Detroit Free Press

TERMINALLY ILL KNOW WHAT’S BEST FOR THEM

TERMINALLY ILL KNOW WHAT’S BEST FOR THEM

Last week, as Americans fought over ballots as if they were life and death, the Dutch passed a law that really was about life and death: namely, when is it acceptable to end one and welcome the other?Their answer? When a patient is suffering. Not necessarily dying. Suffering. Inconsolably. Unbearably.When that happens, under the new law -- the first of its kind in the world -- any patient older than 16 need only discuss it with a doctor, agree that the pain is too much, and ask for a peaceful death.
WE WILL MISS THIS ICON OF DETROIT SPORTS

WE WILL MISS THIS ICON OF DETROIT SPORTS

How do you eulogize a rival? Joe Falls, a man who did the same job as me for the newspaper that competes with mine, died last week. He lost a long battle with diabetes. He was 76. He couldn't type anymore. He couldn't walk steps. Last year, with a simple, elegant column, he told his many fans good-bye after six decades in the business."It's been a joy," he wrote, "thank you for being there with me."
MARTIN FORGOTTEN BY THOSE HE COURTED

MARTIN FORGOTTEN BY THOSE HE COURTED

The flowers at the funeral were bright and colorful, white orchids and pink carnations spreading across the pulpit. A singer wailed a plaintive hymn, "I know He holds my hand." A church elder urged the assembled to ignore the newspapers and remember that "a man's legacy is not determined by one chapter of his life." He said only those who truly knew the Lord could say who they thought He was.Then he asked the mourners: "Who do YOU think Eddie Martin was?"
WHY WINGS WILL NEVER BE THE SAME

WHY WINGS WILL NEVER BE THE SAME

It is easy to imagineAmerica without prohockey. Look around. We are living it.The NHL has been shut down for three months. Guess what? Life goes on. Sports go on. Remember when people used to say "football, baseball, basketball and hockey" as if they were four equal slices of pie? Well, ESPN hasn't lost 25 percent of its content, newspapers haven't cut 25 percent of their space, and the idea hockey might constitute a large chunk of the U.S. sports stage is now laughable.
GOOD-GUY PISTONS RISK ITDESPITE WALLACE’S BAD REP, DUMARS MAKES BIG DEAL

GOOD-GUY PISTONS RISK ITDESPITE WALLACE’S BAD REP, DUMARS MAKES BIG DEAL

Win. Spin. To do the former, you often need to do the latter. The wheels began turning in Detroit on Thursday afternoon, the moment Rasheed Wallace, a big, volatile guy whose former owner all but threw a party when he finally dumped him, joined the Pistons in a three-team trade. The Pistons are a team that prides itself on selfless, blue-collar behavior. Wallace fits that bill the way Janet Jackson fits "overdressed."
WAR COVERAGE DID NOT START WITH CABLE TV

WAR COVERAGE DID NOT START WITH CABLE TV

Like most Americans, I have been glued to my TV, watching the war in Iraq. My channel of choice has been CNN. After a while, I began to notice a name I hadn't heard before: Walter Rodgers.There it was again. Walter Rodgers. I wondered whether this was a general, or a strategist, or maybe a soldier exhibiting great bravery, given that his name -- Walter Rodgers! Walter Rodgers! -- was being tossed about with unabashed worship.
MOURNING VIA WEB IS SAD TURN OF EVENTS

MOURNING VIA WEB IS SAD TURN OF EVENTS

Isn't it a shame," someone says, "that we only see each other on such sad occasions?"It is the most common sentence at a funeral. You hear it from relatives, ex-neighbors, friends who moved out of state.Only death, it seems, can make us slow down long enough to reunite. We hug. We kiss. We share a collective grief, until someone remembers a story that makes someone else smile. And in the end, we are reminded not only of how much we love the dearly departed but also how much we love the ones who are still around.
IT’S HARD WORK BEING A KID THESE DAYS

IT’S HARD WORK BEING A KID THESE DAYS

A2-year-old was running on the playground last month, as 2-year-olds do.He banged into a railing, as 2-year-olds do.And he got a cut on his head, as 2-year-olds do.His mother sued the city, as parents do. The accident, she claimed, hurt "his modeling and acting career."No, I am not making this up. In a letter to city officials, the mother claimed the railing was painted the wrong color. It was too green, she said, making it blend in with the landscaping. It should have been painted a brighter color, she insisted.

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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