1963-1964 Yearbook

UNMARRED and deserted, the Harding campus reveals its beauty under a blanket of Ch ristmas snow and quietly owaits the return of students who left to spend the holidays in various parts of the United States. WINTER SCENES Chilling winds, snow announce it's winter time INGENUITY, talent, and kindness are evident in the arroy of playthings mode for orphan children by Harding women and displayed at the SA Yule Party. 58 Winter on a college campus is more than a season of the year. The winter comes bringing cold and snow, but on campus a weather change signifies more than a difference in thennometer readings. The cold warrants mad dashes from warm dormitories to warm classrooms to a warm student center. And the snow means more than frozen beauty; it gives a respite from monotony to exuberant snowball fights, wet feet, and stiff red fingers. And with the winter also comes the shorter days and longer darkness when nights at the books seem to be just a little slower and when students welcome the chance to escape to a basketball game. Winter also brings Ulat time of the year when students hear those annual songs and carols on the radio and look at the lighted trees and colored decorat ions in a certain way and pack the cars and buses and trains and wave good-bye to enjoy those precious few days at home.

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