6-year-old KCK biker to National Motocross Championship

Brody Cook (Photo from Alan Hoskins)

by Alan Hoskins

Six-year-old Brody Cook has done it again.

For the second straight year, the young dirt bike racer from Kansas City, Kan., has qualified for the largest amateur motocross race in the world, the 33rd Annual Rocky Mountain ATVMC AMA Amateur National Motocross Championships presented by AMSOIL at Loretta Lynn’s Ranch in Hurricane Mills, Tenn.

Cook took on more than 20,000 hopefuls from across America to earn one of just 1,446 qualifying positions.

“To make it as a 5-year-old is a rarity so it is very unusual for someone to make it two years in a row,” said Cook’s father, Josh.

A wreck in the first race of the preliminaries cost Cook any chance of advancing to last year’s finals but he’s hoping last year’s experience will help him this year.
“Everyone is so good that a wreck can really make it difficult,” said his father. “But he’s hoping to a lot better this time.”

Cook, who will be in second grade at Glenwood Ridge Elementary in Basehor this fall, has been riding since he was 4 years old. Winner of several races in the last two years, he’s competed in eight states – Michigan, Ohio, Texas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Illinois, Missouri and Kansas – this year and is entered in a four-day national championship event in Ponca City, Okla., the week prior to the AMA championships.

The AMA national championships will held in Hurricane Mills July 27-Aug. 2. He’ll be accompanied by his parents, Josh and Mindy Cook; his younger brother, Jack; and his great-grandparents, Bob and Sylvia Hartman.

More than 20,000 bikers competed over the last four months in qualifying for the national championships with the top finishers in area and regional qualifiers earning a berth into the National Championship race. Racers may enter a wide variety of classes, from mini-cycle classes for children as young as four, all the way up to a senior division for riders over 50. There are also classes for women and classes for both stock and modified bikes.

“The Amateur Nationals at Loretta Lynn’s is the event every motocross racer in the country wants to compete in,” said Tim Cotter, event director. “A win at the Amateur Nationals gives a rider instant national notoriety and can serve as a springboard to a lucrative professional motocross career.”

Most of America’s top professional motocrossers, including James Stewart, Ricky Carmichael, Travis Pastrana and Jeremy McGrath, have won AMA Amateur National Championships at Loretta Lynn’s. The race is so prestigious that in 2012 it became part of the Red Bull Signature Series, airing race coverage on NBC for the first time ever. In 2013, the coverage of the Red Bull Signature Series was broadcast live on NBC for the first time ever. In 2014, the racing will be streamed live on-line all week long on RacerTV.com.

The track is built on a section of Loretta Lynn’s Ranch and Campground in Hurricane Mills. The course contains a variety of jumps, corners and other obstacles designed to test the skills and stamina of the racers. Most riders attend the event with the help of their families. In fact, many groups consider the event their family’s summer vacation. Besides races, the ranch provides family-friendly facilities including a game room, swimming pools, arts and crafts activities as well as a fashion and talent show.

Civic organization to open new food pantry, thrift and development center

Window on the West
by Mary Rupert
A Kansas City, Kan., organization has seen a community need for the past few years and has done something about it.

Civitan Club Dotte is starting a family life development center that will include a mobile food pantry, a thrift location, a career closet and a center that will offer practical information about cooking, gardening, careers and life enrichment.

The first day for the mobile food pantry is today, July 7, beginning at 2 p.m. at the Crossroads Family Church, 8822 Parallel Parkway, Kansas City, Kan. The mobile food pantry will be open until all the food is gone for the day, according to organizers. The center will be working in conjunction with Harvesters to distribute food in a drive-in format. There is no qualifying for the program, but those participating will be asked to sign in. The mobile food pantry started on a Monday, but from now on, the mobile food pantry will be open the second and third Saturdays of the month.

Janice Witt, president of the local Civitan Club Dotte chapter, said she has been contacted by many persons in need who have asked for help from the organization during the past few years. Civitan is an international civic service organization, and the Kansas City, Kan., Civitan chapter was founded by Witt and other volunteers.

The Crossroads Family Church, formerly Immanuel Baptist Church, has been an instrumental partner in the effort, as it has provided the needed space in two classrooms, Witt said.

Inside the church will be a regular food pantry. A free thrift also will be located at the church, where people can receive three outfits per family member once a quarter, she said. There will be items provided in the future such as school supplies and backpacks, she said.

Witt said the Civitan Family Life Development Center will include space at the church classrooms where workshops can be offered in life skills, along with education in career skills such as training in being a nurse’s assistant. A Kids Café sponsored by Harvesters will begin in August, she said, where children will learn how to cook, and each one will take home a bag of groceries at the end of the week.

Besides food provided by Harvesters, many volunteers including the Civitan Orchids chapter have collected canned food for a food pantry at the location, Witt said.

During the past few weeks, Civitan volunteers have been sorting through clothes, especially career clothes, to get the Career Closet ready. Witt noted that a store in Liberty, Mo., has donated many new name-brand career outfits to the effort.

Many businesses and organizations have made donations to this project, she said, including Ussery Body Shop, Jerry’s Sports Club, Laborers 1290, the UPS Store, House of Diamonds, Vision Signs, Twisters, Sunset Bar and Grill, DeGoler’s Pharmacy, Welborn Boarding and Grooming, and several others.

The Civitan Family Life Development Center is dedicated to Mother Reola Grant, Witt’s mother. Grant spent a lifetime helping the needy, often in a more informal way, including inviting the needy to her home to eat.

Witt saw many needs in the community that were not being met, and believes that needs have increased here during the past several years. “We knew hunger was out there,” she said. She cited people who are working minimum-wage jobs at fast-food restaurants, for example, as being among those who may need help with their bills and groceries.

“I’m doing this in honor of my mom,” Witt said. Her mom always told her that “when God calls you, He prepares you,” she said, and where a roadblock shows up, a detour appears, “and that’s the way it’s been.”

To reach Mary Rupert, editor, email [email protected].

16-year-old sentenced in connection with shooting death

Lamount A. Ford, 16, of Kansas City, Kan., was sentenced on July 3 in Wyandotte County District Court to serve almost 13 years in the custody of the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Ford, who was prosecuted as an adult, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and aggravated assault in connection with the July 23, 2013, shooting death of Nola Pierce. The homicide was in the 1200 block of Everett Avenue in Kansas City, Kan.

Assistant District Attorney Mollie Hill prosecuted the case for the state of Kansas.