Stewart racing to find a cure for dementia
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[July 07, 2016]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - At 77-years-old,
Jackie Stewart has a new challenge that he ranks among the biggest
of his life.
The Scot, who raced through one of Formula One's deadliest eras
and won three world championships, and who campaigned for driver
safety when others mocked and blocked, says he has his work cut out
this time.
Stewart is putting 1 million pounds ($1.29 million) into a new
global charity he has set up to accelerate research into finding a
cure for dementia, an illness his wife Helen was diagnosed with two
years ago.
"It’s not the same as motor racing safety. That was a tough enough
task. But this one’s tougher," he told Reuters in an interview.
"It's difficult enough finding money to start a Formula One team
that we did, Paul (his son) and I. This is a much bigger task. And
it’s bigger money in the long run. So I’ve got to work awfully hard
on this.
"Obviously it’s a shock. And it’s a different kind of shock," added
the man whose life has been marked by profound dyslexia and the
deaths of some of his closest friends and rivals on the racetrack.
 "I’ve been through a lot of unhappy times with everybody that I have
close to me, really all of them died – if you think of Jimmy (Clark)
and Jochen (Rindt) and Francois (Cevert), Jo Bonnier. A long list...
and I haven’t had anything like that for an awfully long time."
Stewart, as always, will be at Silverstone for the British Grand
Prix this weekend, and so too will the woman he has been married to
for 54 years.
Once a familiar face on the pitwall, and on the movie screen in
Roman Polanski's 1972 Monaco documentary 'Weekend of a Champion,'
she timed laps to fractions of a second but now forgets to wear a
watch.
"She could take down 26 racing cars on the same track at the same
time on one single stopwatch. As did Betty Hill, Pat Surtees, Bruce
McLaren’s wife, Jochen Rindt’s Nina," said Stewart.
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Former Formula One driver Jackie Stewart and his wife Helen arrive
at the world premiere of Rush at a cinema in Leicester Square,
central London, September 2, 2013. REUTERS/Toby Melville
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"It was Nora Tyrrell and Helen Stewart timing for the whole team,
but at the same time in the race doing a lap chart for 26 cars.
Here’s the sharpness, a laser brain ... and then suddenly not
remembering the most simple thing."
Stewart said his charity, called 'Race against Dementia'
www.raceagainstdementia.com), would aim to find and fund original
thinkers who might come up with solutions in a way motor racing
people would understand.
"I want to find an Adrian Newey in Sri Lanka, China, India, America
or the UK," he said, referring to Formula One's standout designer
whose cars have won titles for three different teams.
"If we can find around the world those sort of people, I have to
believe we are going to find a cure for this or a preventive
medicine for it."
(Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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