
Brief Description
Records of the mission, including correspondence, minutes, reports, memos, financial reports, policy statements, planning documents, promotional material, photographs, etc., related to the origins, activity (primarily in Colombia and Costa Rica) and restructuring of the mission. Collection is arranged in these series: Field Executive Bodies, Association of Bible Churches of Costa Rica, Editorial Caribe, Escuadron, Pre-Minamundo and Minamundo, Roblealto, Colegio Monterrey, Evangelical Alliance of Costa Rica, Goodwill Caravans, Clinica Biblica, Seminario Biblico, Colombia, Mexico, Panama, New York, Communications, Public Relations, Evangelism (campaigns and Evangelism-in-Depth), Education, Early Administrative files, Personnel and Field Administration, New Jersey Field Office and Administration, North American Council and Boards, Subject File, R. Kenneth Strachan and Family Papers, and Individual Missionaries records and correspondence. The collection primarily spans 1920-1973. There are restrictions on the use of this collection.
Collection 236 [March 9, 2001]
Latin America Mission; 1921-
Records; 1920-1985 (bulk 1920-1973)
Boxes (74 DC; 27.8 cubic feet), Microfilm, Oversize Material, Photographs
Restrictions
Microfilm may only be used at the Archives and is not available for use by inter-library loan. Microfilm reels 16, 43,44,45,46,47,48 and 49 may not be used by researchers until January 1, 2023 without the written permission of the Latin America Mission president.
Requests for permission should be directed to:
President
Latin America Mission
PO Box 52-7900
Miami, FL 33152-7900
Forms sent to contact person may be obtained from the Reading Room staff.
Historical Background
Latin America Mission (LAM) was an interdenominational mission agency, engaged in church planting, evangelism, camping, child care, Christian education and theological training (in both formal and off-site programs), literature production, medical care, agricultural and community development, and providing services to other organizations. As of 1986, LAM worked in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Honduras, Mexico, Panama and Peru; however, the majority of its personnel worked in Colombia and Costa Rica.
LAM was founded as the Latin America Evangelization Crusade in Costa Rica in 1921 by Rev. Harry and Susan Beamish Strachan, who had been working as missionaries with Regions Beyond Missionary Society in the Argentinean pampas. Latin America Mission became the official name of the mission in 1938.
The mission expanded its work into Colombia in 1937. Key institutions which emerged in that country included the Association of Evangelical Churches of the Caribbean (the association of LAM churches), the Evangelical Missions Officers Council (EMOC), and CEDEC or Evangelical Confederation of Colombia, which largely replaced EMOC in 1950. EMOC/CEDEC was dedicated to coordinating efforts and minimizing overlap and competition among mission agencies in the Colombia; the group also formed to address in a unified way the persecution of Protestants.
While LAM concentrated its efforts in Costa Rica and Colombia, it established work in other Latin American countries, some brief descriptions of which follow. The autonomous Mision Latinoamericana de Mexico (MILAMEX), was founded in 1970 to carry on and expand the ministries of radio, evangelism, camp and publications in Mexico. Juan Isais was appointed as its first director. "Spearhead" was the project name for a program which began as an idea in 1970 to involve Christian university students from the United States in evangelism in Latin America and expose them to mission opportunities. Launched in 1972, "Spearhead" developed at a time when other mission agencies were also implementing short term mission programs for young people.
Work started in Panama in 1954 with the incorporation of the mission and opening of its bookstore. LAM also operated radio station HOXO jointly with World Radio Missionary Fellowship. In 1958, the "Panama Confab" was held, an informal gathering of LAM leaders to develop an overall picture of ministry in Panama and formulate how LAM could most effectively allocate its resources and cooperate with other agencies and denominations also at work there.
In 1954 LAM began exploring options for ministry among New York City's Hispanic population. Among the activities envisioned were a Spanish Bible Institute, coordination with Hispanic pastors, evangelistic outreach, and building a base for carrying out social ministries as well. The project, led by Juan Isais, started in 1956 with a radio program and correspondence course; a bookstore was opened a year later, and the Bible Institute began operation in 1958.
Administration. The US Home Council, later called the Board of Trustees, was a "self-perpetuating body" made up of selected representatives of the Christian public, and representatives of the executive leadership of the Mission.... The Board of Trustees ordinarily meets monthly to handle legal and business matters of the mission, determine financial policy, receive and delegate contributions, examine and accept missionary candidates and oversee the activities of the Mission." (Principles and Government of the Latin America Mission, 1965 edition, folder 65-1,2) The Board worked in conjunction with the General Director and the Inter-Field Conference. The General Director was the chief executive of the mission and was a member of all official mission bodies. He was responsible for the over-all direction of LAM's work and was appointed by the Board of Trustees.
Authority was delegated by the mission's board of trustees to the field office in Costa Rica. The mission's governing bodies were in order of rank the Home Council, the Director (later replaced by Local Field Councils) and the Inter-Field Council (IFC). The Quorum of the Inter-Field Council (Q-IFC, later called the Inter-Field Council Executive or IFC-X, consisting of those members of the IFC resident in Costa Rica) was charged with taking interim action between IFC meetings.
The US General Council was the organizational body comprised of individuals selected by the mission's Board of Trustees on the basis of commitment to missions and LAM; the Council served as an advisory body to the LAM General Directors on matters of policy and program. The Council was added to the LAM organizational structure in 1963, meeting once a year.
The mission was incorporated in a number of countries beside the United States, including Canada in 1961.
Formal divisions of LAM included: Evangelism, Communications, Literature, and Student Evangelism. The mission was administratively restructured in 1971 with the formation of the Comunidad Latinoamericana de Ministerios Evangelicos (translated Community of Latin American Evangelical Ministries, CLAME). CLAME became the umbrella organization, of which various LAM divisions became autonomous members, along with the US branch of the mission. In addition to decentralizing the mission, the major consequence of this restructuring was the redistribution of authority into predominantly Latin American rather than expatriate missionaries' hands. The United States division of the mission therefore became an equal member along with the other divisions in CLAME. The organization was governed by an annual assembly of its members, an executive committee and a full-time general secretary (three-year terms). CLAME's first general secretary was W. Dayton Roberts, who was followed by Nicaraguan missionary, Rafael Baltodano Z. and Paul E. Pretiz. Horace Fenton, who had been LAM's general director at the time it restructured, continued as the director of LAM-USA until 1977. At that time, developments in CLAME led to further restructuring of LAM-USA, and Clayton L. "Mike" Berg, Jr. became it's president for a three-year term.
CLAME was dissolved in 1986, with each of the member divisions becoming autonomous. LAM-USA continued its own operations as well as seconding staff to other former-CLAME members.
Headquarters. LAM's first headquarters was located San Jose, Costa Rica, and later added a field office in Cartagena, Colombia in 1937. Its United States headquarters was located in New Jersey (Ridgefield and then Bogota), and transferred to Coral Gables, Florida in 1977. In 1987, the mission again moved to Miami. The mission also maintained offices in London and Toronto.
Publications. The mission produced its bi-monthly magazine Latin America Evangelist, beginning in 1921, to report on LAM's work and developments in Latin America.
Public relations. The mission developed a variety of means to develop and maintain interest and support of its work among American evangelicals. Until 1960, the department had operated under the name Stewardship Office; beginning in 1960, that was replaced by the Office of Information and Public Relations. The mission used various means to make itself more widely known, including Latin America Evangelist, films and filmstrips, brochures, books and articles, missions conferences at churches, and an annual conference of its own. It also solicited support from foundations. The division also coordinated dissemination of information within the organization, illustrated by a number of internal publications including LAMECOS (Home Office Monthly Bulletin), The Costa Rica Field Reporter, Entre Nos (Spanish "weekly publication for the family of Latin America Mission"), Lowdown ("From Down In Lower Florida"), Confidential Memo ("To the LAM Family), and Memo From Dit (Fenton). Latin America Reporter was a radio program developed to be aired by evangelical radio stations in order to increase listeners' awareness of Latin America, missionary events (not limited to LAM) there, and of the mission's activity. "Operation Outreach" was a tour of LAM fields (Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Peru and Venezuela) by supporters. LAM conducted the tours in 1962, 1965, 1967 and 1968; a 1970 tour was planned and then canceled. The 50th anniversary tour in 1972 was an extension of this series of tours.
Association memberships. LAM was a member of both Interdenominational Foreign Mission Association (IFMA) and Evangelical Foreign Missions Association (EFMA). LAM withdrew from IFMA in 1978, while continuing its membership in EFMA.
Evangelism. From the mission's inception, evangelism was its primary emphasis. Prior to World War II, Harry Strachan carried out citywide crusades throughout the Spanish-speaking world, which served to strengthen the underdeveloped Protestant church in predominantly Roman Catholic countries. Strachan's son, R. Kenneth, revived these campaigns between 1949 and 1958, climaxed by the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association's Caribbean Crusade in 1958.
Under R. Kenneth Strachan's leadership, LAM initiated a program in 1959 which transferred the focus of evangelism from presenting a single professional evangelist to country-wide congregation-based lay evangelism called "Evangelism-in-Depth (E/D)," which continued on a broad scale until 1971. E/D programs operated in fourteen Latin American countries; after 1971 the program continued in Mexico. The program, usually carried out over the course of a year, included organized prayer, training for the lay Christians, preparation of counselors, follow-up of new Christians, widespread publicity, door-to-door visitation, local and regional evangelistic campaigns, regional and national parades, radio and television programs, and widespread tract and Bible distribution. A key feature of the program was its intent to "mobilize the entire evangelical community."
With the development and experience of E/D in Latin America, LAM developed the Office of Worldwide Evangelism-in-Depth (OWED) in 1967 to promote the program's use throughout the world and coordinate projects outside of Latin America. With the formation of the Community of Latin American Evangelical Missions (CLAME) in 1971, LAM's tradition of evangelism was continued by CLAME member, International Institute of In-Depth Evangelization (INDEPTH).
Theological education. LAM expanded its initial focus on evangelism when in 1923 Susan Strachan began training women leaders in her home in a program called the Women's Bible Training School. In 1924, ten Nicaraguan male students joined the student body and the school was renamed the Bible Institute of Costa Rica. In 1941, the school was again renamed the Latin American Biblical Seminary or Seminario Biblico Latinoamericano. (Publications of the Seminary include Vinculos, aimed at the Seminary's alumni; ID, produced by the school's Committee of Missionary Activity; Discipulo, a short-lived seminary publication; and ECOS, a 1- or 2-page newsletter for students consisting largely of announcements.) Beginning in the mid-1970s, following the establishment of CLAME and Seminary's independence, criticism of the school developed because of allegations that it had conceded ground to liberation theology; many conservative churches consequently withdrew their financial support. In 1979 LAM withdrew its public endorsement of the seminary, although it continued to sponsor some of its missionaries on the staff.
By 1966 the school had grown to include fifty-nine students representing twenty-three evangelical organizations. The Caribbean Bible Center was developed in Sincelejo, Colombia in 1953, to provide additional theological training for lay people, as well as providing a facility for Christian camping and conferences. The Center was founded as a memorial to Dr. Robert C. McQuilkin, founder of Columbia Bible College, who was consulted during the development of the Center. A Bible education correspondence course was initially based in LAM's Communication Division and transferred to the Center in 1967. An extension education program was also developed by the Center in 1967.
Social concern. LAM from the beginning addressed social needs as part of its ministry. The Clinica Biblica (Bible Hospital) was established in San Jose 1929 and a Costa Rican orphanage, the Hogar Biblico (Bible Home) in 1932 (See the section on Orphanage, Farm and Camp (Hogar Biblico & Roblealto). Clinic Biblica continued under LAM administration until 1968, when operation was transferred to an independent board and staff, Servicios Medicos. Two other ministries developed in Colombia were United Action (1971, a relief-rehabilitation development program for rural communities) and the Association for Christian Care for Colombian Children (1972). LAM cooperated with the Christian Action Committee in Costa Rica, an ecumenical effort in social action. Among the projects of the Committee in which LAM directly participated were the Good Will Caravans and the Bible Home at the Roblealto site. The Good Will Caravans was part of the Evangelical Alliance of Costa Rica's Rural Work Committee (Comite de Obra Rural), designed as a mobile project to bring medical care, education and evangelistic outreach to communities outside government service areas at the invitation of a local church.
