<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9601010864
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
960109
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, January 09, 1996
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color WILLIAM ARCHIE
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>



Coach Ben Kelso works with Delvar Barrett during practice at
Cooley High. "If Delvar didn't come back to school," Kelso
says, "who knows if he'd even be alive next year?"
Delvar Barrett tosses a pass over the head of teammate Darrell
Jackson during practice. Barrett, a sophomore, is Cooley's
starting center.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
DREAMS DEFERRED
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1996, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
A TEENAGER COUNTS ON HIS COACH FOR FATHERLY GUIDANCE
BECAUSE IN THE CITY, IN MANY BOYS' LIVES, THERE ARE
TOO FEW GOOD MEN
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Aren't you going to school?" his mother asked the first day.

  "Nuh-uh. My stomach hurts." 

  He stayed in bed. The next morning he was still there.
  "Aren't you going to school?"
  "I  still feel sick." 
  A week passed. Then two. After three weeks, his high school basketball
coach, Ben Kelso, called to inquire. Where was Delvar, the kid they called
"Shaq"? How come he hadn't been  in school all this time?
  "He's sick," his mother said the first time Kelso called.
  "He might be back tomorrow," she said the next time.
  "I don't think he's coming back," she said the next.
  Finally, more than five weeks after Delvar's disappearance, Kelso got into
his car and drove out to the house. He knocked on the door, and Delvar came
out, all 6-feet-6 of him. He seemed OK. Except  his soft, boyish face kept
looking down. He was embarrassed.
  "What is it?" Kelso asked. "Why haven't you been coming to school?"
  "Because of what they say."
  "What who says?"
  "The other  guys."
  "What do they say?"
  Delvar looked away. How could he explain this? His mother worked as a phone
solicitor for a burglar alarm company. She made, in her best year, maybe
$10,000. She had  three kids to feed, bills to pay, and no husband. So there
was never any money. Delvar owned two pairs of pants, two decent shirts, one
pair of shoes.
  And that was it.
  The kids in school had  noticed. They got all over him. They dogged him
about wearing the same clothes each day. They dogged him about his "weak"
shoes. Being teenaged is all about status, no matter where you live -- even
the  inner city -- so they dogged him about being too poor. This, is in a
neighborhood with bars on the windows and bullet holes in the porches. Too
poor?
  "I don't want to hear it anymore," Delvar told  Kelso. "I'm sick of it. I'm
not coming back."
  Kelso nodded. He knew what to do.
  This is a story of a city kid who had his eyes opened by a coach. It's also
a reminder of how many of Detroit's  young men need a coach -- because they
don't have a father around. Delvar Barrett, a 15-year-old basketball prize,
has already endured a lifetime of challenges. He suffers from diabetes and
must inject  himself twice a day with insulin. He cooks his own food, drains
the fat, avoids sugars, and travels with an emergency kit. He deals with
bullets in his neighborhood and drugs in his streets. He is taller  and
stronger than most grown men -- yet he is still a kid.
  And, like any kid, he yearns for adult guidance.
  "If I had a father around," he says now, sitting in the gym office at
Cooley High,  "I never would have quit school. My father would have told me to
stick it out, ignore the other kids. And I would have listened. Like I
listened to Coach Kelso."
  He leans forward in his chair, his  long arms dangling in his lap.
  "Where is your father?" he is asked.
  He shrugs.
  "Who knows? East side, somewhere, I think."
Where are all the men? 
  Take a pulse of the Detroit school  system, and you'll find a wretched
trend. Most kids are being raised by one adult, and most of the time it's the
mother, grandmother or other female relative. Where are all the men? Sure,
Delvar's mother  could have made him go to school when he told her he was
sick. But when you work all day and you tend to two daughters -- one of whom
also has diabetes and has to be home-schooled -- and when your son  is the
size of an NBA forward, and weighs 250 pounds, and says he's not going to
school and lies in bed all day --  what are you going to do? Drag him?
  "I was hoping he would come out of his depression,"  Vivian Barrett, his
mother, recalls. "I knew if I forced him, it wouldn't work. 
  "I felt very bad. He doesn't have many clothes, it's true. We don't have
the money. I haven't bought anything new  for myself in years.
  "But he's at that age when he listens better to a man. Maybe if he had
older brothers . . . 
  "His father? Ha! I don't know where he is. He's what you call a
Christmas-card  father, you know? He barely works. He's just not interested."
  Which is where Kelso came in. He was interested. On the day he discovered
Delvar at home, he returned with a pair of sneakers, some sweats,  and an
article that had been written about Kelso in Sports Illustrated, an article
which detailed his similarly difficult youth. "You read this," Kelso told
Delvar. "And then see if you can come back."
  Kelso, 48, has been doing this type of thing for years, casting his shadow
into the empty rooms of his players' lives. There are many Cooley alumni in
Detroit who think of Ben Kelso as the most dominant  male influence in their
lives.
  That is both good -- and sad.
  Delvar read the article. He read about Kelso's poverty- stricken childhood
in the rural South, how he once was bitten by a rat during  his sleep, how he
