Tonya Cathleen Vines - Higginson, AR Jennifer Lynn Visser - Northampton , PA Shannon D. Waggoner - Tulsa, OK Errica Walker - Fairmont, WV Tamara Michelle Wallace - Little Rock, AR Shayne Wallis - Bald Knob, AR Kristin Gayle Webb - N. Little Rock, AR Julie Ann Weibel - Yucaipa , CA Tracy Elizabeth Weldy - Winston-Salem, NC Sheri Leigh Wells - San Antonio, TX William Brent Wells - Southaven, MS Wayne Wendel Westerholm - eshani c Station, NJ Elizabeth Anne White - Tyler, TX James David White - Searcy, AR John Gregory White - Scottsdale, AZ Samantha Jean White - The Woodlands, TX Paula D. Whitehead - Pangburn , AR Fred Douglas Wiley - Houston , TX Kristanto Wibowo - Jakarta , Indonesia Dayna Sue Wiggins - Visalia , CA Roslyn Anne Williams - Searcy, AR Tinea Louise Williams - Pine Bluff, AR h .. .... .~ 1C7,. - 4 • 24g ·. '. :1. • Sop omores '° • ~ ..,. • • • Vines - Willfams r·.. .. 4 q .. • .tJ. 4 • " 9 4 ~ I • . . ... • • 0. 9 •• .... .. .. ........ 'O <O .. .. " .. - - · ..... " .. Sophomores: S ophomore. In and of itself it was .not a bad word. Mr. Webster defined it as a person who was in their second year of high school or college. But, when you dug a little deeper, the word was really a contradicting term. Sophos, the Greek word for 'wise,' and moros, the word for 'foolish,' combined to call students in their second year of study a wise fool . Not pleasant , when you think about it. Did you ever know a sophomore? If you did, you may have believed that the word meant exactly what the Greeks meant it to. I had a good friend that was a sophomore, and my being a senior made this seem a little odd. When he was a freshman, he didn't know anything, but the minute he became a sophomore, he knew it all . He had no more questions, but he had all the answers - so he thought. Slowly, he "Wise Fools?" found out he was not the "wise guy" he thought he was . Did this scenario sound familiar? It should, because you acted the same way. I did , too. When I look back to my sophomore year, I find myself thinking how silly it must have been to act that way. Then , I look back on my friends and think , "Well , I wasn't alone." I think it was an inbred fact of life. You reached that stage and something snapped. Automatically, you assumed the world should have been looking to you for the answers to deep and meaningful questions. Then you felt bad when you realized how silly you really were. But sophomores, don' t give up hope! You won' t be like this forever! You'll grow out of it. I promise. Perhaps this summer, while you ' re home working, something will snap. - Darin Martin The drin~ are on us. Goofing off in the Lilypool was just one of the ways that students had fun. Sphomore Eric VanMatre, from Rolla, MO, freshman Brian Gainey, from Baton Rouge, LA , sophomore Scott Adair, from Phoenix, AZ, and Kirk McEuen, a sophomore from Little Rock, AR, cool off from the summer heat during Student Impact. - photo by Jack Davis.
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