Education. LAM's emphasis on education was expressed not only through ministerial training and theological correspondence courses, but also primary and secondary level education. A secondary school for girls was opened in 1948, and for boys in 1955 in Cartagena, Colombia; these were merged in 1970 to form the Colegio Latinoamericano. The environment of persecution of Protestants, particularly in Colombia, contributed to the motivation for the mission to provide a high school education which did not discriminate against the children of evangelicals. Colegio Monterrey in suburban San Jose was founded in 1956 by Costa Rican Christians in cooperation with LAM and also sponsored by the Association of Bible Churches of Costa Rica, the Templo Biblico, and the Association of Parents, Teachers and Friends. Kindergarten and primary programs were opened in 1957, followed by a first year secondary program in 1958. The medium of instruction for the school was Spanish. Albert C. Grimm, a LAM missionary, was its principal from 1959 to 1966, when administration of the school was turned over to national leadership.
The mission established the Training Division in 1958, including under its administration the Seminary and Correspondence Course. The emphasis of the unit was on providing for well trained leadership for the evangelical church in Latin America. In 1965 the Training Division was reformed as the Education Division to provide oversight for all educational work of the mission. The Divisions' directors were Wilton Nelson (1958-1966) and Clayton L. Berg, Jr. (1966- ).
Church planting. The mission planted its first church in 1929. Its church planting work in Costa Rica led to the founding in 1945 of Asociacion de Iglesias Biblicas Costarricences (Association of Costa Rican Bible Churches), which in 1967 consisted of nineteen churches. Those congregations which developed from LAM's work formed the autonomous association. Most ministries of LAM were conducted in partnership of AIEC. An example of this was a short-term training program for local pastors which the Association sponsored.
Youth ministry. LAM's work among young people was carried out among grammar and high school boys in Costa Rica and university students. Escuadron de Servicio Christiano (Costa Rican equivalent of Christian Service Brigade in the U.S., a church-based club program for boys) was established in 1947, followed by Camp Roblealto in 1948. The division, a part of LAM's Youth Department, was made independent under a national council in 1955 and fully nationalized in 1958. Joseph Coughlin, former LAM missionary and founder of Christian Service Brigade, was its first director. By 1963, Jorge Alfaro had assumed leadership of Escuadron. Once autonomous, LAM carried some Escuadron staff on its payroll and the mission named two members to the Escuadron National Council. The mission began a process of evaluation of its relationship to Escuadron in 1963 which continued through 1970.
University outreach. Work among university students, modeled on Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship's ministry in the US, began in the 1940's, with input from Inter-Varsity and later from International Fellowship of Evangelical Students (IFES). Work was initially carried out by the Association of Christian Students (AUC) and the local International Fellowship of Evangelical Students (ACEE). Prior to 1966, ministry among university students was combined with that of teenagers and children in LAM's Youth Department, led by Joseph Coughlin. Coughlin served as the director of the Youth Department until mid-1953, when he was replaced by Lester Burton. In 1966, LAM held several consultations to plan the upgrading of its ministry among university students, calling the program MINAMUNDO, the acronym being derived from Ministerio al Mundo Estudiantil (Ministry to the Student World). MINAMUNDO, like some other student ministries around the world, included work among high school students.
Orphanage, Farm and Camp (Hogar Biblico & Roblealto). Hogar Biblico (LAM's orphanage, translated Bible Home), was opened in 1932 on a 200-acre piece of property purchased in 1930. The mission also started a dairy farm there in 1932, which was intended to both supply milk to the orphanage and nearby clinic, and to defray the facility's operating expenses. The farm later added coffee, sugar cane, and poultry (1964) to its income generating enterprises. Coffee production was discontinued in 1969.
In February 1948, Campamento Roblealto (translated Camp Tall Oak) was opened for a two-week camp in the Costa Rican mountains outside San Jose. Camps were held there for grammar school, high school and university students, as well as occasional English camps for children of missionaries and others. The camp was also the site of Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship's (US) summer Overseas Training Camp (OTC) in 1969 and 1970.
In 1962, a Provisional Board of Directors was established for the orphanage, whose oversight covered the orphanage and farm. In 1966, the administration of the camp was formally brought together with the orphanage and farm under the title "Roblealto." In 1968, administration of the camp was moved from the Roblealto division to that of the Minamundo division. Also in 1968, the Provisional Council was replaced by the a more permanent governing body, the Asociacion Evangelica Pro-Bienestar del Nino (translated the Evangelical Association for the Benefit of Children).
Literature. LAM's literature division, Editorial Caribe, was organized in San Jose in 1949, when the mission took over the Spanish-language publication program and inventory of the American Tract Society. A grant from Moody Press and Moody Literature Mission facilitated this process. The work included publishing Bible study resources in Spanish, Sunday school materials (Luz del Evangelio: Spanish adaptation of the complete Gospel Light Sunday school curriculum begun in 1945) and operating book stores in four countries. The division opened its first bookstore in San Jose in 1949; another was opened in Panama in 1955; a third was opened in the Spanish-speaking area of New York City; and a fourth was opened in 1961 in the Costa Rican port of Limon; a subdivision was also established in Mexico, but rather than incorporating an independent shop, a distribution system through existing bookstores was implemented.
Editorial Caribe was an active member of San Jose-based LEAL (Literatura Evangelica para America Latina, translated Evangelical Literature for Latin America), the cooperative coordinating agency for the production and distribution of Christian literature in Spanish, whose intent was "not to publish books itself, but rather to help member organizations by a thorough program of coordination and planning." LEAL began in early 1945 at a preliminary conference called by Evangelical Literature Overseas in 1955; in 1956, it held a constitutional convention in Placetas, Cuba, to formalize its existence. Reorganization of LEAL was considered at several times, including being merged into Difusiones Inter-Americanas (DIA, translated Inter-American Communications; DIA means day in Spanish; see following section under radio). Discussions about restructuring (including issues of indigenous vs. missionary control and financing) were intensified in the late-1960's and in 1970. In view of financial viability and ongoing usefulness, LEAL was scaled back and its operations were moved to Argentina in 1970.
VERBO (translated "the Word") was a magazine proposed and accepted at LEAL's constitutional convention to be a Spanish evangelical monthly. Initially called VIDA (translated "life"), the title was altered to avoid problems with LIFE Magazine. Headquarters were established in Buenos Aires, with Alec Clifford, Paul Sheetz and Jose Bongarra serving as administrative staff for the magazine. Organizational sponsorship for the magazine did not solidify until 1957, when LAM and Conservative Baptist Foreign Mission Society (CBFMS) assumed co-sponsorship of the magazine. Due to inability to develop popular acceptance and continued fiscal shortages, publication of the magazine was suspended in late-1958. LAM withdrew its sponsorship, while CBFMS took full control of the magazine, moved its headquarters to Mexico City under Vergil Gerber's leadership, where it resumed publication in 1962. At the time preparations were being made to revive VERBO, inquiries were made by Charles Ward of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association about the feasibility of launching a Spanish version of DECISION Magazine; that project was launched and in 1964 but discontinued by the end of the year.
Editorial Caribe moved from San Jose in 1969 to Miami, where it became the Latin America Mission Publications (LAMP). In 1968, Editorial Caribe requested the evaluation services from Christian Service Fellowship. The most critical issue addressed was Editorial Caribe's financial indebtedness for the Luz del Evangelio program. The division's relationship with Gospel Light consequently changed in the late 1960's. Another consequence of the evaluation was the selling of the division's printing shop.
Radio. The Radio-Literature Division was established in 1956, and was then divided into separate divisions in 1958. In 1965 the division was expanded to become the Communications Division, integrating various non-radio communications into one unit. W. Dayton Roberts was the division's first director. Paul Pretiz followed Roberts as the division's director in the mid-1960's. A separate Communications Department was also established on the Colombia field in 1964, integrating film, radio, literature and correspondence functions.
LAM's central and first involvement in radio broadcasting was in establishing station TIFC (El Far del Caribe or "Lighthouse of the Caribbean") in San Jose. In 1945 LAM bought facilities on which to develop the radio station, which it did in 1948. TIFC was the second Christian station to broadcast on radio in Latin America (the first being HCJB in Quito, Ecuador). HOXO, a commercial station which aired some religious programming, was purchased by Christian businessmen in the Canal Zone in 1949. In 1954, LAM jointly assumed responsibility for the operation of station HOXO in Panama with the World Radio Missionary Fellowship (HCJB). In 1963, LAM transferred its sponsorship to World Missionary Fellowship, giving it full responsibility for the station. LAM withdrew its sponsorship because of the realignment of the mission's priorities, and an ongoing lack of personnel and finances. In the mid-1950's (1956?), LAM's radio work was made a full division of the mission, later called the Communications Division. It also assisted in operating stations in Nicaragua (YNOL, 1959, fully supported and operated by national Christians, the first indigenous-operated radio station in Central America, under leadership of David Solt) and El Salvador (YSHQ, 1963, the second indigenous-operated radio station, also under leadership of David Solt), and later added television broadcasting to its use of media for evangelism and teaching. Federico Picardo was the television station's first director and Arturo Cabezas its first manager. LAM explored various opportunities to enter television broadcasting in Latin America, none of these developed into ongoing operations.
LAM also contributed staff and production of radio programs and audio-visual materials for distribution to all Spanish-speaking areas through DIA (Difusiones Inter-Americanas), a cooperative evangelical radio, TV and film service. DIA began in 1951 as the Cadena Cultural Panamericana (Panamerican Christian Network), which formed to expand the efforts of individual stations by sharing radio programs among the members. CCP had a board of directors representing five Christian radio stations. The service they offered was recorded music, talks, sermons, dramas, devotional services, children's programs, Christian news, and scripts. CCP was administered by Clarence Jones (HCJB), Paul Pretiz (HOXO), W. Dayton Roberts (TIFC) and Robert Remington (Presbyterian USA Board of Foreign Missions). LAM was a founding member of CCP. In 1959, 153 representatives of the major Protestant radio and literature ministries in Latin America participated in the Congress on Evangelical Communication in Cali, Colombia. The result of the congress was the formation of DIA. The congress was jointly sponsored by CCP, representing radio and television ministry, and LEAL (Literatura Evangelica para America Latina) representing literature interests. DIA's headquarters, like CCP's, was in San Jose. CCP was not immediately closed down but continued to coordinate some activities among eight missionary radio stations in Latin America before being closed down.
Scope and Content
[Note: In the Scope & Content description, the notation "folder 2-5" means box 2, folder 5.]
The materials in this collection consist of administrative correspondence, minutes, reports, internal memos, financial reports, policy statements, planning documents, promotional material, "Blue Books" (divisional organizational manuals), a few photographs, etc., all related to the origins, activity (primarily in Colombia and Costa Rica) and administrative restructuring of Latin America Mission. The Archives has both many original documents and a microfilm copy made of them, although there are originals not on the film and many documents on the film which were not sent to the Archives. The records are arranged in the following series:
| I. | Field Executive bodies (1941-1971) | |
| II. | Association of Bible Churches of Costa Rica (AIBC, 1939-1972) | |
| III. | Editorial Caribe (Literature Division, 1944-1973) | |
| IV. | Escuadron (1946-1970) | |
| V. | Pre-Minamundo & Minamundo (1946-1972) | |
| VI. | Roblealto (1949-1972) | |
| VII. | Colegio Monterrey (1955-1971) | |
| VIII. | Evangelical Alliance of Costa Rica (1944-1972) | |
| IX. | Goodwill Caravans (1962-1973) | |
| X. | Clinica Biblica (1929-1971) | |
| XI. | Seminario Biblico (1927-1972). | |
| XII. | Colombia (1932-1972) | |
| XIII. | Mexico (1962-1973) | |
| XIV. | Panama (1952-1971) | |
| XV. | New York [City] Project (1954-1968) | |
| XVI. | Communications (1945-1972) | |
| General | ||
| TIFC | ||
| HOXO | ||
| YNOL | ||
| YSHQ | ||
| DIA | ||
| LEAL | ||
| VERBO | ||
| XVII. | Public Relations (1946-1972) | |
| XVIII. | Evangelism (1944-1972) | |
| Pre-Evangelism-in-Depth Campaigns (1944-1958) | ||
| Evangelism-in-Depth (1948-1972) | ||
| XIX. | Education (1960-1971) | |
| XX. | Early administrative files (1920-1951) | |
| XXI. | Personnel & Field Administration (1932-1972) | |
| XXII. | New Jersey Office & Field Administration (1921-1973) | |
| XXIII. | North American Council and Boards (1933-1972) | |
| XXIV. | Subject File (1927-1982) | |
| XXV. | R. Kenneth Strachan and Family Papers (1949-1975) | |
| XXVI. | Individual missionaries: Records & correspondence (1929-1985) | |
LAM's operation and ministry were most focused in Costa Rica. The records reflect this in that various series distinguish between institutions operating in Costa Rica, while the records for institutions operating in Colombia were consolidated under the Colombia series. The researcher should be aware that the majority of the documents in the collection document an organization undergoing structural change, and division titles may therefore change. The Historical Background of this guide illuminates some of these changes.
