sn 7-29-2023

(J-Ad) #1
Page 6/The Sun and News, Saturday, July 29, 2023

Good Morning Bedlam brings Midwest folk music to the stage in Caledonia


Shari Harris
Contributing Writer
The community enjoyed
another installment of the


Caledonia Summer Concert
Series.
People in chairs, on blan-
kets, and sitting in golf carts

spread across the Community
Green Park lawn on Tuesday
evening to take in the show,
featuring a pair of artists.

The opening act was
Aaron Jonah Lewis, who
hails from Detroit and plays
ragtime music with the banjo
and fiddle.
The headliner was Good
Morning Bedlam, a Midwest
folk band from Minneapolis,
Minn. The group entertained
the audience of about 200
people with a mix of cover
songs and several original
songs. The band members
include Isaak Elker (guitar
and vocals), Victoria Elker
(bass and vocals), Katherine
Seeger (violin and vocals),
and Dawson Redenius (trum-
pet and keyboard).
Children in the audience
were invited by the band to
dance along while they per-
formed. Though technical
difficulties occurred during
the last part of the show, the
band members took it in
stride and began telling jokes
to keep the audience enter-
tained.
They closed out their set
with an upbeat sing-a-long.
There are still two more
chances to enjoy an outdoor
concert at the Community
Green this year, which is set
directly in front of the
Caledonia branch of the
Kent District Library. On
Aug. 8, concert goers can
hear CJ Chenier and the Red

Hot Louisiana Band. On
Aug. 22 comes the Schrock
Brothers with Peter
“Madcat” Ruth.

Opening acts begin at 6
p.m. and headliners start at 7
p.m. Food trucks are also
available during the shows.

KCC Express Enrollment Event to


offer fast-track services, chance


to win free credits Aug. 5


BATTLE CREEK


  • Kellogg Community
    College will be hosting a
    one-stop-shop event on cam-
    pus in Battle Creek in August
    for current and future stu-
    dents to complete the steps to
    enrollment in preparation for
    the fall semester.
    KCC’s Express
    Enrollment Event will be
    held from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
    on Saturday, Aug. 5, on
    campus at 450 North Ave.
    The event, which is free and


open to the public, will offer
students everything they
need to be prepared to start
classes this fall, including
financial aid assistance,
placement testing, academic
advising and onsite registra-
tion.
Express Enrollment Event
attendees will also have an
opportunity to enter a draw-
ing for a chance to win three
free credit hours at KCC for
the fall semester.
Individuals who are new

to the college and interested
in attending the event should
bring the following informa-
tion with them:


  • A photo ID

  • Transcripts from high
    school and all colleges
    attended

  • ACT, PSAT or SAT
    scores (scores from tests
    taken within five years can
    be used in place of KCC’s
    placement test)
    For more information
    about the Express Enrollment
    Event, contact KCC’s
    Admissions office at adm@
    kellogg.edu or 269-965-



  1. The first classes of KCC’s
    fall semester begin Aug. 28.
    Student registration informa-
    tion, including links to regis-
    tration instructions, policies,
    tuition and fees and other
    information, is available
    online at kellogg.edu/regis-
    tration.


proposed future budget at the
July 20 meeting. SOLitude
has proposed a $190,
budget to the board for 2025,
with changes in funding in
several key areas. The com-
pany has proposed reducing
the amount of its aquatic her-
bicide treatments from
$127,500 in 2024 to $112,
in 2025, while increasing its


aquatic plant control over-
sight expenses from $17,
in 2024 to $25,000 in 2025.
The company proposed rais-
ing its water quality testing
expenditures from $9,500 in
2024 to $11,200 to 2025, but
those costs could further
increase if the scope of test-
ing is expanded, as some
lake residents would like to

see.
“With permit restrictions
and the board’s general
direction, (the aquatic herbi-
cide treatment) category
should account for increas-
ing the use of peroxy-
gen-based algicides as the
primary product used to
manage nuisance and inva-
sive algae,” SOLitude aqau-

tic biologist Pete Filpansick
wrote in his estimate to the
board. “Recent lake manage-
ment efforts have continued
to decrease the need for her-
bicides, but the GLIB should
be ready to continue manag-
ing invasive growth in the
canals and be ready to treat
any new infestations of inva-
sive species out in the lake.”

The budget proposal sets
aside $24,000 in contingen-
cy, and Dugan said that
amount could be tapped for
expanded water quality test-
ing.
“The $24,000 is extremely
generous to take care of
those things that rear their
heads,” Dugan said. “I would
say that we’re even in a posi-

tion to do extra testing right
now, with the contingency
that we have.”
GLIB receives $190,
in funding annually from
Barry County, and has not
requested any change in that
funding from the county for
the next three years, GLIB
Chairwoman Vivian Conner
said.

284 N BRIGGS ROAD - MIDDLEVILLE, MICHIGAN 49333
269-795-9091 / FAX 269-795-

203506

GUN LAKE, continued from page 1


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Scott Bloom, O.D.
OPTOMETRIST

Good Morning Bedlam, a Midwest folk band hail-
ing from Minneapolis, headlined the Caledonia
Summer Concert Series show on Tuesday evening.

Detroit-based ragtime artist Aaron
Jonah Lewis opened the show, seen
here plucking on a banjo as his dog
accompanies him on stage.


Three-year-old Reese dances in
front of the stage, enjoying the music of
Good Morning Bedlam on Tuesday
evening in Caledonia.

A steady crowd formed at Community Green Park
in Caledonia on Tuesday evening for the latest install-
ment of the Caledonia Summer Concert Series.
(Photos by Shari Harris)
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