1981-1982 Yearbook

Danna Abney - Springfield, VA Virginia Adams - Ventura, CA Bamidele Adenlji - Ibadan, Nigeria Dewayne Agin - Arnold, MO Billie Albany - Glasgow, KY Loretta Alessio - W_ Chicago, IL Bentley Alexander - Cave City, KY Beverly Alexander - Searcy, AR Brent Alexander - Delight, AR Lisa Alexander - Rochester, MI Averine Allen - Starksville, MS Dwayne Allen - Harrisburg, PA Lynn Alley - Boring, OR Rhonda Almand - Bentonville, AR Charles Alsabrook - Richardson, TX Ronald Altman - Summerville, SC Lori Anderson - Waldron, AR Lydie Andrzejewski - France Kenneth Ard - Richardson, TX Jennifer Armstrong - Porterville, CA Brian Arnold - Batesville, AR Cheryl Arnold - O'Fallon, MO Kimberly Asbill - Jackson, MS Linda Bacon - Nashville, TN Daniel Bailey - Glen Fails, NY Tom Baio - Buffalo Grove, IL Cheryl Bakely - Vincetown, NJ Tyran Baker - Louisville, KY Vicky Balcolm - New Orleans, LA Linda Baldwin - Claysville, PA Kimberly Banks - Independence, MO Dana Barrentine - Franklin, TN Sleven Barry - Pine Bluff, AR Daryl Bales - Portsmouth, VA Gregory Beam - Waxahachie, TX Tamara Beauchamp - Hazelwood, MO Debra Beck - Magazine, AR Risa Beckloff - Bentonville, AR Angela Bell - Brentwood, TN Lizabeth Bell - Birmingham, AL Judy Bennett - Bartow, FL Lynda Benlon - Madison Heights, MI Phillip Berry - Woodstock, GA Heidi Bettich - Red Wing, MN LaDonna Bible - Stone Mountain, GA Urszula Bielecka - Wroclaw, Poland Jack Billingsley - Memphis, Ml Tammy Bishop - Cullman, AL Kenneth Bissell - Nashville, AR 160· Sophomores IChanging Seasonsl Harding Comfort Comfort - it comes with a summer. It's that warm season when the heat can be beat by a trip to the pool, refrigerator or air conditioner_ In Harding's changing seasons, comfort and satisfaction characterized the second year class of sophomores_ Following the rocky ebb and flow of freshman life, the sophomore had finally arrived. It was a warm feeling indeed. "You're not a newcomer any more," said class pre~ident Blair Bryan. "It's a very fuh time because you know more and feel a real part of the school instead of just attending it. You feel more love to the school and l what it stands for because of a better understanding." This deepened understandingl had not come easily, but it had come. With pledging, Cathcart and Armstrong gone for good, the new upperclassman had many lessons engrained in his mind. They were perhaps lodg· ed indelibly there forever, Cheri Lewis, a from Jacksonville, Ark., ag.reed l with Bryan. "You really more at home," she said.

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