Note on arrangement. The arrangement of the collection has remained in the series order as it was received from the donor; the actual ordering of the series largely remains as it was received, but the archivist made some adjustments. Original file folders were replaced with acid-free folders. Folder titles have also been retained as they were received on the microfilm targets, except that inconsistencies have been made to conform with the predominant labeling by the archivist. Spanish folder headings are retained on the targets; English translations have been used in the Container List. All targets have been retained in their folders. For undetermined reasons, the date ranges on the targets for numerous files do not coincide with their corresponding folder contents; as the discrepancies frequently extend beyond a year or two, possibly files were added to or subtracted from files following their being microfilmed. While the files in each series are arranged alphabetically, exceptions to this do occur; the files have been retained in the order in which they were received in order to coincide with the microfilming order. Duplicates were removed from the collection. Documents were stamped with sequential numbering in preparation for filming; gaps in the numbering also suggest the weeding of the files prior to their transfer to the Archives.
Note on microfilming. Latin America Mission began preservation microfilming of its records in 1982. During that year, LAM sorted and filmed those records which comprise the first accession of this collection (reels 7-26), as well as the records which were filmed and then disposed of or retained by the donor (reels 1-6). Staff continued to sort, arrange and weed out records in 1983 and 1984. During 1984 and 1985, the filming of the second set of materials was carried out, comprising those records sent to the Archives in 1984 (reels 27-42). The third filming of documents occurred in 1986 (reels 43-49). The forty-nine reels of master negative microfilm which resulted from this total project were given to the Archives in December 1990. A positive user copy of the first 28 reels was produced by the Archives in 1991; a positive copy of the remaining reels was produced in December 1992.
Some file folders were annotated with the sorting or culling date, as well as filming date, and the position on a specified reel, i.e. Reel 32:7 meaning the seventh file on Reel 32; in some cases, the actual location of the file on the reel differs from the number assigned during the filming, i.e., file 32:7 is noted on the filmed target as 32:9, suggesting that two files which were in the original order were numbered but not filmed. There is no indication on the film about these missing files. In some cases, the range of filming frames was also noted on the file folder. Notes on file folders indicated that the material in them had been "culled" in 1982 and 1983, suggesting they had been weeded prior to microfilming. Most of the paper documents were stamped with a number prior to filming; the gaps in the sequential numbering suggest that not all documents filmed were transferred to the Archives.
The contents of the records on microfilm replicate the contents of the paper documents, with the following exceptions: 1) Reels 1-6 consist largely of the records of the Field Executive Bodies and the Early Administrative Files series. These records were filmed and then apparently discarded prior to the transfer of paper records to the Archives. 2) The Colegio Monterrey series, Evangelical Alliance of Costa Rica series, and Seminario Biblico series are minimal in the paper records, but significantly more extensive on the microfilm version of the records.
The researcher should also be aware that the filming order does not always follow the order in which the files were received. Supplementary files were filmed together and appear consecutively on the film. However, the files of documents of supplementary records, however, were integrated into the various series and therefore do not correspond with the order of the filming.
The quality of some of the first microfilming was somewhat suspect, or the record was incomplete; therefore some supplementary filming was done in 1985 which appears on reels 39 through 42. Reels 43 through 49 consist of documents (primarily from the other series) identified as confidential. These documents were removed from the other series for separate filming; these confidential documents do not exist in paper form in the collection.
Note about language: The collection contains documents in Spanish. While they do not predominate in the entire collection, there are certain series where the Spanish documents outnumber those in English; a note to this effect is included in the series description when applicable.
I. Field executive bodies (1941-1971; folders 1-1 through 20; reels 1:1 through 4:7, 40:1 through 40:21, 43:1). The records in this series consist primarily of meeting minutes of LAM's executive bodies on the mission field: the Inter-Field Council (IFC); the IFC's executive committee called the Quorum Inter-Field Conference (Q-IFC), whose full title was the Quorum Resident in Costa Rica of the Executive Committee of the Inter-Field Conference of the L.A.M., and was later named the Inter-Field Council Executive (IFC-X), the Colombia and Costa Rican Field Councils, and the Colombian and Costa Rican annual mission meetings. In a hierarchical arrangement, the bodies related to one another as follows:
|
IFC |
||
|
IFC-X |
||
| IFC-Costa Rica | IFC-Colombia | |
| Annual Meeting - Costa Rica | Annual meeting - Colombia |
The IFC meetings consisted of reports from field and administrative committees, deliberations and decisions in the areas of administration, finance, communication, personnel, policy manuals, and authorizations of action. Records from field council meetings document the same variety of topics at the country level, therefore including more country-specific information. Records from the country annual meetings also include country-specific information, but also reflect the full membership of the mission in the given country. Recommendations from the country field councils were considered and acted on by the IFC and or IFC-X; likewise, recommendations from the country annual meetings were considered by the country field councils. Therefore, recommendations, proposals, requests for action moved up through the bureaucracy, while decisions, actions, etc., moved down.
The majority of these records exist only on microfilm (See Notes on microfilming). The exposure settings on the microfilm copy are varied, ranging from properly exposed to underexposed (dark).
II. Association of Bible Churches of Costa Rica (AIBC, 1939-1972, bulk 1950-1972; folders 1-21 through 4-7; reels 7:1 through 9:14 40:44 through 40:46, 43:3). This series records the development and activity of the organization founded in 1945 by those congregations which developed from LAM's church planting work in Costa Rica, documenting both the at the overall level and that of individual congregations. Subjects covered include administration, finances, outreach, pastoral assignments, publication of the Association's periodical, Vocero, obstacles to establishing healthy independent churches, Evangelism-in-Depth, building projects, role of the laity, policies, church-mission relationships, and reorganization of the AIBC. Key LAM figures identified in the meetings and correspondence are Mike Berg, Bill Brown, Franklin Cabezas, Horace Fenton, Wilton M. Nelson, Paul Pretiz, and R.K. Strachan. The documents in this series are written predominantly in Spanish. Exceptions are the English minutes from Council meetings in folders 1-23 and 1-24, and most of the contents of folders 4-1,2,3,4,5.
III. Editorial Caribe (1944-1973, bulk 1952-1972; folders 4-8 through 10-6; reels 10:1 through 11:21, 40:47 through 40:55, 43:4). This series thoroughly covers the planning, finances, production and distribution, business, and ministry areas of activity of LAM's literature division. Policy and decision-making is particularly prominent in the Advisory Board's minutes (folder 4-8). Folder 4-11 includes a 1960 version of the division's history. "Blue Books" were divisional organizational manuals; a draft of and discussions about the development of the Editorial Caribe's "blue book" is included in folder 4-11, as are another history of the division and several organizational charts. The ministry and business of the division's bookstores in Costa Rica, Panama, and Spanish-speaking New York, are widely documented. The production of major Bible study tools drew on the resources of Eugene Nida and the American Bible Society (folder 6-6). Other correspondence with Nida is located in folder 7-1. The evaluation process utilized from Christian Service Fellowship is documented through the application and intermediate correspondence in folder 9-1. An actual copy of the evaluation is not available, but a detailed summary of it's findings and recommendations is. Files which record analysis of function and restructuring of the division are folders 9-7 through 9-10. The cooperative efforts of Editorial Caribe with a number of evangelical agencies in publishing Christian literature in Spanish is documented in folders 10-1 through 10-6. The following were either major correspondents or participants in Editorial Caribe planning and activity: Clayton L. Berg, Hal Cocanower, Horace Fenton, W. Dayton Roberts, and R. Kenneth Strachan.
IV. Escuadron (1946-1970; folders 10-7 through 11-4; reels 12:1 through 12:12, 40:56 through 40:58, 43:5). The Escuadron series consists of reports, minutes, correspondence, curriculum, financial records, organizational charts, evaluations, and promotional materials related to LAM's ministry among high school students. Folders 10-7,8 provide a summary of decisions and actions made between 1948 and 1958, along with documentation of the relationship between the mission and Escuadron; discussion of this issue is covered in this and other Escuadron files. There are some documents in Spanish, particularly among items produced for use with the boys or in training leaders, and following the nationalization of the program in 1958. The major correspondents and in Escuadron were Joseph Coughlin, Horace L. Fenton, W. Dayton Roberts, Bob Sabean, R. Kenneth Strachan, and Charles Troutman.
V. Pre-Minamundo & Minamundo (1946-1972, bulk 1962-1970; folders 11-5 through 12-10; reels 12:13 through 12:33, 40:59 through 40:60, 43:6). This series includes correspondence, reports, financial records, organizational charts, documenting LAM planning and philosophy for ministry among university students, chiefly from 1961 to 1971. MINAMUNDO was the title given to ministry among high school and university students. Pre-Minamundo was an internal term developed to identify ministry among students during the 1940's and 50's. While a few documents record activity during the 1940s and 50s, the series is principally focused on the origins and early life of Minamundo in the 1960s. Joe Coughlin's reports are among the pre-Minamundo files, also including information on the Escuadron program. A concentrated summary of the planning phase is available in folder 12-10. Extensive correspondence, both within LAM and between the mission and Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship (IVCF) and Inter-national Fellowship of Evangelical Students (IFES), document these organizations' efforts at cooperation (folders 11-8,9,10). Because LAM's upgraded program among university students overlapped work carried out by IFES, issues of cooperation, loans of staff and areas of responsibility had to be discussed in order to minimize ambiguity and conflict. These very comprehensive files detail cooperation among evangelical agencies carrying on ministry with students. The restructuring of the mission which occurred in 1971 also had an impact on the mission's work among students as well, documented in Folder 11-11. Folder 12-4 includes correspondence on relationships with these and other organizations, including Campus Crusade for Christ, Youth for Christ, and MEC (Movimiento Estudiantil Cristiano, Latin American version of the Student Volunteer Movement). While the bulk of the material in this series relates to ministry among students in Costa Rica, a geographical contrast is provided by material on work in Colombia (Folder 12-9). Spanish documents are sprinkled throughout the series, but English documents predominate. Folder 11-12 includes a letter from Francis Schaeffer expressing his concern about theological trends in the evangelical community, specifically as expressed in an article by LAM administrator Horace Fenton. LAM correspondents in the series include Lester Burton, Joseph Coughlin, Horace Fenton, Tom Hanks, Leon Headington, David Howard, Juan Isais, Benton J. Melbourne, W. Dayton Roberts, Bob Sabean, R. Kenneth Strachan, and Charles Troutman. Among the IVCF correspondents are C. Stacey Woods, and mission secretaries David Adeney and Eric Fife; IFES correspondents include Woods, Wayne Bragg, and Rene Padilla.
VI. Roblealto (1949-1972; folders 11-11 through 13-22; reels 12:34 through 13:22, 40:61 through 40:65, 43:8). This series consists of correspondence, reports, promotional material, minutes, organizational charts which document the planning and operation of the mission's camp, orphanage and farm. The series is divided among the camp, orphanage and farm, yet as the history of Roblealto suggests, these are all progressively more interrelated. Only in 1966 were the administration of the camp, orphanage and farm brought together under the heading "Roblealto," but because they were consolidated, they are formed as a series.
Several Spanish terms are used in the documents. As noted in a promotional brochure, "'finca' means 'farm' and may refer to anything from the orphanage alone to our 200 acres of cows, coffee, bananas and children." "Granja" is translated "farm," but appears to refer only to the poultry farm.
Administrative issues covered include personnel, development of property and facilities, relationships with LAM, the Association of Bible Churches of Costa Rica, other evangelical agencies, and funding. The two periods of restructuring (1962-1963 & 1966-1968) are focal points for the records. Folder 13-14 includes documents which make clear the organizational transition in 1966, when the incorporation of the various ministries under the title Roblealto occurred. In addition to operating camps for Latin American young people, Roblealto also provided an occasional English-speaking camp for children of missionaries and others; a report by Wayne Bragg describes these in 1957 (folder 12-16). As an aid to development and fund raising, several memorial projects were established, including one in 1960 in memory of Christian Service Brigade staff worker Les Burton, who died in 1956 (folder 13-8). As with other series, the Roblealto series has Spanish documents interspersed through it. Key correspondents in the series include Dorothy Andrews, Joseph Coughlin, Horace Fenton, David Howard, Donald Longworth, Benton Melbourne, Paul Pretiz, W. Dayton Roberts, Bob Sabean, R. Kenneth Strachan, and Charles Troutman.
