Pitchers shine as KCKCC sweep knocks Coffeyville out of Jayhawk lead

Freshman Geoffrey Birkemeier kicked off KCKCC’s sweep of Coffeyville Friday by retiring the final 11 hitters to complete a 3-hit 2-0 win. (KCKCC photo by Alan Hoskins)

by Alan Hoskins

Kansas City Kansas Community College continued its assault on Jayhawk Conference leaders Friday, knocking Coffeyville out of first place behind the shutout pitching of freshmen Geoffrey Birkemeier and Preston Bailey.

Birkemeier pitched a 3-hitter in leading the Blue Devils to a 2-0 win in the 7-inning opener; Bailey gave up only two singles and no runs over seven innings in KCKCC’s 4-3 win in the 9-inning nightcap.

The wins were the fifth and sixth in a row over first place teams for KCKCC, which handed previously unbeaten Cowley its first four-game series loss last weekend.

The sweep also stretched KCKCC’s winning streak to eight in a row heading into a return doubleheader Saturday at Coffeyville, which fell to second place at 15-3 behind Johnson County (14-2).

The Blue Devils improved to 8-10 in the conference and evened their overall record at 15-15.

A righthander from Papillion, Neb., Birchemeier allowed only six Ravens to reach base, striking out four and walking two while retiring the final 11 Ravens in order.

The Blue Devils scored the only run they would need in the first. Lucas Norton led off with a single, stole second, took third on an infield error and scored on Christian Arnold’s squeeze bunt.

The second run came in the fifth. Eric Hinostroza led off with a single, moved to third on sacrifice bunts by Tyler Raymond and Zane Mapes and scored on Tanner Foerschler’s base hit.  Bailey, a righthander from Savannah, Mo., allowed only one runner to reach second base in seven innings of the nightcap.

The Blue Devils took a 4-0 lead into the ninth before the Red Ravens scored their only runs of the day, scoring three times on three hits and a walk off reliever Hunter Phillips before Phillips stranded the tying run on second.

KCKCC took a 2-0 lead in the third. After a leadoff single by Mitch Glessner, Zane Mapes beat out a bunt and both runners moved up on Foerschler’s sacrifice bunt.

Norton’s sacrifice fly scored the first run and Mapes scored on a double steal.

Garrett McKinzie opened the fourth with a triple and scored on Arnold’s sacrifice fly for a 3-0 lead and Arnold drove in what proved to be the winning run with a two-out single following a hit batsman and a wild pitch in the sixth.

Founder of EyeVerify to speak at KCKCC Innovation Summit

by Kelly Rogge

Toby Rush, CEO and founder of EyeVerify, will be the keynote speaker at the 3rd annual Kansas City Kansas Community College Innovation Summit. The summit features entrepreneurial innovations in the region.

Rush’s EyeVerify created a technology of biometric authentication that applies pattern-recognition techniques to video images of the veins in a user’s eyes. Smartphones and tablets already have cameras that are sufficient to capture the eye image. This means that the Eyeprint Verification software can be used on hundreds of millions of devices that are already deployed.

The Innovation Summit is 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday, April 4, in the Upper Jewell Center on the main KCKCC campus, 7250 State Ave. in Kansas City, Kan.

The summit includes a State Street Perfect Pitch Contest with 12 emerging entrepreneurs in the high school and general divisions. These participants will offer innovations in areas including information technology, apparel, medical devices, culinary arts and others. A total of $10,000 in cash prizes will be awarded by State Street Bank. Registration is $10 per person and includes a continental breakfast and lunch.

In addition, the summit will feature a panel of entrepreneurs including Joyce Williams, founder of Joyce Williams Salon and developer of Joyce Williams Hair Care Products.  Kansas City, Kan. Mayor and CEO, Mark Holland, will provide a lunch address, where competition participants will also be awarded prizes. The lunch is a partnership between KCKCC and the KC Chamber First Friday Focus.

Innovation Summit sponsors include State Street Bank (platinum sponsor); KCKCC (host sponsor); University of Missouri (breakfast sponsor); Youth Entrepreneurs, Unified Government of Wyandotte County, Wyandotte Economic Development Council, Kansas Small Business Development Center, KCSourceLink KCK Chamber, KCK Women’s Chamber and Emporia State University-KC (friend sponsors).

To register for the Innovation Summit, visit www.kckcc.edu/academics/academicDivisions/business/workforceDevelopment/innovationsummit.aspx. Then select “Registration Form” and follow the instructions.

For more information, contact Marisa Gray at [email protected] or call 913-288-7659.

KCKCC launches Center for Global Transitional Justice

by Kelly Rogge

Kansas City Community College has launched a new center known as the Henry M. Louis Center for Transitional Justice to promote global transitional justice, peace, multicultural education and global friendship.

The center will publish a quarterly journal, “The Citizen Diplomat,” convene annual transitional justice conferences and organize a freedom and peace luncheon in the fall semester.

The Henry Louis Center, which was approved by the KCKCC administration earlier in March, will be beneficial to the local community, state, national and international communities.

In the past, the center, acting as an educational institute, had conducted conflict resolution workshops and simulations for high school students and hopes to continue with that tradition. The center also plans to organize hands-on workshops, lectures and conferences for local communities.

“Transitional justice is concerned with how individuals, governments and societies deal with the unpleasant past,” said Ewa Unoke, associate professor of political science at KCKCC and coordinator of the Henry project. “Transitional justice deals with such issues as truth telling, punishment, pardon, accountability, healing, catharsis, reparative justice, restorative justice, reconciliation, national recovery, truth and reconciliation commissions and the International Criminal Court.”

The center’s new project, “Transitional Justice and Counter-Terrorism: Establishing a Post-Conflict Agenda for Societies in Democratic Transitions” began in February 2014 after 10 KCKCC students participated in the recent National Model United Nations at Harvard University in Boston.

The Louis Center, along with the Student for Global Peace and Ralph Bunche Society, jointly sponsored the trip.

“The Henry M. Louis Center for Global Transitional Justice is a great asset for the KCKCC,” Unoke said. “Our students, will write for the transitional justice journal, take transitional justice classes and conduct researches abroad. KCKCC faculty interested in the theme of transitional justice will have the opportunity to be published and also participate in transitional justice conferences, workshops and researches locally and abroad.”

If grants are approved by the State Department, the new project will bring together journalists, government officials and the community from the United States and Africa. The center will conduct workshops abroad in collaboration with a few KCKCC faculty and students.

“In an age of anger, fear and terrorism, transitional justice is a timely theme in international relations, post-conflict reconciliation and national recovery,” Unoke said. “Professor Henry Louis was a global extrovert who led hundreds of KCKCC faculty on numerous trips worldwide. Our aim is to continue Henry’s legacy by facilitating global links among KCKCC community, governments and human rights communities abroad. We invite individuals and organizations who believe in human rights, peace and reconciliation partnerships to join us.”

Unoke holds a doctorate degree. His major fields of study were international relations and comparative politics. He is a transitional justice and subaltern scholar who is a former Biafra Child soldier and prisoner of war. He has taught for the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development in Liberia at the College of Insurance and Risk management. Unoke has also taught transitional justice at Howard University, Lincoln University and currently at KCKCC.

For more information on the Henry M. Louis Center for Global Transitional Justice feel free to contact Professor Ewa Unoke at [email protected] or 913-288-7318.