y Da • u Recently Frontline, publi ffairs progr m n the public te evi ion tations ired a pro­ gram titled Boxing: Down For The Count. mon th b xing tr edies depicted were Johnny Owen, chamption hip fighter killed in the ring in 1980, and the more than thirty fighter killed i the ring ince 1980. They showed Stew rd Darden p raJyzed and no in a heel­ chair. They showed the great uhamm d Ali, contr sting his lurred peech now with cle r f t, itty line of a decade ago. He . p thetic figure, bloated f ce, roping for each rd rationalizing hi condit­ ion ith the alibi that hi chil­ dren h v million put a ay for th m and their future. It noted that there h ve been hearings in Congre about oxing for virtually every on ithout ignificant r ult. Sena­ tor E t efauver probed boxing in the 50s and in 19 5 it's Congre man Pat Williams. hat are the eneral changes that the hearings want to chi ? They ant national or nization that develops na­ tional rul and regulatio that will go m aliSO tate; that ill provide reliabl information bout box rs, ean hiJ , th re are many outright opponents to the 0- called port of boxin. The rican, Can dian, and World dical ociation want it b nned entirely. Howard Co 11, the noted bo ing commentator, recently made the deci ion to divorce him If entirely from ny involvem nt with b ing. In ddition h went t the U.S. Conare to argue against the port. Sweden and orway have Ire dy banned boxing. nd C II predicts that Great Britain and Canad will oon follow uit. The and other very creditable enemies of box­ ing claim it is morally wrong and medically rong. edical research indicate that 87% of all fighters uffer measurable brain d mage. Ex­ fighters are recognizably "punch-drunk", disfigured by numerou cut and bruise adorned with pu nose and uliflower ears and handi ap­ ped with IUTTed speech. Unseen damage not only happen to their brain, but to their kidneys and othe internal organ. All of thi for a profes ional career . th t verages only five years. Other social activist cite the fact that boxing, one of all the port, h its purpose to inflict great bodiJy h rm bet een its opponent. Phy­ chologist indicate that it incites agression in its participants, and in tho who view the port in person, in film or on tele­ vi ion. In turn, this motivated agre jon heighten violence in the total community. But it i its phy ical violence that mo t feel reprehensible. In 1982 the then champion Ray ancini fought bitter fight MARCH 13 - 19,1985 THE CITIZEN with South Korean. Doo ou Kim. Kim died a a result of the .ght. A month I ter Kim's mother committ d uicide. Then there" Sugar Ray Seales, for­ mer Olympic ch mpion and pro­ fessional fighter n w permanent­ ly blind. And Hilmer Kenty ex-lightweight hampion and Sugar Ray Leonard, former Olympic 'and profession I welterweight champion who both have suffer detached retinas and have retired from the ring. The hard-core proponent of boxing claim it ke ps ghetto youth off the streets and teaches , them di ipline. And despite the fact that most fighter , end up broke. proponents al say that b xing i a financial ladder of ucce for me. It provide a dream of acclaim and acceptance for som who could not find these in ot r sport or through more normal avenues. Marine Pfc. S. GREGORY DORO , son of. Don ld G. Dorow of Lakecrest Tower, South Haven, MI, has com­ pleted recruit training at Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego. He w introduced to th typic J daily routin that he will expert nee during hi en­ listment and tudi d the per­ sonal nd profe ional t ndard traditionally exhibited by arine . A 1979 raduate of L.C. ohr High Sch l, he joined the Marine Corp in Octob r 1984. e CO The injurie in b xing are often compared to induries in ports, notably footb 11, Help for Schizophrenics Schizophrenia, a most misund rstood brain di ea e that affects nearly one in every 100 Am ricans , is all too frequently hidden in the closet by the patient's family, and ignored even by many doctor . Yet, li e diabetes, multiple sclerosis and cancer, it is a bio­ logical condition that responds to m dication, and its symptoms can be controlled. Unfortunately, folklore surrounds it. Schizophrenia, for instance, is not caused b guilt nor trig ered by acts or failures of the pa­ tient. It is not "split per­ sonality" and is certainly not an idiosyncratic way of thinking, correctible through psychonalysts , hat it surely is, ho - ever, is enormously treat­ able. Dr. E. Fuller Torrey, a world reno ned authori ty in the modern treatment of schizophrenia, has sum­ marized much of current "S----_. � kno ledg and his 0 n broad experience in an il­ luminating and valuable book, Surviving Sc nizo­ pluenia: A Family Manual. This has become virtual­ ly definitive, popular text for families of chiz­ ophrenics , s well as for physicians and other pro­ fessionals who treat those ho suffer from this seri­ ous disease. According to Dr. Torr s . more than 600,000 peopl are in active treatm nt for schizophrenia on any gi ven day in the United states. and ev ry ear, ome 100.000 ne case are diagnosed schizo- _ phrenic. od rn tre tm nt, in­ cluding the use of drug therapy, produce st r­ Uing result . One third of 11 people di nosed and hospitalized ith schizo­ phrenia r cov r complete- ly. Ano her one-third ill b so improv d to r - quire only occa: ion I ho - pitalization, if any. uch depend on p' ti nt atti­ tudes and the nature of both institu ion 1 and po .t-in titutional care. To help tho e in treat­ ment, or n eding it. s ell as th i r families and ph icians, E. R. Squibb Son of Princeton. e J r y has made vail ble 26-pa e booklet of key exc rpts from Surviving sc hizopltrenia.1t is avail­ able on r qu t ithout char e. For a free copy of the ookl t, writ to E. R. Squibb Son, Room B2214, P. O. Bo 4000, Prine ton, w Jersey 085 O. Ju t for the booklet on SUTl)ivi () sc izopluenia. Ea. t Park ;��c 2301 Sups, St. Mu ksgon Hts. T rry L. Williams, Sr. gr. Your Neighborhood Store ......... -Win -Groc ri s th