‘My Shelf To Yours’ book sale returns to KCKCC

by Kelly Rogge, KCKCC

An upcoming book sale at Kansas City Kansas Community College will provide great deals on used books plus help students in financial need.

The upcoming “My Shelf to Yours” book sale is returning to KCKCC in March, raising funds for students on campus. The sale is from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. March 28 and 29 in Room 2325 on the lower level of the Jewell Building on the KCKCC campus, 7250 State Ave.

It will also be open 8:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. March 27. The sale is open to the public as well as students, staff and faculty.

“It has been my privilege to participate in the My Shelf To Yours used book sale for the last five years,” said Brian Patrick, director of cultural outreach at KCKCC. “Because of this sale, we have been able to help many students get their textbooks. I am also very impressed with all the students who volunteer to help with the sale – they are such good workers and their collaboration is crucial to the program’s success. Professor Allen Lenoir and the students from ENACTUS are also a great help with our sale. They give us a lot of marketing and business assistance. It is a great experience for everyone.”

All books will be $1 or seven books for $5, and proceeds benefit the student scholarship fund. The ICC uses the fund to distribute scholarships for textbooks and tuition to students who have a financial need.

In addition, there will also be beverages and snacks for sale as well as fashion jewelry and other local vendors. Those who attend the book sale and purchase at least $5 worth of items are automatically entered into a raffle for a KCKCC Bookstore Certificate.

Created in 2010, the goal of “My Shelf To Yours” is to promote scholarship, leadership, entrepreneurship and sustainability by selling donated used books both online and on-ground.

The student-operated store has gained national recognition from eBay’s Green Team for recycling books to help fellow students who need assistance with purchasing textbooks and with college tuition. Since the event started almost eight years ago, more than 75,000 books have been donated from 412 individuals. This has helped 479 students with 1,246 textbooks and has awarded more than $29,400 in scholarships.

“My Shelf To Yours” donates any unsold book donations from the sale to local charities and organizations.

For more information, contact Brian Patrick at 913-288-7362 or by email at [email protected] or Barbara Clark-Evans at 913-288-7504 or by email at [email protected].

Eight Wyandotte County students named to dean’s list at Washburn

Washburn University has named eight Wyandotte County students to its dean’s list for the fall semester.

To qualify for the dean’s list, students earn a semester grade point average of 3.4 to 3.99.

On the dean’s list from Wyandotte County:

Annie Carpenter, Bonner Springs, Kansas
Ali Justice, Kansas City, Kansas
Morgan Lawrence, Edwardsville, Kansas
Wesley Tabor, Kansas City, Kansas
Samuel Wagner, Kansas City, Kansas
Cassady Holloway, Bonner Springs, Kansas
Rebecca Weimer, Bonner Springs, Kansas
Michaela Augustine, Kansas City, Kansas

Woman dies in wrong-way accident on I-35

A 32-year-old Independence, Missouri, woman died in a wrong-way auto accident at 10:48 p.m. Wednesday, March 14, on southbound I-35 at K-68, east of Ottawa, Kansas.

The woman was a passenger in a Chevrolet Suburban driven by an 18-year-old Kansas City, Kansas, man, according to the Kansas Highway Patrol trooper’s report. The driver of the Suburban was injured and was taken to a hospital, the report stated.

According to the trooper’s report, the two persons in the Suburban were not wearing safety restraints.

The Suburban was northbound in the southbound lanes of I-35, the trooper’s report stated. The Suburban struck a Chevrolet Impala head-on that was southbound in the southbound lanes, according to the trooper’s report.

The driver of the Impala, a 20-year-old Kansas City, Missouri, woman, was injured and taken to a hospital. Also injured in the Impala was a 20-year-old woman from Kansas City, Missouri; another 20-year-old woman from Kansas City, Missouri; and a 21-year-old woman from Kansas City, Kansas, according to the trooper’s report.

The occupants of the Impala were wearing seat belts.