agencies) and if the flesh is
pierced death supervenes within five minutes.
Specially licensed Japanese chefs are per-
mitted to prepare the poison-tinged flesh of
the blowfish for human consumption. Only
enough poison remains to give the piscatorial
gourmet or Yakuza Sammy Glick an intoxica-
tion in his epicurean Russian roulette.
The use of lethal cards by modern-day hit
men has of course been hushed by the author-
ities.
Training camps for these paid assassins
exist frequently right under the noses of those
most eager to learn of them. Some have tried
to exploit the author’s knowledge of such but
his lips are sealed both by honor and constitu-
tional privilege. These highly secret installa-
tions have been in operation for years; Sun
Tzu mentions them in his essays on the art of
war (about 400 B.C.). Further information is
available in documents entrusted to the Mis-
katonic University Library in Arkham, Massa-
chusetts.
Mastery of multiple weapons is essential to
the modern-day mercenary and he would no
more think of overlooking cards than catgut.
Every now and then a story will appear in a
Jivaro Indian14
small-town newspaper about a sinister look-
ing outlander apprehended with his violin
case containing only cards, but in this frenetic
day and age such events go largely unnoted.
In the movie Goldfinger the character Odd-
job is able to decapitate statues and even
unapotheosized flesh with the toss of a steel-
brimmed hat.
A hat, indeed!
Ian Fleming spent years as an intelligence
officer and knew full well what the real
weapon was. (Devotees of the 007 series will
recall that James Bond was apparently done in
by the aforementioned poison of the fugu fish
in the closing pages of From Russia With Love.)
It is impossible to write a chapter on the
martial arts without mentioning the late Bruce
Lee.
SETTING THE WORLD RECORD
IN LONDON
In November of 1976, Ricky Jay was flown to
London to appear on the Michael Parkinson
Christmas Special for BBC-TV. At that time
Mr. Norris McWhirter, Editor of the Guinness
Book of World Records and representatives of
three London newspapers were invited to
watch Mr. Jay demonstrate his unique skills
with playing cards. That visit resulted in a
new world record and subsequent entry in the
Guiness Book of World Records.Jay hurls cards through London dailies at speeds estimated
over 90 m.p.h. Holding the “Mail” is Norris McWhirter.
Michael Parkinson and Norris McWhirter prepare for the
brutal card onslaught.Jay demonstrates
accuracy by
throwing card into
small window at
BBC Studios.
Jay in front of
BBC Studios
all in a day's
work,Historical accounts of the
scaling of cards into the
far reaches of small
theaters. A feat of skill
included in the stage
shows of famous
magicians, with particular
emphasis on Herrmann the
Great and the Amazing
Thurston.
a
* Magicians
And
Card-
Scaling
*
¢Herrmann
he act of throwing cards as a demon-
"Tete of skill must be included in any
serious history of stage magic in this
country. Yet, with the exception of this au-
thor’s interest, and his demonstration of such,
it is a skill rarely if ever seen today.
Two of America’s greatest magicians, Alex-
ander Herrmann and Howard Thurston,
made the scaling of cards into the audience a
feature of their performances.
Alexander Herrmann, fondly remembered
by old-timers (he died in 1896) as Herrmann
the Great, was the most famous of a dynasty
of wonderful performers.
His father was Dr. Samuel Herrmann who,
in addition to his work as a surgeon, was
performing magic on the Continent for such
notables as the Sultan of Turkey and even
Napoleon. He also found time to sire sixteen
children. The eldest, Carl, born in 1816, left
medical school for the life of a wandering
wizard, and by all accounts was one of the
most skilled to join the profession. It is inter-
esting to note that Carl's first successes were
in the field of bird imitations.
Alexander, who was twenty-seven years
younger than Carl, first joined the elder’s
show for a command performance for the
Czar of Russia in 1853. It seems that Alexan-
der’s departure was not announced to the
Doctor, who could not bear the thought of his
youngest son also passing up medicine for the
sordid life of a sorcerer. He supposedly threat-
ened to bring kidnapping charges against Carl
unless Alexander was returned.
The threat—in fact the use of police inter-
vention to dampen the enthusiasm of would-
be conjurers—is an attempted deterrent
which is still prevalent. This author's personalexperiences, as well as those of the Seldom-
Seen Kid and other magic notables, will in due
course be revealed; but this is hardly the place
for such pulpy gems.
At any rate, Alexander's skill supposedly
softened the Doctor’s calloused exterior and
he allowed the child to continue under Carl's
tutelage.
Alexander eventually presented his own
show, playing mostly in the United States,
while Carl remained on the Continent. It is
not known exactly when Alexander intro-
duced the scaling of cards into his show, but
there is no doubt that it became one of the
features of his act. At the height of his career,
when Alexander was both the wealthiest and
best-known performer in America, he threw
thousands and thousands of thin cardboard
cards, decorated with his picture and signa-
ture, into theater galleries around the country.
A considerable portion of Alexander's great
reputation came from his impromptu per-
formances. While walking down a street or
dining in a restaurant he would take advan-
tage of any situation that would evoke laugh-
ter or garner free publicity. He would appar-
ently find gold pieces in fruit just purchased
from a street vendor or he would extract the
watch from a bystander’s pocket while being
observed by a policeman. When Alexander
was dragged to the police station the watch
would be found in the policeman’s pocket
rather than his own. Once, at the famous
Whitechapel Club in Chicago, Alexander at-
tempted to throw a card into a small opening
at the juncture of the woodwork lining and
the ceiling. He took two entire packs of cards
and threw them unsuccessfully until a single
card remained in his hand. Then, glancing
1920
Howard Thurston
slyly about, he took the card and with a
faultless throw lodged it perfectly in the crack.
There it remained until the Club ceased to
exist.
Although Alexander was unquestionably a
great showman and skilled performer, he was
not noted for his creativity as a magician, and
many of his effects were copied from DeKolta,
Maskelyne, and other notable performers of
his day. So it was with his card-throwing;
though not original, it became his trademark.
His skill and accuracy made it a spectacular
event; he started an American magical tradi-
tion.
Howard Thurston was born in 1869. His
first significant job was as a newspaper boy on
the trains that passed through Columbus,
Ohio, on their way to Akron and Pittsburgh.
Young Howard saw playbills advertising
Herrmann the Great and saved his pennies
until he was able to buy the most inexpensive
ticket, high in the balcony, for Herrmann’s
final show in Columbus. (Or so the legend
goes, and magic legends being almost as
simplistic as most magicians, who are we to
argue?)
Needless to say, Howard was inspired. We
can even conjecture that Howard caught one
of the souvenir cards Herrmann threw into
the gallery and that, since the wrist action in
throwing both cards and folded newspapers is
identical, Howard soon became proficient at
throwing cards.
In any event, that inspiration soon gave
way to another, no, to the other inspiration.
Thurston soon enrolled in Mt. Hermon School
as a medical missionary. After completing his
studies he decided to enroll in medical school
at the University of Pennsylvania. It was inthe Albany, New York, train station, with
Howard en route from Columbus to Philadel-
phia early in 1892, that the second legend-
making incident took place. While waiting for
the connecting train Thurston saw an adver-
tisement for the Herrmann show. Remember-
ing his earlier inspiration he stayed over to see
it and was once again awestricken. It was
Herrmann’s last night in Albany and, when
Howard appeared at the railway station in the
morning, the master magician and his wife
were at the ticket window inquiring about the
next train to Syracuse. For the rest of this
spine-tingling tale I must quote from Walter
Gibson’s The Master Magicians (Doubleday,
New York, 1966):
“Howard heard the ticket agent say ‘8:20’
and as Herrmann turned away, Howard
pushed a twenty-dollar bill through the win-
dow, saying he wanted a ticket to Philadel-
phia. Back it came, with the change, but as
Howard glanced at the ticket he saw that it
read ‘Syracuse.’ It was already 8:15 and an an-
nouncer was calling ‘All aboard for Syracuse!’
Howard saw the Hermanns going through the
train gate; on impulse he followed them and
boarded it.
“That incident shaped the career of Howard
Thurston. In Syracuse he attended Herr-
mann’s opening performance and was even
more fascinated than in Albany the night
before. His mind was made up; he would
become a magician, not a missionary.”
As sad as this story may be to all devoted to
spreading the Word, we may all take heart in
the fact that while few men are as successful
as those they try to emulate, Howard Thur-
ston did become the most successful and best-
known magician in America.
2122
Though known in his later years for a huge
illusion show (at one time ten railroad bag-
gage cars were needed to transport his props)
his reputation was originally made by his skill
with cards; card-throwing was a major feature
of his act. Like Herrmann, Thurston threw
thousands of good luck cards into the out-
stretched hands of eager fans throughout the
country.
Amazingly enough, many of magic’s most
famous old-time performers threw souvenir
cards into theatre galleries.
More than a hundred years ago, Robert-
Houdin, the incredible French conjurer, wrote
about card-throwing and mentioned seeing a
Hungarian performer named Well who threw
a card and had it boomerang back to his hand.
Robert-Houdin also mentioned that card-
throwing was a useful skill because it allowed
one to distribute small books or souvenirs to
the audience via the same basic method.
“Once,” he says, “I threw one of the little
sketchbooks from my horn of plenty, right
across the chandelier to the spectators in the
upper gallery, and gained tremendous ap-
plause for the boldness of the feat.”
Early in his career Houdini, the famous
escape artist, was billed as “The King of
Cards,” and he too was proficient at throwing,
and boomeranging cards. Occasionally, as a
card returned to him, he would lunge forward
and with a pair of scissors cut it neatly in half.
The great French performers Felicien
Trewey and Jean Valton, both highly skilled at
card flourishes and throwing tricks, used
them to make their reputations. Mehay, men-
tioned in Sachs’ Sleight of Hand (1875), would
put a card on the back of his left hand and flick
it into the audience with his right forefinger.Frederick Eugene Powell, the late Dean of the
Society of American Magicians, threw cards,
as did Will Rock, one of Thurston’s successors,
More recently a performer named Benjamin
Franklin IV did an entire vaudeville act based
on card-throwing, and currently Flip and
Richard Ross of Holland, Finn Jon of Norway,
Christian of Vienna, and Whitey Roberts in
the United States have all included clever card
throwing techniques in their acts.
Most performers threw cards made of a
cardboard stock heavier than the ordinary
playing card and consequently easier to
throw. These cards were generally embla-
zoned with the picture and autograph of the
Magician, and often bore some greeting such
as “Luck to You.” These were valuable adver-
tising pieces for the performer and today are
eagerly sought by collectors of antique mag-
icana.
Sometime during the years of the Second
World War card-throwing was withdrawn
from popular view and its secrets covetously
guarded and performed by only a chosen few.
Jt may well be that the American cultural
conscience found it too wily, too Oriental a
means of expression to be comfortably coun-
tenanced. Perhaps it was rationing, and all
that it entails, or the war effort itself which
left Americans with no time to develop this
specialty. Still another possibility was the lack
of good instructional material by highly qual-
ified teachers.
The author, fortunate enough to have ac-
quired these special skills and to have added a
few ideas of his own, is honored in being able
to continue this recondite tradition. He sin-
cerely hopes his readers will succeed him in
this formerly exclusive coterie.
23The basics of card-throwing
(illustrated): the Herrmann
method, the Thurston
method, and the Jay method.
The hand, the wrist, the
grip, and the all-important
follow-through.
4
¥
Technique
4
Pstrange fellow—excite him to learn that
this is far from the first written discussion
concerning the technique of throwing playing
cards. In the author's files are more than fifty
references to throwing, spinning, boomerang-
ing and dealing cards and the different magi-
cal effects which may be done with these
techniques.
The bulk of these may be found in now-
defunct magician’s periodicals and out-of-
print books. The author is well aware of the
risk he is taking by tackling this subject; his
publisher is nearly suicidal.
Magical literature, like the magical art, is
overrun with misinformation and redundan-
cies; there is little of practical value. In magic,
as in most ancient arts, the oral tradition still
provides the best method for learning. Char-
acteristically, it is the unpublished material,
merely spoken of or held covetously by a
chosen few, that houses the truly great secrets
of the noble art.
The trend toward the popularization of
magic through the publication of previously
select and guarded methods will do little or
nothing to lift the art from the miasmic murk
which has surrounded it for years. Nor will it
be improved by the general availability of
magical secrets and effects pitched by former
used-car salesmen in their antiseptic glass-
enclosed cages, surrounded by guillotines and
arm-choppers and halves of ladies with fringe
and teased blonde hair, combined with the
public appearances of those persons too ill-
equipped to perform for even the most boring
family reunions.
This is merely the author's rationalization
for writing the book. After twenty years of the
pain inflicted on him by witnessing poor card
I may interest the reader or—if he is atricks, a tome which explains how cards are
used to inflict pain is not only fitting but
spiritually justifiable.
Do you like card tricks? he asked.
I said no.
He did five.
—W. Somerset Maugham
Since Herrmann and Thurston were the
most famous of the card-throwers we will
commence with a discussion of their methods.
An article comparing these two gentlemen,
with accompanying illustrations, was pub-
lished in a 1936 edition of the Sphinx magic
magazine. Quoted is the part which discusses
their techniques.
