| Martial Arts   The martial arts consist of
              a series of hand-to-hand unarmed combat tactics.  The most
              popular are karate, judo, jujitsu, and kung fu.  Many experts
              believe kung fu does not belong in the category of unarmed
              self-defense because it can become a killer art in its most
              violent form.   Chinese jujitsu and its
              offshoot, judo, are thousands of years old.  They began in
              China and Japan.  During the Middle Ages in Japan, common
              people were not allowed to carry weapons.  They devised a
              self-defense technique that involved a series of holds, trips,
              strangles, and falls.  By the 1700's, judo and jujitsu were
              no longer required for self-defense, but these sports survived
              stressing grace, physical discipline, and spiritual concentration. 
                 Jigaro Kano, a Japanese man,
              founded the first judo school in 1882.  He introduced the
              system of "belts," with a white belt for a novice and a
              black belt for an expert.  This system has been extended to
              karate as well.  Judo came to America in 1902.   Karate was introduced in an
              Okinawa school in 1905.  By the year 1922, it had spread to
              Japan, and eventually was practiced worldwide.  Today, the
              World Union of Karatedo (Karate) Organization sets the rules
              governing the use of striking, punching, and kicking on various
              parts of the body.  Matches last from two to three minutes
              and points are scored for blows to the neck, face, kidneys, and
              midsection of an opponent.  The blows are not actually
              landed: if they were, they could disable or even kill. |