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Columbia | Leah Hogsten

by Leah Hogsten
Terra Lawhorn, 19, has ridden on a tractor wither her husband Randy,23, ever since they started the eighth grade when they started dating, so naturally when she gets bored on her days off she visits him out in the fields for a ride. Even when she couldn’t drive, she’s convince her mother to take her to see him and she’d wait in the car for a half hour, hour, even up to two hours. Terra says she always knew they would get married. The Lawhorns have been marred for two years.
Since their retirement, just about all of Bobby Fawcett’s and Eugene St. Clair’s time is devoted to fishing. The two Campbellsville residents were just putting in half a day on Russel Creek yet managed to catch a sunfish and two small mouth bass. Fawcett and St. Clai have been fishing buddies for 10 years.
Charlie Spoon, 12, examines a mouse he found while helping his father and brothers harvest tobacco fields. Charlie’s job was to drive the tractor.
“Indian”: Tommy Kemp, 6,m knew exactly how he wanted to spend his $5.00 that the tooth fairy gave him for his first tooth. He bought himself an Indian outfit. Tommy spent most of the day making surprise attacks on unsuspecting invisibles with his tomahawk.
“Sign”
Columbian manager Ben Burris, 23, puts in a late night on Thursdays. He is responsible for changing the old movie to the new, which sometimes takes up to two hours.
Both boys and girls usually establish their boundaries outside the theater waiting for friends to show up. They manage to flirt while maintaining their distance.
A couples snuggles together in anticipation of the ending of the horror movie, “Single White Female.”

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