“It is particularly interesting that Howard
Thurston and Alexander Herrmann did not
perform the feat in the same way. They both
used cards of much heavier stock than the
ordinary playing card. This gave the cards
added weight which permitted them to be
thrown much farther than the standard play-
ing cards could be thrown. Howard Thurston
gripped one end of the card between his first
and second fingers and threw it by a snap of
his wrist. Herrmann gripped the card about a
half-inch from the end and midway between
the sides with the tip of his second finger and
the ball of his thumb. The first finger held the
corner of the card so as to give it an added
spin when it was thrown. The actual throw-
ing, that is the little snapping flick of the wrist,
Herrmann did in the same way as Thurston.”
The author doubts that the explanation
would have provided much new competition
for Messrs. Herrmann and Thurston were
they alive when it was written. To add a
27The Thurston Grip
The Herrmann
Grip
The Herrmann
Grip (from
undemeath)thought from the pellucid Jean-Eugene
Robert-Houdin, known to conjurers the world
over as the father of modern magic: “The
performance of the sleight (to throw a card)
depends on a certain knack by no means easy
to explain in words.”
The knack of which Robert-Houdin speaks
is the wrist action as the card is released. The
better accounts of card-throwing, those of
Robert-Houdin in Les Secrets de la Prestidigita-
tion et de la Magie (1868), Professor Hoffman in
Modern Magic (1887), T. Nelson Downs in The
Art Of Magic (1909), and Jean Hugard in
Hugard’s Magic Monthly (October, 1954) are all
misleading on one salient point: the knack of
releasing the card. Phrases like “jerk of the
hand,” “shot sharply forward,” and “strong
reverse twist” tend to make one think he is
attacking an overall-clad clod rather than sail-
ing a piece of paper.
The author has taken much time with the
following explanation and has seen it work
wonders. He believes his crowning achieve-
ment was in seeing a young woman, at that
awkward age of fifteen, who in no way had
exhibited expertise in physical or digital skills
and who was not familiar with playing cards,
upon reading the instructions once, sail a card
with a perfect spiral some twenty feet to a wall
and strike a picture of the author dead center,
causing him pain and happiness simulta-
neously.
The keys to the incredible Jay method of
card-throwing are two: the Jay grip, and the
ability to relax.
T. Nelson DownsThe Jay Grip
The Jay Grip
First we must assume that the card, like the
divinatory arrow mentioned earlier, can ex-
press four directions. The four corners of the
card will now be designated as Northeast,
Southeast, Northwest and Southwest.Place the Northeast corner of the card into
the fleshy part of the right index finger tip.
The right second finger is placed under the
card about one inch down from the index
finger along the Eastern edge of the card. The
right thumb is placed over the card in exactly
the same position. The thumb and second
The hand as the
card is released.
6THE BASIC
JAY TECHNIQUE
The Jay Grip
The Jay Grip,
showing hand and
arm position
finger have the card pinched between them. If
the cards were not present the position of
these fingers would be identical to that used in
passing the tiniest piece of cigarette to a close
friend.
The third and fourth fingers are kept out of
the way: this is most easily done by curling
them inward to touch the palm. The Eastern
edge of the card makes contact with the handonly where it is grasped by the first two
fingers and thumb: the card does not touch the
palm of the hand at this time. This is very
important. Later, when the wrist is turned
inward, the Southeast corner of the card will
hit the base of the palm, but it does not do so
yet.
You are now ready to learn the Jay throwing
technique.
Cocking of the
wrist before
releaseSit comfortably
in a chair.
=
The From-
the-Chair
Throwing
Technique
Release and
follow-through.
Suna
Grasp card in Jai ip and
bend at the abouThe Jay Throwing Technique
The basic spinning motion will be discussed
first; the arm action for longer throws will be
described later.
1. Sit comfortably in a chair (not an arm-
chair). Your left hand, which holds the deck,
rests in your lap.
2. Grasp a card in your right hand in the Jay
grip. The right arm rests loosely against the
tight side of the body.
3. Bend the arm at the elbow so that the
hand is now about six inches above your knee
and parallel to the floor.
4, Bend your wrist towards your body until
the Southeast corner of the card touches your
hand at the base of the palm.
5. The wrist now straightens, returning to
the original position, as the fingers release the
card. The card glides out over the second
finger, spins forward for a few inches (or feet),
and falls to the floor. The motion of the wrist is
the same as that employed in dismissing an
incompetent valet.
After you get the feel of this motion you are
ready to add arm action; this will provide
greater stability and distance.
The Jay throwing technique with
complete arm action
The entire throwing action is similar to that of
scaling a Frisbee or saucer and the motion of
the arm bending back at the elbow is like the
swing of a pendulum. This back-and-forth
action may be repeated a few times before the
release of the card as a sort of warm-up
3536
exercise; this is similar to practice-stroking,
before the shot in a game of billiards.
1. Resume the relaxed position in the chair.
The chair will be familiar with you by this time
and it too will be relaxed.
2. Hold the card in the Jay grip and
straighten out the arm, keeping it parallel to
the floor.
3. Keeping the arm in the same plane, bend
the arm in at the elbow, back toward your
body, at an angle of 90°.
4. The wrist continues to move back but the
arm remains stationary until the card touches
the base of the palm exactly as in the spinning
exercise.
5. The wrist and arm swing forward to the
original straight position and at this point the
card is released.
6. The follow-through: as the card is re-
leased the wrist goes farther to the right of the
extended straight arm and the fingers open
slightly in a flicking motion.How to throw a card and
make it return to the
hand, a simulacrum of the
Australian boomerang.
Also: fancy one-hand
throws and catches for the
serious student.
Advanced
Technique
v
GThe Australian
Boomerang
he most impressive stunt in the card-
thrower’s arsenal may be the flourish
known as the “boomerang card.” A
card is tossed into the air for a distance of four
or five feet. Suddenly the card seems to stop
in mid-air, reverse direction, and return grace-
fully to the thrower's hand.
Though not as difficult or spectacular as
some of the stunts you will read about later, it
can be done with such sureness, certainty,
and elan that it will impress all but the most
calloused observers.
To learn this stunt, place the card to be
thrown in the right hand in the Jay grip. The
student should be standing in a comfortable
position in a room with a high ceiling. Al-
though the grip is identical and the throwing
motion similar to that outlined in the last
chapter, there are some new pointers which
must be emphasized.
In the previous exercise you will recall that
as the card was released from the hand the
arm extended straight out from the shoulder
and parallel to the floor.
To make a card return to the hand it is
necessary to shoot the card up in the air rather
than straight out on a horizontal plane. To
accomplish this the arm must be bent back
toward the face at an angle of about 45°; the
card must also be sailed upward at a 45° angle.
The fingers hold and release the card as in the
throwing exercise, but there is a pronounced
forward motion of the wrist as the card is
released: it is this action which imparts the
reverse-english necessary for the card to re-
turn to the hand. This motion is similar to that
used in throwing a hula-hoop and having it
return.
It is important to add that while the wrist issnapped forward, excessive force is not neces-
sary. In fact, a card may be thrown and
returned to the hand with a very light and
delicate toss.
A good practice exercise is to toss the cards
very gently straight up in the air and catch
them as they return. This helps to visualize
the flight of the card. Next toss the cards out at
a 45° angle and experiment with the wrist
movement until you are able to make the
cards return from a distance of four or five
feet. With practice it is possible to propel the
cards a distance of thirty feet or more and
have them return unerringly to the thrower’s
hand.
When experimenting at the longer distances
it is important to remember that how far a
card may be boomeranged depends propor-
tionately on how high the card may be
thrown. It is best to practice in vacant au-
ditoriums or the unoccupied high-ceilinged
houses of the wealthy.
Position for the
Boomerang CardTo catch a returning card
in the deck
It looks pretty to catch a card at the fingertips
but it is prettier still to see a card boomerang
through the air and return to the center of a
pack of cards. There are numerous methods of
accomplishing this.
1. The easiest method is to boomerang a
card with the right hand while holding the
remainder of the deck palm up in front of you
in the left. After the card leaves the right
hand, the right hand grabs half of the pack
from the left and remains poised three or four
inches above the left hand. As the card
returns to a position between the two halves,
the hands quickly come together and capture
the card in the center of the deck.
2. Place the deck well into the crotch of the
left hand so that the thumb extends over the
East side of the deck. The thumb curls around
enough to grab about one-half the pack along,
this edge while the other fingers grab the
remaining half from underneath. This allows
the two halves to pivot open like a book and
the card may be captured between them as it
returns from the air. It is best to keep the deck
closed until the last possible moment as it
looks quite mysterious to see the card return
to the center of an apparently closed pack of
cards.
3. Again throw the card with the right hand
and hold the pack with the left. After the card
is thrown the right hand grabs the pack from
the left hand, the thumb on the South end and
the second, third, and fourth fingers grabbing
the North end underneath the pack. The
index finger is curled on top of the pack. The
right hand now turns the pack around and thewrist is now rotated clockwise so that the
thumb side faces forward. Use the index
finger to press down on the top of the deck
and the second, third, and fourth fingers to
press up underneath. The cards are held
To catch a card
returning to the
deck. Method 1.
Card returns.42 firmly in this position while the right thumb
tiffles down the end of the pack, opening it
near the center and pulling it back toward the
body. This leaves a hinge-like opening for the
card to enter on its return flight.
To catch a card returning to
the deck. Method 2.
To catch a card returning to
the deck. Method 3.
Card returns.Fancy Throws and Catches
It is possible with the following technique to
place the entire deck in one hand and launch
single cards forward from the top of the pack
in a continuous fashion. Cards may also be
boomeranged in this fashion and made to
return to the center of the pack.
1, The Long-Distance Spinner
This is an excellent method invented by the
late Audley Walsh and is adapted from the
explanation in the Tarbell Course In Magic
(Louis Tannen, New York, 1945).
The deck is held in the right hand with the
thumb and second joint of the second finger
holding the short ends of the deck. The index
The Long-Distance
Spinner
4344 finger is on the upper edge of the deck close to
the right side. The third and fourth fingers are
underneath the deck. The index finger presses
down and the third finger presses up causing
the cards to curve slightly because of this
pressure. The right thumb presses its tip-end
against the lower right-hand corner of the top
card of the deck. The thumb must be held taut
and straight with strong pressure. Without
bending, the thumb snaps the top card up-
wards and to the right. The forefinger, acting
as a pivot, causes the card to revolve in a
clockwise direction.
The cards may be caught in the other hand,
in a hat, or in the center of the pack.
To catch the card in the pack, refer to
method 3 explained above. A simple modifica-
tion from the throwing position will put the
cards in the appropriate grip for the catch. As
the card is released the third finger quickly
moves from under the deck to take a position
on the end next to the second finger. This
leaves the deck held by the first finger and
pinky with the second and third fingers mere-
ly lending support. After the card is released
the index finger again curls against the back of
the card; the hand is now turned palm up and
the thumb riffles back half the pack exactly as
explained earlier. The returning card is caught
in the space between the packets.
2. The Martin Lewis Method
This is an exciting new technique. Hold the
deck in the left hand between the thumb and
second fingers at the Southwest and North-
west corners, respectively. The fleshy pads of
the thumb and finger are pressed into the
corners of the deck. The side of the indexfinger pushes the top card down from the
Northwest corner until it buckles upward,
being pivoted against the thumb. The index
finger presses down about one-half inch,
further buckling the card, and then snaps
toward the crotch of the thumb. This frees the
corner of the card and it now shoots forward
and away from the thumb.
The Martin Lewis
Method
The Martin Lewis
Return to Deck46
To catch the card as it returns to the deck
requires repositioning of the left index finger.
When the card is released the index finger
straightens out and reaches over the top of the
pack adjacent to the right side of the second
finger. From that position the index finger
pulls back about half the deck, hinging it at
the thumb. The propelled card is allowed to
fall into this space; the index finger lowers the
top half of the pack, trapping the card in the
center.
3. One Up, Two Back
A novel effect can be created by throwing a
card into the air where it apparently splits into
two cards; these return to the thrower, one
being caught in each hand.
Of course two cards are scaled initially;
these are held in perfect alignment in the Jay
grip and then boomeranged out for a few feet.
The cards are held together by the centrifugal
force of the throw and its aerodynamic prop-
erties. As the cards are about to return they
suddenly separate and are caught as de-
scribed.
To make this stunt a little easier you may
experiment with bending the corners of the
cards. If the Southwest corner of the top card
is bent up and the Southwest corner of the
card beneath it bent down the cards may
separate more easily.
The easiest way to separate cards in flight is
to throw them so that they leave the hand
already out of alignment. If the top card is slid
one-quarter inch to the East of the card below
it and the cards are thrown as described they
will separate easily at the furthest point of the
throw and return to the hands.4. The Double Boomerang
A pretty flourish, virtually unknown in this
country, was shown to the author by Finn Jon,
the clever Norwegian conjurer.
Boomerang a card into the air and wait for it
to return. Just prior to when the card would
usually be caught by the right hand, the right
wrist and hand turn sharply clockwise to
bring the palm upward; the card is struck by
One up and two
back, Method 1.
One up and two
back, Method 2,Back-of-the-Hand
Flick
the palm of the right hand. This imparts
additional spin which causes the card to fly
out and once again boomerang back to the
hand. The motion of the right hand and arm is
almost identical to that used to impart back-
spin to a Ping-Pong ball when hitting it with a
paddle.
