Saturday, June 23, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Five Saturday, June 23, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Five g t3 a h r a ft Disabled vets learnto cope By ARNOLD B. SAWISLAK cently:, "My biggest problem is upon the reaction to them of One young man, "grounded" Jim Maye asked a doctor about WASHINGTON (UPI) - Jim people who don't care." those who stayed home. from wheelchair travel, when he it when he was in a military VMayer was an infantryman, a Jim Maye, 30, the president of developed pressure sores from hospital and was given a run- runt. He was 23 when a booby- MAYER'S ATTITUDE is dis- the Paralyzed Veterans of Amer- lying on his back, propelled him- around. He concluded that no rap got him in Vietnam on April tinctly upbeat, but what about the ica, says, "To some people, Viet- self around while lying on his one wanted to discuss sex and 9, 1969. severely disabled Vietnam veter- nam veterans represent every- stomach on a wheeled table. "found out for myself." He recalls: "When I came to, ans in VA hospitals or sitting at thing bad. They see us as drug Amputees have entirely differ- Morgan is determined that this chaplain asked me where I was home? addicts, as men who went arund ent problems than veterans who subject, a prime anxiety of it. I said that I had lost my Just three years ago, the VA killing babies." are paralyzed or otherwise ill. young men who have lost the use ight foot. He asked me to look asked its hospital directors for This is not just Maye's imag- For them, VA has established of their lower bodies, no longer nd I did-and saw that both their observations on Vietnam ination. Louis Harris, in a 1971 a corps of "prosthetics represent- will be sidestepped in VA hos- eet were gone. 'But son,' he veterans coming into their insti- public opinion survey for the atives" - counselors equipped to pitals. confided, 'you can still have a family'." MAYER, A BREEZY, hand- some young man who walks without crutches or cane on two artificial legs, now is president of a relatively new but v e r y active organization called the Na- tional Association of Concerned Veterans. He travels across the country, talking about a better deal for Vietnam vets, especially in schooling and jobs. Mayer has had his share of physical problems, but has im- mersed himself in his work. He told a magazine interviewer re- tutions. The comments were mix- ed, but there were a number in this vein: * Three out of five young vet- erans interviewed-. . . were em- bittered, unsettled, generally dis- trustful and showed inability to find meaning in the future." 0 "The Vietnam War exper- ience, with the conflict of state- ments for and against the war by various social, political and educational leaders, has had an especially brutalizing effect on many of the young, immature Vietnam veterans." FOR DISABLED veterans out- side the hospitals, a lot depends VA, found that "the whole ques- tion of treatment of returning veterans is a serious burden on the conscience of the American public." MAYER NOTES other reac- tions: "Being handicapped, you see people who try to avoid you or to give you a 'buddy-buddy' rou- advise veterans on all their prob- lems, but particularly able to un- derstand the needs of persons who have lost arms or legs. All prosthetics representatives are amputees themselves. FOR PARALYZED patients, there is "team" treatment involv- ing everyone dealing with the pa- tient. "When I came to, a chaplain asked me where I was hit. I said that I had lost my right foot. He asked me to look and I did and I saw that both feet were gone. 'But son,' he confided, 'you can still have a family'." tine. I just want to get across that the disabled aren't differ- ent, they're people." Essie Morgan, VA's chief of socioeconomic rehabilitation for spinal cord injury (SCI) patients, says the men she deals with usually come around to adopt an affirmative attitude abot their situation: "From somewhere, they seem to garner the feeling that they have done something for their country." THE SCI PATIENTS who can - most paraplegics and a few quadriplegics - roll about t h e hallways at Castle Point in hand- driven and powered wheelchairs. New & Important WAR and POLITICS available at .arbrrs. 316 S. State St. One obvious advantage of this is that hospital workers with less medical training than doctors can be given factual information about the SCI patient's problems, and they in torn can pass on to the doctors their own observa- tions about the patients. Essie Morgan is enthusiastic about a two-year-old program to move SCI patients whose medical conditions have stabilized from hospitals to their homes, where they are regularly visited by doc- tors, nurses and therapists. This was started in four cent- ers and could be expanded to eight more if funds are made available. BUDGET CUTS this year make that unlikely. One of the problems of paraly- sis that formerly was treated in whispers is the sexual function. "THIS WAS a never-never land," she said. "It was gener- ally felt to be a taboo subject. But researchers found that hun- dreds of spinal cord-injured men not only could have erections and satisfactory sex, but could sire children." Marriage also is a problem that Mrs. Morgan and her associates try to face, counseling both vet- erans and wives and fiances. She said it was her experience that "good marriages" begun before the veteran was hurt tend to continue after the injury, and that breakups which occur "would have happened anyway." She and her counselors work as closely as possible with pa- tients and their finances w h o are considering marriage. THE VA "SOURCE BOOK" says marriages after the paraly- tic injury "have a better prog- nosis than those made before it. This is because the marriage has been negotiated between t w o people who know exactly what they are contracting to do." Jim Maye, who is married, said his observation is that "short time" marriages entered into before a serviceman left f or combat are the most likely to break up when the vet returns paralyzed. But, he says, statistics s h o w that "the divorce rate is less than normal for-marriages entered in- to after spinal cord injury." Join The Daily CIRCULATION DEPT. Come in any afternoon 420 Maynard HIGH FASHION FOOTWEAR shoes by sans souci, inc. 522 East William (in The Maynard House) Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108 (313) 761-9891 now 30/. off: all Goody two shoes Orange tar Alize 5 s a e - . - The Summer Daily wishes to announce: The last day 'of publication for the Spring Term will be WEDNESDAY, 27 JUNE 1973 We will resume publication for the Summer Term TUESDAY, 10 JULY 1973 (Display and Classified advertising deadlines will be: Noon, Monday, 9 July for the Tuesday issue.) I