Opinion
A heavenly no-hitter
Heaven, for a major league baseball pitcher, could well be the first day of the spring season. Green grass. Crisp uniforms. Bright white chalk lines. The smell of hot dogs and popcorn. Bleachers full. Rival team in your house.
The pastor at Norman's St. Joseph's Catholic Church described such a heavenly scenario Wednesday morning at Willard Schmidt's funeral. The longtime area resident, former car dealer and major league baseball pitcher died March 22 after a lengthy illness.
Mr. Schmidt, a Kansas wheat farm boy with a talent for pitching baseballs, played on minor league teams, then hit the majors with stints for the St. Louis Cardinals and Cincinnati Reds between 1952 to 1959.
He was half of the Schmidt-Tullius Dodge dealership and Schmidt Bicycle and Lawnmower Center. Mr. Schmidt was an avid devotee to baseball his entire life. The Kansas Baseball Hall of Fame inducted him in 1989.
At the funeral, the Rev. Edward Menasco said in that heavenly game he sees Mr. Schmidt on the mound throwing only strikes the entire game. It's a no-hitter and the crowd gives the young pitcher a standing ovation.
That's exactly what his family and friends did during the funeral Wednesday. Well done, Mr. Schmidt. Well done.
- Opinion
-
-
Anger won’t resolve problems
Economic stress, politics devoid of hope and the dangers of taking an airplane on vacation have acted to push the thermometer of the American psyche into a pan of boiling water....
-
State’s illegal immigrant population on the rise
A report from the Pew Center suggests the United States’ population of undocumented immigrants has declined. Nationally, it is estimated there are about 7.8 million illegal immigrants with about 60,000 in Oklahoma in 2009. The state’s ...
-
Let’s toast: Lindsey reopens
The long-awaited reopening of Lindsey Street on the south side of the OU campus is worth celebrating. It came Wednesday afternoon and followed reports in August that the street would not likely be open for Saturday’s home football opener....
-
Murder trial has Norman ties
The murder trial of an Oklahoma pharmacist is garnering some large headlines. Jerome Ersland is scheduled to be tried before a new judge later this month. He is accused of shooting to death a masked robber inside a south Oklahoma City ...
-
Beginning a new school year
With a new school year just beginning, this is an exciting time for students, teachers and parents alike. Aside from catching up with old friends, a new school year brings new friends, new class schedules and a host of opportunities to ...
-
State needs to plan carefully
As if Oklahoma weather weren’t already worry enough, now we have “flash droughts.” According to the Oklahoma Climatological Survey, about half the state is currently experiencing a “mild” drought. According to data from the U.S. Drought ...
-
Time to turn a page on mission in Iraq
President Obama’s 20-minute Oval Office speech Tuesday night had no tone of victory. It recounted U.S. achievements and losses in freeing Iraq from a ruthless dictator. Mr. Obama said the same intensity that helped the Iraqis determine ...
-
Bob Barry: A humble ambassador
It’s not apparent to people who only know Bob Barry as the voice behind the microphone but there is another side of him. He’s as upbeat and enthusiastic as he sounds and likes clean jokes that usually involve some kind of word pun, ...
-
Pakistan’s food crisis may surpass floods
Although the worst flooding in its history has decimated much of Pakistan’s farming region, the disaster to come may be just as big a blow. Officials warned the food crisis could expand into a long-term shortage impacting generations of ...
-
Win-Win Week against cancer
Many college athletic teams have put on pink uniforms, T-shirts, ribbons, socks and helmet stickers to show their support for cancer survivors and cancer research. But it’s rare when that expression trickles down to high school teams....
- More Opinion Headlines
-
Anger won’t resolve problems





