<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9201050503
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
920206
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, February 06, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1G
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SPECIAL SECTION  ; ALBERTVILLE '92; Feb. 8--Feb. 23
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
MOTHER WOULDN'T APPROVE OF SUCH GAMES
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ALBERTVILLE, France -- Whoosh!

  Whooooosh!

  HELLLLLP!
  Yes, sports fans, it's time once again for the Winter Olympics, that
spectacular event in which young athletes named Franz, Hans  and Gunther try
to kill themselves in 14  sports. This, by the way, is why the Winter Games
are so popular. In the middle of another cold and dreary February, there is
nothing more enjoyable than sitting  at home, flicking on the TV set, and
watching some poor fool ski off a mountain.
  ("Oooh! That's terrible!" I hear you say. Now, wait a minute.  Tell me you
don't watch "Wide World of Sports" just to see that guy go sprawling off the
ski jump. Come on. Come onnnnnnnn!)
  Danger? Hey. Danger is the Winter Olympics' middle name. Take a look at the
venues. A mountain?  An ice track? This isn't  "Romper Room." And check out
the equipment: sharp poles, pointy skis, guns, blades and sticks? It sounds
like the prop list for a Brian DePalma movie.
  I don't want to scare anybody, but almost everything  in the Winter Games
goes against household safety rules. What did your mother tell you? Don't sled
on ice! And what do lugers do? Sled on ice. What did your mother tell you?
Don't jump on your skates!  And we have figure skating.  Don't play rough!
Hockey. Don't play with guns! The biathlon. 
  Let's face it. The safest moment in the Winter Olympics is the opening
ceremony, and even there you could  get poked with a flagpole or burned with a
torch.
  But OK. They may be dangerous, but these sports are lots of fun, and those
of us who made  the trip to Albertville can look forward to two weeks  of
peppy French expressions, such as "Regardez! Cette homme a crashez sur le
mount!" ("Look! That guy just skied off the mountain!") 
  Unfortunately, not everyone is familar with all these wonderful  and
exciting winter sports. Some of us are still trying to figure out bowling. For
these folks, we provide the following handy guide to Winter Olympic
competition, in frost- free English, along with the  dangerous and safe ways
of doing these events, should you ever be crazy enough to try one.
 1. FIGURE SKATING:  Believe it or not, this is one of the most highly rated
TV sports in America. Women enjoy  it because it mixes grace and skill with
some of the loudest Hungarian music you've ever heard. Men like it because
every now and then, they get to see a guy in sequins fall flat on his face.
  Under  normal circumstances, ice skating is relatively safe, as long as
the water is above freezing. However, the way the Olympic skaters perform --
leaping into the air and spinning 7,126 times, while pretending  to be a
character from "Cats" (this, by the way, is known in skating circles as the
"Triple Sal-Chow-Chow-Chow") -- well, you never know who's going to survive.
* Dangerous way: Go for the gold.
* Safe  way: Wear a pillow.
 2. SPEED SKATING:  A sport made up of former figure skaters who never learned
to jump. Intead they just skate around in a circle about a half-million times,
until one wins the medal and the others get dizzy and throw up.
* Dangerous way: Go for the gold.
* Safe way: Take a Maalox.
 3. DOWNHILL SKIING:  This exciting sport sends men and women flying down a
mountain like cruise  missiles. Of course, a cruise missile is not fast enough
for downhill racers. They like to smear wax on the bottom of their skis, so
they can achieve, to quote Mr. Sulu, "Warp Speed," which, in English, means
"Intensive Care Ward." The average person, naturally, would be terrified of
such an event, but the experienced downhiller knows he is well-protected by a
paper-thin nylon body suit, which should  do wonders when he hits that tree.
* Dangerous way: Go for the gold.
* Safe way: Walk down. We'll come back for you in 1994.
 4. CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING:  You may notice that there are an awful lot of
cross-country ski events, such as the 10- kilometer, 30-kilometer,
50-kilometer, 149-kilometer, 834- kilometer and 2,304-kilometer races. That's
because nobody knows how to stop. They just wait until  the skier runs out of
steam, or crashes into a tree, and then the judges put a medal around his
neck. It is a wonderful sport, since everyone gets to go home with a prize.
Except for the people who never  come to a stop. But we'll catch up with them
in the next Olympics.
* Dangerous way: Go for the gold.
* Safe way: Use glue instead of ski wax.
 5. SKI JUMPING:  An all-time safety favorite. Supposedly  sane young men drop
out of a chute, ski down a massive runway and go flying off into outer space.
As soon as one is finished, the next one follows. This may remind you of a
childhood game known as "Let's  Jump Off the Roof." Remember when you were all
on the ground, holding your knees and crying, and one cross-eyed kid went back
up there to try it again?
  He's a ski-jumper now.
* Dangerous way: Go  for the gold.
* Safe way: Go home and watch that "Wide World Of Sports" opening again.
 6. LUGE:  Wearing nothing but a helmet and a body suit, the luger gets on a
sled, lies on his back, and drops  down an ice track at speeds of nearly 60
miles an  hour. He insists this is perfectly safe. His only worry is that, if
he fails to negotiate a curve correctly, he will go flying off the track and
land  somewhere in  Botswana.
  But that rarely happens.
  Maybe twice a week.
* Dangerous way: Go for the gold.
* Safe way: Install brakes.
  7. BOBSLED:  A sport made of former lugers who decided  it is better to die
in a group than all by yourself.
* Dangerous way: Go for the gold.
* Safe way: Get a bicycle. 8. BIATHLON:  This is a fun one. Men named Franz,
Hans, Dmitri, and Lars ski themselves  to exhaustion through the frozen woods.
Then, while they are trembling and shivering and gulping air, they pull out a
gun and fire. I am not making this up! Then they ski some more. 
  What happens,  you ask, if they accidentally shoot each other? 
  Good question. Nobody knows, since nobody ever watches this event. 
* Dangerous way: Go for the gold.
* Safe way: Wear a bulletproof vest. And  ski behind everybody else.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
HUMOR; COLUMN; WINTER OLYMPICS; 1992; LIST; SPORT
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
