1986-1987 Yearbook

Junior Class Officers: Front row: Treas. Buffy Manning, Pres . Kristi Heinselman . Back row: Sec. Melanie Jackson, Vice Pres. Ryan Blickenstaff. - Photo by Bill Tripp. Patricia Ann Abern - Searcy, AR Eugene Sanders Abernathy - Lawrenceville, GA Brent Lamar Abney - Fairview, NC Alex Milton Addington - Searcy, AR Joseph Berry Adkins - Memphis, TN Susan Renee Adkins - Hutchi nson, KS Mickey James Adkiston - Tulsa, OK Miguel 0. Aguilar - Siguatepeque, Honduras • Laura Lynn Allen - All iance, OH Melissa Carol Allen - Pleasanton, TX Michael S. Allen - Searcy, AR Olan L. Alsup - Gai nesvill e, TX Kristen Mae Anderson - Minneapolis, MN Michael Dana Anderson - Coeur D'Alene, ID Gregory S. Atkinson - Montgomery, AL Todd Larrell Austin - Paragould , AR Sharon Renee Aviza - Albany, NY Shannon Michael Ayers - Mt . Dora, FL Jama Cay Bailey - Parkersburg, WV Jill Elizabeth Bailey - Brentwood, TN Lance David Bailey - Searcy, AR Laura Jean Baker - Mayfi eld, KY Leanne Baker - Bozeman, MT William Franklin Baker - Mt . Dora, FL Michael Scott Baldwin - Lubbock, TX Phillip Scott Ballinger - Searcy, AR Cassandra Ann Banks - Greenwood, MS Bruce Allen Baptiste - Butler, PA 118 Shades of Juniors I n the autumn the juniors returned to Harding, now in the autumn of their school career. Much of the lighthearted carelessness of spring and summer had passed, and, with the friendly lectures of parents and relatives still ringing in their ears, the juniors knew it was time to settle down to one major, take heavier loads, and really work. The juniors still enjoyed themselves, of course. Just as autumn is full of warm sunshine and hayrides and Halloween, so the third-year students found time for frisbee on the front lawn or video games in the student center. But as the main business of autumn is the ripening of crops in preparation for winter, so also the juniors became more serious about their grades, partied a bit less and spent more weekends in the library, in preparation for their coming senior year. Many of them were becoming really excited about their majors, as they finished up required courses and began to take more classes in their chosen field. It was a fun season, but a serious one, as well . As the trees received a mantle of reds and yellows, the juniors felt the mantle of responsibility dropping onto their shoulders. No more frequently-cut classes, no more chapel probation, no more weekly majorchanging - it was time to get down to business. + - Sherry Daniel

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