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Terry McCann |
Terry McCann had always
been trim, fit and upbeat. A former not-for-profit
executive associate who grew up
in Chicago, Illinois, Terry is renown for his wrestling success, his philantrophy, his voluntarism and his drive to be the best, and help
others around him be their best. His wrestling career began in 1952 when
he won the Illinois High School State Wrestling Championships. After
receiving recognition for his tremendous accomplishments, Terry went to
the University of Iowa to continue wrestling. He maintained his
winning-ways and record, becoming a three-time All-American and a two time
NCAA Champion in 1955 and 1956.
While working and living in
Tulsa,
Oklahoma
in the late 1950s, Terry trained for the 1960 Rome Olympics. He had many
sponsors who at the time were hell-bent to make sure the Americans beat
the Russians. He got up before dawn and ran five miles. He then worked
8-10 hours a day. At night, he wrestled. His wife, Lucille -- happily --
took care of the 5 kids at home (with two more on the way!). Lucille all
but ordered her husband to pursue his dreams. They were married their
freshman year at Iowa and had their first child one year later. Terry
wanted to quit wrestling and go to work to support his family but Lucille
insisted that he continue to pursue his Olympics dreams. He actually made
the 1956 Olympic Team but did not go because he was in school and wanted
to complete his education.
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Terry McCann taking down his opponent, 1950s |
He
won three consecutive AAU National Championships and posted the only
undefeated international record of his time, as the only man to go
undefeated against the Russians. The road to
Rome was rocky for Terry due to a knee cartilage injury a
month before competition. However, his stellar record made the USOC
committee more lenient, and he was allowed to tryout later, but had to
defeat several men consecutively to earn a spot, which he did with ease.
That was only the beginning of an amazing journey. The first day of
competition in
Rome was postponed by rain, and unbeknownst to Terry,
rescheduled for the same evening. Let back at the village sleeping, Terry
woke up just in time to race to his event where he had no time to warm up
or prepare. He fought bravely, but the judge decided against him. Now,
he was faced with a much rockier road to the gold medal.
He next match
was against a very skilled Russian named Chechov. Fighting through the
injury as well as an illness a week before competition, Terry amazingly
managed to win this match and other crucial matches, pinning his opponents
in shockingly short times. After his second match pin in 18 seconds, he
couldn’t be stopped, and received a1960 Olympic Gold Medal for Wrestling.
Returning from
Rome with Olympic gold, Terry remained involved in the wrestling
community. In the 1970s, he coached several
All
State
wrestlers, 42 Freestyle National Champions, and five Greco Roman National
Champions, none of them for any money. Terry says that his payment for
coaching was seeing each young man win his own championship. After
achieving great coaching success, Terry co-founded the United States
Wrestling Federation which later became USA Wrestling, the governing body
of wrestling across the world.
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Terry McCann. Olympic Gold - Rome, 1960 |
Terry is a member of the U.S. Wrestling Hall of Fame, the International
Wrestling Hall of Fame, the Amateur Wrestling Hall of Fame, and the United
States Olympics Hall of Fame.
Click here to go to
his wrestling webpage.
In
the mid 1970s, Terry moved his family to
Southern California.
He was not in California very long before he took up surfing. Using the
same traits that made him an Olympic Gold Medalist, Terry acquired the
skills to become a great surfer. His newly found passion led him to join
Surfrider Foundation, an environmental organization focused on keeping
beaches clean. In 1993, Terry ran for a position on the Board of Directors
and was elected President of the foundation. Terry made tremendous,
positive changes to an ailing foundation and increased surfer awareness to
all time highs. Terry still surfs today as a member of the San Clemente,
California Chapter of the Surfrider Foundation. Terry was also the CFO
of Lions International, the largest service organization in the world
and served as the Executive Director of Toastmasters for 30 years.
It
was on Father’s Day in April 2004, that Terry has his first of several
terrible bouts of pain in his chest. He could hardly walk because the
pain was so bad. First, doctors tested him for heart attacks and
aneurysms, but found nothing. They sent him home with pain medication and
after a couple days it went away. He would be in and out of the emergency
room every two to three months from then on.
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Terry McCann |
In June of 2004, Terry began to feel the same
discomfort in his chest. Several x-rays were taken at the Mission
Hospital in Mission Viejo, California. The films revealed a pleural
effusion. Terry underwent two thoracentesis and each time the cells
were benign. He continued to suffer chest pains and underwent a CT
scan in October and December of 2004. Each time the scans were
examined by cardiologists who were unable to pinpoint the cause of his
pain. In December, a CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis was also
negative.
In
March of 2005, Terry underwent a third thoracentesis. Again the
pathology of the fluid was negative for any malignant process. His
doctors suggested a exploratory surgery to determine the cause of the
recurrent pleural effusions.