VII. Colegio Monterrey (1955-1971; folders 14-1 through 14:5; reels 16:1 through 17:1, 40:82 through 40:85). The series contains correspondence, minutes of board meetings, reports, financial records, statistics, an organizational chart, by-laws, program evaluations, promotional materials, graduation programs and forms, which cover the administration, staffing, students and enrollment, board membership, fiscal operation and facilities development of the high school in Costa Rica. Reviews and newspaper articles criticizing the school are included, along with subsequent response and program changes. Many of the documents in this series are in Spanish. The majority of this series exists only on microfilm; the exposure quality varies within the series. The predominant correspondents include: Clayton L. Berg, Horace L. Fenton, Kenneth G. Hood, Victor Monterroso, Wilton M. Nelson, Paul Pretiz, and W. Dayton Roberts.
VIII. Alianza Evangelica Costarricense (1944-1972; folders 14-6 through 14-9; reels 16:18 through 17:2, 40:86 through 40:88). As with the preceding series, the majority of the Alliance records are only preserved on the microfilm copy of the LAM records. The documents which comprise the series include correspondence, reports, incorporation documents, historical summaries, minutes, statistics, assembly programs, and lists. Among the subjects covered are Alliance activities, planning, cooperation, administration, and the Goodwill Caravans. The materials in the folders 14-6,7 include information on the joint administration of the Alliance, attitudes toward ecumenism (particularly in reference to a World Council of Churches offer to supply materials and funds for Cuban refugees), and cooperation with the Christian Action Committee and the Alliance's Rural Work Committee (assist pastors and congregations increase their effectiveness in an agricultural country). Included in the file are promotional pieces for the Good Will Caravans and the Hogar Biblico (Bible Home), and a history of the Caravans project.
Principal correspondents in the series include Horace Fenton, Paul Pretiz, W. Dayton Roberts, R. Kenneth Strachan, and various Association members. Most documents are in Spanish.
IX. Good Will Caravans (1962-1973; folders 14-10 through 15-4; reels 17:3 through 17:9, 40:89 & 40:90). This series, predominantly in Spanish, includes correspondence, reports, statistical and financial reports, promotional materials, and organizational charts for the mobile medical and education units. Folder 14-14 includes a recommendation report, "Suggestions for a Working Relationship with Missions and Indigenous Churches in Latin America." LAM's cooperation with FARMS Inc. related to agricultural projects, while that with MAP International was of a medical nature. Folder 14-15 includes an extensive report, "Agriculture and Rural Church Work in Costa Rica," prepared by a Fuller Seminary student. Folder 15-1 includes the script for a slide presentation on the caravans. The principle correspondents in the series are Horace Fenton, David Howard, Gareth Miller of FARMS Inc., Paul Pretiz, Grace Roberts, and W. Dayton Roberts.
X. Clinica Biblica (1929-1971; folders 15-5 through 17-6; reels 17:10 through 17:27, 40:91 through 41:4, 43:13)). This series consists of correspondence, memos, reports, minutes, statistics, organizational charts and financial records, documenting the administration, operation, funding and public relations aspects of the hospital, for the most part between the years 1955 and 1968. As in the other series, the Bible Clinic files record the mission's attempts to nationalize the administration and work of the hospital. Folder 15-5 contains several statements of mission rationale for the medical ministry. The focus of the series tends to be toward the period of reevaluation and transition to the hospital's oversight by Servicios Medicos. Folder 16-7 documents a visit by MAP personnel (Medical Assistance Program) in order to evaluate the program and make recommendations. Folders 17-1,2,3,4,5 document this process directly. In addition, an entire file is devoted to the history of the Clinic (See folder 15-10). The series contains some Spanish documents. Principle correspondents are: Marie Cameron (hospital doctor since 1930), Thomas Cherry (LAM Costa Rican Field Administrator), Horace Fenton, David Howard, Benton J. Melbourne, Paul Pretiz, W. Dayton Roberts, Ladison Saylor, and R. Kenneth Strachan.
XI. Seminario Biblico (1927-1972; folders 17-7 through 19-13; reels 27:1 through , 41:54 through 29:42, 41:54 through 42:18, 43:19). The Seminary series is made up of correspondence, minutes, curriculum materials, schedules, accreditation materials, reports, incorporation documents, promotional material, financial records, press releases, the seminary prospectus, publications, lists, etc. The topics covered include the Seminary's history, academic affairs, administration, faculty, students and enrollment, curriculum development, accreditation, association memberships, planning, cooperation with other institutions, activities, its correspondence course, board membership, fiscal operation and facilities development of the school. One third of the series is available in a hard copy; the other two-thirds are available only on microfilm. Several items of interest: the series includes correspondence with Ralph Winter about the Training Union of Greater Colombia (TUG, folder 17-13). Folder 17-16 includes the paper, "The Relationship of Correspondence Courses to Evangelism-in-Depth." The Harry Strachan Lectures featured guest speakers at the Seminary. Correspondence and arrangements with those participating as lecturers included John Mackay (and accompanying questions about his theological liberalism), Eugene Nida, Vernon Grounds and Jose Miguez-Bonino (reel 29:8 and folder 19-6).
Records included only on microfilm greatly expand the documentation of the Seminary's operation and activity, covering academic affairs, administration, its correspondence course and other programs, promotion, publications, student affairs and faculty.
The major correspondents in the series are Clayton Berg, Plutarco Bonilla, Horace L. Fenton, Richard Foulkes, David Howard, Ruben Lores, Wilton Nelson, W. Dayton Roberts, and Charles Troutman.
XII. Colombia (1932-1972; folders 19-14 through 25-6; reels 18:1 through 19:21, 41:5 through 41:10, 43:14). Unlike the previous series which distinguish between various aspects of ministry in Costa Rica, the Colombia series brings together the records documenting the various ministries in the country. The series contains correspondence, reports, memos, financial reports, church membership and financial statistics, all documenting the work of LAM and its affiliated congregations in the country, principally between 1949 and 1972. The files record administration of the mission's work, evangelistic outreach, finances, relationships with national Christians and their integration into the mission, personnel matters, etc. The files offer a thorough view of mission internal communication and decision-making related to the demanding work of establishing thriving congregations with committed trained leadership. Folders 19-14,15 and 20-1,2,3 cover the complete range of mission business in the country, including the host of routine details and documentation on personnel issues, local churches, country-wide trends, finances, and the administrative restructuring occurring during the last half of the 1960's. The breadth of the series enables the researcher to view some of these issues from a variety of perspectives and levels.
The minutes of the Association of Evangelical Churches of the Caribbean (folders 20-4 through 8) are almost exclusively in Spanish. The folders of AIEC correspondence and reports (21-1,2), largely in English and covering the same time period, shed some light on the workings and decisions of this body. An occasional letter from David Howard and later Dick Boss to a senior mission administrator can be found, containing a report of issues addressed by the Association; these become somewhat more frequent during the 1960's. The issues discussed in these files relate to conditions and problems in local congregations, personnel problems, association leadership, the Evangelism-in-Depth program, church property, and the licensing of lay ministers. Folder 21-1 includes a 10/31/60 letter from David Howard on appropriate attitudes toward converted men who have relationships with more than one woman, particularly with regard to church leadership and participating in the sacraments. Several subjects are addressed in concentrated doses, such as Pentecostalism (or the charismatic movement) and the relationship between the mission and the national church. In 1963 and 1964, and again in October 1967, incidents of Pentecostal manifestations were occurring in congregations. Discussion of the situation, which involved mission leadership and supporters, is documented in folders 19-15 and 20-6,7. As these manifestations were occurring within the context of local congregations, folder 21-3 provides additional background. Folder 23-2 further documents the mission's consideration of this matter. The subject of church/mission relations was being widely discussed in 1962 and 1963 (folders 19-15 and 20-6.
The operation of the Evangelical Missions Officers Council (EMOC), and the somewhat broader Evangelical Confederation of Colombia established in 1950 are documented in folders 22-1,2,3,4. These bodies were dedicated to coordinating efforts and minimizing overlap and competition among mission agencies in the country; the group also formed to address in a unified way the persecution of Protestants. Clyde Taylor, General Director of the National Association of Evangelicals (U.S.) and Executive Secretary of the Evangelical Foreign Missions Association (EFMA) is among the correspondents whose writing is in these files. In the late 1960's, the issue addressed in the file (folder 22-4) is the influence of the communists in Colombia. The files touch on a variety of matters from mission agency perspective at a country-wide level, including education, politics, and services. Among the items in this group of files is a statement of the recommendations of EMOC's Comity Committee with a variety of clauses agreed upon by the members. Also included is a record of discussion about LAM's membership in EMOC and CEDEC, focusing on issues of ecumenism and separatism, since CEDEC's membership included a suspect mainline denomination. The status of Protestants in the predominantly Roman Catholic country was an issue of growing concern. Included in folder 22-1 are the Spanish text and English translation of "The Concordat," an agreement between a Colombian president and Pope Leo XIII in 1887, which was ratified by a Colombian legislative body in 1888, establishing Roman Catholicism as the national religion of the country. The files also include numerous bulletins prepared by CEDEC on persecution in Colombia. The 1953 "Convention of Missions," an agreement between Colombia's president and Pope Pius XII, further strengthened Catholic dominance in the country; an additional twist in the situation involves US support of the Colombian school system through aid funding. There is limited reference throughout the series to the persecution Protestants were facing in the country; the most consolidated documentation of this can be found in folder 24-9. With the conclusion of widespread persecution in the early 1960's, other issues received CEDEC attention, including the United Biblical Seminary of Colombia in Medellin. An subject of discussion in 1967 was the participation of CEDEC members in the Evangelism-in-Depth program. Folder 22-4 contains a 1968 "Census of Protestant Church Members in Colombia." The files are primarily in English, although the minutes from meetings are entirely in Spanish.
Relationships with other missions working in the country is covered in folder 23-10, including those with non-evangelical or ecumenical groups, Southern Baptists, Mission Aviation Fellowship, Presbyterian Church USA and several other interdenominational agencies. Folder 23-14 contains a 1967 edition of "History of the Latin America Mission in Colombia, 1937-1967." A similar report, "A History of Primary Schools in Colombia, 1937-1967," in folder 25-3 documents the emergence of LAM's provision of Christian education for children.
Key correspondents in the Colombia series include: Marian Chapman, Horace L. Fenton, Ernie Fowler, Pedro Gutierrez, David Howard, William Lester, Robert Reed, W. Dayton Roberts, Helen E. Shute, R. Kenneth Strachan, Pearl M. Thompson, and Charles Troutman.
XIII. Mexico (1962-1973; folders 25-7 through 25-10; reels 13:23 through 13:25, 40:66). This brief series (correspondence, minutes, reports, financial reports) documents the origins and early development of LAM's ministry in Mexico. Juan Isais, Dave Howard, R. Kenneth Strachan, Charles Troutman, Horace Fenton, W. Dayton Roberts, and Harry D. Burke ("Spearhead" director) were the primary correspondents in this series. There are an approximately equal number of English and Spanish documents in the files.
XIV. Panama (1952-1971; folders 25-11 through 26-4; reels 13:26 through 13:32, 40:67). As in the Mexico series, the documents (correspondence, minutes, reports, financial reports) in this series record the incorporation of LAM's work in Panama (both in the forms of its bookstore and radio station HOXO), and development of the ministry there. The series includes on letter from Clarence Jones, co-founder of World Radio Missionary Fellowship and radio station HCJB (folder 25-11) and discussion of legal issues. Folder 25-13 records the findings of the 1958 meeting, and consolidates information on mission activity in the country carried out by various Christian agencies and denominations; attention was given to the history of mission work on the isthmus, existing LAM work at the bookstore, radio station and among West Indians, and recommendations for further development of the work there. Folder 26-4 should not be overlooked because of its title "Miscellaneous". Included in it are documents on partnership vs. "latinization" models of integrating indigenous leadership into LAM's ministry, lessons the mission could learn from the relationship between Panama and the United States, and the legal status of expatriates in the country. As with other series, Spanish documents are included here as well, although they do not predominate. Key correspondents in the series are: Bob Beukema, Fred Denton, Horace Fenton, John A. Mawhinney, Paul Pretiz, W. Dayton Roberts, R. Kenneth Strachan.
