KCKCC will send .395 offense against No. 8 Highland Saturday

by Alan Hoskins

Boasting the best hitting team in Kansas City Kansas Community College history, Kacy Tillery’s Lady Blue Devils will make their strongest bid for a return to the national tournament in 10 years this weekend.
With four players hitting better than .400 and seven of nine starters hitting at least .300, the Blue Devils (33-13) will take a team batting average of .395 into the four-team Region VI tournament at Topeka’s Hummer Park Saturday.
The No. 4 seed, the Blue Devils will open at noon against No. 1 seeded Highland, the nation’s No. 8 ranked Division II team with a 36-8 record. The other noon semifinal will match No. 2 Independence (40-14) and No. 3 Cloud (29-12) . The two winners and the two losers will then collide at 4 p.m. with tourney play to be completed starting at 10 a.m. Sunday
Saturday’s meeting with Highland will be the third for KCKCC, which dropped 9-2 and 3-0 decisions at Highland.
“If our pitching and hitting are on, we can play with anybody,” said Tillery, who last took KCKCC to the NJCAA national tournament n 2004..
Leslie Ford, who is third in the nation in number of innings pitched with 272, will carry the pitching load for KCKCC. As the workhorse of the staff, Ford is 21-6 with a 1.76 earned run average, seven shutouts and 21 complete games. Ford has also given up 13 home runs, which could be a problem. Highland is sixth in the nation in home runs this year with 40 and has a team batting average of .373. For is expected to face Paige Crawford (12-2 with 1.68 ERA) in the opener.
The top of the KCKCC lineup may be the best in the nation. Third baseman Lacey Santiago his hitting .494 in the leadoff position and leads the team in stolen bases with 14; centerfielder Justice Scales is hitting .497 and second in RBI with 41; and outfielder Mierra Morrisette leads in hitting (.500) and RBI (49) from the No. 3 spot.
Second baseman Amanda Holyrod leads the team in home runs with four, is second in RBI with 45 and hitting .397 from the cleanup spot while shortstop Hanna Barnhart is hitting .421 with 25 RBI at No. 5. Catcher Megan Dike, a .365 hitter with 11 stolen bases; Ford (.287), outfielder Ashley Henington (.307) and first baseman Laura Vanderheiden (.282) round out starting lineup. Santiago, Morrisette, Holroyd, Barnhart and Dike are all sophomores.

KCKCC professor selected for Fulbright Award

Gregg Ventello (KCKCC photo)

by Kelly Rogge

Gregg Primo Ventello has had a love for the Japanese culture since he was a child.

“I had a friend whose mother was an ESL teacher for adults,” he said. “She often had Japanese students at her house cooking, and the food was so good, but it was very different from what I ate at home (Italian). Food was my introduction, but as I got older, I became interested in Japanese history and literature as well.”

Ventello, a professor in the English Department at Kansas City Kansas Community College, will have even more time to learn about the Japanese culture. He has been selected for a Fulbright Award to Japan.

The presidentially-appointed J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board, along with the Japan-United States Educational Commission, chose the longtime KCKCC faculty member to serve as a lecturer at the University of Ryukyus in Okinawa, Japan, for the 2014-2015 academic year.

As a lecturer, Ventello will be teaching African American literature, gender studies and American culture.
The 10-month appointment starts in September and ends in July 2015. Once his appointment ends, he will return to KCKCC to resume his regular duties for the 2015-2016 school year.

“I am really excited to be going back,” he said. “I think the food is what I am looking forward to most. Food is important to Japanese culture. In my background, food is integral to every family gathering. It doesn’t matter who you are; people commune over good food and drink. It is the easiest way to get to know someone, to assimilate.”

Ventello is one of approximately 1,100 faculty and professionals from the United States who will travel abroad through the Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program in 2014-2015. The program is the flagship international educational exchange program sponsored by the U.S. government and is designed to increase the mutual understanding between the people of the United States and those from other countries.

The application process, which started in February 2013, included a project statement and letters of recommendations. It then had to go through three reviews – technical, disciplinary and regional, before being accepted.

This is not the first time Ventello has lived and worked in Japan. Shortly after graduate school, he lived on the northern most Japanese island of Hokkaido for one year. When he returned to the United States, he finished his dissertation at the University of Kansas and in 2000, began his tenure at KCKCC.

In 2012, Ventello returned to Japan with his wife and two children for a visit. It was when they got back to the United States that his family expressed interest in going back to Japan, but this time, for a longer visit.

“The Fulbright Award seemed like it fit perfectly,” he said. “Both of my children are excited to return. It will be an adventure for the whole family.”

While in Japan, Ventello said his children, 7 and 11, will either go to an international school or public school. The main difference is that at an international school, there is more instruction in English. Classes in a public school setting would be taught entirely in Japanese.

“My wife and I both taught in public schools (in Japan), and it would be an invaluable experience,” he said. “Once we decide where the kids will go to school, then we will find a place to live nearby.”

Ventello said what he hopes to bring back with him to KCKCC is the idea of communitarianism or the emphasis on community above the individual.

“It is a very different concept than what we have learned here in the U.S.,” he said. “What I want to emphasize is what each culture can learn from the other and the benefit of placing the community ahead of the individual. I want to see how certain sacrifices benefit us all.”

KCKCC catcher signs with Bethel College

There were smiles all around as KCKCC sophomore catcher Megan Dike inked her letter of intent to attend Bethel College. She was joined by, from left, KCKCC coach Kacy Tillery, parents Steve and Amy Dike and Bethel coach Stacy Middleton. (KCKCC photo by Alan Hoskins)

by Alan Hoskins
Kansas City Kansas Community College catcher Megan Dike will continue her collegiate softball career at Bethel College in North Norton, Kan.
A sophomore from Lansing, Dike was signed to a letter of intent by Bethel Coach Stacy Middleton Tuesday.
“I’m very excited,” said Middleton, who started the softball program at Bethel three years ago. “Megan is a good catcher and a great hitter; fundamentally solid and well coached. She’s going to bring a great work ethic to our program.”
Dike had a banner season at the plate, catching every game and hitting .365 with one home run and 16 runs batted in. “Bethel is getting an incredible player,” said KCKCC coach Kacy Tillery. “She calls a game as well as any catcher we’ve had here and she pitches as well so she has the know how to help a pitcher out when in trouble.”
The daughter of Amy and Steve Dike, Dike said she was especially attracted to Bethel because of its Special Education program. “I think it’s going to be a good fit on and off the field,” Dike said. “They’ve got a good education program.”