Medications may be dropped off at drug takeback day sites

Unused medications may be dropped off today at sites throughout the area for drug takeback day.

The hours of this event are 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. April 27.

The goal is to get unused medications out of the hands of children and pets and away from the environment.

Participating sites include CVS, 3750 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas; CVS, 4645 Shawnee Drive, Kansas City, Kansas; Walmart, 12801 Kansas Ave., Bonner Springs, Kansas; and CVS, 950 Minnesota Ave., Kansas City, Kansas.

For additional locations in the metropolitan area, visit https://takebackday.dea.gov/.

Blue Devils sweep but need help to finish higher than third

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Pitcher Carlos Soto showed the way in the first game, hitters took the lead in the nightcap as Kansas City Kansas Community College swept a Jayhawk Conference doubleheader at Coffeyville Friday.

Soto went the distance in a 6-3 opening game win; the Blue Devils hammered out 13 hits in a 14-8 slugfest in the second game. The wins boosted KCKCC’s overall record to 37-13 and kept alive hopes of moving up in the conference standings.

Solidly in third place at 22-8 heading into today’s home doubleheader with Coffeyville, the Blue Devils need help to move up higher in the final standings. Johnson County and Cowley share the lead at 21-5 heading into their doubleheader today.

The Blue Devils play at home today at 1 p.m. Today’s doubleheader closes out KCKCC’s conference season but Johnson County and Cowley each have four games remaining next week, JCCC against Coffeyville and Cowley with Neosho County.

Soto took a 5-hitter and 6-2 lead into the bottom of the seventh before a final inning scare. After a Luis Mendoza home run, the Ravens loaded the bases with one out on three consecutive singles before Soto started a home to first game-ending double play.

“We always find ways to make it interesting,” KCKCC coach Matt Goldback said. “Soto was cruising up until then; dominant the whole game.” Soto struck out five, walked one and hit two.

Eduardo Acosta provided the game’s biggest blow, a bases-loaded triple in the second inning set up by a walk and singles by Traice Hartter and Kemper Bednar.

Eric Hinostroza’s run-scoring single made it 4-2 in the fifth and the Blue Devils added a pair of insurance run in the seventh on a two-run single by Jose Sosa following a pair of walks and Hinostroza sacrifice bunt.

KCKCC scored six runs in the first two innings of the second game but still led only 6-5 before four relief pitchers limited the Ravens to six hits and three runs over the final seven innings.

Kevin Santiago homered and singled and Griffin Everitt had three doubles to lead KCKCC’s 13-hit attack. Brady Holder and Acosta each had two hits and Bednar a triple.

The Blue Devils were aided by Coffeyville wildness. Three KCKCC runs scored on wild pitches and five Raven hurlers walked eight and hit one. Five Blue Devils combined to strike out 10 but also gave up five walks, hit three batters and threw four wild pitches.

KCKCC jumped in front 4-0 in the first inning, loading the bases on a hit batsman and two walks. Tyler Henry’s sacrifice fly scored the first run, Everitt doubled in another and Holder singled in two.

Aided by two hit batsman and a walk, Coffeyville made it 3-2 in the bottom of the inning. Santiago’s home run following an Acosta double reopened the lead to 6-3 in the second only to have the Ravens score twice in the bottom of the inning and then tie it with a run in the bottom of the fifth.

The Blue Devils then broke away by scoring in each of the final four innings, breaking the 6-6 deadlock with three runs in the sixth on just two hits, singles by Holder and Sosa sandwiched around two walks and two run-scoring wild pitches.

Another run scored on a wild pitch in a 2-run seventh after a double by Everitt and Bednar’s triple. Two more runs scored in the eighth on singles by Santiago and Hinostroza, Henry’s sacrifice fly and Everitt’s third double and hits by Holder and Acosta and a Santiago fly ball finished the scoring in the ninth.

Zavier Morin got the pitching win, allowing two hits and two runs in 2 2/3 innings, He struck out two and walked one. Jose Amaro and Max Storch finished up with one scoreless inning each. Victor Gotay got the start, allowing five runs on five hits in 2 1/3 innings. Hunter Paxton came on in relief of Soto, allowing three hits and one run in two innings and registering three of 10 strikeouts recorded by KCKCC hurlers.

Third-graders tour Grinter House

Third-graders from Trailridge School, Overland Park, toured the Grinter House on Friday. (Photo from Pat Spencer)


by Pat Spencer

Seventy third-graders from Trailridge School in Overland Park toured the Grinter House on Friday.

Grinter Place Friends volunteer Jerry Grey showed them how they used to have to carry water to wash clothes on a washboard and then had to hang them on a line to dry.

Leona Sigwing showed them the size of the wagons that carried them across the prairie and all the things they needed for the trip and how they packed the wagons.

Louise Crable showed them a lot of items that were used back in the 1800s.

Donna Reddy and Laura Debus helped them roll out biscuits and make butter from cream. Later they ate the biscuits with the butter and apple butter.

Mary Conrad gave them a tour of the house and also showed them some of the antique toys that kids used to play with, they were all handmade and of course didn’t need electricity.

On Saturday, April 27, there is a quilt show until 4 p.m. at Grinter Place, 78th and K-32 in Kansas City, Kansas, with a talk about quilts scheduled at 1 p.m.

Third-graders from Trailridge School, Overland Park, saw artifacts from the 1800s as they toured the Grinter House on Friday. (Photo from Pat Spencer)
Third-graders on Friday got a glimpse of what it was like to wash and dry clothes in the 1800s. (Photo from Pat Spencer)


Third-graders from Trailridge School, Overland Park, toured the Grinter House on Friday. (Photo from Pat Spencer)
Third-graders from Trailridge School, Overland Park, toured the Grinter House on Friday and learned about cooking on a wood stove. (Photo from Pat Spencer)
Third-graders from Trailridge School, Overland Park, toured the Grinter House on Friday. (Photo from Pat Spencer)
Third-graders from Trailridge School, Overland Park, toured the Grinter House on Friday and learned about antique toys. (Photo from Pat Spencer)
Third-graders from Trailridge School, Overland Park, toured the Grinter House on Friday, and learned about covered wagons. (Photo from Pat Spencer)