It is also possible to achieve a similar effect
by having the returning card hit the hurler’s
elbow or wrist and fly out and back again. In
all these variations the card has a tendency to
veer toward the right on its second flight, so
the card should be hit toward the left to
compensate for this propensity.
5. The Finger-Flick
Cards may be propelled a considerable dis-
tance by flicking them with the second finger.
The card to be flicked is held either singly in
the left hand or protruding horizontally from
the top of the deck as it is held in a dealing
position. The second finger cocks up against
the right thumb and then shoots forward
hitting the Southeast corner of the card with
the fingernail. The action is identical to oneused by most schoolchildren in propelling
expectorant spheres.
Holding the card or cards in the same
position it is possible to shoot them forward
by striking them with the unaided index
finger or the back of the hand. This is a simple
trick to accomplish but not nearly so pleasing
as the finger-flick or butterfly swirl. Many hard
objects may be used to propel the cards in a
similar manner by striking the object smartly
against the Southeast corner of the card. Ex-
perimentation will lead to strange and pleas-
ing results.
The Finger-Flick
49
we
Propelling card
with a pencilJuggling: The
Cascade Patter
6. To juggle cards
To keep the cards in the air for a continuous
juggling sequence is extremely difficult. In
fact, the author knows of no other present-
day performer attempting the effect with ordi-
nary playing cards.
There are three major difficulties in per-
forming this feat: the cards must be tossed
from both hands; there is no time to re-grip
the cards for each new throw, they must be
tossed immediately on being caught; and the
cards are so light as to make it difficult to
control their flight.
To master the stunt it is necessary to prac-
tice throws and catches without regripping
the cards. This must be done with both hands.
After these exercises are mastered you are
ready to practice juggling.
The basic pattern to be used is called the
Cascade. This consists of throwing the objects
to be juggled under one another from hand to
hand in a continuous pattern.
Place two cards in the right hand and one in
the left. Softly toss a card from the right hand
toa point in the air about one foot over the left
hand and, before it falls into that hand, the
card held in the left hand is thrown to a point
one foot over the right hand. Before this card
is caught in the right hand the third card is
now thrown upward to occupy the same
space previously occupied by the first thrown
card. If you still have cards returning to your
hands after a few tosses, you are juggling.
It is also possible to shower-juggle three
cards. Showering is a juggling term for a
continuous circle of juggled objects. Each card
is thrown from the right hand and caught in
the left in this exercise. Start with two cards inthe right hand and one in the left. Toss a card
into the air above the left hand from the right
hand and immediately throw the second card
in identical fashion. Before the first card falls
into the left hand, the third card (the one
originally in the left hand) is passed over to
the now-empty right hand. As each ensuing
card is caught in the left hand it is instantly
passed to the right to be thrown out again.
7. Throwing cards with the feet
It is possible to sail cards from between one’s
toes.
The Foot Flick
51The hows and wheres of
practice; techniques to
keep the fingers limber and
a short medical study of
card-thrower’s arm and its
relationship to tennis
elbow, surfer’s knobs, and
Frisbee finger.
6
, How To
Practice
And
Stay FitGerman Military
Calisthenics
gent practice. Great instructors have
stressed the importance of learning to
practice correctly, lest untold hours be spent
in inconsequential or even damaging exer-
cises. How one practices is more important
than how long one practices. Indeed, too
much practice may have a deleterious effect
on the student’s physical and mental abilities.
Short practice sessions, not to exceed fifteen
minutes at a time, are best. Two or three of
these sessions will have a greater positive
effect than a straight hour of work.
In addition, throwing a card involves mus-
culature which is not generally used during
one’s daily activities. Too much practice in the
early stages may be harmful. Caution is rec-
ommended to avoid injury.
The author refuses to take responsibility for
the eager student who purchases this book
and spends the next six or eight hours hurling
cards at a photograph of Bill Bixby. Certainly,
the author has sympathy for such excitement,
but mark this warning well: it is not a wise
practice.
It is as well to mention that the author
refuses to accept responsibility for any per-
sonal injury the student may cause to himself
or his fellow man.
Throwing cards is a potentially dangerous
undertaking and each person must take the
responsibility for his own actions. Although
the author is a concerned, sympathetic, and
emotional individual he refuses to feel guilty
about monopedic casualties whose limbs were
severed by a poorly directed toss of the card.
Once the student has passed the beginning
stages he may increase the length of his
practice sessions, but please note that this is
IE any art, mastery comes only after dili-not essential. Some masters of the art still use
the fifteen-minute plan with no regrets.
Before the cards are even touched, a period
of limbering and loosening is essential. Many
of the martial arts—dancing or yoga stretching
exercises—are excellent for this, but extra
emphasis on loosening the wrists, arms and
shoulders is important.
Masters of the exotic eastern disciplines
have frequently drawn upon animals to set
examples for human behavior. Yoga, kung fu
and karate all have exercises and forms based
on the particular movements of certain ani-
mals.
To acquire deadly accuracy with cards occa-
sionally requires one to emulate animal pos-
tures. These may be used to assume the most
advantageous position for a shot, to limber up
before an assignment, or to scare an enemy
into immobility before an attack.
Loosening Up
Start with an old-fashioned finger pull. Com-
mencing with your favorite finger, pull it back
and forth several times; gently at first and
then with rigor. Repeat this process until all
the fingers have been pulled.
To loosen the wrist, arm and shoulder
simultaneously, one must adopt the attitude
of a young frigate bird.
Begin by letting the arms hang limply by
your sides. Start to slowly shake the arms,
wrists and hands. Raise the arms out, per-
pendicular to the elbows and continue the
shaking. Now lift the arms up high and shake
the shoulders, neck and head in a forward
and backward motion. Continue to do this
55The Finger Pull
THE NEW YORK TIMES, TUESDAY, MAY 1, 1912
"Tilt of the Heron’s Neck Is Explained
By 10HN NOBLE WILFORD
Standing in the coastal
shallows, its head and neck.
tilted at! a sharp angle, the
seat blue heron appears to
be listening to the wind oF
merely lating for want, of
soe ong
‘Actually, the pose is not
fle and ‘two Canadian
eologsta sow eteve hey
Save figured out the primary
reason why herons and some
‘ther wading birds ten le
their necks wile standing oF
walking slowly through ‘the
wae.
Tels not simply a way of
scanning tne waters for ish,
dhe resetrchersconcived, of
of exinating"Getances be.
Seen thle soap ponte
bila andthe arte bey
‘he ated eck: woul Bech
tobe the "heronte way ct
‘rercoting # problem fami-
‘arto any ‘swimmer on
Sony doy Oe pare rom
Senigne Yefecad “ott the
suet eurtace,
Fleron Rates the Cover
ied in the hor
tod inthe Ap 20 te
Foe of Nature; a Bosh jour-
fal, by donne. Reeds! and
A 8
Head-on views of herons
(a) on & cloudy day and
(b) on @ sunny day. tn
(b) the bird Is ditlng
ts head toward the sun
to avold glare,
Bran Partridge of the Uni-
versity of British Columbia's
Institute of Animal Resource
Ecology in’ Vancouver. A.
sketch of head-titing herons
se rated the cover Of the
Journ
During the course of 8
study af the feeding Behavior
of the great blue heron tong
the Pate: coast of Canada
Inst Summer, Professor Krebs
tnd Mr. Partngge, 0 stucent
sistant, observed the bird's
‘haractena.ie posture
‘The. longlegaed heron,
wnieh stands aout four fet
{all ‘and is often mistaken
Caled’ crane, as ee head
ings ong neck at an ang
{08 miautes ata time, Then,
Suddenly turning. its heady
‘Would strike a fah
“The “neadsting. occurred
fae more fem eon aun
8, the, Soologsta noted,
ony when the heron wad
cing at an angle fo the sun
hati, not diectly toward
or away trom It The obeery-
tre "reported iat herons
‘Two possible explanations
‘raloed,
a
v0 predators by
Sitartse ie thadow and
Sean thtoen toe Soe
fine her may have
letied ofan oe towed
then “and est off "ie
‘escape route. If that is true,
herons should strike at fish
most often immedately be:
Tow their uted heads—which
the zoologists said la not the
‘creates a "patch of glare” on
the water Surface in ts own
direction. By moving. their
heads. the herons shifted the
without leaving
fishing area
Professor Krebs._and Mr
Partridge tested this theory
by. training a hand-raiaed
eroa io hunt fr ish ina
= S00-watt floodlight, “the
only source of ight in the
room.
‘The heron tilted its head
the direction of the flood:
ight As the light was moved,
(he heron moved itr head
‘accordingly.
‘This ed. Professor Krebs
tana Mr. Parisiage to the con:
lusion, as reported in Na:
ture, that head-tilting: seems
related to glare and “prevum:
ably “enhances ‘the hunting
c\fficiency” of herons in sunay
weather.rapidly making sure the wrists, hands, arms
and shoulders are limp and shaking loosely.
Rigorous loosening-up exercises are a deter-
rent to muscle-constrictions, cramps and sore-
ness. Please do not let the fact that you feel
like a ridiculous oversized chicken dissuade
you from doing these exercises. In your heart
you will know you're on the way to mastering
the difficult aspect of the piratical frigate bird.
Next I will ask you to practice a particular
swoop of the neck called the “Heron’s tilt.”
(See Times article, p. 56.) This is a difficult
procedure but necessary to avoid the direct
rays of the sun which could ruin an important
shot. The head and neck must be angled
sharply to one side without changing the
alignment of the throwing arm. The heron is
able to keep this difficult position for minutes
at a time, and with proper practice, human
mastery of it is possible. This posture is
especially helpful in avoiding glare on the sur-
face of the water. The famous card-fishermen
of Micronesia are particularly adept at this
practice, and to watch them, sans sunglasses,
pierce flying fish on a bright day in the Pacific
is a joy to behold.
Once the body (yours) is warm and loose it
is time to pick up the cards.
Practice Techniques
Set up a large hatbox in the center of the room
and sit in a chair about five feet away. Hold
the cards in your left hand and feed them one
at a time into the right hand as you begin to
throw. It is best to toss the cards lightly over
the box so they will float gently down inside.
57
A HatboxHats
58 This requires a subtle control which will be
useful later in more difficult shots.
Once the student is proficient at this drill he
should move the chair so that it is ten feet
away, and throw cards into the hat instead of
the box. I suggest a collapsible opera or top
hat which may be carried easily, allowing the
student to practice almost anywhere.
‘To throw cards into a hat requires a different
knack than that used for target throws but it is
a good stunt to practice for two reasons: first,
it gives one a feeling of subtle control when it
is mastered (note in the illustration how the
wrist gently moves upward for the release of
the card); and second, in the vernacular of the
street, it allows one to “hustle a buck.” True,
the days when Rajah Raboid hustled the
hatboys in the millinery shops on Broadway
are gone, but a clever fellow can always get up
a bet for cards-in-the-hat at the local barber
shop or billiard parlor. If you're looking for an
edge, if sheer skill isn’t enough, then the
following anecdote may be heartening.
The Eleven-Foot Shot
When I was just a tyke and card-in-the-hat
and balkline billiards were big games, Ellis
Stanyon was the Card-In-The-Hat champion
of the British Isles. I was a cocky kid and nota
bad hat man myself. 1 wangled a trip to
England and set out to find the limey with the
weird monicker. In those days, and things
haven't changed much, the regulation hat
pitch was ten feet. 1 found Stanyon’s home
court and cased it. Then I found Stanyon at
the local pub and let him “hustle me” into agame. The old-timers were trying hard not to
laugh at me, the little Yank they called me,
and one of the nicer ones told me to hold onto
my geetus and go home. I promptly told the
dude I'd go fifty pounds on the side: he took it
and so did a dozen other eggs.
To shorten the saw, me and the limey put
up a thousand apiece for a one-deck toss, best
out of thirty-two (that’s all the cards they
used, those days) on his home court. We went
out back and old Ellis had just about the worst
day he ever had. First he tossed too short,
then too long, and by the time he was on I was
ahead to stay. I only nailed him by two cards
but that was just to make it look good.
Quicker than a flash I was back in Brooklyn.
Stanyon never did find out why he threw so
bad that day but here's the “G” on the joint:
before | ever laid eyes on the dude I found the
guy who set up the joint and J greased him
heavy to move the hat back to eleven feet.
I always thought I could beat the limey
straight, but I worked for a year on the eleven-
foot shot just to make sure. The mark never
knew what hit him.
Target Practice
These next drills are designed to have the
student strike a specific area with a card. First
find an old barn. Next find its broad side.
Stand six feet away and throw cards until you
can hit the side of the barn on every throw.
Mastery of this drill will enable the student to
win many a bet early in his career.
Now buy an easel and on it place a poster-
sized blowup made from a snapshot of some-
59
An Easel60 one you dislike. Stand back ten feet and
commence firing. After a few weeks, or when
you are able to stick cards in the pockmark of
your choice, move back a few feet and try
again.
Though not a serious student of the occult
the author is aware that it is thought possible
to do bodily harm to an individual by hitting
or pricking his photograph. This phenome-
non would come under the heading of sym-
pathetic magic as expressed by Frazer in The
Golden Bough. It has also been called mimicry
or imitative magic, and although most well-
known with pins and dolls, modern-day sor-
cerers have been known to use photographs
in these rituals. Indeed, many primitives still
refuse to be photographed for this very rea-
son.
