KCKCC’s Blue Devil 5K is a success

Kids participated in the 2014 Blue Devil 5K and Kids Trot recently. (KCKCC photo)

by Kelly Rogge
Exercise was the name of the game during the 2014 Blue Devil 5K and Kids Trot.
The event, which is in its 10th year, was May 3 on the Kansas City Kansas Community College campus.  Eighty participants crossed the finish line.
“This year’s Blue Devil 5k and Kids Trot went awesome,” said Joe Mundt, trainer at the KCKCC Wellness and Fitness Center. “It is great to see the community come out and support our event. Participants really enjoyed the great weather and watching the kids do their races after the 5k was done.”
The goal of the annual event is to get the community more active. The winners were the husband and wife pair of Matt Greer, 18 minutes and 8 second and Angela Greer, 22 minutes and 37 seconds. They both also won last year. Awards were also given to the top finishers in each category. Following the 5K race, children had the opportunity to participate in the Kids Trot. There was also a pancake breakfast in Lower Jewell.
“Our KCKCC Wellness Center staff does a great job every year putting this event on. From setting up the course to helping participants get their bib numbers and timing chips on before the race, our staff does it all,” Mundt said. “The participant’s excitement leading up to the event helps to motivate us to make this event even better each year.”
Donations for the Blue Devil 5K Run/Walk were received from the Midwest Regional Credit Union, Sam’s Club and the KCKCC Bookstore.
For more information about the Blue Devil 5K or the KCKCC Wellness and Fitness Center, call 913-288-7370.

The 2014 Blue Devil 5K and Kids Trot got the community involved in running events. (KCKCC photo)

KCKCC students collect more than 4,000 items and cash for student food pantry

by Kelly Rogge

The Kansas City Kansas Community College Student Food Pantry is now well stocked with non-perishable food items, as well as personal care items thanks to a recent collection drive.

KCKCC students from two Human Relations in Business classes used their energy, creativity and dedication for this community service project.

“Our students are so amazing,” said Karen Gaines, business instructor at KCKCC. “This semester, the classes formed teams, and over a four-week period, the teams gathered 4,015 food and personal care items and $135 (most of which was then turned into food and personal care purchases).”

Andrea Chastain, director of the Student and Community Resource Center (formerly the Community Outreach Counseling Program) at KCKCC, said the food pantry was not large enough to accommodate all the items collected by the students.

“That is a good problem as we now have items in reserve to replenish the shelves,” she said. “I know that our student population appreciates the generosity of all who contributed to the food pantry and those students who participated in the community service projects.”

The KCKCC Student Food Pantry is located in the Student and Community Resource Center and offers non-perishable food and personal-use items to students who need assistance. For further information about these services, contact Andrea Chastain, director of the Student and Community Resource Center, 913-288-7270 or by email, [email protected].

Professor makes appeal to save lives of kidnapped girls

by Kelly Rogge
The director of the KCKCC Henry Louis Center for Global Transitional Justice, Professor Ewa Unoke has appealed to the President and the U.S. Congress to save the lives of the recently kidnapped school girls in northern Nigeria.

On the night of April 14, 2014, about 230 girls were abducted from their boarding school in Chibok, Borno state, by a group of Islamist militants known as Boko-Haram. Boko-Haram means “Western education is a sin.” According to Unoke, “This is not only a parent’s nightmare, but a crime against humanity and peace – that your child goes to school and never returns home.”

“If the world is united in the search for the Malaysian missing plane tragedy in which 239 passengers are feared dead, the United States and the global community should also assist the Nigerian government in bringing back the innocent school girls who have become victims of adult abuse,” Unoke said. “For over one year, the northern Nigerian States of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe have remained under siege because of the relentless atrocities blamed on Boko-Haram. Boko-Haram has continued to bomb buses, churches, markets, mosques, schools, bus stops and kidnap innocent women and children.”

Amnesty International estimates that more than 3,000 people have been killed by the militant group including foreign residents and United Nations’ workers. Consequently, while the Nigerian military is engaged in a lifetime battle to defeat Boko-Haram, Unoke said certain Human Rights organizations and TV journalists accuse the Nigerian military of indiscriminate killing of citizens.

“We, at the Henry Center believe that no visionary government will fold its hands while innocent children and their mothers are abducted, abused and sold as sex objects and slaves,” Unoke said. “Boko-Haram, over the years, has become more brazen in its attacks on innocent citizens. And, the Nigerian people have been living in unprecedented fear since the girls were kidnapped. Boko-Haram is opposed to the education of women because western education clashes with Sharia Law. Under Sharia Law, the role of women is at home; to take care of children and their husbands. This is why the insurgent group targets students, women and academic institutions.”

According to the founder, Mohammed Yusuf, the objective of Boko-Haram is to establish an Islamic Nigerian State with Sharia Law as national Constitution. Unoke said since Yusuf was killed in 2009, Boko-Haram has become more ruthless in retaliation and in its fight for self-determination.

“Boko Haram’s horrific act affects the U.S. national interest – security interest, economic interest and ideological interest since Boko-Haram is linked to Al-Qaeda, the terrorist group involved in the plane hijacking and attack on the U.S. Sept. 11, 2001,” he said.

According to Unoke, the blame on President Goodluck Jonathan is unwarranted because terrorism is a global challenge and no single nation is capable of dealing with this scourge alone.

“When it comes to crimes against humanity and peace, the world must shift emphasis from national interest to humanitarian interest such that an attack on one nation is an attack on all nations,” he said. “Professor Henry M. Louis whom our Center is named after, was a man of peace and an advocate for peaceful coexistence and multicultural harmony. Dr. Louis would not have kept silent in the face of the current Human Rights abuses of innocent African children.”

Unoke was a BOFF child soldier who fought against Nigeria during the Biafra – Nigeria War. For more information, contact Ewa Unoke at [email protected] or call 913-288-7119.