KCKCC student receives Ella Fitzgerald Memorial Scholarship

Christian Anderson

by Kelly Rogge, KCKCC

One student at Kansas City Kansas Community College is the first to receive a scholarship from the Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation under a new partnership.

KCKCC recently reached an agreement with the Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation regarding a new music scholarship – the Ella Fitzgerald Memorial Scholarship. The scholarship will provide one music or audio engineering student per year with a full-tuition scholarship that covers all college-related fees and expenses.

KCKCC’s first recipient is Christian Anderson, a second-year music major from Shawnee, Kansas.

“I cannot begin to express how grateful and humbled I am that the faculty saw fit to name me the first Ella Fitzgerald Scholar at KCKCC,” Anderson said. “The fact that they thought me deserving of this serves as a great encouragement to me to keep giving my all despite whatever may happen in an uncertain future. This is truly a great honor that I am very excited to have received.”

The Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation was established in 1993 by Ella Fitzgerald, a world-renowned jazz artist. Fitzgerald wanted to share her passion for music and reading with people of all races, cultures and beliefs as well as to help at-risk and disadvantaged members of society achieve a higher quality of life.

The foundation’s four main areas of focus are – creating educational and other opportunities for children; fostering a love and knowledge of music, including assistance to students of music; the provision of health care, food, shelter and counseling to those in need and specific areas of medical care and research, with an emphasis on diabetes, vision problems and heart disease.

The foundation’s scholarship program began in 1996 at the Bob Cole Conservatory of Music at California State University-Long Beach. The program has since expanded, and the foundation now funds 30 scholarships at schools throughout the United States.

“It is an honor for us to have been invited by the Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation to be one of their educational partners,” said Dr. Justin Binek, assistant professor of music at KCKCC. “For us to be part of a list that includes such wonderful jazz programs as California State University-Long Beach, the University of North Texas and North Carolina Central University is remarkable. And I couldn’t think of a more deserving student to be our first Ella Fitzgerald Scholar than Christian. In addition to being a truly excellent and well-rounded musician, in my opinion he’s an even better person.”

KCKCC was chosen as an Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation partner, in part, because of the college’s repeated national exposure through the Downbeat Student Music Awards and performances at various national conferences.

In addition, Dr. Justin Binek, assistant professor of music at KCKCC, completed his doctoral research on Fitzgerald’s improvisation techniques and the foundation has expressed interest in partnering with a community college that had a high percentage of minority students.

“KCKCC is ecstatic to have a partnership with the Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation. This award is another indication of how highly regarded our Music Department has become, along with the 14 DownBeat Student Music Awards that our students – mostly vocal – have won in the last four years,” said Jim Mair, music professor at KCKCC. “Kansas City, Kansas, is also the birthplace of Charlie Parker, Carmell Jones and Dr. Nathan Davis, all of whom performed with Ella Fitzgerald, and KCKCC Professor Dr. Justin Binek wrote his dissertation on the evolution of Ella’s scatting. All of the pieces of the puzzle are coming together to perpetuate the Kansas City, Kansas, connection to swing, soul and the evolution of jazz music.”

Anderson, a graduate of Shawnee Mission Northwest, focuses primarily in voice, and performs a diverse range of styles, including classical, jazz and musical theatre. He is a member of KCKCC’s award-winning vocal jazz ensemble, The Standard. An excellent academic student as well, Anderson studies piano and he is active in KCKCC’s Theatre Department.

“We are honored that the Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation selected KCKCC to be one of the few institutions in the country to offer their scholarship,” said John Stafford, associate professor of music, director of choral activities. “I am excited about Christian earning this award. Of the 10 candidates we were considering, Christian had the highest GPA among all of them. Also, a special thank you should go to Dr. (Justin) Binek for being the liaison between the college and the foundation in organizing this opportunity. This wouldn’t have happened without his hard work and insight.”

Wyandotte County COVID-19 cases increase by 166

There were 3,317 cases reported at noon Thursday, an increase of 166, according to the UG’s COVID-19 website. (From UG COVID-19 website)

Wyandotte County positive COVID-19 cases increased by 166 from noon Wednesday to noon Thursday, according to the Unified Government’s COVID-19 webpage. Also, hospital numbers are rising.

There were 3,317 cases reported at noon Thursday, an increase of 166, according to the UG’s COVID-19 website.

There were no new deaths listed in Wyandotte County, the total remained at 88.

On Tuesday evening, Wyandotte County health officials announced the mask order would also apply to persons who are exercising indoors at gyms or facilities, and also to day cares.

Gov. Laura Kelly announced on Wednesday that school start would be delayed until at least Sept. 9 in Kansas because of the rising number of COVID-19 cases.

