KCKCC Community Choir to perform at winter choral concert

by Kelly Rogge

The Kansas City Kansas Community College Community Choir is preparing for its annual Winter Choral Concert this weekend.

The concert is at 3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 7, at the Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church, 2203 Parallel Parkway in Kansas City, Kan. Admission is free, however donations will be accepted for vocal music student travel opportunities to St. Louis, Mo., Chicago, Ill., and Denver, Colo., in the spring. The concert is open to the public.

The choir will perform selections from Handel’s Messiah with a professional string quartet. In addition, the KCKCC Chamber Choir will perform a cappella selections ranging from early American hymns, baroque church music, Russian church music and African-American spirituals.

For more information on the vocal program at KCKCC, contact John Stafford at [email protected] or call 913-288-7137.

Kelly Rogge is the public information supervisor for Kansas City Kansas Community College.

Fast-food workers protest low pay

One fast-food worker who went out on strike this morning said that he thinks the pay at a full-time job should cover basic living expenses.

His pay of $9.50 an hour at a fast-food restaurant is not enough to pay the bills, said Terrence Wise, who was participating in the fast-food workers’ strike today.

Wise works at a fast-food restaurant in Kansas City, Mo., and said today, the protests spread to a fast-food restaurant near 8th and Minnesota in Kansas City, Kan., and also to a gas station here. They are coordinated with protests in about 160 cities throughout the nation, he said.

Wise said workers want a $15 an hour wage and a union.

“We want more from these million-dollar companies we work for,” Wise said. “We want our employers to treat us with respect and pay us a living wage.”

While his pay of $9.50 an hour is more than the $7.50 an hour minimum wage, he said that it is still not enough for living expenses. He has worked at a fast-food restaurant about 10 years.

“I bring home $1,100 a month, I pay rent, $650 a month, the car is $450 a month,” he said. “I have to have insurance on that.” He’s not even including food, the gas bill, and the electric bill, he added.

“It’s not even close,” Wise said. “It’s a struggle to survive. I have to pick and choose whether to pay the gas one month or the lights the next. I shouldn’t even have to make those decisions with a full-time job.”

In the past, he has tried to work two jobs at fast-food places to support himself and his family, which includes three children, he said. But he found that being away from the family so much, leaving at 6 a.m. and getting home at 2 a.m., was damaging to his family life, he said.

The fast-food protests have been going on for about two years, and about 30 places went out when it started in the Kansas City area, he said. Today, workers at more than 70 different stores, including a few in Kansas City, Kan., have gone out on strike, he said.

Besides fast-food restaurants here, the protesters in the Greater Kansas City area were from gas stations, dollar stores and some home health care workers.

According to a spokesman for the protesting groups, fast-food workers are fighting for $15 an hour and union rights to organize in 160 cities throughout the nation today.

The protests were peaceful in Kansas City, Kan., and there were no incidents here, according to police.

New No. 11-ranked KCKCC women post 100-46 road win

by Alan Hoskins

The Lady Blue Devils of Kansas City Kansas Community College will take the nation’s No. 11 Division II basketball ranking into opening Jayhawk Conference play Saturday.

A 100-46 winner over Central Methodist JV Wednesday, the Blue Devils will host Labette in the Jayhawk opener at 2 p.m. with the men’s game scheduled for 4 p.m.

At 9-1, the Blue Devils jumped all the way from 18th to 11th in the second Top 20 national poll of the season. The Blue Devils’ only loss came at unbeaten Hutchinson, which is ranked No. 2 in Division I.

The Blue Devils will get additional chances to move up. Jayhawk rival Johnson County (11-0) moved up from No. 4 to the No. 1 ranking while Highland continued in the No. 9 spot.

Five Blue Devils scored in double figures in the win at Central Methodist. Erin Anderson led with a season high 19 points including five three-pointers. Cheyenne North added 16, Cierra Gaines 13, Sierra Roberts 11 and Cassidy Harbert 10.

In addition to Roberts’ 11 points, the Blue Devils also got seven points each from Rashaun Casey and Iland Shurn and six from Arrica Daye off the bench as 11 players scored.

Alan Hoskins is the sports information director for KCKCC.