Saturday, September 11', 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nineteen . Lewis: Mixing medicine, footba/l (Continued from page 11) thing dirty. When you play clean and you're always alert and you're in good condition, then football is not really a danger- ous game. There are 200-pound bodies flying into each other at full speed, and there are al- _ays freak injuries - I felt iy broken arm was a freak injury - but I'm not trying to hurt the guy across from me and he isn't really trying to hurt me. If I play right and play clean I don't think I'm go- ing to get hurt. But also, football can be a dangerous game. There are a lot of head injuries, a lot of neck injuries that can be per- manently disabling. I think if you take all the Big Ten foot- ball players now and look at them when they're about 45 or them when they're about 45 or 50 you'll find a lot of arthritis and other residuals from the game that people aren't aware of now. Be- cause the artificial turf has made the game faster, the play- ers are bigger and stronger and hitting harder, there's more trauma to all your joints. I think in 20 years we're going to find a lot more permanent residuals than we've had in the past. WHY DO I ABUSE my body like that? I don't know. Every football player wonders, "What the heck am I doing out here?" As I go on in my medical stud- ies, I can see what things are going to hurt me and what things aren't. Some things are unavoidable. The way blocking is taught today, is to block with your head and arms, and you can get a lot of neck injuries. You can get a jammed neck- I've lost an inch and a quarter in height since I've been here just from pounding my head into people. I'm not kidding- it happens to a lot of the line- men and linebackers. But I have to do it in order to play football. I do winder, "What the heck is going on?" (laughing) But I'm young and I'm healthy - I'm blind as far as looking to the future. I say, "Hey, I feel okay now." But I know what I'm going to feel like forty years from now. DAILY: When you were a kid, did you dream of being a football player or a doctor? And how do you view your career options now? LEWIS: Medicine is there, and I have two more years to go. That's my career. Being a foot- ball player was more of a dream, being a doctor seemed more of a reality. It's always been in my mind that I was going to be a physician - it was just inevitable. I knew that school would always be there and that I'll be a doctor some day, as soon as I can. Football has always been kind of a dream, because football is a game of breaks. You can get hurt, or your team can have a lousy year so no one really looks at you. Your success is often in somebody else's hands. You can work real hard and make yourself the best player - that's what I've tried to do - but there's always a chance that some freak thing's going to happen and it's going to be over. SO I'VE ALWAYS dreamed of it - and in America, hero wor- ship is a big thing, and football players are in the limelight. But medicine's been a reality - I've known that's what I've wanted to be for a long time, and I've just assumed I'm going to be a physician. It's part of my life. I'll be a physician in two years, hopefully, but if pro football comes up, or something else, maybe it'll be longer. All that depends on this year. I feel I have a good opportuni- ty to be drafted if I have a good year. I'm going to work really hard this year and hope to have a great year. But- it's not because of pro football that I hope to have a good year-it's because of Michigan football. I'm really looking forward to this year. We have just a super, super team coming up. DAILY: Why did you come to Michigan - was it because of Inteflex? LEWIS: Well, the Inteflex pro- gram was an integral part of my decision. But Michigan, to me, has always been the sym- bol of academic and athletic ex- cellence. There's no other place in the country where you can get both the way you can at Michigan. There are other places where you can get as good academics - Stanford, Harvard, I got re- cruited by all those schools and their academics were very im- pressive. But Michigan's were just as impressive. There were other places that have great athletics - Ohio State, Nebras- ka, Oklahoma, Southern Cal and all those. They're very impres- sive in athletics, but Michigan is just as impressive, if not more. There's no other place where you can get the two combined. You can get a great education and play mediocre football, or you can play the best football, but what do you have to show for it? The edu- cation is what really counts in the end. I'M HAPPIER HERE than I ever thought I could be, and it's not just because we've won thirty games since I've been here, or because I'm going to get a medical degree from Michigan. It's the great tradi- tions at Michigan - Michigan's a great tradition school, wheth- er people on campus want to believe it or not. Another thing is it's one of the top two or three great lib- eral institutions in the country. The education you get outside the classroom is really bene- ficial. You can meet every type of person here. A lot of times athletes can get really wrapped up in themselves and get a big ego - "Here I am, athletic hero, walking across campus." You go other places, the big jock on campus has everybody following him, all the beautiful girls hanging onto his arms. But here, you don't have that, and it kinds brings you back to earth. You can be walking down the street with someone and they ask what you do and you tell them you're a football player and they go, "Oh ... well, I don't get to many of the games." DAILY: What does that do to you? LEWIS: It says, "Hey, a lot of people don't really care that you're a football player. But there are a lot that do. It's kinda neat, I think. It's interest- ing to meet different people like that. You find that there are other things in the world be- sides football. OPEN 24 HOURS OPEN 24 HOURS We Serve Pizza Also Serving a Complete Menu Breakfast, I 94 Hours a nay Lunch&Dinner Fast Carry Out STEAKS on Entire Menu CHOPS 7986 SEAFOOD A Condiotioned SUBMARINE SPAGHETTI RAVIOLI WOLVERINE DEN PIZZERIA 1201 S. University, corner Church, Ann Arbor 'I. ATHLETE'S SHOP adidas and WHITE STAG SPEEDO Your Ann Arbor Connection for adidas 4Footwear (All Styles & Sizes) We. Also* Carry a Full Line of: TENNIS WEAR WHITE STAG & ADIDAS WARM-UPS SPEEDO SWIMWEAR and ATHLETIC ACCESSORIES 4 -4 "A Shoe for Every Athlete's Foot" 309 S.STATE-PHONE 995-1717