Great care should be taken in this target
exercise. It is not a joking matter; after all, this
is a book on self-defense.
Long-Distance Practice
To throw a card long distances requires prac-
tice of a more direct and simple nature than
the preceding accuracy drills. Distance throw-
ing should proceed at the student’s own rate
and he should make sure he devotes at least
one fifteen-minute time period to its mastery
each day.
Starting indoors, you should throw cards
with all your might until you can hit the
farthest walls in your house. You then should
move outside. Notice how much more difficult
the scaling becomes. It is a good practice to
match yourself against the elements whenbecoming a little too impressed with your own
skill.
Careful attention must be given to the wind
and to the pockets of air formed by the
structure of the buildings where you practice.
Change positions frequently until you can
master the different airflow situations. Even-
tually you should be able to throw cards onto
or over the roofs of small buildings. This is a
sure sign of progress.
Medical Considerations
Long-distance throwing places a heavy strain
on the arm, shoulder and elbow. Particular
care must be taken to avoid injury or a
condition known as tennis elbow is likely to
occur. This phenomenon, called teno-synovitis
by the knowledgeable, is also common to
baseball pitchers. It occurs when there is an
undue strain on the musculature in a specific
area. The best defense against this discomfort
and pain is warming up properly, and careful
attention to one’s daily practice habits. If this
condition should occur, the best possible way
Pitcher's Elbow
61to alleviate the pain is an application of the
oriental panacea salve called Tiger Balm. It is
available commercially in this country but I
recommend a visit to the beautiful Tiger Balm
Gardens in Hong Kong. An inferior American
substitute called Cloverine Brand Salve may
be found advertised on the backs of old comic
books. One could turn a handsome profit or
win a bicycle by selling this stuff to friends.
During the exercise called “drop and
shoot,” you start in a standing position; quick-
ly drop to your knees and hurl a card. This
technique is a must in the card thrower’s bag
of tricks and a vital defense against pygmy
assassins. The sudden dropping to the floor
may cause a bumpy lump to appear on the
knees. This phenomenon, called osseous callus
by the knowledgeable, is called “surfer’s
knobs” by the beach-blanket-Bingo set. It can
be avoided by practicing on a rubber mat or
wearing knee pads (see the advertisement for
the special Jay model). If injury does occur I
again recommend the application of the orien-
tal panacea salve called Tiger Balm.
Repetitive card-throwing may cause a
scraping of the skin between the first and
second fingers; this is likely to occur if the
student uses the Thurston card throwing
method. This scraping of the flesh produces a
disturbance which is called “Frisbee finger”
by the knowledgeable. The beach-blanket-
Bingo set is not familiar with this term, and it
may be used as a shibboleth to separate the
men from the boys. If this condition does
occur, it may be best to shroud the fingers
with a clever western invention called the
Band-Aid. Eventually a callus is built up on
the sore spot. Switching to the Jay method of
card-throwing, you're surer and safer.Emergency operating techniques using cards for the incision.A prejudiced enquiry into the
advantages of cards over more
conventional weaponry. Special
sections on self-defense against
plastics and humans, and a
pertinent discussion of cards as
a pest control. Also, an added
bonus: the secret fighting
technique against multiple
adversaries, the lethal “four card
fist.” And a second bonus: the
consumer's guide to mechanical
card-throwing.
Self-
DefenseW: defend oneself with playing
cards? Indeed, why not? These are
perilous, even parlous, times. It is
no more plausible to go through life without
thinking about defense than it is to forget
one’s morning ablutions. Yet, for most of us,
the thought of striking another person—even
to defend ourselves, our loved ones or our
homes—is anathema.
In the light of this, let us discuss some of the
important advantages of cards as a means of
self-defense.
They are easy to carry, they are designed to
fit comfortably in the hand, they are inexpen-
sive, and they may provide countless hours of
amusement before the actual encounter (if the
student is a competent gamesman he may
even acquire considerable fortune from his
meager investment).
In addition, in these times when outraged
citizens shout at police brutality and the
restriction of constitutional rights, it is com-
forting to realize there are no recorded busts
of persons carrying cards as concealed
weapons.
Perhaps the greatest advantage of the card
as a weapon is that it may be used primarily as
a deterrent to crime and only in extreme cases
used to maim and kill.
During the author's college days he worked
as a disc jockey in a rather rowdy dance
parlor. From his vantage point on a raised
platform inscribed with the words “R.J. plays
the tunes you wanna hear,” the author had an
excellent view of the entire bar and dance
floor. Many times he saw an argument about
to be transmuted into violence; as soon as a
fist was raised to strike a blow, the author
would hurl a card and strike the belligerentbozo squarely on the ear. The attacker, star-
tled, would wheel around in search of the
culprit. If his eyes did meet those of the
author all he would see was the benign and
innocent look described in the chapter on
Advanced ‘Techniques
In this and many other situations the author
has reduced a bellicose bonehead into a whin-
ing wimp with a perfectly accurate toss of the
card. This invariably dissuaded such an ogre
from his evil intentions. Some may argue that
this is playing God or meddling where only
divine intervention seems appropriate. While
the author respects these feelings, his defense
is that after years of study and the mastery of
an art, one also acquires a sense of discretion
applicable to most worldly situations.
A further moral note is appropriate. In
carrying out self-defense techniques it is best
to assume that one is locked in a life-and-
death struggle even when practicing. Al-
though human targets are the best practice
Emmylou Harris
defends herself
against
too-tenacious
members of the
Fourth Estate
by firing a card
from her guitar,68 material, they do not react well to such play-
acting. Consequently the student may wish to
provide himself with human effigies in the
form of manikins or dolls, or a bevy of toy
animals to serve as the objects of his attacks.
(For information as to how this practice may
be turned to more ominous purposes, see the
discussion of sympathetic magic in the chap-
ter on How To Practice and Stay Fit.) If the
student feels it is important to protest the on-
slaught of plastics, choosing a plastic object
for a target allows him a subtle repudiation of
society's polyethylene propensities. Although
it is best to select nasty or malevolent crea-
tures for this work, the author's favorite
practice partner is a seemingly mild-
mannered plastic duck. On an otherwise un-
eventful carnival night in Rio this very duck
took a piece of the writer's left buttock in its
beak and paraded it triumphantly through the
festive streets with mallard panache.
The Modern Playing Card Defense
It is with great pride that the author in-
troduces this epochal system.
We will start with a discussion of the four
basic throwing techniques for self-defense.
1. The Flick
This throw is used for its distracting effect and
it is not meant to cause harm or do bodily
injury.
Hold and throw the card as explained in the
chapter on technique, releasing the card softly
Basic Attack as you did in the practice throw. Should this
Stance card hit bare flesh it will cause only minorannoyance but will serve as a warning and let
the enemy know you're Out There.
2. The Butterfly Swirl
This has a bit more bite than the preceding
throw. The grip is the same but the card
should be held with a lighter and gentler
touch. The index finger cocks against the
Northeast corner of the card and creates
enough resistance to create additional spin as
the card is released. The card will now travel
with more revolutions per second (rps) and.
this produces greater impact as a surface is
struck. In the pain-tolerance tests conducted
at Duke University many people described the
reaction to the Butterfly Swirl with the word
aculeus which is defined as the bite of an
insect, hence the slogan “Float like a butterfly,
sting like a bee.”
3. The Sea-Urchin Spin
The conventional grip is used but the card
must be thrown with added force which is
provided by the arm and shoulder. The arm
should be raised to an angle of almost 45° as it
crosses in front of the body prior to release.
When the hand releases the card there should
be a noticeable downward snap. The hand
and body must move together to make this
throw effective. When this technique is mas-
tered this throw can produce a stinging,
pinching sensation, even against the Levi-clad
posterior of an adversary, and blood may be
drawn if bare flesh is struck. The pain inflicted
by this throw is likened to stepping on the
articulated spines of the edible sea-urchin
6970
echinus esculentus found in the sublittoral
zones of the British Isles.
This throw is critical in the mastery of self-
defense. Though not lethal it can be very
damaging around the eyes, throat and geni-
tals, bothersome to the point of true annoy-
ance at the mouth and ears.
4. The Dolphin Dart
The power of this throw has its analogue in
the great driving force of the tursiops truncatus
or common bottlenosed dolphin. The dolphin
rams its opponent, the shark, at speeds in
excess of thirty knots causing great internal
injury to that predator. Using this technique, a
card may be thrown with great speed and
have a comparable effect on one's enemies.
For this throw the hand is almost straight
overhead and the card held firmly in the
standard grip. The right foot points straight
ahead and the arm straightens in a forward
direction snapping the card out at neck level
in the same vertical plane as the extended
foot. The card’s flight should be such that a
whirring sound is heard. This shot is very
difficult and early attempts may cause the card
to flutter to the ground at the thrower’s feet.
The release and snap must be timed correctly
and the arm must move smoothly, though
powerfully, at all times.
The Dolphin Dart is currently gaining popu-
larity in this country, but for years was the
favorite of Japan’s Yakuza hit men. It is precise
and reliable and should be used only in life-
and-death struggles. In addition to the areas
mentioned in the Sea-Urchin Spin, the Dol-
phin Dart is also effective at the temples, heart
and kneecaps, and can paralyze a victim if ithits any vital pressure points (see chart) at
close range.
Special Techniques
1. The Children's Cudgel
The entire deck is used to jab and strike an
opponent at close range in this exercise. With
the right hand assume the familiar hitchhik-
er’s posture, thumb extended and fingers
curled in a loose fist. Place the deck into the
hand so the fingers curl around the East side
of the deck. Move the thumb down to the top
of the deck and turn the wrist to the right so
you are now looking at the back of your hand;
The Children’s
Cudgel The Cudgel Grip
Vital Pressure
Points72 if your hand is large it may be impossible to
see the cards from this position. This is a
distinct advantage and gives you the addition-
al advantage of the element of surprise. The
cards should be gripped tightly and the blow
may be delivered by shooting the arm stiffly to
the right for a distance of no more than five or
six inches. It is best to direct the cards against
the knuckles, solar plexus, groin or head of an
opponent. This technique finds its genesis in a
sadistic children’s game called “Knucks.”
2. Round-Up
This full-deck technique both stings and con-
fuses the enemy. Hold the deck in dealing
position in the left hand, which should be
relaxed. When you sense an enemy attack
extend your right hand in the familiar hand-
shake mode and surreptitiously lower the left
hand. Quickly bring the left hand forward,
hurling the entire deck at the face of your
assailant, thus befuddling him.
3. The Lethal Four-Card Fist
This is the author’s own defense against
multiple adversaries. It was developed in
New York but has a distinctly Oriental flavor
and may be used in most geographical areas.
Place a card between the first and second
fingers of the right hand, using the Thurston
Grip explained in the chapter on Techniques.
Next, place a card between the second and
third fingers and then one between the third
and fourth fingers; finally a card is placed on
top of the index finger and secured by the
gentle pressure of the thumb pressing downThe Lethal
Four-Card Fist
against the top of the card. All the cards are
held in the same relative position; looking
down from above, one should see only the top
card and not the three beneath it.
To fire, bring the right arm across the body
and then extend it forward, releasing all four
cards at once.
The cards will spread slightly on release; the
top card goes to the left, the bottom card to
the right. The two center cards will travel the
farthest. With practice, one can strike four
individuals simultaneously.
This technique is particularly useful in gang
warfare and most effective when the user can
throw with both hands. A skilled helper is
required to load cards between the empty
fingers of the person throwing. In this way
two men can hold off a small army of foes.
Special Cards
Although the author uses ordinary playing
cards for self-defense he has been questioned
frequently about the effectiveness of poi-
soned, steel or razor-bladed cards. He hasSelf-defense to protect against a would-be
mugger andlor rapist.
kept abreast of these developments in the field
but is reluctant to make any recommendation.
There are, of course, certain advantages in
the use of such products, but many difficulties
may be encountered. First, one loses the
disarming effect of simple paper. Second, the
cost and acquisition of these specialized arti-
cles may be prohibitive. Third, the additional
weight of these cards will affect the trajectory
of the throw; the path of the card will be
altered. It is possible to compensate for these
disadvantages, but these are fiendish
weapons which should be avoided by all but
small children and those infirm of mind.
Terrible tales could be told of one who prac-
ticed these deadly techniques and then inad-
vertently used the boomerang throw. . . .Classes at
Columbia School
of Card ThrowingClasses at Famous
Card Thrower's
School
Self-Defense for Women
Although the basic techniques and practice
exercises for men and women are the same,
there are several advantages for women who
become proficient in the use of cards as
weapons.
Protection from the potential rapist or mug-
ger is an essential in this society and no matter
how unpleasant or distasteful this subject may
be, every woman would be wise to at least
consider the possibilities of such an uninvited
advance.
In my women’s classes at the Columbia
School of Card Throwing, various attack situa-
tions are suggested and discussed. The prob-
lems are analyzed and the correct parries are
provided. The more advanced students enjoy
improvising responses and some novel and
effective techniques have been found in this
manner.
The Children’s Cudgel (previously dis-
cussed on page 71) is a particularly excitingdefense against the movie masher as it may be
administered at close range and while seated.
It is an effective blow delivered on the back of
the hand, or, in response to more serious
attacks, on the ear or under the bridge of the
nose.