XV. New York City (1954-1968; folders 26-5 through 26-10; reels 13:33 through 13:37, 40:68). This series (correspondence, minutes, reports, financial reports) documents the beginning and growth of ministry among Hispanic Americans, including reports on meetings with Hispanic pastors and status reports on the various components of the project. The series predominantly covers the time period up to 1960. Spanish documents are included in this series. The key correspondents are: Horace Fenton, Leon Headington, Juan Isais, John A. Mawhinney, W. Dayton Roberts, and R. Kenneth Strachan.
XVI. Communications (1945-1972; folders 26-11 through 32-6; reels 14-1 through 15:27, 40:69 through 40:81, 43:9 through 43:12). The Communications Division series consists of correspondence, reports, memos, organizational charts, statistics, financial records, press releases, meeting minutes and promotional material, documenting LAM's planning and activity in the operation of radio stations TIFC, HOXO, YNOL and YSHQ, radio broadcasting cooperation as part of CCP and DIA, involvement in television outreach, cooperation in literature production through LEAL, and magazine publishing in VERBO. An historical summary of the division as of 1966 is available in folder 26-13. Each of the sub-series contains some documents in Spanish. The following individuals were key participants in discussion documented in most or all of the sub-series: Horace Fenton, Paul Pretiz, W. Dayton Roberts, and R. Kenneth Strachan.
General. An initial general sub-series contains materials which broadly document the Division's activity. The expansion of radio ministry into various countries between 1955 and 1969 is recorded in folders 26-15 through 23. A number of special projects coordinated by the Division requiring cooperation with other organizations and/or fund raising are documented in folders 26-27 through 32. Particularly noteworthy is the Division "Blue Book" or organizational manual, which includes goals, policies and an historical summary (folder 26-13). Also of particular interest is material in folder 26-28, documenting the planning and implementation with the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association of the short-lived Hour of Decision radio program in Spanish, including correspondence with Cliff Barrows; some additional internal evaluation is also located in folder 32-6, written several years after the program was discontinued. Correspondence about availability of an inter-field communication system was carried on with Jim Vaus, an ex-convict who was later converted during Billy Graham's 1949 Los Angeles Crusade (folder 26-24). A single folder (27-2) documents consideration of and opportunities to enter TV broadcasting by the mission. Key correspondents in this sub-series in addition to those noted above include: Bill Herzog, David Solt, and William Wortman.
TIFC. Materials in this sub-series document the planning and operation of LAM's Costa Rican radio station, including discussion of programming, technical matters, listener response, promotion, personnel, relationships with other organizations, expansion into television broadcasting, and funding. For historical perspective, folder 27-4 includes a mid-1960's historical overview of the entire division, while folder 28-3 includes a short history on the station. Notables: folder 27-4 contains a 1962 report on the potential for commercial operation of radio station TIFC; folder 27-7 includes the division "blue book;" folder 27-13 contains an analytical report by International Christian Broadcasters in 1966 on the market in which TIFC was broadcasting, TIFC's effectiveness within that market, and recommendations for implementation. Some documents in the TIFC sub-series are in Spanish. Key figures in the operation of TIFC reflected in the records are Franklin Cabezas, Federico Picardo, and David Solt.
HOXO. Like the TIFC sub-series, the HOXO sub-series documents the planning and operation of the radio station in Panama, with additional emphasis on the joint sponsorship of the station which emerged between LAM and World Radio Missionary Fellowship in 1954, and LAM's transfer of responsibility entirely to WRMF in 1963. Reflecting the rise of anti-American sentiment during the early 1960's, the status of missionaries in the country is also treated. A copy of a creative project on the history of HOXO, located in folder 28-8, draws together a great deal of information on the origins, development and key participants in the station's operation, during and beyond the period of LAM's sponsorship of the station. The sub-series contains some documents in Spanish. The key participants reflected in the sub-series are: Bob Beukema, William Bibee, Fred Denton, Howard Erickson, Bill Herzog, and Clarence Jones.
YNOL. While this sub-series is less substantive than the two previous ones, it nonetheless records the origins and operation of the radio station in Nicaragua. Documentation of the planning phase with its feasibility studies and reports predominates. There are Spanish documents in the sub-series. In addition to the key correspondents for the entire series, David Solt was a key participant in YNOL operations.
YSHQ. This sub-series is also brief, beginning and focusing on the record of the station's history during the planning stage, but including some information on the radio station's early operation in El Salvador.
DIA. This sub-series includes documentation on Difusiones Inter-Americanas (translated Inter-American Communications) and its predecessor, Cadena Cultural Panamericana (CCP, translated Panamerican Christian Network). The files generally address the administration of CCP/DIA, LAM's membership in it and organizational support of and contribution to it. Among the materials in folder 29-5 are notes from the conference at which CCP was organized and its initial "code of regulations" and a report, "The Challenge of Gospel Broadcasting in Latin America," prepared for the Congress at which DIA emerged. "Facts About DIA" is a helpful booklet in folder 30-2, containing a statement of faith, staff, membership, services, and constitution. Folder 29-13 contains correspondence from Donald Grey Barnhouse. The 1959 Congress is documented, along with two subsequent meetings in Huampani, Peru (1962 and 1967); these files document both planning and Congress proceedings and decisions. The key participants in CCP and DIA as reflected in the records were Clarence Jones, Robert Remington, Robert Savage, and Hugh Worsfold.
LEAL. This sub-series records the emergence of Literatura Evangelica para America Latina (translated Evangelical Literature for Latin America), its administration and LAM's participation in its operation. Discussion of LEAL's health and value of continuation appear throughout the sub-series, particularly in folder 30-11. The LEAL sub-series includes records from the 1955 conference called by Evangelical Literature Overseas at which the LEAL-concept was born, and the constitutional convention a year later at which LEAL was formally organized. The key participants as reflected in the LEAL sub-series were Vergil Gerber (LEAL executive secretary) and James Johnson (Evangelical Literature Overseas).
VERBO. This sub-series documents the origin, short life and suspended publication of the magazine during which time LAM was a co-sponsor with Conservative Baptist Foreign Mission Society. There is interesting interchange on cooperation with the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association. Firstly, consideration was given to featuring Billy Graham in VERBO at the time of his Caribbean Crusade in 1958 (See folder 32-4). Consultation with LAM on the feasibility of launching a Spanish version of DECISION magazine is documented in folder 32-6, as well as developing a distribution network for the publication; an internal memo exploring alternatives targeted for a general non-Christian audience is included in folder 31-13. Key correspondents include Jose Bongarra, Alec Clifford, Vergil Gerber, Rufus Jones (CBFMS), Paul Sheetz, and Kenneth Taylor.
XVII. Public Relations (1946-1972; folders 32-7 through 43-9; reels 20:1 through 23:27, 41:11 through 41:22, 43:15). This series consists of correspondence, memos, reports, financial records, annual reports, stationary, news releases, brochures and other promotional materials, newsletters, prayer letters, scripts, advertisements, related to LAM's efforts at the mission-wide level to develop and maintain support for its work among American evangelicals. Documented in the series are the philosophical discussions of what methods the mission wanted to use and how it wanted to be perceived, the role of deputation in presenting the mission to the evangelical public, and the actual planning and production of various means to accomplish its public relations goals. The groups identified to be targets of these projects include prayer and financial supporters, the general evangelical public and press, and potential missionary candidates. The series provides a record of criticism the mission received (folder 43-6), often related to issues of theological conservatism or liberalism.
Folder 32-7 includes annual programs for public relations, detailing proposed publications and projects. In addition to information distributed through its own publications, LAM also coordinated information on its activities in other publications (see folder 32-8). Folder 34-4 contains a copy of "You and Your Deputation Work," from 1952. LAM's philosophy and practice of using audio-visual media is documented in the files on films, filmstrips, etc. (folders 34-8 through 35-13. The production of films required LAM to work with other evangelical agencies, including the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association's World Wide Pictures on Caribbean Crusade, and Westminster Films on Unfinished Business and Colombia Conflict. In some cases, scripts and viewer survey results are included for the corresponding film. Folder 36-4 includes an evaluation of LAM's donors and fundraising methodology. Folder 37-4 brings together promotional pieces which also outline LAM history. 39-3 includes a detailed summary outlining the history of Latin America Evangelist. Folder 39-13 consists of books created to involve children in understanding LAM's missionary work, incorporating stories, cartoons and questions. The principal correspondents in this series are: Horace Fenton, David Howard, John Kenyon, Mary Anne Klein, Jane Pain, Paul Pretiz, W. Dayton Roberts, and R. Kenneth Strachan.
XVIII. Evangelism (1944-1972). The breadth of this series provides the opportunity to observe LAM's evangelistic efforts over twenty-five years. The series contains several general background files (folders 43-10 through 43-18, and 55-5 through 57-5) which span the duration of entire evangelistic effort of the mission, as well as files documenting outreach in particular countries, giving the researcher both broad and narrow views of LAM efforts. LAM's thorough planning in preparing for campaigns and Evangelism-in-Depth programs throughout the region is well recorded, including planning proposals, statements of philosophy, materials used, reports on meetings, and plans for follow-up. The series is divided into two sub-series: Pre-Evangelism-in-Depth Campaigns and Evangelism-in-Depth. The series includes many documents in Spanish, a much higher proportion of which will be found in the Evangelism-in-Depth sub-series.
Pre-Evangelism-in-Depth Campaigns (1944-1958; folders 43-10 through 44-31; reels 24:1 through24:29, 41:23 through 41:40, 43:16). This sub-series consists of correspondence, reports, minutes, financial records, public relations materials related to the mission's evangelistic program from the late 1940's through 1958, at which time individual campaigns with a professional evangelist were discontinued and the Evangelism-in-Depth program (E/D) was begun.
During the pre-E/D campaign phase of LAM's history, professional evangelists were enlisted, including opera performer Anton Marco (see particularly folder 43-13). Communication with other individuals who participated (E.S. Alphonse, Rogelio Archilla, Alfredo Colom, Israel Garcia, Mariano Gonzalez, Eliseo Hernandez, Ernesto Leon, Jose Morales, Roberto Navarro, J. Edwin Orr, Ben Saint, and Phil Saint) is documented in folder 43-16. Use of these and other individuals is documented in specific countries throughout the Campaigns sub-series. Examples of tracts can be found in folder 43-14. Each of the country files includes correspondence and reports on individual meetings. folder 44-5 contains correspondence from Abe Van Der Puy and Clarence Jones.
The culmination of the campaign phase was Billy Graham's early-1958 tour of the Caribbean and Central America, during which Graham held meetings in Costa Rica, Mexico, Guatemala, Panama, Venezuela, Trinidad, Barbados, Jamaica and Puerto Rico. The record of the campaign (folders 44-29,30,31) extends back to the early planning phase, which began in mid-1952. BGEA correspondents include Jerry Beavan and Joe Blinco, with letters written to Billy Graham and Grady Wilson.
Principal correspondents in the sub-series include: Iner Basinger, Horace Fenton, Jonas Gonzalez, Juan Isais, Ruben Lores, W. Dayton Roberts, R. Kenneth Strachan, William L. Thompson (Campaign Division Director). David Howard coordinated Billy Graham's crusade in Mexico. Correspondence with other LAM staff in each of the countries is also included. Correspondence with representatives of other missions active in South and Central America is also included in the files for campaigns for particular countries.
B. Evangelism-in-Depth (E/D, 1948-1972; folders 44-32 through 57-16; reels 24:30 through 26:19, 30:1 through 32:27, 37:3,9 through 37:14, 39:12 through 39:15,22, 43:30). This sub-series, like the campaign sub-series, includes records at both the entire program and country-by-country levels.
Country level. The files at the country level may include correspondence, financial records, committee minutes, press releases, publicity materials, press coverage, follow-up evaluation, copies of the official national Spanish language newspaper, in most cases called En Marcha (in Ecuador, it was called Impacto), and in several cases, an English-language report to American supporters called Postmarked Colombia or Postmarked Peru. Most of the files include material prior to and following the formal program implementation, with the predominance of documentation during the period of the program. Copies of training manuals can be found in folder 51-3 (Bolivia), 52-12 (Ecuador), 53-2 (Guatemala), and 53-9 (Mexico).
