The Edmond Sun

Features

July 29, 2010

Cancer survivors show how to LiveStrong

EDMOND —  Oklahoma cancer patients and survivors will pitch for a future free of cancer at the annual LiveStrong Night with the Oklahoma City RedHawks.

Turner Mason Swink, an Oklahoma City eighth-grader first diagnosed with cancer when he was only a year old, and 8-year-old Caitlin Schemmel, a third-grader from Colbert diagnosed with leukemia in December, will throw out the first pitch at the event sponsored by the Lance Armstrong Foundation and the Oklahoma City RedHawks.

The event will take place at 7:05 p.m. Friday at the AT&T Bricktown Ballpark. This year, the annual fundraiser is entitled “Pack the Park in Yellow” and organizers urge anyone attending the game to wear yellow as a show of support for all of those diagnosed with cancer in Oklahoma. Yellow LiveStrong t-shirts will be on sale at the game. Yellow is the signature color of the Lance Armstrong Foundation, representing hope, courage and perseverance for those affected by cancer. Turner and Caitlin are living examples of all three.

Turner, 13, developed leukemia in 1998, had a reoccurrence in 2000 and then developed a brain tumor in 2005, but he never gave up the fight. Today, Turner is in remission counting his fifth year of being cancer free. “Stay strong and never give in,” Turner offered as advice to anyone battling cancer.

Like Turner, Caitlin is a fighter. She battled hard against leukemia, but was non-responsive to therapy. In April, she received a bone marrow transplant, which has given her a new lease on life. Caitlin says she now feels great and urges others with cancer to “pray a lot and be strong.”

The youngsters will be joined on the RedHawks mound by two special adult cancer survivors, Oscar Mize and Dr. Matt Haag.

Haag, a Deaconess family physician, was diagnosed with colon cancer last year at age 47. He underwent surgery and six months of chemotherapy. His message to fellow cancer patients is to “keep a positive attitude and surround yourself with family and friends to help and support you.”

Mize, a Cache resident, has battled brain tumors off and on since the first was discovered in 1991. He has battled four brain tumors over the past decade, the most recent treated with proton therapy at the new ProCure Proton Therapy Center in Oklahoma City. He hopes it’s his last. He tells other cancer patients to “never give up.”

The RedHawks will play in special yellow jerseys that will be auctioned off right after the game, along with a Nolan Ryan autographed baseball and a host of authentic, autographed and framed sports memorabilia from Case of Champions. In addition, a specialized mountain bike sponsored by Bicycle Alley will be raffled off at the game. Raffle tickets are $5 each or five for $20.

For more information, contact Jerry Burnstein at 818-1769 or livestrongarmyokc@cox.net.

Text Only
Features
  • Operating on feelings can be catastrophic

    How they raise their kids is a touchy subject for lots of parents.

    May 25, 2012

  • Take care with puppy vaccinations

    Q: My son recently bought a 3-month-old mixed Rottweiler-German Shepherd pup from a dog breeder near Tecumseh. He was assured by the breeder that the pup had received a 5 in 1 vaccination two weeks earlier, but the pup got sick about a week after he took it home.

    May 21, 2012

  • Edmond Beautiful plans Spring Garden Tour

    Edmond Beautiful Inc. will have a Spring Garden Tour of the 2011 “Yard of the Week” winners May 26-27. The “Yard of the Week” program recognizes yards and gardens during the summer months for outstanding flowers and landscaping.

    May 18, 2012

  • Sometimes it’s easy to let go of the familiar

    Remember the clack-clack of the lawn mower you used to push over your yard every week or so before someone finally figured out how to attach a gas engine to the contraption?

    May 18, 2012

  • ‘Attachment parenting’ fad benefits only guru

    The cover story in last week’s (May 21, 2012) Time Magazine is all about “why attachment parenting drives some mothers to extremes — and how Dr. Bill Sears became their guru.” That is the article’s subtitle. All I can say, somewhat hopefully, is “at last.”

    May 18, 2012

  • Protect pets from poisons in the yard, garden

    After an unseasonably warm winter, many gardens and yards around the country are growing and blossoming well ahead of schedule

    May 14, 2012

  • Norman church keeps up hourly adoration

    For nearly 10 years, someone has been present every hour of the day, every day of the year inside the chapel less than a block north of St. Joseph’s Catholic Church.

    May 14, 2012

  • Protecting pets from poisons in the yard, garden

    After an unseasonably warm winter, many gardens and yards around the country are growing and blossoming well ahead of schedule. Outdoor enthusiasts who are also pet owners are delighted with the early onset of spring, enjoying their outdoor living spaces while watching their pets run and play.

    May 14, 2012

  • REL_Adoration004.jpg Norman church keeps up hourly adoration

    For nearly 10 years, someone has been present every hour of the day, every day of the year inside the chapel less than a block north of St. Joseph’s Catholic Church.
    Deacon Jeff Willard said when the “Perpetual Adoration” program was started at St. Joseph’s, he thought it might last six months at best.

    May 14, 2012 1 Photo

  • Fatherhood illuminates relationship to God

    Like most men, when I got married I didn’t know what I was signing up for.  I didn’t expect it to change me much. In fact, it wasn’t until we had children that I realized how different I had become. I didn’t sign up to have squalling infants keep me up for hours night after night. I sure didn’t sign up for diaper duty. And the one thing I definitely wasn’t expecting was that these little sewage-secreting noise machines would have cables jacked straight into my heart. What they wanted, I wanted them to have. It wasn’t even a choice.

    May 7, 2012

Poll

One year after Osama bin Laden’s death, do you believe the U.S. can say it has successfully completed the war on terror?

Yes
No
Don't know
     View Results