‘Jayhawkers’ movie more than story about basketball

Views West

by Murrel Bland

The Boss Lady (Carol) and I walked into the Standees movie theater Saturday, March 15, to watch the independent “Jayhawkers” film.  The theater and an ancillary restaurant are in the Prairie Village Shopping Center.

As we walked up to the ticket counter, we visited very briefly with  three other couples—also obviously Jayhawk fans.

“Well, we don’t have to watch the Jayhawks tonight, so we came to see the movie,” one man said.  KU lost the night before in the Big 12 tournament to Iowa State.

The feature film “Jayhawkers” tells the story of how Wilt Chamberlain was recruited and played basketball at the University Kansas in Lawrence. But it is much more than a film about basketball. It is a story about how the greatest basketball player ever helped change the hearts and minds of Kansans when it came to race relations.

The film tells of Wilton Norman Chamberlain who was born in 1936 in Philadelphia, Pa. He led his Overbook High School basketball team to two city championships; once he scored 90 points in a single game.

B.H. Born, a KU graduate who played for coach Phog Allen in the early 1950s, had spotted Chamberlain and encouraged Allen to recruit him. Allen visited Chamberlain and his parents and found that more than 200 other schools were recruiting the basketball sensation; Allen, known not only for his coaching skills but also for his power of persuasion, convinced Wilt to visit Lawrence.

A special delegation welcomed Chamberlain to Lawrence, meeting him at the Lawrence Airport.  He decided to play for KU.

However, after he came to Lawrence, Chamberlain ran into ugly racial discrimination. Black persons were not allowed to attend downtown Lawrence movie theaters or eat in restaurants. There are scenes where Chamberlain integrates a movie theater and a restaurant.

Franklin Murphy, the KU chancellor, saw Chamberlain not only as a great basketball player, but also as an agent of change who had—through sports– the power to lead the way toward racial justice.

I recall conversations with Roy Edwards Jr. and his wife Joan, about how they befriended Chamberlain, inviting him to their Kansas City, Kan., home for Sunday dinner, despite certain neighbors who looked disapprovingly. Chamberlain would lift the Edwards children up to a goal so they could dunk the basketball.

Justin Wesley, a current member of the KU basketball team, does an excellent job of portraying Chamberlain. His coach, Bill Self, had suggested to Kevin Willmott, the film’s director, that Wesley would do a good job in the movie. Wesley did.

Willmott , a native of Junction City, Kan., is an independent moviemaker and an associate professor of film at KU. His other films include “CSA,” a story of what it would be like if the South would have won the Civil War and “The Only Good Indian,” a story about students who escape from Indian schools.

Jayhawkers” also provides insight into the life of coach Allen. Allen, portrayed by Kip Niven, played in the early 1900s for James Naismith, the man who invented the game of basketball and KU’s first head basketball coach.

Allen told Naismith that he wanted to coach basketball. Naismith said basketball didn’t really need a coach—that “you just let players play.”

According to legend, there were times during Naismith’s coaching tenure that he didn’t attend games; at other times, he served as a referee. Coaching was a sideline for Naismith—his other duties included teaching hygiene classes and conducting chapel meetings; he also was an ordained Presbyterian clergyman.

Allen was considered the man who invented basketball coaching. He wanted to coach Chamberlain; however state law forced him to retire at age 70. He was bitter that Chancellor Murphy refused to seek an exemption; instead Murphy appointed Dick Harp, Allen’s assistant, as the new head coach. Allen had favored Ralph Miller who had played at KU for Allen in the late 1930s. Miller was a very successful basketball coach at Wichita University, the University of Iowa and Oregon State.

Kathleen Warfel, an actress that I first met when she was at Washington High School in the early 1970s, does an excellent job of portraying Bess, Phog Allen’s wife. Warfel has appeared in several local theater productions and is a KU graduate.

The “Jayhawkers“ film is in black and white–consistent with the films of the 1950s era—except for the final scenes that are in color. The movie closes with shots from a halftime ceremony in early 1998 during halftime of a KU-K-State game when Chamberlain’s jersey was retired. I was fortunate to have attended that game.

Chamberlain had been reluctant to come back to KU for the ceremony; when he started to speak to the packed field house of more than 16,000 loyal Jayhawk fans, he started to apologize for losing the national championship game in 1957 to the University of North Carolina. But the fans didn’t want to hear that. There was no need for him apologize. And in that moment, he praised his KU experience, ending with ”Rock Chalk Jayhawk.”

Murrel Bland is the former editor of The Wyandotte West and The Piper Press.

Cook and Cline Design now open In KCK

 

Cook and Cline Design, a new design and furnishings business, recently opened at 416 N. 5th St. on Strawberry Hill in Kansas City, Kan. (Photo by William Crum)

by William Crum

There’s a new kid on the block on Strawberry Hill.  Cook and Cline Design has opened at 416 N. 5th St. in Kansas City, Kan.

The new design and furnishings business provides carpeting, flooring, countertops and molding for home remodeling and new homes.