Thinking. The general files document the transition, at both practical and theoretical levels, from the campaign to the E\D phase, covering the program, planning, philosophy, structure, materials, and international development. R. Kenneth Strachan's memo, "Implementing the Concept of Evangelism in Depth," is included in folder 55-5, along with responses received from senior LAM administrators. These files document an initial fertile period of reflection and planning, followed by implementation and refinement of the idea as LAM leaders surveyed opportunities in the region. E\D was an innovative program, and the series reflects the analysis and strategy and evaluation characteristic of such a period. One by-product of this was the publication of books. Folder 46-7 relates to the publication of four books on evangelism by LAM staff: Evangelism-in-Depth by various authors, Revolution in Evangelism by W. Dayton Roberts, The Other Revolution by Juan M. Isais, and The Inescapable Calling by R. Kenneth Strachan. Folder 49-2 gathers together various writings, particularly on topics relevant to E/D, such as "E/D in Relation to Theological Training," "E/D as a Theological Revolution," "Mobilization of Believers and Churches for Evangelism," "Theological Foundations of E/D," "Revolution and Evangelization in the Latin American Context," "From E/D to In-Depth Evangelism," "What Does it Mean to Evangelize Today?" and "In-Depth Evangelism: Method or Strategy?"
Evaluation. The debate referred to in folder 47-4 refers to the discussion carried on between a proposed published description of E\D by Strachan, and a response by Rev. Victor E. Hayward, providing a World Council of Churches view of evangelism with greater emphasis on the "ethical and social implications of the Gospel." The file includes a copy of Strachan's article, Hayward's response, and the correspondence related to International Review of Missions' attempts to publish the two pieces simultaneously. Also included is internal discussion of the publishing possibilities and the issues addressed in the debate. A copy of Strachan's reply to Hayward is also included. The process is well documented from a variety of angles.
A project solicited by LAM was an evaluation of E\D by author and missiologist, George Peters. The file includes pre-evaluation reports and correspondence, and Peters' report delivered at the 1968 IFMA-EFMA Winona Lake meeting, a post-evaluation internal analysis of Peters' report, correspondence with Peters on his findings, a record of the process of Peters' work of publishing his work in book form, and responses to the book. The file provides insight into not only the E\D program, but external and internal evaluations and feelings about it and relationships in evangelical mission/missiological circles. Also included is a copy of a paper on New Life for All, an indigenous Nigerian evangelistic movement.
The collection helpfully provides an outside look at E/D as well as that from within LAM. An example of this is a thesis written on E/D, titled A Description and Evaluation of the Evangelism in Depth Program of the Latin American Mission (folder 57-1).
Training and implementation. Building support for and participation in E\D was a major component of the program. Folders 46-1 and 2 document the program developed to involve congregations in E\D and the impact of the program on congregations. The process of training pastors and lay leaders in the principles of E/D and helping them plan implementation in their countries and congregations is documented in folder 49-7 and 8, which contain a record of specific training and planning programs held in Costa Rica. Records for two workshops held in 1963 and 1966 provide some measure of comparison of workshops over time. Along with discussion among mission administrators about goals and implementation of the project, the LAM records also include the materials actually used in training pastors and their congregations to become practicing evangelists. These include the flip charts in English and Spanish for visualizing the instruction, along with an instruction workbook on the use of the flip chart.
Promotion. Folder 46-6 describes the development of a promotional book built around illustrations and brief narrative description of the program. The book itself is filed separately and described more fully in the Photograph Location Record of this guide. Included in the events described in folder 47-1 (almost entirely in Spanish) is a visit by Donald McGavran to a seminary in Mexico planned by Juan Isais, and discussion of the timing of the E\D program in Mexico, where Isais was based and served as LAM representative. One of the tools used in the program, both for training and promotion, was audio-visual production, such as filmstrips; scripts for these are available in folders 45-14 and 15.
Details of administration. Folder 47-7 offers an interesting glimpse into the identity and ownership of a program and its name. Because the E\D program had grown and "Evangelism-in-Depth" was a catchy phrase which was subsequently adopted by other groups for programs unrelated to LAM's E\D, the mission registered the name with the US Patent Office in 1966. The file documents both the registration process and communication between LAM and parties using the E\D name. A related interesting item is a 1961 memo from Horace Fenton to W. Dayton Roberts suggesting abbreviating "Evangelism-in-Depth" from "E-in-D" to "E/D", the abbreviation which became standard. (folder 49-4).
Cooperation. The growth of the program was built on cooperation, and that interaction with numerous other evangelical and non-evangelical agencies is documented in folders 47-8 and 9. While some of the correspondence per organization is limited to one or two pieces, the range covers forty different institutions.
Folders 47-10 to 14 record the work of the committee established to coordinate evangelistic programs on a national scale in Latin American countries, Comite Latinoamericana al Servicio de la Evangelizacion (CLASE). Ruben Lores of LAM was CLASE's Secretary/Treasurer. Evangelical Foreign Missions Association (EFMA) was one of the meeting's sponsors, and correspondence in the CLASE files includes that with EFMA Executive Secretary, Clyde Taylor, and Assistant Executive Secretary, Wade Coggins.
OWED. With the development and experience with E/D in Latin America and subsequent interest throughout the world, LAM established the Office of Worldwide Evangelism in Depth (OWED). Folders 49-9 through 51-1 document the origins of the office, preliminary goals and organization, administrative and financial relationship to LAM, financial difficulties, and its operation. A 1967 theological consultation (folder 49-12) on evangelism included presentations on topics related to evangelism, such as conversion, the church, and cooperation vs. separation. This set of files contains a considerable record of the process of implementing of E/D in Africa, Europe, Asia, North America, Latin America, and Oceania, and with the emergence of OWED, how the efforts throughout the world were coordinated through the office. In the United States, E/D projects were established in Eastern Kentucky (referred to as the Appalachian region, includes On the March), Eastern Pennsylvania, New England, and DuPage County, Illinois. The files related to these programs also record the intersection with and contribution of OWED to these.
Other information on worldwide promotion and application is available in the international travel of Ruben Lores and Horace Fenton (folders 45-9,10 and 11). Folder 48-3 contains reports on trips to oversee E\D projects in both South America (Chile, Brazil, Paraguay), Asia, Africa, North America, and various papers exploring the philosophical aspects of E\D, including its relationship to the church growth movement. A number of these papers were prepared by Orlando Costas. Folders 48-1 and 2 contain similar material, although they are mostly in Spanish.
A final portion of the evangelism series covers meetings, consultations and congresses with relevance for E\D and OWED (folders 57-6 through 57-16). Among these are the 1968 Asian-South Pacific Congress on Evangelism, Consultation of Evangelistic Strategy (COES), a series of meetings between 1968 and 1972, a Wheaton College Graduate School course in 1969, the 1969 Consultation on Saturation Evangelism in Montreaux, Switzerland, the 1969 U.S. Congress on Evangelism, the CLADE I and II meetings in 1969 and 1970, and an assortment of other meetings in which LAM had representation, including several Youth for Christ congresses, EFMA/IFMA joint conferences, the 1968 West African Congress on Evangelism, the 1969 Congo Congress on Evangelism, the 1970 Elburn Congress on Latin America sponsored by ECLA (the Evangelical Committee on Latin America, jointly established by EFMA and IFMA), and the 9th Urbana Missionary Convention in 1970.
Key correspondents in the series include: W. Dayton Roberts, Horace Fenton, David Howard, Charles Troutman, Ruben Lores, Scott Nyborg, and Charles Koch.
XIX. Education (1960-1971; folders 58-1 through 58:9; reels 29:43, 42:19 through 42:27). This slim series brings together materials on the Training and Education divisions of LAM, the Education Division having developed from the Training Division, and including under its administration the Seminario Biblico, lay training, and other educational ministries of LAM. A more detailed record of these operations are available under their own series elsewhere in the collection. Correspondence, memos, blue books, statements of goals and philosophy, and reports comprise the series, which documents the transition from one to the other division during the restructuring period of LAM. A 10/12/71 memo (folder 58-8) documents the dissolution of the Education Department (as distinguished from the Education Division) in Colombia due to diminished work with primary schools and increasing independence by the Colegio Monterrey. Key correspondents in the series are Clayton L. Berg, David Howard, Wilton Nelson, and W. Dayton Roberts.
XX. Early Administrative Files (1920-1951; folders 58:12 through 59:3; reels 5:1 through 6:32, 40:23 through 40:43). This series consists of administrative records which were filed separately by LAM, donor, documenting earlier history of the administrative areas covered by the following administration series. Among the records are correspondence, lists, promotional materials, brochures, prayer letters, publications, memos, reports, constitutions and by-laws, and reports, etc. As is the case with several other series which are predominantly recorded only on microfilm, about two-thirds of this series is only available on microfilm. The topics covered include personnel issues, public relations, finances, relationships, programs in Costa Rica (seminary, Bible Home, clinic, radio station TICF, youth department, etc.), Colombia, and Panama.
Folder 58-16 includes a copy of the periodical Latin America Evangelization Campaign. Folder 59-2 included the program from the 1936 Primer Congreso Evangelico and the 1948 Congreso Evangelico del Caribe. An interesting set of letters is contained in folder 59-3 in which a supporting church questions the mission about the suspected theological liberalism of a LAM missionary.
Among the microfilm files are lists of missionaries and a notebook (folder "Personnel: Missionaries & national workers; 1924-1948," reel 6:1) arranged alphabetically listing station assignments, field absences, furloughs, vacations, illnesses and deaths. The LAEC/LAM public relations files (folder "Publicity materials; 1920-1948," reel 5:7) include prayer letters of Harry and Susan Strachan among others. A table arranged by missionary records information on supporters, receipts, salary and shortages (folder "Finances: Missionary support, student & orphan support; 1946-1948," reel 5:16). The launches referred to in several folder titles were a part of a river ministry project (Folder "Launches...," reel 6:14,15,16). The Youth Department section of the series refers only to Camp Roblealto (folder "Costa Rica: Ministries - Youth Department; 1948," reel 6:28). The "Historical Sidelights" file contains a 1955 version of LAM's history, written by W. Dayton Roberts (reel 6:30). Correspondence recording LAM's interaction with other agencies includes communication with Central American Mission, Christian Airmen's Missionary Fellowship (later Missionary Aviation Fellowship) and with C. Stacey Woods on behalf of Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship (folder "Inter-Mission relationships: Correspondence; 1931-1948," reel 6:32).
The primary correspondents in the series are R. Kenneth Strachan, William L. Thompson, Susan Strachan, Horace Fenton, and W. Dayton Roberts.
XXI. Personnel & Field Administration (1932-1972; folders 59-4 through 66-14; reels 33:1 through 35:42, 39:16 through 39:20, 43:23 through 43:27). This series consists of correspondence, reports, memos, etc. documenting the administration of the mission as a whole, primarily from the United States office when based in New Jersey, and of the Costa Rica office in San Juan. The series includes several sub-series: Candidates, Field, Annual Meetings, New Missionaries, Personnel, Finances, Affiliations and Relationships. A parallel series for both the New Jersey office and field office follows, addressing policy-level considerations, as contrasted with the operational ones of the present series.
Candidates. The candidates sub-series documents the processing of applications to join the mission and the mission's search for prospective workers. Among the subjects covered are specific personnel needs, individual applications, candidate screening and consideration of psychological aspects, orientation, and candidate procedure and philosophy in general.
Field. This sub-series documents the operation, maintenance and development of LAM's ministry, principally from its San Juan office. The files also document the function of the Field Committee within the broader LAM context. Among the committees documented in folder 60-5 are: Spiritual Life Committee, Committee on Housekeeping Budget, Committee on Hospitality, Planning and Review Committee, Policy Committee, Action Committee, LAM Communications Committee and Comisiones Para La Consulta. Folder 60-1 includes a 1963 organizational chart detailing the distribution of responsibilities in Costa Rica.
New missionaries. The New Missionary sub-series (folders 61-3 through 16) documents the program of educating and preparing newly appointed missionaries for life within the mission and at their respective assignments. Included among the files are duplicated information provided to new missionaries and outlines from orientation sessions. The information on the orientation sessions provides a extended view of how the mission prepared its new workers for their missionary service, from the perspectives of language, culture, etc., and how the program changed to provide more thorough training.
