The present study supports previous findings among high-school football players in exactly the same area in the prior decade (1946-1956): dementia, parkinsonism and ALS incidences were similar in the soccer versus the control group.10 Notice, however, that high school football from the period between 1956 and 1970 was probably more similar to the current era, including body weight, athletic operation and equipment. Symptom management may be achieved through NSAID's and physiological agents such as icehockey, iontoresis, or phonophoresis. The rationale for the investigation was based on a growing literature indicating that repeated mind trauma/concussions can cause subsequent irreversible neurological ailments.14,15 Early concerns were increased in the context of "dementia pugilistica"16 (or parkinsonism) as an outcome of boxing. With historical links to nationalist impulses and intricate connections into the existing political milieu, football provides a window through which the post-conflict procedures of a neighborhood could be observed. The latter groups radicalized each other through those processes.