THE MICHIGAN DAILY Paret Near Death After Defeat' "0 W NEW YORK (P)-State investi- gators last night rushed a report to Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller on Saturday's championship prize fight that left welterweight Benny (Kid) Paret near death. Doctors said all has been done that can be done for the Cuban-born boxer for the time being. The New York State Athletic Commission, which polices profes- sional boxing in the state, called witnesses, viewed films of the fight, then turned in a report for transmission to Rockefeller in Al- bany. The governor's office indicated there would be no comment on the findings last night. Rockefeller earlier said the violent beating of Paret in full view of millions on television left him "deeply con- cerned and disturbed." Grudge Fight The 25-year-old Paret, who lost his world welterweight title to Emile Griffith in a grudge fight at Madison Square Garden, has been in a deep coma since he was carried from the ring on a stretch- er. It was Paret's second knock- out in as many fights in less than four months. Paret underwent an operation Sunday to remove pressure from his brain. This was followed yes- terday by a tracheotomy-an in- cision into the windpipe-to :assist his breathing. "No further operation at this time is contemplated," said a medical bulletin from Dr. John S. Crisp, a chief surgical resident at Roosevelt Hospital. No Champion Deaths No champion ever has been fatally injured in an American prize ring. There was speculation that a prior fight with middleweight champion Gene Fullmer last Dec. 9 had weakened Paret and made him an easy target for Griffith's battering ram attack in the 12th round of Saturday's fight. Referee Ruby Goldstein finally stopped the fight and awarded Griffith the title on a technical knockout. .Not Enough Rest? Said Gus Lesnevich, former ]ight heavyweight champion and now 4 referee, who watched the fight Saturday from ringside: "Personally, I don't think Paret had enough rest since the Fullmer fight. He looked very sluggish dur- ing the entire fight." From his home in West Jordan, Utah, Fullmer agreed. He declared, "I never hit a guy so many times before he went out . . . it was not a fight to be followed by another tough one right off. He got a bad ' beating in the fight with me." 1 Goldstein's timing in bringing the fight to a close as Griffith hammered punches into Paret, while the champion staggered on the ropes, also drew attention. Goldstein, one of the best known Exhibition Baseball New York (A) 6, Detroit 5 Houston 7, Los Angeles (A) 0 Baltimore 18, New York (N) 8 Cleveland 3, Chicago (N) 0 Los Angeles (N) 7, Milwaukee 3 Pittsburgh 10, Chicago (A) 9 St. Louis 7, Cincinnati 6 0t " J 1. j QUALITY AT A PRICE From our diamond mines in British Guiana Robert Haack, Importers Ann Arbor NO 3-0653 referees in the nation, said he stopped the fight as soon as he realized Paret was "not rolling away from the punches and was in danger." Goldstein Defended Lesnevich and another ringsider, former heavyweight champ Jersey Joe Walcott, both defended Gold- stein. They said it is customary in a title fight for a referee to limit his interference of the men in the ring. "If Ruby had stopped it sooner," Lesnevich said, "and Paret were all right, he would have been criticized for stopping it too soon. Paret's managers say they were yelling at Ruby to stop it, but I was sitting near them and, if they were yelling anything, I didn't hear it." However, Johnny Sullo, 49, one of Paret's seconds, said the first blow by Griffith that caught Paret on the ropes knocked him sense- less. Added Sullo: "When we saw that he was help- less, we yelled to Goldstein to separate them. We yelled, 'Get in there and stop it Rube. Get be- tween them.'" DENHART, RELAY TEAM WIN: Raimey Takes Second In First Try at Hurdles ,n . By DAVE GOOD Dave Raimey had better watch out or he's going to have to take up track seriously. The junior football halfback, who amazed everybody earlier in the season with his feats as a broadjumper, tried his hand .at hurdling last Saturday for the first time since high school and nearly won. Raimey placed second to West- ern Michigan's Gay Barham in the 60-yd. low hurdles at the Western Michigan Open in Kal- amazoo, but even more impres- sively, his time of :07.0 was just .1 of f the varsity record. "He looked lousy on the first hurdle, a little better on the sec- ond one and great from then on," commented Coach Don Canhamr. "He was terrific, that guy." Almost Wins Raimey nearly caught Barham, who finished in :06.9. Canham, who explained that he was "just goofing around," didn't enter Raimey in the broad jump because "his ankle was bothering him." In fact Canham sent Ergas Leps, Dorr Casto and freshman Dan Hughes to run in Hamilton, Ont., so as a result, the Wolverines took only two first at Kalamazoo while Western Michigan walked away with seven. In Hamilton, Leps' second place in the mile run was the only time the Wolverines hit the scoreboard. Hurdler Bennie McRae decided to stay in Ann Arbor. Rod Denhart, the Big Ten chain- pion, led a Wolverine slam at Kalamazoo in the pole vault, clear- ing 14'4". Junior Steve Overton was right behind at 14'0", and sophomore George Wade managed 13'6" for third. Two-Mile Team Wins The Wolverines entered three relay teams but won only the two-mile, as Ted Kelly, Dave Hayes, Jay Sampson and Charlie Aquino timed 7:48.2. Sampson's 1:55.3 half-mile was the fastest split. Then the one-mile unit of Car- ter Reese, Aquino, Talt Malone and Mac Hunter timed a good 3:20.9 but still finished only third despite Hunter's strong anchor leg of :48.9. Aquino, a half-miler all last year, ran his second consecutive sub-:51 quarter-mile, pleasant sur- prise to Canham, who has been juggling his relay team .round all year. "I'm going to run him on the relay from now on," Canham added. Second in Sprint Medley The sprint medley relay team of John Davis, Bill Hornbeck, Reese and Dave Romain picked up a second for the Wolverines in that event, while Joe Mason and Char- lie Peltz, normally both hurdlers, tied for third in the' 300-yd. dash in :33.3. In the other field events, Roger Schmitt hit 52'1" for a third in the shot put, and Steve Williams leaped 6'4" to tie for third in the high