Many single card techniques are particular-
ly useful against a masher or in situations
where it would be awkward, clumsy or social-
ly unacceptable to carry an entire deck. A
single card jab to the neck or between the eye
and cheek would be very effective, and yet not
permanently damaging unless applied with
unusual strength. A single card rolled up and.
thrust into a movie masher’s nostril can be a
fairly persuasive way of saying “no.”
If you are accosted by a man who places
his hand on your upper torso you may place
one of your hands on top of his. When he
relaxes, assuming this to be an encouraging,
response, you lock his hand against your
body and use your free hand to push a single
card under one of his fingernails and thrust
firmly forward. This, embellished with appro-
priate verbal accompaniment, should make
your attitude clear.
In more serious attacks where rape or even
loss of life are at stake, blows should be
administered with full force and directed to
areas where they can do the most damage. It
would be helpful to memorize the pressure
point chart on page 71.
It is a wise habit to always carry cards in
your pocket and/or purse, place them under
the pillow at night or within easy reach at all
times.
In the self-defense classes at my Famous
Card Thrower’s School, I may teach the rudi-
ments of magic techniques which make it78 possible to conceal cards from view. The front
and back palm is one such exercise. This may
prove valuable if the attacker is aware of the
use of cards as weapons. The cards may be
hidden while in the pretended compliance
stages noted above; then, when least ex-
pected, they can be retrieved and used for an
effective blow.
Self-Defense for the Elderly
The abuses suffered by our senior citizens are
now unfortunately commonplace; though fre-
quently reported they are rarely dealt with in
an effective way. While it is not in this author's
power to change a society which has allowed
such things to evolve, it is in his power to at
least suggest some effective deterrents to theft
or personal injury.
Cards are a particularly efficacious self-
defense technique for the elderly because all
old people play gin rummy. Consequently,
cards are a familiar item and there is no need
for long periods of getting acquainted with the
product (like there might be with a crossbow
or garrote) before effective results can be
produced. Also, carrying cards may eliminate
the need for the steel-plated-money-belt-and-
undergarment combination so many of our
senior citizens are being forced to wear for
their own protection.
Forget the “you can’t teach an old dog new
tricks” attitude of so many people. I have
demonstrated at the Columbia School of Card
Throwing’s Geriatric Classes that the elderly
can learn to effectively throw and protect
themselves with cards in only twice the time it
takes a clumsy teenager.4 Advanced geriatric
coaching
Geriatric
Self-Defense Class80
Cards are among the lightest of weapons
and should add very little burden to the
shopping bag or pocket, and, of course, single
card techniques are possible by all but the
most infirm. An old person should never be
without a card.
And just think of the social advantages of
such a defense system. Upon being ap-
proached for any reason, the senior citizen
can analyze the accoster and, if realizing he is
a grandchild or otherwise harmless person,
offer to play a little gin with him. Of course, it
is always advisable to keep a joker at hand in
case the newcomer is a poor loser, relative or
not.
The Drop and Attack
This is an effective deterrent to robbery. If
attacked, the old person should produce
money on demand, securing a packet of cards
secretly behind the bills. He kindly proffers
the cards to the thief but at the last minute lets
the bills fall to the ground. In deference to the
elderly, the thief bends down to pick them up
and the old person comes down sharply on
the attacker's neck with the packet of cards in
the Children’s Cudgel position. If this tech-
nique is accompanied by the distinctive
scream of the elderly, the thief—if he is able to
move—will surely run away.
If an outdoor, non-contact prophylactic is
needed, try this: At the approach of any
unseemly character, our senior citizen should
nonchalantly throw cards at a nearby tree,
making them land firmly in the bark. He or
she should then leer at the stranger who will
hurry by or reverse direction.
Geriatric cases should not overlook “Cardsfrom Mouth” (the technique discussed on
page 87, as it is a favorite of octogenarians.
Cards as a Pest Control
Ever since the publication of Rachel Carson's
The Silent Spring, an alternative to chemical
pesticides has been sought. Much attention
has been given to protecting the environment
and controlling industrial waste, yet the pesky
fly remains a problem and the cockroach may
outlast us all. In these times of Ban-the-Bomb
and Back-to-Nature a personal combat ap-
proach may be the answer. If each of us slew
his own weight in personal pests, we would
solve the problem and simultaneously do
ourselves honor on the field of battle.
There are, of course, some disadvantages in
attacking insects with cards but this is to be
expected of any solution. It really does require
skill to strike all but the most lassitudinous
specimens: this accounts for the wonderful
feeling of accomplishment when the mission
has been successfully completed. Further-
more, cards do cost money and if the edges
crack or split upon contact with a hard surface
such as the chitinous shells of an adversary,
the cards become damaged and may not be
used again. It may be far more practical to
pluck flies from the air with chopsticks as
Toshiro Mifune does in the Samurai Trilogy, as
the chopsticks may be used over and over
again. However, such a skill, though over-
whelmingly impressive, is not likely to be
readily mastered by Westerners.
It is best to start by attacking large crawling
bugs, and then after considerable practice,
Chopsticks
Toshiro Mifune82 progressing by stages to small flying insects.
You must pay careful attention to the moving
target drills cited earlier; still, it is unlikely that
you will have great success with animalcular
samples. After all, this is not offered as a
panacea for germ warfare.
Please keep in mind geographical distinc-
tion as well. Many a highly talented West
Coast fly killer will swagger East to take on a
New York City slicker and go back to Califor-
nia a bitter and broken man, finding the New
York fly a much tougher character than his
lethargic West Coast brother.
A final thought for the conscientious home-
maker: take some cards and coat them with
cinnamon mixed with four drops of rose
water. The cards may then be strung crea-
tively to form eye-pleasing mobiles and hung
about the house. These are far more aestheti-
cally efficacious than industrial pest strips and
are environmentally sound; they are an effec-
tive deterrent to flying pests.
A Consumer's Guide to
Mechanical Card-Throwing
There are no doubt some people who despite
every good intention, frequent practice, and
careful attention to detail, are too dysfunction-
al to master the Jay method of self-defense.
This poses a serious problem. Can we allow
these unfortunates to be abused by the hostile
rowdies who inhabit our streets, and those
who break into our homes? In all good con-
science, we cannot.
For such people there are mechanical aids
which, with a minimum of practice, may givea person a means of conquering fear and
living a healthy and well-adjusted life.
A crossbow-like item called Zing-It, in-
vented and marketed by R.A. Hamilton of
New Jersey, is just such a device. The Zing-It
consists of a T-shaped piece of wood about
eleven inches long and five-and-a-quarter
inches across at the bar of the T. A groove
about one-quarter of an inch wide runs from
front to rear in the exact center of the devise.
A dowel of wood which is connected to a #64
industrial rubber band runs in the groove. The
dowel is about an inch longer than the groove
and has a projecting lug at its foremost end.
The card is placed along the crossbar at the T
where there are four pins to steady the card at
the best angle for the shot. After placing the
card in position, the dowel and consequently
the elastic (which is connected to the under-
side of the crossbar) is pulled back with the
right hand. The left hand steadies the ma-
chine, aim is taken, and the dowel is released;
the lug hits the card, propelling it sharply
forward.
With practice, one can become proficient at
loading and firing with great accuracy and
may reasonably expect to achieve thirty aimed
shots per minute (spm).
83
Zing-It84
wee
Card-Propelling
Slingshot
As a last resort, the solid construction of the
device enables it to be used to bludgeon
attackers at close range.
Zing-It may also be used for fun. It is
possible to do the boomerang stunt with the
device and also to launch paper airplanes. Mr.
Hamilton's address is 978 Madison Avenue,
Plainfield, New Jersey 07060.
An absolutely fiendish device used to pro-
pel playing cards was brought to the author's
attention by Bradley Efron, the chairman of
the statistics department of Stanford Universi-
ty. Professor Efron may have been the first
person to experiment with the use of a regula-
tion hunting slingshot to sail cards.
The Wham-O Slingshot is recommended
and available commercially at a reasonable
price, but almost any brand will work. It is
best to hold the slingshot with the left hand
and the card with the right. The lower end of
the card should be inserted in the pouch and
held with the thumb and index finger. The left
hand aims and the right hand pulls back and
releases. The height, distance and speed of
the cards propelled in this manner will exceed
those thrown by hand by all but the most
expert practitioners.
A strange device was used almost a hun-
dred years ago by a well-known French con-
jurer named Buatier DeKolta. He housed a
spring-loaded device in a bouquet of flowers;
when a card was placed on the bouquet and
the catch released the card was propelled a
great distance. Using this remarkable contrap-
tion, DeKolta actually sent a card over the
Flatiron Building in New York City. Though
the actual details of its construction remain
unpublished, those persons of mechanical
aptitude are urged to experiment. Particularthought should be given to the engineering of
card guns. (Please feel free to engage the
author in correspondence if your efforts are
successful.)
A strange device in the card-thrower’s arse-
nal is mentioned in a 1949 issue of The Phoenix
(a conjurer’s periodical) by Audley Walsh. The
product is a rubber finger, a device sold in
stationery stores and used for the sorting of
bills and papers and as a prophylactic for the
first phalange of the employed digit.
Rubber-finger aid
to propelling cardsJacques Cousteau practicing the Jay grip in preparation for
underwater self-defense.
The device can be used for techniques
which call for a card to be shot off the deck
under pressure (such as the Long-Distance
Spinner mentioned in the chapter on Ad-
vanced Techniques). Place the rubber piece on
the thumb or first finger (whichever propels
the card in the method being used). You will
notice that without any change in technique it
is possible to spin the cards a much greater
distance and with less effort. The device is
also a great aid in fancy one-hand dealing.
Though shunned by the purist, this tool is
worthy of investigation by the curious novice.Underwater self-defense
For the Conscientious Objector
For those who would do no physical harm to
others even though it might mean the loss of
life or property to them, I suggest the vener-
able technique of “Cards from Mouth.” The
pacifist, sensing danger, should secrete a
bunch of cards in the buccal cavity of the
mouth. When the attack is imminent and all
other options denied, he should quickly pull
the cards from the facial orifice. This will cause
the prospective assailant to gasp in horror and
run away. (Tests have shown the most un-
sightly combination to be one composed of a
mixture of court cards and jokers.)An effective battery of
crowd-pleasing
demonstrations from the
author’s own repertoire.
Included are
award-winning throws
such as: card over
building, the classic card
through newspaper, and the
kudo-copping card-
cuts-cigarette-in-mouth.
8
Stunts
To Impress
One’s
Friends
4
8ay I say right at the outset that a
common failing in almost any pro-
fession and most certainly any art is
a student's eagerness to propel himself for-
ward at a rate of speed that is injurious to his
ultimate advancement. I realize that many
people have purchased this book with no
other intent than to receive the tumultuous
applause and jubilant congratulations of the
multitudes after neatly severing the cigarette
in a loved one’s mouth or some other equally
spectacular feat. However, I must hasten to
warn that such things do not happen easily.
There is nothing wrong in picturing yourself
being carried off on the shoulders of a wildly
cheering crowd after setting a new world’s
distance mark. Indeed, it is thoughts like
these which inspire greatness, but let me add
that in any sport there can be only one
champion. It took me a long time to get there.
Nevertheless, considering such things with a
sense of the art and tremendous personal
sacrifice, it no longer seems sporting of me to
keep all the ammunition in my arsenal exclu-
sively to myself. In a profession as hazardous
as mine, there is no telling when or where
tragedy may strike. To compound the tragedy
of my own death with the death of an art I
have worked a lifetime to advance would be
more than anyone could reasonably be ex-
pected to bear.
Consequently, I am willing to release some
of my pet secrets, some of the miraculous,
original stunts that have been responsible for
my international fame and personal fortune.
Reader, though many of these remarkable
achievements will seem impossible, do not be
discouraged. I assure you that with diligent
practice each and every one of them may berealized. This will not happen in weeks,
perhaps not in months, possibly not in years,
but with the proper work and attitude, it can
and will happen.
Needless to say, this chapter is not for the
tyro or dilettante: and if they are wise, they
will read it no longer. Such dabblers may skip
over to a chapter stippled with funny pictures,
and be amused. I hope I have not been
unsuccessful in my attempt to give a little
something for everyone. Serious students, are
you with me? Good! Then I shall begin
Almost all of the effects in this chapter are
based on the acquisition of one particular skill:
to toss a playing card with incredible accuracy.
This may best be acquired with a daily routine
of physical exercise and practice. I have out-
lined much of this ritual in the chapter How
To Practice and Stay Fit. I suggest that if you
have only glossed over its contents you return
to and reread it at once.
(Left)
Jay throws a card
over Hollywood's
world-famous
Magic Castle for a
prestigious panel
of prestidigitators.
(Right)
Receiving the
plaudits of the
panelRicky Jay and Mr.
X, shown
practicing at an
early age
The specific technique for accuracy can, in
its most mundane sense, be labeled target
practice. I shall assume by now you have
become proficient in the general areas out-
lined in the above-mentioned chapter and can
successfully hurl cards through a swinging
inner tube and toss cards into the designated
cut of beef in the mock-up Jersey heifer.
The two new practice tricks which I am
about to divulge for the first time should spur
the student on to the mastery of some of the
most difficult accomplishments in the art.
