A Last Deadline on Borrowed Time

The Metro News
Oct. 8, 2004

It was about two years ago, as I recall, that a doctor told me I was receiving too much medical attention. The way he put it was that I was being “over-doctored.”

This judgment came during a serious diagnostic session after I was referred to him, I suppose, by one of the doctors who were over-doctoring me. There had been some CAT scans, and both the doctors ordered ordering them and the doctor analyzing them had their names on some of the paperwork.

The session wasn’t all that serious. In the course of it, the doctor got out of his chair and showed me how a mutual friend of ours tries to hit a golf ball. During this demonstration, he had both feet off the floor at the same time, and I’d say the whole show called for a considerable amount of agility.

As I left, his final words were, “stay away from too many doctors. You’ll be OK.”

Moving closer ahead, to April of this year, the same doctor, serious to the hilt, told me I didn’t have long to live. “We’re talking months, not years,” was the way he put it.

I had developed a mild, but persistent, pain in my midsection, and this led to tests, which led to a referral back to the golf doctor. He looked me over and said he’d better have a closer look at the tests. He said he’d call me.

The call came on a Friday, ruining my weekend. Did it ever. He said he wanted to see me the following Tuesday, and to quote, “bring Barbara.” When a doctor tells you to bring your wife with you, it sounds exactly like dirt hitting the lid of your coffin.

The doctor’s sense of humor, and his ability to maybe hit a golf ball with both feet off the ground didn’t make the bad news any easier to take. I felt sudden compassion for horse thieves and occupants of death row, when I should have been thinking about what was ahead for me.

There was the biopsy, which is like having your appeal rejected. There was the last hope, the surgeon, who was confident he could operate and remove all the cancer, But it was a gamble that failed. The tumor had spread beyond control, to my magneto and onto my push rods and even to my differential. As I once heard an Okie explain it, “I was ate up with cancer.”

The operation was supposed to take four hours, but when I woke up in the recovery room just two hours after the starting time, I knew the game was over.

I was in the hospital, recovering from an artistic incision when the oncologist talked to me and my family about available treatments to slow the cancer and possibly add some quality time, as it’s called, to my life. They all agreed with my decision not to pursue that option.

My personal feeling was that I figured I’ll be closing in on my 84th birthday when my time comes, and that’s enough. I didn’t feel like gambling on paying out quality time to buy more quality time, with no guarantees.

I got out of the hospital and went home to recuperate. This process got a big boost when my children, deciding there would be no immediate division of the assets, also went home. It wasn’t long, however, before we were all back together.

In mid-June there was a countrywide Snider reunion in Oklahoma City, and to everyone’s surprise, mostly mine, It turned out to be very enjoyable. Everyone brought old pictures and newspaper clippings, and it took us three days to digest it all and visit cemeteries and other historical sites the Sniders made famous.

Barbara and I then spent the rest of June, all of July and the first week of August freeloading with daughter Amy and her family in Southlake, Texas. It was a long time, but it gave me the opportunity to learn again to appreciate the taste and fragrance of a good cigar and a touch of schnapps. It all works better in a lounge chair beside the pool.

In August our family and a few friends got together in Litchfield Beach, SC for our kind of revival., and to eat crab cakes. We were forced to evacuate by Hurricane Charlie, but only for one night, when we had to eat ribs.

We’re back in Topeka now, and I saw the oncologist Monday. He didn’t have any good news for me, and he wouldn’t risk the prognosis on how long I have to live. He said I could go where I want to go and do what I want to do, but that’s like saying that if that if I’ve never been to Cleveland, and always have wanted to go, now is the time. The same goes for Beaumont and Bozeman. But not Britton, where I grew up.

I won’t be writing forever, although you may be thinking I’m acting like I’m going to try. What is going to happen is that on days I don’t feel up to it, the staff of the Metro News will select columns to rerun. You’ll probably enjoy them more than the new stuff, right off the showroom floor.

I’d be lying if I told you I never think about the end, both when and where. I always wind up with my dad, and the night he died, in a nursing home. The family was there, and as it got very late, he told us to go home, saying, “I’m not in any pain, and I’m not afraid, so go home.” We left, and he died about two hours later.

I also think of my mother. She, too, died in nursing home, talking like she was a teenager again, teaching at a one- room school in western Oklahoma.

I also remember the night she and my brother took me to the airport to catch a late flight, and it was stormy, with lightning. She mentioned the weather, and I said it was OK, that if the plane crashed, my troubles would be over. And she said, “Or just beginning.”

