Detroit Free Press

ARE BEARS GOOD ENOUGH FOR THE LIONS TO SHOW UP?

ARE BEARS GOOD ENOUGH FOR THE LIONS TO SHOW UP?

* Detroit 20, Chicago 19: The only thing that worries me here is that it's a Monday night game and the opponent isn't Dallas or San Francisco. Are the Bears good enough for the Lions to beat? Pick vs. spread: Chicago.* Minnesota 23, Tampa Bay 21: What happened to all that bold talk from Sam Wyche? Pick vs. spread: Tampa Bay.
WITH THE LIONS, THE PRESENT ALWAYS LOOKS LIKE THE PAST

WITH THE LIONS, THE PRESENT ALWAYS LOOKS LIKE THE PAST

On a weekend when we impeached the president, lost a future speaker of the House and bombed a foreign country, it's comforting to know that certain stories remain unchanged.Ladies and gentlemen, the Detroit Lions.On Sunday, the Lions played their last home game of 1998, and they closed the local show by once again promising to do better next year. Of course, they promised that for this year. You see how this repeats.
AMERICAN PEOPLE DON’T WANT THIS

AMERICAN PEOPLE DON’T WANT THIS

When those in power say they're doing what the American people want, you can pretty much bet they have their own interests in mind.Take Kenneth Starr. For the past four years, he has pursued the president's every conversation, memo, phone call and sneeze. He has spent more than $40 million in taxpayer money. He insists he is doing what the American people want -- even when the American people tell him they're sick of him.
A BARRY BAD DAYCOME-FROM-AHEAD DEFEAT IS A COMPLETE TEAM EFFORT

A BARRY BAD DAYCOME-FROM-AHEAD DEFEAT IS A COMPLETE TEAM EFFORT

There goes autumn. Before it even started. Detroit's football season has been knifed at the knees, it is bent, bleeding, broken -- and the trees haven't dropped their leaves yet. The Lions lost Sunday, which is no longer news around here, but how they lost was unique, even for them. Blown snaps. A rainstorm of penalty flags. Last year's quarterback returning to burn them. And the final crushing blow: Superman humbled.
KING CARL THINKS ONLY OF HIMSELF

KING CARL THINKS ONLY OF HIMSELF

ATLANTA -- Carl Lewis was standing next to me on the set of "Good Morning America" Friday, wearing frayed tan shorts, a matching top, and sandals with no socks. It was 7:45 a.m., and everyone was yawning. Carl was with his agent and some guy who is co-writing Carl's new autobiography. None of them seemed in a hurry to get anywhere.
FORGET FLASHBACKS TO 1970S;STEELERS NO MATCH FOR DALLAS

FORGET FLASHBACKS TO 1970S;STEELERS NO MATCH FOR DALLAS

Well, football fans, the NFL playoffs, known to insiders as "games that are actually close," are now officially over. Which means: Time to duck.Over the next two weeks, you will be bombarded with Super Bowl Previews, Super Bowl Extras, Super Bowl Insiders, Super Bowl Extravaganzas, Super Bowl Close-Ups, Super Bowl Analysis, and Super Bowl Commercials Featuring Michael Jordan.After which will come the actual game, a nail-biting 52-10 victory for the NFC team.
FANS SHOULD BAG TALK OF TRADE, NOT THEIR HEADS

FANS SHOULD BAG TALK OF TRADE, NOT THEIR HEADS

The first thing I saw when I entered the Silverdome parking lot Sunday night was a Lions fan leaning against his car. He had a bag over his head.This was not an encouraging sign. As headgear goes, the bag rates low on the sports list, behind the rainbow wig, the big piece of cheese, and the beer cans with plastic sucking straws. Still, I had to wonder how many fans would be there at all -- including Mr. Baghead -- if Barry Sanders were not on the team.
STRANGERS SAVE A MOTHER AND SON

STRANGERS SAVE A MOTHER AND SON

The last time I saw the mother she was hiding on a couch, her head wrapped in a bandana, her eyes as narrow as coin slots. She was coming off a crack cocaine high, in a burned-out house in Detroit's northwest side, with a hole in the roof, no heat, one working light bulb, floors covered in dirt. This was home to Dorothy Chatman and her teenage son, Deshawn."Have you ever seen your son play basketball?" I asked her that day."Basketball is what he's into now," she sniffed. "Next year ...it'll be something else."

Mitch Albom writes about running an orphanage in impoverished Port-au-Prince, Haiti, his kids, their hardships, laughs and challenges, and the life lessons he’s learned there every day.

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