Both of these techniques should be practiced
with a trusted confidant or partner. For years
the author practiced with a now-famous polit-
ical figure noted for his blind ambition, who
must unfortunately remain anonymous, but
this is the perfect opportunity for the author
to express publicly his heartfelt gratitude and
thanks for the many unselfish hours that “Mr.
X” gave of himself for the advancement of the
art.These two new practice drills can be divided
into the areas of stationary and moving tar-
gets.
Stationary Targets
For this stationary target drill, first purchase a
goodly quantity of a product called in this
country “string cheese.” This comes in a cigar-
shaped stick and, once the protective covering
has been removed, the cheese may be pulled
apart in thin string-like strips. I particularly
recommend the mozzarella as its consistency
is best suited to our work. The Bordon brand
with my picture on the package has been
produced under the personal supervision of
my staff and is consistently excellent for the
job.
Have your partner stand in the center of a
spacious room which has been first cleared
of encumbering furniture. You should now
stand six feet away from him. There should be
indirect lighting both behind him and in front
of you. This is important. Have your friend
hold the cheese stick on his left hand and pull
down the individual strips with his right.
Each time he pulls down a strip he should
fully extend his right hand away from his
body and stop all movement.
You should stand in a relaxed manner, legs
comfortably wide apart with the right foot
pointed directly at his extended right arm
(this, of course, if you are right-handed). The
deck of cards is in your left hand and the cards
are fed one at a time into your right after each
release. You and your partner should estab-
lish a rhythm immediately. As he pulls the
string cheese you simultaneously load the
93
Bordon Brand of
String Cheese94
card from left to right hand. He extends his
right arm, and about one second later you fire.
It is best to aim directly for the center of the
strip of cheese as this allows the most favor-
able latitude for your throw. The cheese pull-
ing and throwing should be repeated rhyth-
mically on every fourth beat for a series of
thirteen repetitions. It is best to practice this
for four sets with a minute pause in between.
After the four sets stop to regroup the cards,
get a new cheese, and repeat the process in its
entirety. I suggest practicing to musical ac-
companiment, particularly something pleas-
ing to the ear, yet with a monotonous beat.
This exercise can of course be made more
difficult by the pulling of thinner strips of
cheese, and with a greater distance between
the partners. I suggest Yasth of an inch of
cheese and one foot back every week until at a
distance of fifteen feet a gossamerlike thread
of cheese can be hit easily. The exercise must
be practiced twice through, two or three times
a day for maximum results.
Moving Targets
To hit a moving target requires considerably
more skill than hitting a stationary object.
There are, I suppose, some exceptions to the
rule, Hitting a large stuffed toy panda which
has been thrown into the air may be easier
than splitting a piece of string cheese, but
enough of humor and on to the business at
hand.
In the past it has been difficult to find a
target-propelling device which has more con-
sistency than the human hand, but whichcould also be regulated for height and speed.
A new product will solve this problem: the
revolutionary Ping-Pong gun. This is an air
rifle which shoots Ping-Pong balls easily and
effortlessly into the air where they can be shot
down by a well-delivered throw from the
student. While the Evel Knievel RemCo mod-
el is satisfactory I must, with no undue
modesty, recommend the Jay Autograph
Model Pong Missile Gun marketed by Ideallic.
The Jay model has a hand-controlled trajec-
tory and comes with a set of luminous balls for
night work. It is a truly advanced product.
This is just a suggestion, and the cost of this
professional model may seem prohibitive to
some less fortunate readers. I do suggest,
however, that you look at the colorful adver-
tisement, currently appearing in several na-
tional periodicals, before thinking about set-
tling for a cheap, second-best affair.
Once you have purchased your pong rifle,
have your partner stand seven feet away from
you in a playground or yard. Do not—I
repeat, do not—attempt the practice exercise
indoors, as the popping sound of the ball
being released from the gun in an enclosed
area can cause permanent damage to the ear.
It is a good rule always to be careful when
using guns. Have your partner about seven
feet away from you and about six feet to your
left. He should hoist the rifle to his shoulder
95
The Jay
Autograph Model
Pong Missile GunAesthetic
combination of
human and
pasteboard forms
BH ees
“ 1] Leis i
and fire shots first at about a 30° trajectory
(setting #2 on the Jay Model), until he has
released a round of balls. He should then
increase the angle and, as in the previous
exercise, as the student becomes proficient at
hitting the target the distance as well may be
increased.
The student should stand directly in front of
the area where the ball is to be shot. He
should have his feet parallel and pointing
forward: his hands (deck in the left, individual
cards in the right) down by his sides in the
quick-draw position. He should then relax
and give the command, “Pull,” when ready.As his partner next to him fires the ball he
should quickly sight the object and toss the
card. It is most important that the student
avoid thinking or speaking during this proce-
dure. The sound of the gun firing may at first
seem like a distraction, but it is in fact a great
aid to concentration. Once the student is able
to block this earthshaking din from his con-
scious mind, he will no longer be troubled by
street noises or loud and obnoxious people
during actual test conditions.
The student should practice at least forty
rounds during the day and another twenty at
night. He should eat carrots and avoid tempu-
ra vegetables. Once he has mastered moving
target work he should get the Jay Mirror-Arm
Attachment. This is a device similar to the
side-view mirror on a 1958 T-Bird; the Jay
Model has special adapters which hook onto
the student's left shoulder. When the partner
shoots a ball the student, facing the opposite
direction of the shot, eyes the celluloid sphere
in the mirror and fires a card back over his
tight side to intercept the ball in midair—a
difficult but impressive stunt.
One final word of advice: in practicing these
very difficult techniques it is important to
remember that the release of the card must be
precise and smooth. There should be no
jerking or pulling of the hand, but rather an
effortless and graceful spinning of the card. To
borrow an example from our Eastern friends:
one holds the card firmly, yet gently, like a
baby might hold the finger of an adult. One
releases the card like the baby might release
the adult’s finger when suddenly distracted by
something else. If this convoluted Oriental
parable is difficult to follow, may I suggest a
practical Western experiment? Have a baby
9798 hold your finger and then have your partner
sneak up behind the child and fire the air rifle
next to his ear. Notice how the baby impul-
sively, effortlessly, drops your finger and turns
his head, his face grimacing in pain. This is
precisely the way in which the card must be
released.In which the author
recounts with clarity and
excessive exaggeration how
he has helped the elderly,
abetted the police, and
assuaged the plight of
young damsels with the
help of his trusty cards.
Personal
AnecdotesSeptember. The click of the digital AM/FM
clock radio and the alarming sounds of a
big baritone sax had whipped me into sensi-
bility. l hate coffee. Venice Beach in September
is like a frightened woman.
I put on my floor-length terry cloth robe. It
cost big bucks. I was thankful for the chill in
the air which allowed me to use it. Smiling
into the mirror, | washed my face and brushed
my teeth. I looked silly with that toothpaste in
my mouth but it put me in a good mood. I
went outside to check the mail. There was
none. Two pigeons were squabbling over a
single piece of corn just in front of my door. I
took a card from the secret marsupial pocket
of my robe and maneuvered it into the Jay
grip. It felt good. The first card of the morning
always does. In a flash I fired the card in the
direction of the startled birds. For an instant
they fluttered their wings in confusion, but
quickly settled down, each dancing posses-
sively over a half of the kernel which the card
had neatly severed. I took a big whiff of the
ocean air and walked slowly back to the
house. I was awake now.
Back inside, I plopped down in an over-
stuffed green chair. I put my legs up on the tea
table; I hate coffee. I reached over to grab a
book. It was a slim volume, W.E. Robinson's
Spirit Slate Writing and Kindred Phenomena. 1
didn’t understand much of it, but I loved the
title.
I was reading about a dame who received
supposedly psychic messages ‘cause she had
a telegraph key concealed in her hair. They
had a picture of her. She was a doll. She had
this telegraph key in her hair and a thread ran
from the key to an overhead chandelier and
E was a damp chilly morning in lateThe Jay trophy room after a recent safari
featuring the prize waterbok he felled with a
single perfectly placed shot.102 then down to an assistant who was hidden
behind a curtain. By pulling on the thread the
assistant could tap out messages to her. Sud-
denly the door bell rang. It scared the shit out
of me.
I opened the door.
“You Mr. Jay?” a crater-faced kid in a
Western Union bowler asked.
“No, I'm Mr. L,’" I said; I can really lay it on
when someone scares me.
“Well,” he said, “I got this telegram for a
Mr. Jay.”
“Give me the goods melon-head, I’m Jay.”
I reached into my pocket to toke the bozo
but I didn’t have any change. I was still in my
bathrobe.
“Wait a minute,” I said. I stepped inside
and found a four-bit piece. I tossed it to him
and closed the door.
Damn kids.
I tore open the envelope and began to read:
MR. JAY
SERVICES NEEDED STOP MATTER MOST URGENT
STOP CHEZ PUCE 9:00 TONIGHT STOP WEAR
NIGHT BLOOMING CROCUS IN LEFT LAPEL STOP
SIGNED KARMI NOELL CO
Later that day I selected my boutonniere
from Treppel’s Florists and at 8:45 1 hopped
into my ‘57 Ford Sunliner and cruised down
Pacific to Pico. The car was one of those
wonderful old-timers, a slash-proof convert-
ible with a retractable hard-top which lifted up
like a yawning flamingo and then settled
down into a cavernous trunk when you mere-
ly pushed a button on the dashboard. They
only made them from ‘57 to ‘59. They were
great. You could drive down the highway andwait for a couple of rubes to pull up behind
you. Hit the button and the trunk flies open
and the top peels off and you scare the hell out
of them. Just great. A guy named Louis takes
care of the machine. Does a fine job. He used
to work on Bentleys before the war. The old
Sunliner was in pretty rough shape when I got
it to him, but now it was great. Cherry.
Just before Lincoln I hung a Ralph into a
narrow parking lot and strolled into Chez
Puce. It was nine on the button. The place was
packed. I worked my way through the crowd
and waved to Puce. She ignored me. I had no
time to be insulted.
“Nice looking flower,” said a dink in a pea
green suit. “Care to join me?”
Thad to think twice. It isn’t often you see a
dude suited up in this part of town in duds
only Chuck Berry could get away with, but it
was the crew-cut that really threw me, bad for
the image; mine. He looked like a two-toned
tortoise, but I could take a joke.
“Colonel Marki, | presume,” I said as I took
his hand.
It was his turn to gawk.
“How did you know?” he said in a thick
voice accented with what a mooch would call
German but which my professionally tuned
ear recognized as High Dutch.
“The telegram,” I said, “Karmi Noell Co.,
an anagram for you, Colonel Marki.”
“I am impressed, Mr. Jay,” the foreigner
beady-eyed me. “I had no idea your expertise
extended to these matters.”
I could have told Marki that I grew up in the
stuff. My grandfather was the cipher editor of
G-Man Magazine for 14 years and | had ac-
cumulated an extensive library of crypto-
graphic materials. | could have told him, but I
103104 didn’t. I preferred inscrutability. My silence
made him uncomfortable.
Still he paused, expecting me to say some-
thing. I watched the twitching of his lower lip.
Eventually he interpreted my silence as mean-
ing your move, Marki.
He took the bait.
“Listen Jay, this is a matter of international
urgency and complete discretion is required.
Officially, Iam in Africa at this very moment.”
I nodded, instantly catching his drift. He
continued, “As you have no doubt heard my
country is having certain problems with some
of its neighbors who fall loosely into the
category of ‘emerging nations’.”
“Hold on, Marki,” I interrupted, “first
crépes, then conversation.”
Puce made great ratatouille crépes and fine
French garlic pizza. I had toyed with the
phrase, “First pizza, then palaver,” but I had
discarded it as inappropriate for the time and
place. I filed it away for later use with a broad
named Peggy who went in for that sort of
stuff.
[hailed a pretty redhead wielding the tray
that was the badge of her profession and
ordered the ratatouille. Marki ordered one of
those outlandish dessert crépes with ice-
cream, chocolate and almond syrup.
“Bring this immediately,” he said abruptly
and in a tone that stopped the girl in her
tracks.
“Puce is not an octo-puce,” I said, quoting
by heart the aphorism printed in the menu.
“Take your time, my friend.”
The girl smiled her thanks and I patted her
rear end as she trotted off. I thought of trying
the “pizza, then palaver” line on her but
quickly decided against it.“As I was saying, Mr. Jay.” Marki seemed
irritated and frankly I enjoyed his discomfi-
ture. He had a reputation for ruthlessness
which I found appalling, but he was a very
influential man, and I was tap city. The
divorce had cost me a fortune.
“As I was saying, Mr. Jay, a picket fence
does not always exclude a neighbor.”
I complimented him on his use of the
American idiom and let him continue.
“Three days from now there will be a
clandestine meeting which shall be attended
by very high-ranking representatives of the
principal nations and another country which
is peripherally involved. The tightest security
measures will be taken and weapons are
expressly forbidden. Nevertheless, it is my
nature to expect the unexpected, and you, Mr.
Jay, are likely to be the only person who could
gain admittance to meeting rooms after a
thorough frisking and still be fully armed and
ready to deal with whatever problems may
arise. Your services—” He stopped abruptly
as the auburn-haired honey returned with our
meals.
