This web page has a couple of videos of a catapult launched glider with a restrictive 39 foot ceiling.
http://hosted.schnable.net/amaglider/assets/indoor-gliders/unlimited-catapult-gliders/unlimited-catapult-glider-flight-videos.html
Another AMA indoor glider web page, with a pair of pictures of a hand (discus style) launched model. Here the model reached height of 100 to 115 feet, and longest flight time was 1 minute 42 seconds, a record.
http://hosted.schnable.net/amaglider/assets/indoor-gliders/handlaunch-gliders/new_fai-f1n-world-record-for-indoor-handlaunch-gliders.html
Be careful with this. A lot of Bernoulli based articles on lift are misleading.
The short version for lift explanation is that an aircraft uses an effective angle of attack and forward speed that diverts air downwards and a bit fowards. Newton's 3rd law: the aircraft exerts a downwards and somewhat forwards force onto the air and the air exerts an upwards (lift) and somewhat backwards (drag) force onto the aircraft. Newtons 2nd law: force equal mass time acceleration (how the air is affected). Bernoulli: the total energy of a volume of air is the sum of temperature (usually ignored), pressure, and kinetic energies. How a solid interacts with the air: air is accelerated via pressure differentials near a solid and by mechanical interaction with the solid (or with the thin surrounding boundary layer), such as collisions, vortice generation, friction, ...
The imporant aspect of Bernoulli is that by reducing pressure while accelerating the air, the increase in kinetic energy is offset by the reduction in pressure, reducing the total amount of energy added to the air, which reduces the work done by a wing. The other obvious way to reduce work done by a wing is to reduce the increase in kinetic energy. Accelerate twice as much air at 1/2 the rate of acceleration, and you get the same lift, but only generate 1/2 the kinetic energy. This is why high end gliders have 80 foot or longer wingspans and manage 60 to 1 glide ratios. For smaller model gliders, an issue due to vicous versus inertia forces is called Reynolds number, and the smaller model gliders need a longer wing chord.
Note that a wing always peforms some amount of work on the air, and any change in the total energy of the air requires a non-Bernoulli like mechanical interaction, an increase in pressure without a corresponding decrease in speed^2 and/or vice versa.