According to the UG’s COVID-19 website, the Zip Code with the highest number of recent cases in Wyandotte County was 66102, which reported 238 cases in the past 14 days. Zip Code 66104 reported 135 cases, and Zip Code 66106 reported 114 cases. Zip Code 66101 had 108 cases in the past 14 days. Zip Code 66103 reported 69 cases, according to the website.

The University of Kansas Health System reported a total of 34 COVID-19 patients in the hospital on Thursday morning, an increase from 30 on Wednesday, according to Dr. Dana Hawkinson, medical director of infection prevention and control at KU Health System. Twelve COVID-19 patients were in the intensive care unit and four were on ventilators, compared to two on ventilators on Wednesday. There were seven new admissions Wednesday and several discharges. One of the patients admitted is a teenager.

Dr. Hawkinson said they were running low on critical medications such as remdesivir, and he hopes they do not run short of medications to make patients comfortable while they are on the ventilator.

At a KU Health System news conference on Thursday morning, Dr. Doug Girod, chancellor of the University of Kansas, said the KU Lawrence campus is planning for an influx of students in a few weeks for the fall semester.

The university will test all students for COVID-19, with a free saliva test, according to Dr. Girod.

Students who test positive will be quarantined in Naismith Hall, according to Dr. Girod. They will have the help of the county health department in contact tracing. He said that the county health department, the university campus health center, KU Health System and the state health department have been assisting in making plans.

Monitoring and testing will continue through the semester, he said.

Everyone on campus will wear a mask and there will be social distancing in classrooms and other places, according to Dr. Girod. They will try to avoid face-to-face interaction by making stairways and hallways one-way.

He said there will be a combination of in-person and remote classes.

Lawrence recently saw a spike and new cases were traced back to a few bars, he said. Douglas County closed bars again and new cases started to decline.

Dr. Girod also said some researchers have developed an app that they hope will be used on campus. It asks a series of questions each morning, then gives the person a code that might say the person is not symptomatic at that time. Then the code could be entered into buildings. If there are symptoms, the app will tell the user to call a hotline and get tested.

Dr. Hawkinson said the virus is still out there and people should continue to follow guidance, physical distance, wear a mask, not go out if sick and wash their hands to reduce the risk as much as possible and keep their families safe.

To view the KU doctors’ news conference, visit https://www.facebook.com/kuhospital/videos/290096935440894.


For information on the amended Wyandotte County mask order, visit
https://www.wycokck.org/WycoKCK/media/Health-Department/Documents/Communicable%20Disease/COVID19/07142020MaskOrderAmendments.pdf and https://www.wycokck.org/WycoKCK/media/Health-Department/Documents/Communicable%20Disease/COVID19/07142020LocalHealthOfficerOrderMaskAmendments.pdf.

The governor’s executive order on masks is at https://governor.kansas.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/20200702093130003.pdf.


The governor’s news release on the mask order is at https://governor.kansas.gov/governor-laura-kelly-signs-executive-order-mandating-masks-in-public-spaces/.

The Wyandotte County mask order is at https://www.wycokck.org/WycoKCK/media/Health-Department/Documents/Communicable%20Disease/COVID19/06272020LocalHealthOfficerOrderRegardingMasks.pdf.

Wyandotte County has posted an application for nonprofits, government agencies, school districts and businesses in Wyandotte County that want to apply for CARES Act funding. The web address is https://us.openforms.com/Form/6273fe80-8bba-4c18-b4e7-e551096d8a83.


For information on how to make an easy no-sew mask, visit https://wyandotteonline.com/how-to-make-a-no-sew-cloth-mask/.


For more information about COVID-19 testing, including other sites, visit https://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/what-to-do-if-you-think-you-have-covid-19. Residents also may call 3-1-1 for more information about testing.


The state’s COVID-19 test page is at https://www.coronavirus.kdheks.gov/280/COVID-19-Testing.

Residents may visit the UG COVID-19 website at https://alpha.wycokck.org/Coronavirus-COVID-19-Information or call 311 for more information.

Wyandotte County is currently under Phase 3. See covid.ks.gov.

The state plan’s frequently asked questions page is at https://covid.ks.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Reopening-FAQ_5.19.2020_Final.pdf.


The CDC’s COVID-19 web page is at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/index.html.

Democrats to meet Saturday

Legislative candidates and Mayor David Alvey are scheduled to speak at 9 a.m. Saturday, July 18, at the Wyandotte County Third Saturday Democratic Breakfast. It will be a Zoom meeting.

Legislative candidates in contested Democratic primaries are invited to speak.

Democrats may access the meeting through Zoom on the internet, a smart phone or tablet at https://zoom.us/j/97936409476. Those who have not previously installed the free Zoom client will be prompted to download and install it, or they may install it at https://zoom.us/download#client_4meeting.

For those without a computer or smart phone, the meeting also may be accessed by telephone by dialing 312-626-6799 (long distance rates may apply). The meeting ID is 979 3640 9476.