As she stooped down to serve the crépe she
exposed her proud young breasts which
strained against her scoop-necked jersey like
kittens trying to crawl out of a paper bag. As
she straightened up, my hand, which I had
cleverly allowed to hang limply just below the
surface of the table, was treated to a ride along
her smooth, pear shaped posterior.
“Will there be anything else?” she said,
trying to hide the smile that hér pouting lips
could not conceal.
“Later, baby, later.”
Karmi resumed in a half whisper, “Your
services and your complete discretion are
105106 required. The terms are generous. Here is
your plane ticket and a healthful advance.”
He dropped his napkin and as his hand
reached under the table he proffered me a
small package.
I had an incredible urge to pinch his knee
and tell him I loved him but the divorce had
really wiped me out. I put the gelt in my
pocket and congratulated myself for having
such control.
“Thanks for the meal, Karmi, I'll see ya in a
couple of days.” I got up quickly and started
to leave. The redhead and I bumped into each
other a few strides in front of the door.
I whispered my address and she nodded
quickly.
“My name's Valerie,
“Wm.
She stopped me abruptly. “Oh, everyone
knows you, Mr. Jay.”
“I'm Ricky,” I said, “just Ricky.”
Valerie and I had a swell time.
she said.
Thursday night at 11:00 I eased my Sunliner
out of the sand and headed for LAX. My mind
wandered; I was thinking about the beach one
second, and the lilting tones of Prez on the car
radio the next.
At Lincoln and Centinella I stopped for the
red and looked out into the darkness. It
always gave me the creeps that no one ever
hung out on the streets in L.A. A night like
this in the Big Apple would be buzzing with
electricity. Here . . . nothing. The light
seemed to last forever and the window of the
school across the street stared at me like the
eyes of a dying wino. I stepped on the gas.
L.A. International is a sprawling complex ofsheetmetal and aluminum. The eleventh most
unsafe airport in the world.
I pulled up to the Japan Air Lines counter. I
was booked on JAU’s midnight flight to Lon-
don and from there on a 17-hour British run to
the end of the dark continent.
I had two bags. I checked one and carried
the other confidently past the security guards
to the X-ray machine. No trouble. I boarded
the plane and took my seat
I opened the suitcase and was greeted by
the strange smiles of a gross of Tally-Ho
number 9’s from the U.S. Playing Card Com-
pany in Cincinnati. Private stock. A little
thicker than usual. Precision cut edges. The
real work.
I checked the lining of the suitcase I had
specially designed to withstand the changing
pressure on airplanes which so frequently
causes cards to warp or bristle with a horrible
cracking sound that drives me crazy. No
problem now. | snapped the suitcase shut and
placed it carefully under my seat.
I ordered a martini, very dry, from the
kimono-clad cutie working first class. If she’d
had tits, I'd have married her.
I looked around the lounge of the 747 and
my eyes met those of a striking, stern-faced
Oriental. We nodded to each other in silent
recognition. Haruo Shimada, head of a notori-
ous Yakuza clan, had been my employer for
one of the most amazing exploits of my life
some seven years earlier. For a moment my
mind reeled with a pastiche of ceremonial
swords, whirring cards, severed fingers,
horned helmets, and pidgin English, but as
my lips touched the chilled martini glass
I eased into somnolence and before long
107108 nodded into a well-needed and thought-free
sleep.
When I awoke to the cow-like bleating of
the loudspeaker, Shimada was gone, and the
tail feather of a snow white dove was in his
chair. I shuddered with pleasure and remorse
at the secret Yakuza sign.
The plane was on descent and in a few
minutes we landed in London’s Heathrow
Airport.
As I walked past a caravan of luggage filled
pushcarts on my way to the British Airways
counter, I heard footfalls which seemed to
parody my own. Automatically I moved my
right hand to my inside jacket pocket and
eased a card into the Jay grip without breaking
my stride. Boldly, quickly, impulsively, I
wheeled around on one knee and fired the
card at a blurred figure ten feet away. Midway
between us the card hit another card coming
from the opposite direction and both fluttered
to the floor,
I looked up into the smiling face of Cy
Endfield who ran forward and embraced me
warmly.
“Just checking, Ricky,” he grinned with the
slightly warped glee of a mad scientist, and I
found myself laughing heartily. “I still can’t
tell which of us fired first.”
Endfield was the only other man in the
world capable of such a stunt. Though Ameri-
can, he had lived in London for years. It had
been almost a decade since our last meeting
but he appeared unchanged. He could pass
for a man of forty-five though he must have
been sixty years old.
After a recent success with the invention of
an interlocking chess set, Endfield had de-
voted himself to some secret electronics andcomputer stuff but his life was crammed full of
unusual professions and incredible ideas that
spanned a half century.
Thad asked him to meet me for two reasons.
Some years ago he had directed a wonderful
film on the Zulus and was an expert in African
military movements and weaponry. Secondly,
as a pioneer card hurler he developed a theory
that cards could be thrown with such velocity
that at the correct number of revolutions per
second they would emit a high-pitched hum-
ming noise that could kill a bird merely by
passing in front of it.
For years Endfield and I had corresponded
on this and other topics and I was anxious to
share his most recent discoveries. We spent
the two hour layover period in animated con-
versation interrupted only by peals of laugh-
ter. Finally, as I strode down the walkway to
the African bound jet, the wind snaked across
the tarmac and tugged at my trousers like an
insistent dwarf hooker. I turned to say good-
bye and thought I detected a tear on Endfield’s
cheek. I wondered if I’d ever see him again.
I ordered a martini, very dry, from the
short-skirted cutie working first class. If her
legs were longer I'd have married her.
I looked around the lounge of the 747; I
recognized no one. For a brief moment my
mind reeled with a phantasmagoria of para-
noiac fears of the unknown but as my lips
touched the chilled martini glass I eased into
somnolence and before long nodded into a
well-needed and thought-free sleep.
I was awakened by the cow-like bleating of
the loudspeaker and dismayed to find we had
gone only as far as the Canary Islands. We
were herded from the plane like a bovine
conclave in search of nourishment. I might
109110 have swooned with delight watching bikini-
clad maidens on sparkling sandy beaches in
the hot sun, but at 4:00 AM the airport
employees, embittered by years of insignifi-
cant public service, did little to lift me from my
somnambulistic stupor.
I was relieved to return to the plane. Sink-
ing into my seat, I stared out the port and
seemed to see in the plexiglass-shielded dark-
ness the atavistic images of Mailikazi and
ShakaZulu conjured up by Endfield only a few
hours before.
Little did those mighty warriors dream as
they traversed the Transvaal, following the
spoor of kudu and springbok, that soon their
bones would lie beneath the windswept tar-
mac of Jan Smuts Airport, serving Johannes-
burg, the largest city in the southern hemi-
sphere.
The airport was a twisted maze of queues
and officials. I filled out my white and green
sheets and got my passport and yellow health
book ready and felt like a spiny lobster march-
ing to the sea as I inched my way forward to
the immigration and customs officers.
I thought of the unsettling television image
of animated stick figures calling me “Alien” in
squeaky voices, urging me to register at the
post office every January or suffer a fate worse
than death.
I had done my best to look like a tourist by
wearing bermuda shorts and knee socks, and
a thirty-five millimeter camera hung from my
neck with the great moral weight of a sorority
girl’s lavaliere.
It worked. I was stopped only for an in-
stant.
“Are you carrying any books or periodi-
cals?” I was asked by a rosy-cheeked boy oftwenty-five, all too proud of his sparkling
clean white uniform.
“Not my style, chief.” I saluted and walked
on with not so much as a cursory glance to
halt my progress.
I took a taxi to downtown Jo-Burg. The
climate was pleasant, similar to L.A. but
without the smog; the buildings looked down
on me sorrowfully like lugubrious bushveld
farmers trying to explain their presence. If the
neon signs had read Hartford or Prudential
instead of African Life I could have been in
Newark, or Columbus, or any of a hundred
big, boring American cities.
I checked into the totally pretentious Charl-
ton Hotel where I was nearly attacked by a
swarm of brown-uniformed, brown-skinned
bellboys who seemed like a box of chocolate
babies come to life.
“This way, master,” said a middle-aged
Bantu with a slight paunch.
“None of this master stuff with me,” I said.
And he nodded with no show of emotion.
I gave him a couple of rand, worth a bit
more than a buck apiece, and I got to feeling
like I was J.P. Morgan from the look in his eye.
“Put up the ‘Do not disturb’ sign when you
leave, will ya?”
He nodded again and left without a word.
I took off all my clothes, slid a fresh pack of
cards under the pillow, turned on the color
television and began to read my complimen-
tary copy of the Rand Daily Mail. On the TV,
they were talking in Afrikaans and though I
couldn’t understand a word I found their
jabbering relaxing in an odd sort of way. I
thumbed past the front pages full of military
movements and war casualties without paus-
ing for a moment. The newspaper ritual was
111112
Launant
Fe Mang Mane Mesterics
similar to that of the television, the eyes
scanning the pages but making no attempt to
analyze or even register what they saw. I had
long ago given up reading the sordid trash
most people call “news.” I stopped briefly
on the entertainment pages and noted that
Stephan Grappelli—the great jazz violinist—
was in town, along with the Chinese Circus
Revue of Taiwan and a Magic Spectacular at
the Coliseum.
A knock on the door startled me. It’s the
same all over the world. You put a “Do not
disturb” sign on the door and a minute later
they’re pounding on it.
“Who is it?” I growled.
“Special messenger, sir, sorry sir, very im-
portant, very sorry.”
I opened the door a little way and ex-
changed a rand note for the proffered enve-
lope.
The jerk was still saying sorry as I closed the
door.
The envelopes contained my instructions
from Colonel Marki, once again signed with
the name Karmi Noell Co. No fiddle, acrobats
or rabbits for me; I had exactly ninety minutes
to get back to the airport and on a flight to
Victoria Falls.
I hopped in the shower and let the water
bounce off my back like hailstones off a
window pane. I toweled off and got dressed in
a three-piece leisure suit, open collared silk
print shirt, and some high step demi-boots
from Gucci. I had the vest especially tailored
with card holsters in the side vents (an idea I
adapted from the exploits of John Wesley
Hardin). I carefully opened two new packs of
cards, honed the edges to razor sharpness,
and inserted them in the special vest holders.I placed a few cards into each of my remaining
jacket and pants pockets and then one card
each into the two special clips inside the jacket
at the armpits. With only a precise flick of the
shoulder the cards would drop into the coat
sleeves and down the arm into the hand.
I thought of taking the card crossbow which
I could assemble from the sideflaps of my
shoebox, but quickly decided against it. I also
nixed the idea of steel-plated cards for fear of
their clicking in the X-ray machines. It was
just me and the pasteboards, but, | thought, it
had been just me and the pasteboards many
times before.
I took one last lingering look in the mirror;
the three-piece leisure suit was a stroke of
genius.
Two palookas were waiting for me in the
lobby. Marki’s boys, I thought, but I wasn’t
taking any chances. I drew a pack from my
holster and tapped them on the table as if they
were cigarettes. The two hoods approached.
“I'm Krull,” said the shorter of the two, a
little guy with pinched delicate features and a
small pointed head. “He's Gerrada.”
Gerrada looked like a cross between Ramon
Novarro and Chester Morris. He was tall and
reasonably built but not imposing in stature.
He had a large nose and patent leather hair
slicked back with some greasy pomade.
“We're from the Karmi Noell Co. and we'll
be taking you to the airport.”
“Thanks, boys,” I said, giving the once-over
to the Pinhead and Foodini team before re-
turning the deck to my pocket. I wondered
idly if I could see the future in the polished
surface of Krull’s skull.
The drive to the airport was uneventful. I
peered out the window like some sap looking
113114 for lions or something but I had better odds of
finding wildlife at the Polo Grounds.
We got on the Air-Rhodesia flight and the
palookas told me Marki would be joining us at
Bulawayo, about halfway between Jo-Burg
and the Falls.
Marki boarded on schedule. He might have
been entered in a Buster Crabbe lookalike
contest—in his safari suit he seemed like an
overgrown tyke in shorty pajamas.
Marki sat down across the aisle from me;
the two palookas were a row behind us. A
couple of mugs and a middle-aged woman got
on, and we were off.
After a brief ascent the seat belt signs
switched off and Krull kicked the back of my
chair on his way to the john. As he returned,
my neck twitched with that same uncomfort-
able feeling which accompanies the early
stages of an hallucinogenic high or ergot
Poisoning. I turned. It was a second too late.
Gerrada had jumped to the front of the
plane wielding a menacing Luger and I felt the
cold hard steel of Krull’s shiv kissing my neck.
“Nobody moves,” shouted Gerrada who
was facing the passengers in front of the cabin
door. “We're making a little trip you didn’t
count on.”
Men grumbled and women shrieked like a
chorus of the Johnny Mann singers at the
Hollywood Bowl. The cabin door opened and
Gerrada smacked the emerging co-pilot with-
out even turning to look at him. These two
clowns were pros all right!
My mind was working overtime but the
blade in my neck cramped my style; I decided
to bide my time.
“Shut up, all of you,” growled Gerrada.
“You,” he shouted at the stewardess near-est the cockpit, “tell the captain of this rig to
head for Uganda and don’t try nothin’ tricky.”
The passengers had calmed down con-
siderably and the plane started to wing on to
its new course.
