“Are You Ready For That Job?” (1955), “Dedication of Seminary Library,” “Education in the Shadow of the Church,” “How Important Are Our Church-Related Colleges?”, “Tuition Fees at the Seminary,” “Bethany’s Diamond Anniversary” (1956), “The Miracle of the Mind” (1956), “The Status of the Dormitory—A Report to the Students” (1957), “Charge to the Class” (1957), “Why am I in College?” (1957), “Turn to the Lord,” and a bound copy of “ Mission Fields in the Continent of Learning” (1958).
Speeches delivered by Dr. Mortvedt from 1953 to 1955 including the following: “Christmas Eve Broadcast Radio Station” (December 24, 1953), “Residues Are Not Enough” (June 2 and 4, 1953), “Welcome to New Students” (1953), WDAF Address at Bethany College (October 17, 1953), “A Growing Church is A Teaching Church: A Definition of Purpose” (April 1954), “Not Talk, but Power” (1954), “The Educational Undergirding of Our Church Or Why Attend Our Church Colleges” (1954), “Congregations Have Talents, Too!”, “WDAF ‘Messiah’ Preparation,” “Welcome to New Students” (1955), “Go Ye Therefore and Teach,” “In Him All Things Hold Together (1955), and “Are You Ready For That Job?” (1955).
File includes: a speech given at the Fall Faculty Conference (1965) entitled “The Humanities and the Humanistic View” and the speech given by Dr. Schnackenberg at the inauguration of President Wiegman (1970). This file is missing from the collection.
Transcripts of Dr. Browning’s speeches given at President Anderson’s inauguration, December commencement in 1993, the Schnackenberg Lecture, the Lemkin Banquet, and the Kosovo Teach-In.
File includes a handwritten speech (in English) delivered by Hong to the graduating class of PLA. This document is Undated.
Access to digital content (requires active PLU ePass: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1IJ3QmPnnWeT9C1vERFWrsIQy02n_fQZC
Access to digital content (requires active PLU ePass: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/11QkjE7NPgru818f797RiD-p_X6-fqQJs
Section includes notes on Spanish American history, presumably for a course Dr. Schnackenberg taught. File contains 25 notecards.