I thought about that. Am I ready to go? All I know is that Father John Rossiter has punched my pearly gate ticket, but he can’t guarantee the reservation. He can’t tell me if I’m going first class, or even when my bus (?) leaves. So far, I have no reason to believe my departure will be like the movies, where Spencer Tracy will appear suddenly at my side, and tell me it’s time to go.

When that time comes, I can feel good about some things. Our children are doing well, and their mother, the best thing that ever happened to them, still will be around to help them for many years to come. Our grandchildren all show signs of learning to read and write, and they know their Grandma Snider will be here to do everything grandmas are supposed to do, and then some.

On the wall across from my typewriter hangs a rarity. It is an old-fashioned calendar from the First National Bank of Harveyville, and my wife’s family, and now our family, have been picking them up and hanging them for years.

They’ve served as a reminder to me that I am basically a small-town guy, and I’m at my best when I don’t forget that much of what I learned about life, and how to live it, with small town stuff.

Here’s an example: one day at a Snider’s summer outing, we were playing golf, and my grandson Will was piloting our cart. He was a terrible driver, so I had him stop, and told him to quit going so fast, to stay on the cart path and stop hitting the rocks that lined the path.

We drove on, and Will was saying, “Keep the cart on the path, and watch out for the rocks.” Today, many years later, when Will does anything, I question, I look at him and he says, “I know: keep the cart on the path and look out for the rocks.”

I am reminded now that if I had done all that all my life, I might not be so concerned about the journey that awaits me. And the Harveyville Bank calendar reminds me I’m living on borrowed time.

The guest columnists of 1960: Charles Howes

Topeka Capital-Journal
September 1960

(Charles Howes, who does some airplane driving and frequently has Dick Snider aboard, is today’s guest writer, discussing eccentricities of his peculiar passenger.)

By Charles Howes

I’ve wondered since Snider’s departure if he endeavored to have the pilot of his overseas jet route the flight from New York to Copenhagen via Oklahoma.

It isn’t a fantastic idea, in as much as I have precedent on which to draw. Every trip that we have made together was planned by Snider, and it was routed across that state to the south.

Of course, no one should be castigated for favoring his birthplace, but the extremes to which he goes have caused his fellow travelers to adopt countermeasures. Continue reading

The guest columnists of 1960: Max Kiene

Topeka Capital-Journal
September 1960

(Editor’s Note: The life and times of Dick Snider are further set out by a neighbor serving as guest writer while the columnist is in Europe with a tour sponsored by The Capital-Journal.)

By Max Kiene

When Dick asked if I would write his column for one time. While he was with the Capital-Journal Best of Europe Tour, I said, “Let me take your place on the tour and you stay home and write the column.” He replied that Mr. Stauffer had “ordered” him to go, and under those conditions he simply couldn’t accept my offer.

I told him I thought it was downright sporting of him to give me a chance to get even! (Knowing Snider, there must be a trick somewhere). He said he doubted if I would come up with anything worthy of the Pulitzer Prize. Besides, he will have the last word when he gets home.

My wife and I remarked to Barbara that it seemed a little peculiar that the guy with the largest family in the block would buy the smallest car. Barbara said, “Dick is more cunning than you realize; this way he won’t have to take the kids and me and Manfred the Wonder Dog along whenever he goes anywhere. There simply isn’t enough room in that oversized tinker toy for golf clubs, a wife, four kids and a dog.”

From my observation as next-door neighbor, it seems to me that Barbara is subject to more embarrassment than she deserves. For example, she tells of the time she and Dick checked into a hotel and just as the bellboy was leaving the room., Dick said to her, quote, what did you say your name was?” to quote a famous saying from a popular radio show of a few years ago, quote. Taint funny, McGee.”

For instance, a couple of years ago. During the basketball tournament at Kansas City, when Dick was sports editor, several of the neighborhood women were at the Snider’s house for morning coffee when one of the kids asked, quote, is daddy going to sleep here tonight?” The unasked question was, If Daddy isn’t sleeping here tonight, who is?

Recently, because Anne, Kurt and Steve kept talking about going, Amy was anxious to go to her. Aunt Peg’s wedding. Amy even had a new pair of shoes for the event and was excited about seeing her first wedding. Barbara was in the wedding party, and it was up to Dick to take the children. He said, quote. The boys and Anne, yes; but Amy, no.”

