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Show Hp^SiWith a vocalizing air, red-headedMike Stewart officiated as theSophomore Class President.SOPHOMORESWith the security of a year of collegiate living behind them, the sophomore class returned to the ivy-covered glass and steel girdered campus for another attempt at an education. They were impressed with the ease with which they registered for upper division classes, the familiarity with which they greeted the Huddle, and the multitudes with whom they renewed old friendships. Unattached sophomore women suddenly saw spin-sterhood looming over the hill as unattached sophomore men took the notion to speak, hustle, and date only freshmen women. Sophomores took advantage of the unwritten rule that they were allowed and expected to change majors at least once during the year. With the rise of the first "Explorer," physical education majors changed to physics and chemistry, but toward the end of the quarter the gym was once again filled to capacity. Sophomores were seen about campus, complaining to any and all who would listen about the miseries of certain unmentionable classes. Fewer sophomores were seen wasting all of their time in the Union, and more were seen within the noisy silence of the Library. They are to be lauded for their new found maturity, their mastery of the art of concentration, and their unspoken awe for this thing called "education."mSSMIS!Mil mm WmM i«liiiliili# / Mr:i' Another female trio ruled the roost of the sophomores. They are (left to right): Diane Reid, treasurer; Toni Lamoreaux, vice president; and Gayle Crandall, secretary; and their's was the responsibility of the Snow Carnival.52 |