creators.com opinion web
Liberal Opinion Conservative Opinion
Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop
19 Nov 2009
The Civic Price of Courting Corporations

Amtrak riders passing through New London, Conn., can catch an odd sight in an otherwise picturesque New … Read More.

17 Nov 2009
The Party of Fiscal Babies

Nearly every Republican these days calls for tax cuts and lower deficits, and in the same sentence. Point out … Read More.

12 Nov 2009
Casinos Take Money From States

In Las Vegas, house prices have dropped 55 percent since peaking in August 2006, and the foreclosure rate is … Read More.

Live Man Dying

Fascination with Heath Ledger no doubt swells the mobs going to see "The Dark Knight," the new Batman movie. Ledger's brilliance as the psycho Joker has spawned speculation that the actor's own descent in drug madness had fueled his demonic performance.

Ledger died of an apparently accidental prescription-drug overdose last January, just as the main filming ended. The 28-year-old actor's hopes seemed boundless at the time, and his death shocked the public.

There was no surprise in the passing last week of Randy Pausch. For almost a year, the 47-year-old professor of computer science had been confronting terminal pancreatic cancer. There was no defeating this foe, only delaying the final battle.

As is often the eerie case with deadly cancers, Pausch felt well for much of the time. Also movie-star handsome, he put those golden months to good use, reflecting on life and the final business of life.

Pittsburgh's Carnegie Mellon University periodically asks its professors to prepare a " Last Lecture." Editing a lifetime of thoughts into one exposition is a useful exercise. Because of his diagnosis, Pausch's "last lecture" was to be truly that.

Pausch had assumed that only a handful of students would show up on that warm September afternoon. News of his condition helped pack the hall Delivered with humor, passion and not a shred of self pity, the lecture became a Web sensation. Big media feted Pausch with celebrity and honors.

What did Pausch say? He started off with a slide of a CT scan showing his tumors, then pretty much dropped the subject of cancer. He urged the students to reconsider their goals, and once they landed on their ambitions, to sidestep their failures. "Brick walls are there for a reason," he said.

"They let us prove how badly we want things."

His personal grief wasn't over the prospect of not seeing his three young children grow up, but in knowing that they would grow up without their father. Pausch understood that he didn't have 30 years to impart his wisdom to them. He had to do it right away.

Pausch looks the picture of health in "The Last Lecture" video. Toward the end of it, he does one-armed pushups on the stage and ribs the students, "I'm in better shape than most of you."

It's bit of a shame that the story has been turned into an inspirational tear-jerker. The lecture is a monster hit on YouTube, and his book, "The Last Lecture," co-written by Jeffrey Zaslow, dominates sales in the self-help aisles. Such lines as his vow to have fun every day left "because there's no other way to play it" can have a maudlin ring.

Pausch's biography should include his considerable achievements as an innovator in the teaching of computer science. His programs helped students gain sophisticated computer skills by developing their own games.

His book has been likened to Mitch Albom's bestseller, "Tuesdays With Morrie." In an interview, Pausch admitted that he had never read the Albom book and quipped, "I didn't know there was a dying-professor section at the bookstore."

Pausch ended his days in character as a professorial analyst, this time of life. Ledger was literally in character, as an actor filling the Joker with manic evil. He played it very well. But while each man was master of his craft, their ends couldn't have been more different.

Ledger's death, while self-induced, was surely not in his plan. Pausch had the benefit, or perhaps agony, of foreseeing his shortened future. He understood there was no way to change his abbreviated storyline. That he played it so well will be his own legacy.

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


AddThis Social Bookmark Button
More
Froma Harrop
Nov. `09
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 1 2 3 4 5
About the author About the author
Write the author Write the author
Printer friendly format Printer friendly format
Email to friend Email to friend
View by Month
Dick Morris
Dick MorrisUpdated 23 Nov 2009
Newspaper ContributorsUpdated 23 Nov 2009
Michael Barone
Michael BaroneUpdated 23 Nov 2009

11 Jun 2009 Sotomayor, the New Yorker

15 Jul 2008 Mortgage Scandal a Bipartisan Affair

6 Jan 2009 The Mortgage Thieves Return