When this crisis in this Snider house arose, my wife offered to take Amy. Dick took the coward’s way out and okayed the idea, knowing Amy wouldn’t sit still that long. All went well until she saw her mother and sister in the ceremony, Then in a loud voice, “I want to talk to mommy and play with Anne.”

Barbara was further embarrassed because Dick just ignored the whole disturbance

Recently, Barbara prepared Dick’s favorite dinner and fried chicken and fresh peach pie., expecting him at about 5:30 or 6:00. He called her late in the afternoon to say he was going to play nine holes of golf, that he would be home in time for dinner. One thing must have led to another because he arrived about 9:30. The special dinner had long before been put away, so he decided to make a pizza, even though the atmosphere was rather chilly around there. He finally got the pizza made but had flour all over the kitchen, family room and dining room. Barbara had all that to clean up, too, and decided she just couldn’t win. In spite of all this, Dick is a pretty good guy, and we are glad he and Barbara are our neighbors.

When the great outdoors grates

Topeka Daily Capital
June 21, 1959

The grizzled Old West Texan was sitting on the patio of this huge and luxurious new home when somebody asked him what’s it like, now that he had struck oil on his parched land and had become a very rich man.

“Well,” he said, “Before we hit oil, we lived out here in a shack and we cooked inside and went outside because there was no plumbing inside. About the only difference now is that we go inside, but damned if we don’t cook outside.”

This analysis offers two interesting possibilities as subjects for today’s epistle – outdoor privies and outdoor cooking. It happens that I am somewhat of an authority on both, but I will deal first with the latter, which, to me, is a problem bigger than wheat rust and tornadoes. Continue reading

Small thoughts in a birthday month

Topeka Daily Capital
March 12, 1961

Some small thoughts from a mind of approximately the same size. …

And this should prove it: a psychiatrist, says the line of the roof of a man’s house gives you a pretty good line on the man himself. My roof is flat and covered with rocks. …

And what about this? A lady who likes to write letters, telling other people what to do, says this column appeals to people “who pride themselves on never reading a book which requires thought, and who, night after night, revel in the shoot-em-up vulgarities, or the inanities, of the whodunits.” You’re going to let her say that about you? If she keeps this up, I’m going to steal her copy of Lady Chatterley’s Lover. .. Continue reading

Blaming the media is the wrong way in clergy abuse coverup

Topeka Capital Journal
March 20, 2002

The Most Reverend James P Kelleher, archbishop of the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City in Kansas, which includes Topeka, wrote in the current issue of the diocesan newspaper about what he called, “a most delicate matter – the question of abuse of youth by Catholic clergy.”

He said the actions of the guilty priests, “have shocked the nation and shaken even the trust of many Catholics. Whatever the understanding they had of the terrible damage they were doing to youth at the time of their dirty deeds, there can be no excuse for what they did.”

Later in his statement he said, “What troubles me deeply is what these sordid revelations do to the image of the church.”

Actually, what the priests did hasn’t damaged the image of the church much more than what their superiors didn’t do. Continue reading

John Linville RIP

(John H. Linville, brother to Barbara Linville Snider and brother-in-law to Dick Snider, passed Dec. 23. His obituary appeared in the Ouray County Plaindealer . The column below appeared in the Topeka Daily Capital March 28, 1962)

We sat under a big tree in a back yard in Burlingame, sipping drinks and watching the storm fade away in soft flashes of lighting. My father-in-law, Mike Linville, talked about bigger, better storms.

Once, he said, he had saddled a horse and ridden 14 miles from the family farm to check stories he’d heard that a storm had drive wheat straws into trees.

“I actually found some,” he said, “driven about a half-inch into trees.”

Another time, he rode out a storm in a ditch with his younger brother and mother. He told of silence and the vacuum that made it difficult to breathe, and then of the “roar of about 400 freight trains” that snapped trees like matchsticks…

I remembered the storm that leveled Bethany, Okla. We watched it from our backyard on Britton. What I remember best is reading that papers from the Bethany bank were found in Kansas. Continue reading

Welcome

When friends or colleagues read or hear something about my father, the newspaperman Dick Snider, they ask to read a couple of his columns, ask about my favorites. It’s no clamor, but I decided to post a few of my favorites and some other writing by and about him. It’s partly because I’m asked, partly because I miss him and partly because the best are still so readable. Almost everything here was published first in the Topeka Capital-Journal and the exceptions are noted. Enjoy. Thanks for stopping by.

Steve Snider