We don't want to forget that there are special businesses in this 
			community that also are an integral part of who we are and what we 
			have accomplished, and we don't want to leave them out of these 
			profiles.With that being said, we want to make our first business 
			profile a grocery store that has helped almost every worthwhile 
			cause in this community over the past two decades. This week we 
			focus on the Lincoln IGA. 
			
			  
			In a way, the Lincoln IGA has reinvented the wheel. In a day and 
			age when businesses often are owned by faraway corporations and not 
			involved with the community, the Lincoln IGA has become our good 
			neighbor and friend and engaged us and our efforts as well as any 
			business you could find anywhere. Like in days of old when a 
			neighborhood grocery developed a bond with their patrons, the 
			Lincoln IGA has brought back that business model of community 
			involvement and help. 
			When Bill Campbell and Charlie Lee came to Lincoln in 1990 they 
			were strangers, not only to Lincoln but to each other. 
			However, over the years their names and the business they run 
			have come to be synonymous with caring and charitable giving. Today, 
			the Lincoln IGA has helped so many of our important and 
			near-to-our-heart causes that the name is known in almost every 
			household in the town, if not the entire county. 
			Lee said that taking over the IGA was strictly a business venture 
			that the two ended up in together. Lee was from Fairfield and 
			Campbell hailed from Monticello. 
			
			
			  
			Over the years, their relationship with each other has grown into 
			something brotherly, as they are now good friends, but still 
			business partners who sometimes struggle to agree on decisions. 
			There are some decisions that the two men have no trouble 
			agreeing on, among those being that if you give to your community, 
			your community will give back to you. 
			Lee recalls that the first time they decided to get involved was 
			when the clock on the courthouse quit working, and the county didn't 
			have the funds to get it fixed. Campbell and Lee footed the bill for 
			the repair because they felt that keeping the clock and the 
			courthouse in general in good repair was important to the community. 
			Since then, they have found countless other opportunities to help 
			out.  
			With weekend cookouts in their parking lot, they have been able 
			to help just about every youth organization in the county. "Every 
			time you help a kid's organization, you touch them and their entire 
			family," Lee said. 
			In addition, they do a lot for the local food pantries and other 
			not-for-profits, such as the churches and the Crisis Pregnancy 
			Center. 
			Most recently the Lincoln IGA donated a prize of $500 worth of 
			groceries to the Logan County United Way, helping that organization 
			have one of their most successful fundraisers ever. 
			Each year, the IGA supplies many of the items distributed by the 
			Salvation Army at Thanksgiving and by the Community Action 
			Partnership at Christmas for their food baskets, at greatly reduced 
			prices. 
			
			  
			They also do a fundraiser for the Lincoln-Logan County Food 
			Pantry each year in November.  
			But these numerous charitable donations hardly scratch the 
			surface of all that this store has done for our community over the 
			years. 
			
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			Those interviewed also found difficulty in where to start their 
			praise. All were of the same mindset that there was no need to end 
			their admiration.  
			Personalities of the Week themselves wanted to talk about the IGA. 
			Norm Newhouse, visiting with Cliff Seitzer as Seitzer worked on a 
			Lincoln College project, didn't know how to sum up the admiration he 
			has for the local business. "There's not enough you can say about 
			them," Newhouse said. "They are the most unselfish people you could 
			ever meet. Seitzer said, "They mean more to this community than 
			anyone I know." 
			There was more praise from another pair of Personalities of the 
			Week. 
			
			  
			Dom Dalpoas, director of The Oasis senior center, said, "We are 
			so fortunate to have so many wonderful, supportive businesses in 
			this community, and you have to include the IGA right there in the 
			top. They are so community-minded. What they do for the community is 
			truly phenomenal. They teach us what a community is all about."  
			Wally Reifsteck, an Oasis board member, smiled and agreed with 
			Dalpoas. "You can't find a better example of community-mindedness," 
			he said. "The IGA is there for everyone." 
			And it is this philosophy of being there for everyone that has 
			everyone in the community returning the favors with their patronage. 
			Lee recalls that when the store suffered damage from fire in 
			2000, that was a tough time for the store. "We were closed for six 
			months, but when we reopened, the business came right back," he 
			said. 
			That should have been no surprise to the tandem. The names of all 
			the groups and organizations that the grocery store has helped in 
			some way, shape or form would be like a directory of the community's 
			worthy causes, with few, if any, not on the list. Many who shop at 
			the IGA are there not only because of the store's reputation for 
			quality meats and foods, but also to try to repay the store for all 
			the help they have given to their personal causes. Again, a 
			throwback to old days when a community and a business worked hand in 
			hand to help each other whenever and wherever they could. 
			The stores relationship with the community is expressed well by 
			Lincoln Mayor Keith Snyder. "Lincoln is incredibly blessed to have a 
			hometown grocery store like IGA. There aren’t many people who do 
			more for this community than Charlie and Bill and their employees. 
			The people of Lincoln love IGA because it’s clear that IGA loves 
			Lincoln." 
			
			  
			Lee said that the community has been good to them, and they 
			appreciate it, and giving back is very important. He commented: "We 
			give until it hurts. If you have a million dollars and give someone 
			a hundred, that really doesn't hurt, but if you only have a thousand 
			dollars and you give a hundred, you feel that." 
			The men also have grown to love this community. They are happy to 
			be here and intend to stay right here for many years to come. Lee 
			said, "We've watched little kids come in here as shoppers' kids, 
			then seen them come back and go to work for us, and now we even have 
			one who is the kid of a kid working here." 
			Besides being an essential employer of youngsters and adults, the 
			IGA has become an invaluable resource to this community. The way 
			they operate their business and the way they have become one with 
			this community is a model of community excellence that all could 
			emulate. It is because of their spirit and community involvement 
			that we are proud to offer the Lincoln IGA as this week's 
			Personality of the Week. 
			
            [By
			MIKE FAK] 
            
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