“We have a lot to offer here, plus expert advice. The reason why we decided to come to the Strawberry Hill area is because of the older homes and the people. Everyone is fantastic,” said Kelly Cook, co-owner.

“I agree with Kelly, it’s a great place to live and work. Both Kelly and I recently bought homes over here plus we decided to open our new business here,” said Steven Cline, president and co-founder of Cook and Cline Design.

They have a one-stop shop for remodeling needs in their shop near 5th and Elizabeth.

For more information call 913-608-7899 or go to the website, www.kccrownmolding.com.

Cook and Cline Design, a new design and furnishings business, recently opened at 416 N. 5th St. on Strawberry Hill in Kansas City, Kan. (Photo by William Crum)
Cook and Cline Design, a new design and furnishings business, recently opened at 416 N. 5th St. on Strawberry Hill in Kansas City, Kan. (Photo by William Crum)

 

KCK tax preparer indicted on charges of preparing false tax returns

A tax preparer in Kansas City, Kan., was indicted today by a federal grand jury on charges of preparing false tax returns, U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said.

Ahferom Goitom, 34, Kansas City, Kan., is charged with fourteen counts of preparing false tax returns.

The indictment alleges that Goitom was a professional tax return preparer who worked in Kansas City, Kan., and was the manager of a franchise business that prepares tax returns.

He used commercial tax preparation software at the business to file returns electronically with the Internal Revenue Service.

He prepared at least 34 Form 1040s containing false and fraudulent education credits, charitable deductions, medical and dental expenses, home mortgage interest deductions, gross receipts for a sole proprietorship business, expenses for a sole proprietorship business and deductions for rental real estate.

For example, count one of the indictment alleges Goitom filed a return for a taxpayer in calendar year 2009 claiming medical and dental expenses of $5,050; gifts to charity of $8,200; and job expenses and miscellaneous deductions of $5,821. He knew that the taxpayer was entitled to claim medical and dental expenses of only $226, gifts to charity of approximately $2,000 and no job expenses or other miscellaneous deductions, according to the indictment.

If convicted, he faces a maximum penalty of three years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000 on each count. The Internal Revenue Service investigated. Assistant U.S. Attorney Scott Rask is prosecuting.

Other indictments by the grand jury include:

–  Lamar Lynch, 41, Kansas City, Kan., is charged with 13 counts of stealing government funds by filing false and fraudulent federal income tax returns and nine counts of aggravated identity theft.

The crimes are alleged to have occurred in 2011 and 2012 in the state of Kansas. If convicted, he faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000 on each count of filing a false tax return, and a penalty of not less than two years and a fine up to $250,000 on each count of aggravated identity theft.

The Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation Division, U.S. Secret Service and Housing and Urban Development – Office of Inspector General investigated. Assistant U.S. Attorney Tris Hunt is prosecuting.

–  Randy A. Cornelius, 21, Kansas City, Mo., Allen J. Williams, 23, Kansas City, Mo., and Alvin J. Williams, 23, Kansas City, Mo., have been indicted on bank robbery and federal firearms charges.

A federal criminal complaint filed Feb. 28 in U.S. District Court in Kansas City, Kan., charged each of the defendants with one count of bank robbery in the Feb. 27, 2014, robbery of Inter-State Federal Savings at 8620 Metcalf in Overland Park, Kan.

Today’s indictment adds a charge against each defendant of using a firearm during the robbery.

In addition, Allen J. Williams is charged with one count of unlawful possession of a firearm after a felony conviction.

If convicted, the defendants face a maximum penalty of 25 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000 on the bank robbery charge, and a penalty of not less than seven years and a fine up to $250,000 on the charge of using a firearm in the robbery.

In addition, the charge of unlawful possession of a firearm after a felony conviction carries a maximum penalty of 10 years and a fine up to $250,000.

The Overland Park Police Department, the Kansas City, Mo., Police Department and the FBI investigated. Assistant U.S. Attorney Tris Hunt is prosecuting.

–  Jose Angel Aquilera-Franco, 20, Bonner Springs, Kan., and Darin Glassburn, 44, are charged in a second superseding indictment with one count of attempted possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine.

The crime is alleged to have occurred Dec. 5, 2013, in Kansas City, Kan.

In addition, Aguilera-Franco is charged with one count of distributing methamphetamine within 1,000 feet of St. Peter’s Catholic School in Kansas City, Kan., one count of distributing methamphetamine and one count of dealing in firearms without a federal license.

Upon conviction, the crimes carry the following penalties:

  • Distributing methamphetamine within 1,000 feet of a school: A maximum penalty of 40 years in federal prison and a fine up to $2 million.
  • Distributing methamphetamine: A maximum penalty of 20 years and a fine up to $1 million.
  • Dealing in firearms without a license: A maximum penalty of five years and a fine up to $250,000.
  • Attempted possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine: Not less than 10 years and a fine up to $10 million.

The U.S. Postal Inspection Service and the Kansas City, Kan., Police Department investigated. Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Erin Tomasic is prosecuting.