KCKCC women clinch No. 4 seed in tournament

The KCKCC women’s basketball team has clinched the No. 4 seed in the KJCCC Division II Women’s Basketball Tournament. KCKCC will play Neosho County Community College, the No. 5 seed, at 5:30 p.m. Monday at the KCKCC Fieldhouse. (Submitted photo)

by Tyler Scott, KCKCC sports information director

Baldwin, Kansas – The KJCCC Division II Women’s Basketball Tournament seedings were announced on Friday night, and the KCKCC women’s basketball team clinched one of the top four seeds, earning the No. 4 spot.

The Blue Devils will take on Neosho County Community College, which earned the No. 5 seed after falling to Labette Community College.

The Blue Devils enter the tournament with a 15-12 overall record and 7-7 mark in the conference.


Johnson County Community College earned the No. 1 overall seed after winning the KJCCC regular season championship, while Labette is the No. 2 seed.

Highland Community College enters the tournament as the No. 3 seed and will be the host to No. 6 seed Allen Community College. Fort Scott Community College is the No. 7 seed and Hesston College is No. 8.

KCKCC and Neosho County split the regular season series this season, as the Blue Devils took down the Panthers at home 84-78 on Jan. 26. Neosho earned the win on their home court on Feb. 16, 86-79.


Faith Putz and De’Jaria Guillory are the two leading scorers for the Blue Devils with 10.8 and 10.4 points. Sarah Hunt leads Neosho with 13.6 points per game.

The Blue Devils and Panthers will square off on Monday inside the KCKCC Fieldhouse at 5:30 p.m.

KCKCC women win against Fort Scott, 64-52

The KCKCC women’s basketball team won its final home regular season game against Fort Scott, 64-52, on Wednesday. (KCKCC photo)

by Tyler Scott, KCKCC sports information director

The KCKCC women’s basketball team closed out its home regular season schedule with a 64-52 win over Fort Scott Community College on Wednesday night inside the KCKCC Fieldhouse, on the annual Sophomore Night.

The Blue Devils end the regular season campaign with a 15-12 overall record and 7-7 mark in the KJCCC.

KCKCC took a 5-0 lead after baskets from Faith Putz and Ikia Elam and went ahead 14-9 after the first quarter.

Despite the Greyhounds hanging around with the Blue Devils, KCKCC continued to lead the second quarter and got a big three-point bucket from Aysia Arrowood to give the team a 24-20 lead. It was a tight battle the rest of the half, as KCKCC led 30-27.

With a 33-29 lead in the third quarter De’Jaria Guillory made a basket with 7:48 left in the period and added another basket two minutes later.

The Blue Devils continued to keep the pace up and led by eight points at 42-34 heading to the fourth quarter. Elam and Jennifer Guilbeaux made baskets to extend the KCKCC lead by more than 10 points.

With 5:40 left in the final period, Lacy Whitcomb and Guillory scored six straight points combined to give KCKCC a 55-39 lead, which eventually led the Blue Devils to a win.

Elam posted a double-double of 14 points and 10 rebounds on 5-of-7 shooting. Mercer Roberts and Faith Putz each had 10 points for the Blue Devils.

KCKCC now awaits its seeding in the upcoming KJCCC Tournament, which begins on Monday, Feb. 28.

KCKCC art exhibit features African-American theme

The KCKCC Art Gallery’s latest art exhibition is “From Tanner to Knight: An African American Art Expose.” The show is open from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday to Friday and will close Feb. 25.

A virtual reception is planned from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Feb. 22. The Zoom link to the reception is https://kckcc.zoom.us/s/4254863870?fbclid=IwAR3wPL30P9zvS71-s68xo234cbW9URrzBJhfnxRye3IxfMQiJ_7O4aePZPo.

The exhibition includes 17 artists featuring 24 works of art, including work from renowned artist Jonathan Knight, an internationally known watercolorist and oil painter who also is known for his pastels and printmaking. Knight, who is from Daytona Beach, Florida, and now resides in Kansas City, Missouri, is a Signature Member of the National Watercolor Society. There are three pieces of Knight’s works exhibited for sale, most notably, “Lily Pond VIII.”

The show was co-curated by Dr. Curtis V. Smith, a retired professor from KCKCC and board member of the Greater Kansas City Area Print Society, and KCKCC Art Gallery Coordinator Shai M. Perry.

With several fine art prints in the exhibit, Smith wants to use this opportunity to educate the community about the art of printmaking. Most artists work in cooperation with a professional printmaker to create a fine art image that can be sold as a limited edition.

One of the United States’ greatest printmakers, Ron Adams, is in the exhibit. Adams, who died in 2020, was recognized as a master printer of the highest order, producing powerful images of African Americans.

Other nationally recognized artists featured include an abstract untitled mixed media study on handmade paper by Sam Gilliam. There is a retrospective of Gilliam’s art planned at the Hirschhorn Museum in Washington, D.C., later this year.

Joyce Jane Scott’s “Repent” is a mixed media lithographic silkscreen print with embossing. She was born in Baltimore, Maryland, and recognized nationally for her figurative sculptures and jewelry using freeform off-loom bead weaving techniques.

Clarissa Sligh is an African American book artist and photographer based in Asheville, North Carolina, who co-founded the Coast-to-Coast National Women Artists of Color Project. Her artwork is “Passages, Family No. 3,” a signed and numbered archival pigmented inkjet print.

The works of art featured in the exhibition by Kansas City area artists include Michael Toombs, Glyneisha Johnson, Russell Easterwood, Alexander Austin, Danny Hinds, Maurice Copeland, and Hank Smith.

A nod is also given in the form of two historic reproductions of art during the career of Henry Ossawa Tanner (1859-1937). Tanner was a towering historical figure in American art history who became the first African American to gain international acclaim for his paintings. A resident of Kansas City, Kansas, for a short time after World War I, he completed three paintings while living with his parents. Tanner’s “Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City,” an oil on canvas completed in 1885, was the first painting by an African American to hang in the White House (Clinton, 1998).

For more information on the art exhibition or to schedule a visit, contact Perry at 913-288-7408 or at [email protected].

  • Story from Kelly Rogge, public information manager, KCKCC