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http://www.thebattlecreekshopper.com BATTLE CREEK SHOPPER NEWS Thursday, September 19, 2024 11


TOMBSTONE
Continued from Page 10


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Marketing Specialist


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The County Press
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Your Buyer’s Guide
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Tri-County Times
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email [email protected]


810-452-


Responsibilities include:



  • Advertising sales

  • Account management

  • Prepare presentations, proposals and sales contracts

  • Attend networking events


The Lowell Ledger
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Buyer’s Guide & News
Ad-Visor & Chronicle
Battle Creek Shopper News
The Sun and News
The Reminder

Veteran actor Ralph Moore will
depict F.C. Wolfe (1885-1944),
accomplished Athens businessman,
who turned his attention to growing
dahlias.
By the 1930s, his Exhibition


Gardens had hundreds of weekly vis-
itors, and Wolfe propagated several
original varieties of dahlias.
Tickets for the tour can be pur-
chased at the gate; children 12 and
younger and Athens students will be
admitted for free.
Volunteers will escort guests dur-
ing the tour and will provide walk-
ing assistance with golf-carts.

New and transferring college stu-
dents will have the opportunity to talk
with representatives from more than
50 educational institutions, Kellogg
Community College academic depart-
ments, community organizations and
representatives from U.S. military
branches during KCC’s College
Night this month in Battle Creek.
The event, which is free and open
to the public, will run from 6-7:
p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 24, in the gym
of the Miller Physical Education
Building on campus at 450 North
Ave.
The event offers a unique opportu-
nity for area students to connect with
the schools they’re considering at one
time, in one place, where students
can ask questions, gather information
and make comparisons.
“College Night is a great opportu-
nity for high school students, parents,
families, current KCC students and


community members to gather infor-
mation about educational organiza-
tions and schools,” KCC Admissions
Director Jenni Kotowski said.
This year’s event will include rep-
resentatives from nearly every major
college and university in the state, as
well as several community colleges
and representatives from various
branches of the U.S. military.
Staff members from more than a
dozen academic departments at KCC,
as well as from the Battle Creek
Community Foundation’s Battle
Creek College Access Network and
Legacy Scholars program, will also
be available.
Attendees will also have the oppor-
tunity to meet with a number of orga-
nizations and departments offering
educational scholarships.
For more information, contact the
KCC Admissions office at adm@kel-
logg.edu.

More than 50 institutions


participating in College Night at KCC


The Calhoun County Sheriff’s
Office said it has received numer-
ous complaints from the public that
scammers identify themselves as law
enforcement and request payment
after threats of an arrest warrant are
issued against them.
The scammers commonly identify
themselves as administrative staff
with the Sheriff’s Office and demand
payment in lieu of being arrested, the
Sheriff’s office noted in a Sept. 13
press release.
The scammers may also use fraudu-
lent “Order of Arrest” documentation
as alleged proof of the warrant.
“The Calhoun County Sheriff’s
Office will never contact members

of the public by telephone or email
demanding money or requesting per-
sonal and sensitive information,” the
press release stated.
It also said that no Sheriff’s Office
or law enforcement agency member
will ever request payment via prepaid
credit cards or cryptocurrency ATM.
People should not give personal
information to anyone without veri-
fying the legitimacy of the person
requesting the information.
If personal information is released
to a suspected scammer, people
should contact their local law
enforcement agency as soon as pos-
sible, as well as their local financial
institution.

Sheriff’s Office alerts residents to phone scams

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