St. Charles rallies for 3-1 second half win over KCKCC women

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College’s Lady Blue Devils couldn’t make a 1-0 halftime lead stand up as St. Charles Community College rallied for a 3-1 soccer win Thursday night.

The non-conference loss snapped a two-game winning streak for the Blue Devils, who are 5-2 overall heading into a Jayhawk Conference clash at Coffeyville next Wednesday at 5 p.m.

Freshman Itzel Almanza put the Blue Devils ahead 1-0 with 28 minutes gone in the first half. It was the sixth goal of the season for the forward from Harmon.

St. Charles then tied it 1-1 on a goal by Gabbie Wiesner, went ahead on a shot by Hannah Leahy and added an insurance goal by Bryn Lundberg. KCKCC was limited to five shots on goal as opposed to 10 for St. Charles.

BPU warns customers about scammers

The Kansas City, Kansas, Board of Public Utilities is warning customers and business owners that the utility is seeing an escalated rate of utility scammers.

BPU has seen an increase in reports of phone scams involving small business customers.

With the most recent scam, callers are targeting small businesses using software that fraudulently mimics a utility company’s phone number that appears on the Caller ID. The caller warns that services will be disconnected if the customer fails to make an immediate payment.

If the customer is unable to make a payment, the caller provides a phone number for customers to call where the payment can be made. This phone number is in no way associated with BPU and indeed a scam, a BPU spokesman said.

“We’ve been notified by customers who have been targeted with this strategy; where they are told to call a 1-800 number and purchase a prepaid credit card to make the payment so that all accounts are current. Sometimes the scammers use special software that makes it look like the call is coming from BPU,” stated David Mehlhaff, BPU chief communications officer.

Mehlhaff added that customers who suspect they are being scammed should never provide any personal or banking information. They should hang up and contact the BPU Customer Service Department directly at 913-573-9190.

BPU said electric customers have been targeted by scammers using a variety of such scam attempts for a number of years in almost all of the 50 states.

BPU offers these tips to customers on protecting themselves if they are unsure about the identity of a call, email or visit from a utility representative:

- Never give credit or debit card, Social Security, ATM, checking or savings account numbers to anyone who comes to your home, calls, texts or sends an email requesting this information in respect to your utility bill, without verifying that is an authentic BPU call by either asking to see company identification or by calling BPU’s Customer Service Department.

- Be suspicious if you receive an email regarding your utility bill if you have not requested online communications from BPU.

- For customers using BPU’s online bill pay system, always make online payments directly through bpu.com.

- Never provide personal information via email or click any suspicious links or attachments.

KCKCC to hold Constitution Day event

by Kelly Rogge, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College is offering students, faculty, staff and community members the opportunity to celebrate an important moment in history during its annual observance of Constitution Day.

The Constitution Day event, “Gerrymandering Goes to the Supreme Court,” will begin at 11 a.m. Sept. 18 in Room 2325.

Faculty panelists will first present background information on the Constitution. Then Dagney Velazquez, assistant professor of mathematics at KCKCC, will discuss the impact of mathematics as it relates to gerrymandering. Gerrymandering is the practice in which a political advantage is established for a certain group during the creation of electoral districts. Velazquez spent one week at Tufts University in Boston this summer learning about the implications of such a practice and how the U.S. Supreme Court will address the issue once again later this year. Janet Velazquez, professor of business law at KCKCC, will provide legal analysis of the theme.

In addition to the Constitution Day presentation, those in attendance will have the opportunity to register to vote if they have not done so previously.

This forum is the college’s official observance of Constitution Day, the annual commemoration of the ratification of the Constitution and celebration of its importance in American society. Created in 2004, Constitution Day replaced what was previously Citizenship Day. Federal law requires that all educational institutions that receive public funds provide some type of education programming on the history of the American Constitution, leading to events such as the one at KCKCC.

For more information, contact Ewa Unoke, chair of the Constitution Day committee at 913-288-7318 or by email at [email protected].