Personnel. This sub-series documents a variety of personnel concerns, primarily through correspondence and memos of policy, addressing issues including benefits, insurance, tax and social security, pastoral and psychological care, retirement and resignation, care and education of the children of missionaries, and similar related issues. Folder 62-25 contains a 1952 vintage booklet outlining expectations and responsibilities for missionaries doing deputation during their furloughs. Folder 62-1 contains various lists of LAM's members and their children. Several files (folders 63-3,4,5) address a concern to more thoroughly involve missionaries and support staff in evangelism; running parallel to this is a concern to be sensitive to the authority of the national church.
A number of files include information which address different aspects of relationships in the mission setting: between the mission and national church, missionaries and nationals, etc. Folder 61-14 documents the mission's attitude toward the Costa Rican church and its leadership, illustrating what it hopes to be their working relationship. Information on relationships with nationals in general is addressed in folder 62-6. Folders 62-17,18 document the Partnership Project, which addressed the issue of incorporating Latin Americans into the mission staff. The Partnership Project was developed in Costa Rica to Latinize the special ministries related to publishing, education, etc., with a long term goal of securing national financial support for these programs and the national church. Objections were raised based on the need to avoid mission support of national leadership and the national church. The file includes a 1960 evaluation of the program and a 1969 statement by Charles Troutman on the philosophy and practice of the idea.
Folder 63-14 details the development of plans for response by missionaries to various types of situations in Costa Rica, ranging from natural disaster to war. Folders 63-18,19,20,21 relate primarily to buildings, land and equipment owned by the mission. Although these are routine files, documents from the late-1960's and early '70's deal with the disposition of those things owned by the mission in view of the restructuring of the mission into CLAME.
Finances. This sub-series documents the financial aspects of the operation of the mission, ranging from policy statements (folder 64-9) to practical matters, particularly in relation to avoiding soliciting of funds, fiscal reports, handling of gifts and donations.
Affiliations. The Affiliations sub-series documents LAM's membership in several mission-related associations, primarily the Evangelical Foreign Missions Association (EFMA) and the Interdenominational Foreign Mission Association (IFMA). The process of growing cooperation between these two associations is also documented.
Relationships. This sub-series contains documentation on the activities of other organizations. Because these represent evangelical, fundamentalist or ecumenical perspectives, they offer diverse positions on the value of cooperation in a mission environment. The files also record interaction LAM had with other agencies, particularly those more ecumenically-minded organizations. The interdenominational agencies referred to in folders 66-6,7,8,9,10 are principally those operating in the Central and South American sphere. Among them are: Bible societies, Bolivian Indian Mission, Central American Mission, Christian Literature Crusade, Evangelical Union of South America, Institute of Church Growth, Inter-American Missionary Society, International Christian Leadership, Medical Assistance Programs (MAP), Missionary Aviation Fellowship (MAF), Missions Advanced Research and Communication Center (MARC), Navigators, New Tribes Mission, Overseas Missionary Fellowship, Pocket Testament League, Scripture Union, Sudan Interior Mission, United World Mission, West Indies Mission, World Vision, and Youth for Christ. This discussion is often related to the sharing of ideas, requests for advice based on experience, and efforts toward cooperation and collaboration. Among the denominational groups are Brethren, Episcopalians, Baptists, Methodists, and Presbyterians. Included among the local ministries is the Costa Rica-based Spanish Language Institute. Mention is made of relations with other agencies elsewhere in this guide, including Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, Evangelical Foreign Missions Association and Interdenominational Foreign Mission Association, Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship and International Fellowship of Evangelical Students, and World Radio Missionary Fellowship.
Principal correspondents in this series include: David Howard, Mary Anne Klein (Candidate Secretary), Horace L. Fenton, R. Kenneth Strachan, W. Dayton Roberts, Charles Troutman, and Paul Pretiz.
XXII. New Jersey Office and Field Administration (1921-1973; folders 66-15 through 70-8; reels 37:15 through 38:21, 39:23 through 39:28, 43:31 through 44:3). This series continues the documentation of the administration of the mission, addressed to policy-level considerations, planning and decision-making, as opposed to the operational ones of the previous series. Correspondence, reports, memos, agendas, manuals, legal documents, etc. make up the series. Areas covered include philosophy of ministry, doctrine, regulations, legal matters, organizational structure and restructuring, and the Inter-Field Council and Inter-Field Council Executive.
Folders 66-15 and 67-1,2 contain various editions of what amounts to a statement of philosophy and practice, outlining objectives, activities, doctrine, administration and organizational hierarchy, personnel, and finances; some correspondence related to revisions of the statement is included. Parallels of the previous two policy statements can be found in folder 67-10; in addition to the consolidation of these, the file includes the division blue books, which were organizational manuals developed for each division. Missionary handbooks for both the Colombia and Costa Rica fields can be found in folder 67-9. The legal documents contained in folder 67-11,12,13,14,15,16 include those prepared at the time of Harold Strachan's death and document the transfer of authority and the subsequent reorganization of the mission. Extensive record of the discussion on the restructuring of the mission is documented in folders 68-1,2,3, beginning at the time of Strachan's death in 1945 through 1970. Folder 68-4 depicts in visual form the process of transition the mission was undergoing between 1958 and 1970.
Folders 68-5 through 12 consist of communication among LAM administrators and staff. The subjects of the correspondence run from routine office and financial matters to policy related issues. Generally, the correspondence tends to become progressively more substantive. Included among the correspondents are Mrs. Harry Strachan (mission co-founder and co-director), Clarence E. Mason (mission president), William Thompson (Home Director), Mabel Gamewell (mission headquarters secretary), Margaret Neely (Costa Rica headquarters staff), R. Kenneth Strachan (appointed director with his mother following the death of Harry Strachan in 1945, later general director), Christine L. Thor (based in Costa Rica, possibly C.R. headquarters staff), Betty Helgesen (American Home Office worker), Helen Shute (furloughing missionary reallocated to American Home Office for secretarial duties pending appointment of Gamewell's successor), Edna Lionberger (temporary replacement pending appointment of Gamewell's successor), Pearl (Mrs. William) Thompson (apparently the permanent replacement for Gamewell as secretary), W. Dayton Roberts, Horace L. Fenton (Costa Rica field director), Jacob Stam (board member and formerly mission president), Charles Troutman, David Howard, Kenneth Hood (Home Director).
The Lay Missionary Fellowship files (69-12,13) record the thinking among LAM executives about encouraging lay witness by Christian professionals in Latin America, which later became commonly known as "tent makers". The "proposed projects" of folder 69-14 were various programs which were developed to some stage but discarded, including those in education, publishing, outreach to Chinese, relief and community development, and Bible distribution.
The restructuring of LAM which occurred in 1971 was part of ongoing exploration by the mission as to how to effectively spread the Gospel in Latin America while also working within the context of the Latin American evangelical church. The Restructuring sub-series (folders 69-15,16 and 70-1 through 8) records various aspects of LAM's reconfiguration into CLAME (Community of Latin American Ministries for Evangelism) in 1971. These files extensively document both the theoretical discussion of issues and the practical details of making the transition at the time of the reorganization.
XXIII. North American Councils & Boards (1933-1972; folders 70-9 through 73-16; reels 36:1 through 37:8, 43:28 & 29). This series consists of correspondence, minutes, financial and annual reports, internal memos, and incorporation documents for the United States and Canadian bodies of the mission. While the majority of collection documents the work of the mission from its headquarters and in Costa Rica and Colombia, this series focuses on the mission's administration in the United States and Canada and contribution to mission planning and decision-making.
The US General Council sub-series (folders 70-9 through 14) includes lists of those individuals who served as members, a record of the deliberations on developing the Council, and communication with members on issues vital to their duties. Among the documents in the Board of Trustees sub-series (folders 71-2 through 72-3) are those which record the work of several of the Board's special committees (finance, the return of furloughed missionaries, and retirement; each of which had a financial component) and correspondence with Board members, including Horace Fenton, Philip Gammon, David Howard, Philip Howard, Ruben Lores, Clarence Mason, Robert C. McQuilkin, James Reapsome, Jacob Stam, William L. Thompson and others. The Canadian sub-series includes incorporation records, correspondence, minutes and reports, recording the deliberations and activity of Canadians. Although LAM's fund-raising, public relations and candidate work in Canada preceded its incorporation in 1961, the majority of records document the work of the Canadian corporation or the Council's work during the transitional period from a divisional council to an autonomous corporation.
XXIV. Subject File (1927-1982; folders 73-17 through 74-18; reels 38:22 through 39:11,30, 44:4 & 5). This series appears to have been developed as a reference file, gathering together material on key issues affecting the work of the mission. These included the charismatic movement, ecumenism, church-state relations, cooperation, organizational mergers, missionary casualties, racism on the mission field, relations with Roman Catholics and other evangelical agencies, and histories of the mission. Also in this series are manuscripts of two papers (folder 74-18), one by R. Kenneth Strachan ("New Emphasis in Missions: What adjustment must the fundamentalist missionary movement make to adapt to the new world situation?", 1954) and Charles Troutman (Evangelicals and the Middle Classes in Latin America, 1970).
The series also includes the record on reel 44:5 of a small-scale history project carried out in 1980. Various people, largely LAM retirees or former staff were asked to respond to a series of open-ended questions about the mission, colleagues, and their personal role. The following were those who responded:
Archilla, Rogelio
Church, Alice
Comstock, James
Cotto-Thorner, Dorothy
Coughlin, Joseph
Cruz, Rodolfo
Gutierrez, Pedro
Hood, Ken & Elizabeth
Houser, B. & G.
Howard, David
Jephson, Kathryn
Jorgenson, Jenny
Linquist, Mary
Longworth, Nancy
Marcy, Sidney & Charlotte
McQuilkin, Aimee
Neely, Margarete
Nelson, W.
Piersma, Norman & Donna
Pretiz, Paul
Reed, Bob & Frances
Schulert, Pat
Siegfried, June
Smith, Beryl
Spence, Bob
Thompson, William & Pearl
Thor, Christine
Van de Kappelle, June & Bertha
Wiebe, Paula
Young, Charles & Edith
XXV. R. Kenneth Strachan and Family Papers (1949-1975; reels 45:1 through 46:8). The papers in this series include those of R. Kenneth Strachan, his wife Elizabeth, and their children. R. Kenneth Strachan's correspondence includes routine administrative communication, reviews of potential candidates and their applications to join the mission, interaction on events on the field, evangelism campaigns during the 1950's and the Evangelism-in-Depth program, and the planning for restructuring of the mission during the 1960's. Strachan's illness with Hodgkin's disease and subsequent death is recorded in his papers, as well as in the funeral notices and letters of condolence to either his family or the mission. Also included are notebooks of sermon outlines, sermon texts, and articles, largely on mission-related themes.
Elizabeth Strachan's papers are largely her correspondence with the US headquarters, much of it with Mary Anne Klein, but also include arrangements for her continued work with the mission following her husband's death. The childrens' papers consist of communication to and from mission executives, either of a personal nature or related to their education with which the mission was assisting. The file for Harry Strachan includes reference to his grad thesis on the mission titled Patterns.
XXVI. Individual Missionaries No Longer with LAM: Records & correspondence (1929-1985; folders 58-10,11; reels 40:22, 47:1 through 49:10). The records comprising this series are for former LAM staff who were no longer affiliated with the mission at the time the records were transferred to the Archives, either due to resignation, retirement or death. The types of records found in the files may include pre-application and application forms, biographical essays, prayer cards and letters, administrative correspondence with headquarters, contracts with CLAME, inter-office inter-office correspondence, letters of resignation and notices of death. The Container List of this guide identifies those individuals for whom a file was created. The series is divided into two similar parts: the first consists of paper copies (folders 58-10 and 11); the second exists exclusively on the microfilm. With the exception of one person, there are no individuals for whom there are files in both sub-series.
Folders 58-10,11 are basically personnel files, containing correspondence with individual missionaries to and from the mission, a full list of which appears in the Container List of this guide. Much of the correspondence is with either William L. or Pearl L. Thompson, but also includes that from R. Kenneth Strachan, Horace Fenton and Jacob Stam. The nature of the correspondence is largely routine but ranges from expressions of interest in joining the mission, letters of recommendation written by those used as references by an applicant, letters of acceptance by the mission, travel and passport arrangements, policy violations, personnel problems, letters to a home church informing it of the reason for a candidates dismissal or rejection, an announcement of death, transfer of funds, arrangements while on deputation, offers of work, and letters of resignation. The series also includes a record of summer, short-term and temporary workers. Among these files are documents which record the internal communication and planning for and development of LAM's short-term program around 1960, a questionnaire from then-grad student Greg Livingstone completed by Mary Anne Klein about LAM's short-term program, evaluations and reports, blank and completed application forms, reactions from full-time missionaries about the program, guidelines for short-term workers, and lists of those who participated in the program. Also in the file are lists of former LAM volunteers, former LAMers on loan, and former full-time or part time employees.