On
April 5, 2005, Terry underwent a bronchoscopy, right thoracotomy, and
pleural biopsy, as well as right talc pleurodesis. Postoperatively,
Terry developed a bronchoalveolar fistula and significant subcutaneous
emphysema. He returned to the operation room on April 7, 2005 and
underwent a thoracotomy with complete talc pleurodesis of the right lung.
On
May 3, 2005, Terry met with Dr. Stuart Nagasawa, a doctor at the
Hematology and Medical Oncology department of South Orange County
Hematology Oncology Associates. Dr. Nagasawa recommended a PET scan with
a CT image fusion. In the meantime, pathologists at the City of Hope
Medical Center in Duarte, California performed immunohistochemical stains
on the removed tissue. The diagnosis was malignant mesothelioma.
On
June 17, Terry began chemotherapy treatments using Alimta and
Cisplatin.
On July 20, Terry met with Dr. Robert
Cameron at the UCLA Medical Center. After reviewing his records, Dr.
Cameron advised that a
bronchoscopy and
mediastinoscopy should be performed to access the involvement and status
of his lymph nodes prior to considering any surgical therapy. If
Terry was eligible, Dr.
Cameron would perform a pleurectomy and decortication.
Terry decided to keep on taking the chemotherapy.
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Roger Worthington,
Terry and Lucille with his 1960 Gold Medal. February, 2006 |
The diagnosis caught
Terry by surprise. He tried to deny the shortness of pain and breath at
first. He bought a family fitness center for his house, and even with the
pain of mesothelioma, he managed to squeeze out 60 minutes working out on
the exercise bike and rowing machine. Terry believed that the
exercise might help him extend his life more than the chemotherapy.
The pain he faced on a daily basis is indescribable. Terry says that
“it’s a living hell,” but he wouldn’t be able to get through it if it
weren’t for his wife, who he thinks is “a regular Mother Teresa.”
Through his bouts of
fever, joint aches, and nausea, Terry valiantly struggles on as he has
done throughout his life. He has literally hundreds of friends who
love and revere him for his sincerity, good works and citizenship. They
continue to support him through his illness because they know he is a
living legend.
Terry knows that his
condition is terminal, and every breath he takes is one breath closer to
his last. However, his faith in God and love of family sustain him. He
tries to keep his spirits up. Terry says that his hero is his son, a
Lieutenant Commander in the Navy stationed in Behran, which in Terry’s
words is “not bad for a blond-headed surf dude from Dana Point.” Terry is
proud of his family, proud of his success, and determined to fight a
disease that is a clear result of corporate irresponsibility.
Terry was a guest speaker
several times at the University of Southern California and taught for 12
years at Santa Ana college, where he would lecture on the social
responsibility in business and ethics of business. When Terry was CEO,
the employee and consumer came first, not profit. He was shocked to find
out that executives of some businesses would knowingly sell products
proven to cause asbestosis and mesothelioma. In Terry’s opinion, “it is
undeniable” that a product manufacturer has a duty to warn consumers about
knowable health hazards from the foreseeable use of their products. Like
many mesothelioma patients, Terry has trouble understanding why our
government has not prosecuted the CEOs of the asbestos companies for
homicide. "They knew it would kill, but they sold it anyway, and made
money. There's a word for that. Eventually, the bad guys will be tried by
the highest court, and they will pay."
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Lucille,
Terry and Roger Worthington. February, 2006 |
Terry and former
boxer, David "Punch" Worthington
discuss
the need for research at Terry's home on January 29, 2006 |
More about Terry
McCann
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Medical and
Civil Justice Communities Mourn the Loss of Mesothelioma
Advocate, Terry McCann (6/8/06)
Terry
McCann 1934-2006
Several press releases and notifications of Terry McCann. (6/8/06)
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Olympic Wrestler Succumbs to Rare Cancer
- At The End, It Was Still About Surfing
- UI Wrestling's First Olympian Dies at 72
- "They don't make them like that anymore"
- "Terry was the greatest coach I ever met."
Big Brother Struggles with Cancer,
from Fran McCann. (3/7/06)
Gold Medalist Republican
CEO Condemns Fellow Asbestos CEOs who
Poisoned Him, Los Angeles Times,
February 20, 2006
Golden State
Column: The Legacy of Asbestos (2/2/06)
Olympic Gold Medalist
Against the Asbestos Bail Out
Click here to
see the video featuring mesothelioma patient Terry McCann of Dana Point,
California.
As a Member of the Board of Directors for the
Pacific Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (www.phlbi.org), Terry McCann asks
for Donations to Help in Mesothelioma Research. (1/16/06)
Terry
McCann: On the Record, Under Oath, Educating the Asbestos
Company Lawyers about The Mission to Cure Mesothelioma
(7/20/05) |
***
ORIGINALLY POSTED
NOVEMBER 15, 2005 ***
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