<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9201310428
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
920820
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, August 20, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
MILLIE'S HAPPY FACE WILL BE SADLY MISSED
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
She was a member of the supporting cast, one of those special people who
keeps the stars in the sky, yet still gets tagged with a two-word
introduction: "His brother, Sam." Or "his daughter, Janice."

  Or "his wife, Millie."

  It shouldn't take her death to bring Millie Schembechler, wife of Bo, to
the front of the sentence. But so be it. She was never interested in top
billing. She was more  concerned with how your family was doing, or if the
couch was comfortable and the food was OK. She could invite you in with a
smile, she could lecture you in motherly tones even though she was not your
mother. She could do something few mortals can do: tell her husband he was
wrong.
  Try that sometime.
  She died Wednesday of cancer on a beautiful summer afternoon, the kind of
day she would  have loved. And while it didn't stir the headlines of a Rose
Bowl win, or a Tigers sale, it did send a ripple of pain through those who
knew her.
  It sent a ripple through me. If today be the day  for telling stories
about Millie Schembechler, here is the best one I know: I was working on a
book with her famous husband, and the time came for him to read the
first-draft chapters. As I watched anxiously,  he looked them over, grunting
"umm . . .  umm-hmm." Finally, he nodded approval. Then he lowered his reading
glasses, and looked me dead on.
  "Of course, we have to see what Millie thinks."
 Thus did Millie Schembechler become my "editor." And although the book was in
Bo's words, each chapter came back with these suggestions:
  On the top left side, in red pencil, she drew a frowning face. In this
category went the "naughty" words Bo had used. 
  Atop the right side, she drew a smiling face. And under it, she wrote her
substitutions: 
  "Damn" became "darn."  "Son of a bitch"  became "son of a gun."
  Frowning face to smiley face. 
  I was being edited by cartoon.
Smiley faces . . . making things better
  And yet, if you knew Millie, you had to laugh, because if she could have
slapped a happy face over every sad one in the world, she would have done it.
Cover asphalt with daffodils. Fill silence with music. Make things better.
  People who have seen both  sides can do that. Millie saw both sides. She
was born poor, in rural Mississippi, part of a large family that, according to
a family friend, "lived in a run-down place with a dirt floor." Millie never
forgot that. She never looked down at people. Once, working as a nurse in
Buffalo in the early '60s, a black man entered the hospital, needing emergency
treatment. He was ignored because of his color.  Millie informed the doctors.
She, too, was ignored.
  So she walked out and tended to the man herself. It was the right thing to
do.
  That was her way. Those of you who knew her only as the first  lady of
Michigan football for 20 years really didn't know her. Millie was a healer, an
organizer, a charity addict, and, above all, a mother. She had been raising
three sons on her own before Bo arrived  on a blind date in the summer of
1968. Before she would marry him, she asked their OK.
  Even in her last sickly days, she retained that indomitable knack of
motherhood. A friend, hoping to cheer  her up, sent videotapes of happier
times, when Millie was healthy, attending functions with famous people,
beaming that perfect smile.
  Not long after, the friend received a note. The handwriting was scratchy:
"Thank you for the videos. They will be precious mementos for the kids should
this ugly cancer do me in."
Never was top billing so deserved
  It did her in, finally. No one will ever  know the long battle Millie, 63,
fought with this disease, or the hours her husband spent urging her back to
health, searching for doctors, fighting the inevitable the way he once fought
a fourth-quarter clock.
  Bo would leave Tiger Stadium early, go home and tend to his wife, week
after week, month after month. When she seemed to have the strength, he would
cajole her downstairs, and get her on  the stationary bicycle.
  "I got her to go five minutes today," he told me once. "Tomorrow, we start
with the weights."
  It broke your heart. Here was this ex-football coach, trying to keep his
wife alive by doing the one thing he knew best: work out, get in shape, get
stronger than your opponent.
  But cancer is not sports; when it wants you, it takes you. And so, a few
weeks ago, on the  day he was fired from the Tigers, Bo passed his 24th
wedding anniversary alone with his ailing wife. They had take-out food.
  And today, no one can feel the emptiness inside the Schembechler house.
No one can hurt the way her four sons, Chip, Geoff, Matt and Shemy, are
hurting. No one can console the old coach.
  The Academy Awards have something called Best Supporting Actress, and if
life gave  out such statuettes, Millie would have a few. But to those who knew
her, she deserved marquee billing. So, in the last mention, maybe we should
skip the two- word intro and move her to the front of the  sentence:
  Millie Schembechler, whose husband and children loved her dearly, said
good-bye yesterday, leaving us in the sunshine, a happy face over the clouds,
one last edit on the way to heaven. She will be missed. She will be missed.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN; DEATH; MILLIE SCHEMBECHLER
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