jump. But at Hamilton, meanwhile,, Leps was getting beaten in the open mile run. Jim Irons of the Toronto Olympic Club held off the Michigan captain in 4:10.0, just .2 ahead of Leps. "He just didn't quite catch the guy," Assistant Coach Elmer Swanson remarked. "That's what happens on board tracks some- times." Casto and Hughes went one-two in their heat of the 600-yd. run, but their times of 1:14.8 and 1:16.9, respectively, didn't earn them a place. TO PARTICIPATE IN AERODYNAMICS AND SPACE-ORIENTED FLIGHT RESEARCH, AND INSTRUMENTATION DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS SUch As X-15, APOLLO, SUPERSONIC TRANSPORTS and DYNA SOAR FRC Representative will be ON CAMPUS for interviews- MARCH 29 & 30 7he WE"he s Ciqcl By MIKE BURNS Legalized Mayhem FOR TWELVE BRUTAL ROUNDS, welterweight king Benny (Kid) Paret took the hammer-like blows of challenger Emile Griffith. His head puffed up like a month-old melon but his game legs kept him standing until referee Ruby Goldstein had to award a TKO to Griffith as Paret sank to the canvas unconscious and oblivious to the ring announcer's words which meant that he had lost the fight. But Benny Paret's biggest fight had only begun-he was now fighting for his life. He was rushed from Madison Square Garden to the hospital, where emergency brain surgery was performed and where he was declared in critical condition. At this point, it looks like Paret may live . . . in a coma for one year. Emile Griffith did exactly what Paret would have done to him; he beat his opponent to a bloody pulp, trying to knock him unconscious. That's the purpose of boxing, just as scoring runs is the purpose of baseball. That professional boxing is called a sport is a travesty, a blemish on the word "sport." It is one of the few vestiges of primitive contest remaining in our civilized worla. THERE ARE THOSE who will defend the sport for various reasons. Some maintain that boxing is a skill, that the movements, the footwork, the reflexes make prize fighting more demanding of an individual than many other sports. The colorful fights of Sugar Ray Robinson, Willie Pep and countless others perhaps substantiate this contention. Yet the intention of aly prize fighter, whether scientific strategist or clumsy slugger remains the same: to knock his opponent senseless or to main him so that a technical knockout can be award- ed. Another objection is that it is probably the only way. men like Paret (a $2-per-day Cuban sugar plantation worker who received one year of formal schooling) could make a decent living for their families. Even Paret's wife said that pro boxing should not be barred. "There are a number of men who depend on it for a living. They have kids to support. I don't think it should be forbidden them. If my husband had not been hurt, he would have continued to fight. He knows no other business, and that's true of many of the fight- ers," she said. It is probably true that the riches which Pare njoyed durn; his brief reign as champ could never have been attained by a life- time of toil in the Cuban sugar fields. Perhaps he would have died before this due to disease or other more or less natural causes. But this does not excuse the fact that society has legally condoned the manner in which he was beaten senseless. This legalized mayhem in the ring would be called assault with intent to do great bodily harm in the law courts. SOCIETY HAS MADE IT LEGAL for two men to attempt to maim each other, to beat each other senseless in order to win a sporting contest. To me this does not seem sporting at all. The ultimate social good must be considered. Can society bear with a clear conscience the :responsibility for Paret and the hundreds of other fighters who have died of ring Injuries or who go through life with half of their mental faculties inoperative or impaired? I don't feel that it can. If a junkie wants dope despite te ill effects which it brings, should dope peddling be legalized? Society has said no, realizing the social responsibility which it must bear for the ill effects. So it should be with boxing. A good deal of criticism has been leveled at referee Ruby Goldstein for not stopping the fight earlier. In his judgment, Paret did not seem in poor enough condition to stop the right. I have no quarrel with Goldstein's judgment. He is one of the most experienced and respected referees in boxing. This only goes to show that if a referee of Goldstein's stature could not tell earlier that Paret was seriously injured, then the physi- cal damage which boxing inflicts upon contestants cannot be pre- vented in the ring. It must be stopped outside of the ring. In short, the safe way is to stop prize, fighting. BOXING HAS COME A LONG WAY since the ancient times. The days when horse shoes were placed in boxing gloves have passed., The Marquis of Queensbury revised the rules and "civilized" the sport. Modifications have been made through the years to cut down on physical injuries but they still plague boxing. College boxing, with its head gear and stricter rules, has cut down on serious injuries. Perhaps more equipment and bigger gloves is the answer. Fencing competition continues today, but the winner does not make shish kabob of his opponent in order to win. Perhaps boxing could follow this line, if it wishes to survive in modern society. The primary objective of the fighter has remained unchanged from its origins: to physically hurt his opponent. This I think is the basic fault with pro boxing today. It is the reason why Virgil Akins, yester- day a ranking title contender, now sits blind as a result of ring com- petition. It is the reason Benny Paret hovers nearer death than life. It is the reason that professional boxing, like cock fighting and glad- latorial combat, should be a contest of the brutal past. s " *000 EIectrolux " ChO arsh pl: * 0 Awar " " ..plus excellent summertim earning opportunities for MICHIGAN MEN eHere is a threefold opportunityto mnake ,this sum- .mer vacation the most profitable and valuable you have ever spent: 1.Qualify for the $1,000 Electrolux Regional Schol- arship Award offered by the Electrolux Corpora- . tion to help you meet tuition expenses during the .coming academic year. : 2. 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