Krull had risen from behind me and worked
his way into the aisle. Marki glared at him ina
way that sent a shiver down my pant leg; for a
moment I thought Marki was trying to put the
whammy on Krull with those cold Arctic blue
eyes.
“You don’t scare me, Colonel,” Krull said in
a sibilant squeak.
“Why, you perverted little fool, you can’t
get away with this,” Marki cried as he lunged
for the palooka’s throat with his massive
mitts.
Marki had Krull by the scrag as the little guy
tried to penetrate his thick Dutch hide with
the point of the shiv.
“Gerrada, help,” the pinhead gasped even
as his blade cut through Marki’s flesh.
Gerrada aimed the Luger at Marki and
started to squeeze the trigger. In a split second
Imade my move. I twitched my shoulder and
my eagerly awaiting hands received the
prized projectiles of my profession. I fired the
cards simultaneously. The right-hand card
met the plump flesh of Gerrada’s neck with a
muted thwack and a thin almost impercept-
ible line of blood appeared. The left-hand card
hit the wrist but a fraction of a second too late.
The gun blared out its awful din before falling
to the floor only a moment before Gerrada
himself.
The deflected bullet flew past its intended
victim and cracked the window beside the
still-entwined and struggling bodies of Krull
and Marki.
115
Vane ON CaE
Eo
Ww116
As the glass cracked it was as if the entire
world swept into the giant tornado that took
Dorothy from Kansas to Oz. The oxygen
masks dropped out of their overhead holders
like victims at a mass execution. The windows
covered with mist and the hot African sun
faded from view. Coffee cups, serving carts,
pillows, knives, spoons and magazines
bounced around like popcorn on a stove.
Then, in a maze of arms and legs and screams,
Marki and Krull were drawn to the open
window. They struggled together with a unity
so characteristic of the human species in times
of stress. I watched them grope and twist and
grasp for footing like cats on a pane of glass,
but to no avail; with a giant woosh and a
horrible harmonious groan they were sucked
through the window into the giant vacuum
cleaner of the sky.
The pilot crash-dove to eight thousand feet
to get breathable air as the frightened passen-
gers heaved and coughed and cried and
fainted in their seats. The stewardesses were
clinging to the steel handles in the serving
sections for dear life and Gerrada was saved
from the horrible flying fate of his partner only
because his bleeding hulk was jammed into
the passageway between the cockpit and
cabin.
The hurricane was dying down now and
the pilot was announcing a landing in a
clearing a few minutes away. I cupped my
ears with my hands to drown out the fright-
ening cacophony of the human voice in fear;
as I looked from the plane I saw a huge body
of zebras and wildebeest scatter in a kaleido-
scopic whirl as the plane, like an injured red
hornbill, approached the savannah that was
to be its final resting place. As the jet hit theStanley, Livingstone, and the Victoria Falls
ground and thumped along like a giant jug-
gler’s mistake, I lost consciousness,
Victoria Falls. MOS] OA TUNYA. The smoke
that thunders. 38,430 cubic feet of water per
second. Dr. Livingstone I presume. What's the
question? Gertrude Stein. Spencer Tracy. Richard
Burton. Alan Moorehead.118
I dreamt a storm of magnificent proportions
and when I awoke I still heard thunder
though the sky was cloudless and bright. As I
wiped my eyes and turned towards the noise I
saw a strange smokey mist swirl beneath a
magnificent crowning rainbow. I kicked out
the exit door on the wing and crawled
towards what I realized was Victoria Falls,
driven by some impulse kindled in recesses
far beneath my conscious mind. In the dis-
tance I heard the sirens of the rescue vehicles
but I didn’t even stop to turn around. I
plodded along on my strange mission like a
lemming on his way to the cliffs. Sure, I got to
the Falls.
But that is another story.A sad footnote. The death
by suicide of a San
Quentin inmate who blew
himself to a netherworld
with a bomb fashioned
from a pack of cards. For
those who doubt the
seriousness of the subject
or the tone of the tome.
Afterword
ReJiggs the
Actor/Chimpanzee
mented account of cards as weapons with
a story that has been deemed worthy of
entry in the legendary Ripley's Believe It Or Not.
The author has wended his way through
reels of microfilm of 1930’s newspapers
(enough to know the names of the “human
notables” present at the funeral of Jiggs the
famous actor/champanzee) in an attempt to
find the original article. This proved a futile
endeavor. The only other reference to this
remarkable anomaly appeared in the April
1938 issue of a long-defunct magic periodical
called The Jinx
The Jinx was edited by the amazing wunder-
kind of mental magic, Theodore Annemann.
This is his account:
“In San Quentin a supposedly ignorant
prisoner blew himself to bits with a pack of
ordinary playing cards. Cards are made of
cellulose from which a powerful explosive, tri-
nitro-cellulose, is made. The condemned man
scraped only the red spots from the pack,
soaked the pieces thoroughly, and crammed
them into a hollow pipe taken from his cot.
Heated over a small oil lamp the crude bomb
exploded and tore the prisoner to shreds.”
Mr. Annemann’s sagacious advice to the
magic fraternity was, “Brother, don’t drop
that deck!”
I: seems appropriate to end this docu-
A Sad Footnote to a Sad Footnote
Annemann was considered a strange figure in
magic and, by all but a few, he was thought a
genius in the methods of duplicating psychic
or mental phenomena; he was a creativeFamous
Bullet-Catching
thinker but always a reluctant and nervous
performer. It was big news when advertise-
ments for his full evening show appeared in
the New York press. Annemann was to ap-
pear at “The Little Theatre in the Sky” atop
the Chanin Building on New York’s 42nd
Street on January 26th and 27th, 1942.
The feature of the show was to be the
famous Bullet-Catching Trick. A committee
purchased, examined and marked a bullet
which was then loaded into a rifle belonging
to a spectator, a marksman, who had never
met the performer. The marksman hoisted the
tifle to his shoulder and took aim at the mouth
of the performer who stood blindfolded on
the opposite side of the stage with his hands
behind his back. The commands, “Ready—
Aim—Fire!” were given. A shot rang out and
the performer dropped to his knees; there was
a trickle of blood from the corner of his mouth
and then miraculously the marked bullet was
seen to emerge from between his lips.
Over the years twelve magicians had lost
their lives presenting this spectacular effect,
and the magic fraternity spoke of the upcom-122
ing Annemann attempt with strained antici-
pation.
It is easy to speculate that Annemann, too,
felt the strain, not only of this trick and this
show but of the other confused pieces of his
life. He did not do the performance. On
January 12th, a few miles away from the
theatre, he locked himself in his room and
committed suicide.
My grandfather was to be the producer of
the Annemann show.
I mention this in case Kurt Vonnegut is
planning another novel.
A Strange Footnote to a Sad
Footnote
Recently, while reposing in the Las Vegas
home of The Great Tomsoni, Poland's entry
into the world of sophisticated sorcery and the
star of the Folies-Bergére revue at the Tropica-
na Hotel, | happened upon a copy of Irving,
Wallace's The Fan Club.
I read the back cover blurb:
“The Plan: to capture her and teach her
the realities of love.
The Act: a bold kidnaping of the world’s
Number One sex symbol.
The Climax: the American dream of per-
fect love turns into a shattering night-
mare of lust and terror.”
(‘Possibly the best thing he’s done yet”—
New York Times Syndicate)*
“This seems rather severe criticism.My mood was such that I devoured the
book greedily, drooling over the abduction
and subsequent ill-use of the sultry movie
star. I could not help thinking that if the lovely
damsel had only a deck of cards and had read
this book how easily she could have delivered
herself from the hands of her savage captors
by using the “Lethal Four-Card Fist” de-
scribed on page 72.
But such was not the case. The heroine was
incarcerated by the cruel coterie and there
seemed to be no way out. To quote Mr.
Wallace:
“Yes, she was caged, trapped, with as much
chance of escape as a prisoner locked in
solitary confinement inside San Quentin.
“San Quentin? What had made her think of
that one-time high security California peniten-
tiary?”
What? What indeed!
The Great Tomsoni124
Quickly we find out:
“She had total recall, and recall had brought
it back to her.”
We can presume that total recall is a com-
mon enough attribute of sex-symbol movie
stars.
And now, with the ease of Marlin Perkins
sliding from the protection a mother sloth
gives her young to the protection you can
receive from Mutual of Omaha, Wallace se-
gues to the suicide of a San Quentin inmate
with a deck of cards.
And so it is here, in this Irving Wallace
classic, that I find the missing pieces of the
puzzle and the end to my strange tale.
The man’s name is William Kogut. He is a
lumberjack. Sentenced to death for murdering
a woman, he vows that he will never be put to
death by the state.
As his final day draws near he conceives his
devious plan. He scrapes and soaks the red
pips of the cards and stuffs them into the leg
of his cot with a broom handle; the broom
handle is left in the tubing to make it airtight.
He holds the makeshift bomb over the flame
of the oil lamp all night and finally, as morning
arrives and the gas pressure builds up suffi-
ciently, Kogut’s efforts are rewarded with
translation to a more tolerable plane of exis-
tence.
Facts, names, motives—all clearly before
me in cold print; and then, one final gem.
Mr. Wallace mentions—and I applaud his
restraint and subtlety—Mr. Wallace mentions,
in no uncertain terms, that this man who blew
himself to bits with the ultimate pasteboard
pyrotechnic, was Polish.Marlin Perkins
Map of PolandFastest
Gun In
The
WestACKNOWLEDGMENTS
With this book comes a long line of friends
who have offered the author a helping appen-
dage, typewriter or money and who should be
acknowledged publicly no matter how much
this may jeopardize their individual careers.
First, to T.A. Waters, good friend, prolific
author, and eminent psychologician, who
spent so much time and energy on this project
it almost seemed he was living in my house.
There is little doubt I would have been unable
to finish this book without his help. His
penchant for philogistic phraseology has been
a constant inspiration.
To Dennis Plehn and Bruce Ayres for shoot-
ing and organizing the many photographs
and to those splendid souls who arranged for
or appeared as subjects in them: Wendy
Summers, BBC-TV, John Fisher, Michael Par-
kinson and staff, Emmylou Harris, the Getz-
Tichner Organization, John Zehnder, Norris
McWhirter, Carl Sagan, Andrew Solt, Dai
Vernon, Joe Cossari, Don Lawton and the
exciting Los Angeles-based theatre company,
the Groundlings.
To John Dean, my kinky friend, for sugges-
tions which greatly enhanced this volume, to
Mo for the chicken wings, and Ron Popeil for
the intro,
To Charles and Regina Reynolds for their
elan and for introducing me to my publisher
Jack Rennert, who, along with his faithful
colleagues Jane Wagner and Helen Garfinkle
and Darien House staff members Stu Solow
and Valerie Beale, provided me with a most
unusual experience and a wonderful time in
New York.To the staff and members of the Magic
Castle for permitting me to enter their hal-
lowed halls and make use of their excellent
library. To the Library of Congress and special
collections curator Leonard Beck for gracious
help in my research. To Jay Marshall, that
Midwestern master of mirth, mystery and
minutia, for the use of the rare left-handed
magicians’ throwing cards from his collection.
To Milbourne Christopher, well-known magic
historian and the only Caucasian member of
the All-India Magic Society, for information on
Buatier de Kolta; though long since dead,
vitally important to this book. To Martin
Lewis, Finn Jon, and Flip for allowing me to
include previously unpublished original mate-
rial.
To Stuart Gordon for barristering, bantering
and bargaining on my behalf.
To Deborah Baron for unsolicited testimony
beyond the call of guilt or friendship.
To Karen Hitzig for advice in heavy times,
to Candace Lake for her candor and kudu.
To Chuck Fayne—if you need anything, call
him. I did, frequently.
To Lindley R. Armitage, a fascinating gen-
tleman, for his important advice on body
dynamics.
To Charles Miller, Dai Vernon, Pete Biro, Pat
Page, Bruce Cervon, Michael Perovich, Cy
Endfield, Haruo Shimada, Bill Liles, Scott
York, John Thompson and Derek Dingle, for
being sounding boards, suggesters, and too
good to be called magicians.
To Steve Freeman, mon frére Isola for his
elegant touch.
To Professor Dr. Well, for yet another possi-
ility
To Valerie Farnum, Tracy Newman, Alex
129130 Lange, Spencer Troy and McCabes Guitar
Shop for less specific but no less important
help.
To Itto Ogami for the seagull wave slash
technique.
Special thanks to Gary Cooley for his abso-
lutely wonderful cover art. Border art is by
Michael Gregory. Production was under the
capable supervision of Andrew Merson, Gary
Feller and Dave Miller.
Unless otherwise credited, all photographs
were meticulously taken by Dennis Plehn.
Playing cards were photographed by Robert
Koch. Photos taken at BBC-TV Center in
London, reproduced on pages 15-16 are by
Dave Edwards and used by kind permission
of BBC. The article on page 56 is reproduced
from The New York Times and is copyright 1973
by The New York Times Company. The Card
Boomerang featured on page 85 is manufac-
tured by the Wham-O Mfg. Co., San Gabriel,
California. The Crazy Horse Saloon in Malibu,
California and the Israel Levin Center in
Venice, California provided hospitality to the
author. To all these people and companies, my
sincere thanks.
And, finally, but 1 hope not, to Bozo.
—Ricky Jay
Venice, California
March 1977