LEADER CLINTON COUNT Y
Thurs., November 2, 2023 |
INSIDE
One Section | 12 pages
Kendrick to speak at PHS Foundation brings the president of the Negro League Baseball Museum to Plattsburg. || PAGE A4
Weekly County Sheriff ’s Report Looking back at the calls for service that came through the Clinton County Sheriff ’s Dept. || PAGE A3
$1.00 | “Covers Clinton County Like Dew ”
Plattsburg, Lathrop and Gower, Mo.
LATHROP SCHOOLS
LHS aims to stymie vape usage among students by brett adkison leader editor
Times change, and so do the issues that affect local schools. At Lathrop High School, they’re shifting focus to take one of those issues head-on. Earlier this school year, the
Lathrop R-II Board of Education voted to close the long-running drug testing program at LHS. The funding for that program will now be shifted to an effort to educate students on the dangers of vaping—the nicotine-based smoking alternative that rose to prominence
over the last decade, especially among college and high school students. The district is looking to establish an educational program using an online module. Lathrop High School Principal Robert Bowers feels that vaping has become perhaps the big-
CHILLS & SCARES
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VOL. 129, NO. 1
Football fever in Clinton Co. leader editor
Community........A5 Opinion..............A4 Legals..............A10 Sports................A7
Winner of 100+ awards from the Missouri press assoc.
SPORTS
by brett adkison
Despite a comeback attempt late in the game, Lathrop’s season ends in Grundy County. || PAGE A7
Est. 1895
||Continued on A2
HALLOWEEN
Trenton Downs the Mules
THE LEADER
gest issue that secondary school administrators face “When it comes to drugs, alcohol, and tobacco, we want to do everything we can as a school district to help our families educate our kids,” Bowers said. “The kids
brett adkison | the leader
It might have been a chilly Halloween, but that didn’t keep children throughout Clinton County from dressing up as their favorite characters and scooping in the candy on Tuesday, October 31! (Above) The Plattsburg Police Department was one of many groups and businesses taking part in the downtown trick or treat on Tuesday afternoon, as ghouls and goblins roamed Main Street in search of treats! (Right) Pre-K students at East Buchanan paraded down the halls Tuesday morning in their costumes as they headed for recess.
submitted photo
With two undefeated, stateranked teams entering the postseason, football fever is about to take over Clinton County. Both East Buchanan (ranked second in Missouri Class 2 with a 9-0 record) and Plattsburg (ranked fourth in Missouri Eight-Man with an official record of 7-0) earned first round byes and will be back in action this Friday in their respective district semifinals. As the top seeds, both teams will play at home at least through the district championship round. In Gower, the East Buchanan Bulldogs are on a tidal wave of momentum, powered by a school-record 22-game winning streak dating back to last season. The two-time reigning Class 1 state champions have won an astounding 37 of their last 39 games. The Bulldogs venture into new territory this Friday when they move up to the Missouri Class 2 postseason. It’s the first time East Buchanan has competed in Class 2 since 2015. Coincidently, the team East Buchanan hosts Friday— fourth-seeded Brookfield—is the same team that defeated East Buchanan in that 2015 district championship game. Eight years later, Brookfield enters this contest with a 6-4 record. They’ve won five of their last six games, including a 20-7 victory against fifth-seeded Lawson in the first round of districts. With a victory on Friday, East Buchanan would host the Class 2, District 8 championship game a week later on Friday, November 10, against the winner of the Mid-Buchanan ||Continued on A2