KCKCC golfer overcomes amputation to compete at college level

Parker Vancampen competed for the KCKCC golf team this year. (KCKCC photo)

by Tyler Scott, KCKCC sports information coordinator

KCKCC men’s golfer Parker Vancampen never had the idea that he would play golf. His interest always started with sports like football, basketball and baseball. But an unexpected turn in his life occurred early on, which would propel his start in playing the sport that got him to KCKCC.

When he was an infant doctors found that he had developed a bone tumor that eventually turned worse.

“They discovered it at a couple of weeks old,” Vancampen said. “We fought it until I was 3 or 4 and at that point, it got too far and they decided that we had to amputate my leg. So they amputated it and my first steps were a prosthetic leg and it was off to the races since then. I started competing and playing in sports and really just fitting in like a normal kid.”

Then as he kept playing his right knee started to dislocate every so often. That’s when his trajectory in competing started to change.

“I couldn’t trust myself to run with my prosthetic leg anymore without it dislocating and I just had a lot of fear,” Vancampen said. “I talked to my parents and told them I was going to quit all these sports. They told me I had to keep competing so I said OK. .. I’m going to play golf. I’m going to go out there and work hard at it.”

His interest grew in golf and it has transpired ever since.

This past fall, Vancampen competed in all but two tournaments. He placed in the top 30 at one event, which was his highest finish and hopes to improve upon his game this upcoming spring, which begins in the first week of March.

Vancampen’s interest in KCKCC grew from him getting to know head coach Gary Shrader, as well as the layout of Kansas City.

“I loved Coach Shrader and all my future teammates,” Vancampen said. “There are also a lot of nice courses up here and it just seemed like a good fit. You can get some good practice in and keep developing each day.”

KCKCC’s golf history dates all the way back to the 1970s with numerous individual awards and Region Championships.

Vancampen hopes to be a part of that success, while with the Blue Devils before moving onto the next step.

“I hope to transfer and play at a higher level and just continue golfing and see where that goes.”

More than 500 KCK kids received gifts from Santa

More than 500 kids received gifts at the Donuts with Santa event Saturday at Memorial Hall. The event was through the UG Parks Department. (Photo from UG)
More than 500 kids received gifts at the Donuts with Santa event Saturday at Memorial Hall. The event was through the UG Parks Department. (Photo from UG)
More than 500 kids received gifts at the Donuts with Santa event Saturday at Memorial Hall. The event was through the UG Parks Department. (Photo from UG)

The Donuts with Santa event Saturday saw more than 500 Kansas City, Kansas, kids receiving gifts from Santa.


The event sponsored by the Wyandotte County Parks Foundation, saw nearly 800 community members attending to launch the holiday season.


The free event was at Memorial Hall and included activities, balloon artists, hot cocoa and doughnuts.


Santa arrived to bring more than 500 gifts donated by the Wyandotte County Parks Foundation.


“I am beyond grateful for the wonderful turnout at this year’s ‘Donuts with Santa’ holiday event,” said UG Parks and Recreation Director, Angel Ferrara.

“This year our staff worked extremely hard at making sure this event was a huge success for the community. To see kids and families smiling and having fun in Santa’s village confirms that this holiday event was just what our community needed.”


As each kid arrived, they received a passport card to have stamped as they visited each station in Santa’s Village. Children that filled up their passports were able to enter to win one of six grand prizes of their choice, including a karaoke machine, electronic scooter and a hoverboard. This day would not have been possible without the time and energy of more than 35 volunteers. We are grateful for our community sponsorships, including from the Wyandotte County Parks Foundation, Wyandotte County Sheriff’s Office, Price Chopper (State Avenue and Bonner Springs), Hy-Vee (Mission, Kansas), Krispy Kreme (Shawnee Mission Parkway), and the Ted Miller State Farm Agency.


The UG Parks and Recreation Department invites area youth to the Family Holiday Series, continuing this Friday. Dec. 16, starting at 6:30p.m. with a holiday movie at Joe E. Amayo Community Center, 2810 Metropolitan Ave., KCK, and stockings and gingerbread houses at Beatrice L. Lee Community, 1310 N. 10th St. KCK, on Saturday, Dec. 17 from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Register in advance at www.wycokck.org/parks. (Information from the Unified Government)

Kobach nominates former federal prosecutor to serve as KBI director

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector


Topeka — Attorney General-elect Kris Kobach said Tuesday he would nominate a former Republican rival to be director of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation.
Kobach, who won a three-person primary before narrowly winning election in November, said he would seek Kansas Senate confirmation of Tony Mattivi, who served as an assistant U.S. attorney for 20 years before retiring in 2020. Mattivi was among three candidates in the GOP primary.


“Tony Mattivi is a highly qualified public safety professional with decades of experience working with law enforcement to put away some of the nation’s most violent and dangerous offenders,” Kobach said.


Kobach said that while on the campaign trail he realized Mattivi was valued by Kansas law enforcement officers and would “make him a perfect fit to lead” the KBI.


The director’s job opened after Kirk Thompson announced plans to retire. Thompson was appointed by Attorney General Derek Schmidt, who will leave the office in January. Schmidt lost a campaign for governor to Democrat Laura Kelly.


“I’ve worked alongside the Kansas Bureau of Investigation for three decades, and I know it is a crown jewel of Kansas law enforcement,” Mattivi said.


In the U.S. Department of Justice, Mattivi prosecuted the al-Qaida mastermind behind the USS Cole bombing in Yemen in 2000. He also prosecuted former U.S. Marine Lee Loewen, who attempted to detonate a van filled with explosives in Wichita on behalf of al-Qaida.


In addition, Mattivi was involved in the 2018 conviction of three men from southwest Kansas who conspired to bomb an apartment complex in Garden City where Muslim immigrants resided.


He previously worked in the office of the attorney general and the Shawnee County District Attorney’s office before he was hired by the federal government. He earned a law degree at Washburn University in Topeka.


Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.


See more at https://kansasreflector.com/briefs/kobach-nominates-former-federal-prosecutor-to-serve-as-kbi-director/