AUBURN HILLS - Sometimes you're better off saying nothing. Don't blurt out the thought that's on your mind. Swallow hard and let it go. Be patient and prudent. Save it for later.
There's some good news and some bad news for 92-year old Dr Hans-Joachim Sewering. The good news is that he has just been awarded a medal for "unequalled services in the cause of the independence of the medical profession" by the German Federation of Internal Medicine (BDI). The bad news is that Der Spiegel magazine has not forgotten what it published 30 years ago about Dr Sewering: documents
FROM AFAR, THEY LOOKED LIKE vultures circling over prey. As we moved closer though, we saw them for what they really wereâ€majestic eagles, hundreds of them, languidly circling over the terracotta-stained houses lining the streets of Karachi.
Andy Murray was spared the otherwise mandatory attendance at the National Tennis Centre last week when the LTA summoned all potential British competitors at Wimbledon to make sure they are not coerced into saying anything that reflects badly on the bosses when the nation's international record is placed under an unflattering spotlight next month.
The author of this fascinating odyssey is better known as the founder of the Travel Bookshop, made famous in the film Notting Hill, than for losing an arm to cancer at the age of 10. Never mollycoddled by her family, discouraged from talking about her feelings, Sarah Anderson faced up to her situation - she detests the word disability - by denying it.