Sophomore Class Officers. Front row: Sec. Tracy Brown. Back row: Pres. Craig Mabrey, Treas . Wayne Houk, Vice-pres. Brooks Davis. - photo by Bill Tripp. Freddie Joe Acree - Pocahontas, AR Lori Dawn Adams - Mt. Dora, FL Digna Michel Aguilar - Tela, Honduras Terry Darwin Albright - Webster, TX Susan Margaret Alcock - Palm Beach Gardens, FL Connie Renea Allen - Diboll, TX Muibel Almendarez - Tegucigalpa, Honduras Ruth Anderson - Knoxville, TN Deborah Lee Anthony - St. Ann, MO Valerie Ann Anthony - Dunwoody, GA Mark Daniel Arensmeier - Searcy, AR Mary Ellen Arensmeier - Searcy, AR Heather Joanne Armstrong - Sitka, AK Susan Downing Arnette - Salinas, CA James R. Atkinson - Conroe, TX Suzanne Ayanian - Warren, MI David Franklin Bailey - Hatfield, PA Amelia Kay Baker - Alicia, AR Jodie Lynn Baker - Lapeer, MI Linda Sue Baker - Stonewall, LA Michael Charles Ballard - Kirkville, NY Jay Barber - Bald Knob, AR Michelle Renee Barnett - Whitney, TX Kerry Lou Barnhart - Breese, IL John David Barton - King of Prussia, PA Jennifer L. Beckham - S. Boston, VA Cheryl Mme Bednosky - Peconic, NY Margaret Virginia Bell - Monroe, LA Christine A. Bendickson - Grand Island, NE David Andrew Berberian - Concord, NH Kevin Dean Berry - Little Rock, AR Tracy Leigh Bickford - Eustis, FL Jamie Lou Biggs - Bradford, AR Douglas Eric Black - Byesville, OH Vivian Rachelle Black - W. Memphis, AR 130 Shades of Sophomores 13 y the beginning of their second year at Harding, the sophomores were moving out of their college days. No longer the newcomers, they knew the names of the buildings, could locate the old, as opposed to the new, field, and were able to take notes with one (or two) eyes closed. Still enjoying the leisure afforded by general education classes, the sophomores basked in the warm summer glory of using the library with ease, populating Wendy's each night, and being pledge masters and mistresses for the first time. Sophomores felt the snug, golden assurance that they still had two semesters to decide on a major and plenty of time to pull up their grade point average. They enjoyed everything to the fullest - clubs, because at last they knew all the members; sports, because they finally felt a part of the team; studies, because they began to find their special fields of interest. As the middle children in the Harding family, the sophomores were still young enough to relate to and help the freshmen, yet they could also identify with the older students. In the summer of their college stay, while Harding seemed both new and excitingly familiar, the sophomores became confident in their abilities and pleased with their opportunities. They enjoyed their second year with gusto, and prepared to move on. <®;> - Sherry Daniel
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