picked through trash for something to eat, how he pumped gas as a high
schooler, never had time to play organized ball, worked on an assembly line
until he got into college, and still  managed, somehow, to make the NBA.
  And then he read the part that stuck:
  "Kelso's father left when Ben was 4 years old."
  Delvar's father left when Delvar was 4 years old.
  The next day,  Delvar put on his old blue pants and his old blue shirt, and
he went to school.
Big, strong, quiet, shy 
  In the Cooley gym, Delvar pounds a ball and slides in for a shot. He has
enormous skills  for a kid his size, soft hands, good inside moves, a feel for
the basket. A sophomore, he already starts at center for Cooley, averaging
eight points a game. Yet he has always been quiet and shy. One  day last year,
he just stopped during the middle of running drills and left the court. He got
dressed and went home. Never said a word.
  "Normally I chew a kid out if he stops," Kelso says. "But you  could see
something unusual was happening."
  Delvar was having a diabetic reaction. His blood sugar was low, and he was
shivering and weak. Kelso -- who didn't know of his disease at the time -- now
 has the team travel with orange juice and insulin. And Delvar, when he goes
home, makes sure he boils his hot dogs, and cooks his hamburgers in a pan, and
stays away from sweets and fried foods. Because  his mother works until 8 at
night, Delvar takes care of himself and helps his younger sister Chirese, who
also suffers from juvenile diabetes. He knows that each month he has to get a
new pack of syringes  from the drugstore -- "60 per pack," he recites -- and
new vials of insulin.
  "If I had one day where I could eat anything I wanted?" he says. He smiles
like a young leprechaun, his whole face lighting  up. "I know. I'd eat a whole
box of Peanut Butter Cap'n Crunch."
  And he laughs. Delvar Barrett is a bright kid, and, given his basketball
skill, he has a good chance at a college scholarship. He  dreams of seeing
"faraway places, like Alaska and Hawaii -- I've never been anywhere but
Lansing." 
  He dreams, so he has a chance. It is disturbing to think all this could
have been lost because  he was ashamed of his clothes.
  He came this close.
  "If Delvar didn't come back to school," Kelso says over the squeak of
sneakers on the gym floor, "who knows if he'd even be alive next year?"
Get  used to whizzing bullets 
  Outside Cooley, the snow is piled against the dark brick walls. Like most
inner-city schools, all doors are locked except a designated few. There is a
police car nearby.  You park at your own risk. Once, an out-of-town school
came to play against Cooley, and the coaches parked their cars on both sides
of Kelso's. When they came out, their cars were gone, Kelso's was still
there.
  This is the city. Delvar Barrett lives not far from school, on Buena Vista,
which translates to "beautiful view."
  Not really.
  "One time, on the Fourth of July, someone opened a fire hydrant and we were
splashing around, having fun," Delvar recalls, "and then bang! Somebody shot a
man in the neck and everyone ran.
  "Where I live, you can hear bullets every night -- especially  in the
summer. I used to wonder how close they are, or who was doing the shooting.
But after a while, as long as they're not right next door, you ignore them."
  Delvar, somehow, has stayed away from  guns and gangs. He has a 2.8
grade-point average, and he is in school all the time now, hanging around
Kelso the way a groupie hangs around a rock star. "If I'm in the office, he's
in the office,' Kelso  says, laughing. "If I'm in the gym, he's in the gym.
He's like glue."
  Delvar doesn't do this because he's insecure; he does it because Kelso
cares. "Coach is the first older man that really showed  an interest in me,"
he says.
  Where are all the men? Delvar tells a story about seeing his father for the
first time after a three-year absence. It was Christmas, and his father
brought him a GI Joe  doll.
  "I was so happy to see him, I didn't even want a present. But then he just
disappeared again.
  "Now he's gone and married some woman with her own family. I feel like, who
needs him? If he  wanted to marry someone, why didn't he marry my mother?
  "It's like we're not good enough."
  He says this, and he looks away in anger, and honest to God, you want to
cry. There are young men like  Delvar all over Detroit, kids with one female
elder, no male guidance. Sometimes they say yes when they should say no,
sometimes they get into trouble, and sometimes they simply stop coming to
school  for the saddest of reasons -- like other kids teasing them about their
poor clothes.
  What do we expect? They are still kids. If the right voice is there, they
can be put back on track. If it isn't  . . .
  Delvar steps onto the court and takes another shot. When Kelso walks past,
talking to someone, Delvar watches admiringly, always aware of where he is.
  It's funny. When Kelso was a teen  in Tennessee, he was stealing lunches
from other school kids. He got caught and was about to be expelled. A teacher
stepped in, defended him and helped turn him around. 
  And here, some 35 years later,  Kelso has pulled a kid from a dangerous bed
of self-pity and steered him toward a better life. This time, a coach was
there. But if Delvar's father is reading this -- if any Christmas-card fathers
are  reading this -- you should know there won't always be someone else
around. This was your place, your responsibility, your job, and where were
you? Where are all the men? Until we find them, we won't begin to solve the
problems of this city. We won't even come close.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
DELVAR  BARRETT; BEN KELSO; ROLE MODEL; DETROIT; POSITIVE
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