XXVII. Confidential Files. The confidential documents microfilmed on reels 43 through 49 do not themselves make up a series, but were instead removed by LAM from other series in this collection for purposes of microfilming and confidentiality. These files have therefore been integrated into their respective series and identified with an "R" as a restricted file. This description is to identify the general nature of the those documents, many of which appear to be those that would be routinely marked "confidential" in order to temporarily limit their circulation. However, interspersed with these are documents describing specific personnel problems, ranging from interpersonal to financial to work-related in nature. These include correspondence with individuals and detailed consideration of the individuals, organizations, and dynamics of the situation. Since the nature of these documents is similar to that of personnel files, they are closed to researcher use for a considerable period of time.
Provenance
The materials in this collection were received by the Billy Graham Center from Latin America Mission in October 1982, April 1987, and December 1990.
Accession #: 82-142, 87-36, 90-125
April 30, 1993
Paul A. Ericksen
C. Easley
LAM DIRECTORS
| 1921-1945 | Strachan, Harry (mission co-founder and first co-director) |
| 1921-1950 | Susan Beamish Strachan (mission co-founder, co-director) |
| 1945-1950 | R. Kenneth Strachan (son of founders, co-director) |
| 1951-1965 | R. Kenneth Strachan (General Director) |
| 1965-1971 | Horace L. Fenton, Jr. (General Director) |
| 1971-1977 | Horace L. Fenton, Jr. (LAM-USA Director) |
| 1977-1989 | Clayton L. Berg (President) |
| 1990- | J. Paul Landrey (President) |
CLAME GENERAL SECRETARIES
Roberts, W. Dayton (1st CLAME General Secretary)
Rafael Baltodano (Nicaraguan missionary, 2nd CLAME General Secretary)
Paul E. Pretiz (3rd CLAME General Secretary)
COMMON ACRONYMS IN THE COLLECTION
Latin America Mission used various acronyms for its various constituent bodies, activities, or bodies with which it closely worked. A few of the more frequently used are:
| AIEC | Asociacion de Iglesias Biblicas Costarricences (Association of Costa Rican Bible Churches |
| CLAME | Community of Latin American Evangelical Ministries |
| DIA | Difusiones Inter-Americanas (Inter-American Communications) |
| E/D | Evangelism-in-Depth |
| EdCar | Editorial Caribe |
| EVAF | Evangelismo a Fondo (Spanish for Evangelism-in-Depth) |
| IFC | Inter-Field Council |
| IFC-X | Inter-Field Council Executive |
| LAEC | Latin America Evangelization Crusade |
| LAM | Latin America Mission |
| LAMP | Latin America Mission Publications |
| LEAL | Literatura Evangelica para America Latina (Evangelical Literature for Latin America |
| MINAMUNDO | Ministerio al Mundo Estudiantel (Ministry to the Student World) |
| OWED | Office of Worldwide Evangelism-in-Depth |
| QIFC | Quorum of the Inter-Field Council |
Selected other acronymns which appear in the collection are:
| ACEE | Asociacion Costarricense de Estudiantes Evangelicos |
| AUC | Agrupacion de Universitarios Cristianos |
| CBFMS | Conservative Baptist Foreign Missionary Society |
| CLADE | Congresos Latinoamericanos de Evangelizacion I & II |
| CLASE | Comite Latinoamericana al Servicio de la Evangelizacion |
| IVCF | Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship |
| IFES | International Fellowship of Evangelical Students |
| WRMF | World Radio Missionary Fellowship |
LOCATION RECORD
Accession #: 90-125
Type of material: Microfilm
The following items are located in the Archives Fragile Storage.
Reel 1 - International Field Council (IFC), Quorum Resident in Costa Rica of the Executive Committee of the IFC (Q-IFC), Columbia Field Council (CFC), Costa Rican Field Council (CRFC), Annual Mission Meetings (in Colombia and Costa Rica); 1945-1953. 16mm. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 2 - IFC, Q-IFC, CFC, CRFC, Annual Mission Meetings; 1956-1958. IFC; 1959-1963. 16mm. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 3 - Inter-Field Council Executive (IFC-X), CFC, CRFC, Annual Mission Meetings; 1959-1963. General Director, IFC-X; 1964-1971. 16mm. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 4 - IFC, CFC, CRFC, Annual Mission Meetings; 1964-1971. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 5 - Personnel records & correspondence, Candidate and missionary matters, Publicity, Projects discontinued, Financial records, Constitution and by-laws; 1921-1948. 16mm, filming quality poor. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 6 - Colombia, Costa Rica, Evangelical congresses, Inter-Mission relationships; 1921-1948. 16mm, filming quality poor. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 7 - Association of Bible Churches of Costa Rica. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 1 and 2.
Reel 8 - Association of Bible Churches of Costa Rica. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 2 and 3.
Reel 9 - Association of Bible Churches of Costa Rica. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 3 and 4.
Reel 10 - Editorial Caribe. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 4 through 7.
Reel 11 - Editorial Caribe. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 7 through 10.
Reel 12 - Escuadron (boxes 10 & 11), Pre-Minamundo and Minamundo (boxes 11 & 12), Roblealto (box 12). 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes noted above.
Reel 13 - Roblealto (boxes 12 & 13) , Mexico (box 25), Panama (boxes 25 & 26), New York (box 26). 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in the boxes noted above.
Reel 14 - Communications. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 26 through 29.
Reel 15 - Communications. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 30 through 32.
Reel 16 - Restricted. Colegio Monterrey, Evangelical Alliance of Costa Rica. 16mm. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 17 - Colegio Monterrey: supplementary documents, Evangelical Alliance of Costa Rica: supplementary documents, Goodwill Caravans, Clinica Biblica. 16mm. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 18 - Colombia. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 19 through 22.
Reel 19 - Colombia. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 22 through 25.
Reel 20 - Public Relations. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 32 through 35.
Reel 21 - Public Relations. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 35 through 37.
Reel 22 - Public Relations. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 37 through 41.
Reel 23 - Public Relations. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 41 through 43.
Reel 24 - Evangelism: Pre-Evangelism-in-Depth Campaigns (boxes 43 & 44), Evangelism-in-Depth (box 51). 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in the boxes noted above.
Reel 25 - Evangelism: Evangelism-in-Depth. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 51 through 53.
Reel 26 - Evangelism: Evangelism-in-Depth. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 53 through 55, 57.
Reel 27 - Seminario Biblico. 16mm. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 28 - Seminario Biblico. 16mm. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 29 - Seminario Biblico, Education Division. 16mm. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 30 - Evangelism: Evangelism-in-Depth. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 44 through 46, 56.
Reel 31 - Evangelism: Evangelism-in-Depth. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 47 through 49.
Reel 32 - Evangelism: Evangelism-in-Depth. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 49 through 51, 57.
Reel 33 - Personnel & Field Administration. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 59 through 61.
Reel 34 - Personnel & Field Administration. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 61 through 63.
Reel 35 - Personnel & Field Administration. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 63 through 66.
Reel 36 - North American Council & Boards. 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in boxes 70 through 73.
Reel 37 - North American Council & Boards (box 73), Evangelism (box 57), New Jersey Office & Field Administration (boxes 66 through 68). 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in the boxes noted above.
Reel 38 - New Jersey Office & Field Administration (boxes 68 through 70), Subject File (boxes 73 & 74). 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in the boxes noted above.
Reel 39 - Subject File (box 74), Evangelism (box 55), Personnel and Field Administration (boxes 59 through 65), New Jersey Office & Field Administration (boxes 67 through 70). (Major portion of reel to end blank.) 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in the boxes noted above.
Reel 40 - Supplementary documents: Field executive bodies (box 1), Association of Bible Churches of Costa Rica (boxes 1 through 3), Editorial Caribe (boxes 4, 6 through 9), Escuadron (boxes 10 & 11), Pre-Minamundo and Minamundo (box 11), Roblealto (boxes 12 & 13), Colegio Monterrey (box 14), Goodwill Caravans (boxes 14 & 15), Mexico (box 25), Panama (box 25), New York (box 26), Communications (boxes 26 through 31), Early administrative files (boxes 58 & 59). 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in those boxes identified above.
Reel 41 - Supplementary documents: Clinica Biblica (boxes 15 through 17), Seminario Biblico (boxes 17 & 18), Colombia (boxes 19, 20, 22 through 25), Public Relations (boxes 33, 35, 36, 37, 39, 40, 43), Evangelism: Pre-E/D (boxes 43, 44), E/D (boxes 51 through 55, 57). 16mm. Corresponding paper records of these are filed in those boxes identified above.
Reel 42 - Supplementary documents: Seminario Biblico (box 19), Education (box 58). 16mm.
Reel 43 - Restricted. Confidential documents (culled from files on reels 1-37). 16mm. The following files are recorded only on microfilm in the order they appear on this list. They do not constitute a series, but have been integrated into the previous series of which they are a part. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
| 1960's (Reels 2,3,4); 1960-1968 43:1 | |||
| Personnel & Finances (Reels 5,6); 1935-1955 43:2 | |||
| AIBC (Reels 7,8,9); 1958-1970 43:3 | |||
| Editorial Caribe (Reels 10,11); 1957-1970 43:4 | |||
| Children & youth (incl. student work, Reels 12,13) | |||
| Escuadron (Reel 12); 1950-1967 43:5 | |||
| Minamundo (Reel 12); 1964-1968 43:6 | |||
| Roblealto complex (Reel 13) | |||
| Bible Home (Reel 13); 1949-1970 43:7 | |||
| Day Care Centers (Reel 13); 1970 43:7 | |||
| Farm (Reel 13); 1968-1970 43:8 | |||
| Communications (Reels 14,15) | |||
| Radio (Reel 14); 1953-1971 43:9 | |||
| Difusiones Interamericanas (Reels 14,15); 1960-1970 43:10 | |||
| LEAL (Reel 15); 1963-1964 43:11 | |||
| VERBO (Reel 15); 1957-1959 43:12 | |||
| Clinica Biblica (Reel 17); 1951-1968 43:13 | |||
| Colombia (Reels 18,19); 1951-1971 43:14 | |||
| Public Relations (Reels 20,21,22,23); 1961-1972 43:15 | |||
| Evangelism: | |||
| Pre E/D Campaigns (Reel 24); 1953-1957 43:16 | |||
| E/D movements by country (Reels 24,25,26); 1960-1968 43:17 | |||
| Various during E/D (Reel 26); 1963-1970 43:18 | |||
| Seminario Biblico (incl. Educ. Div., Reels 27,28,29); 1951-1972 43:19 | |||
| Evangelism: | |||
| Various matters (Reels 30,31,32); 1964-1969 43:20 | |||
| OWED/New Life For All relationship (Reel 32); 1967-1970 43:21 | |||
| Criticisms of E/D and other evangelistic efforts (Reel 32); 1954-1970 43:22 | |||
| Personnel & Field Administration (Reels 33,34): | |||
| Candidates; 1951-1966 43:23 | |||
| Field administration; 1965-1967 43:24 | |||
| New missionaries; 1963-1968 43:25 | |||
| Field personnel; 1964-1967 43:26 | |||
| Affiliations & relationships (reel 35); 1949-1971 43:27 | |||
| North American Councils & Boards (Reel 36): | |||
| US Board/Administration corresp. (Reel 36); 1948-1968 43:28 | |||
| Canadian Council/Admin. corresp. (Reel 36); 1961-1971 43:29 | |||
| Evangelism: Congresses & conferences (Reel 37); 1960-1969 43:30 | |||
| New Jersey & Field Administration | |||
| Organizational documents (Reel 37); 1949-1970 43:31 | |||
| Mission structure/Administration (Reel 37); 1963-1968 43:32 | |||
Reel 44 - Restricted. Confidential documents (culled from files on reels 38-39). 16mm. The following files are recorded only on microfilm in the order they appear on this list. They do not constitute a series, but have been integrated into the previous series of which they are a part. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
| New Jersey & Field Administration | |
| Correspondence (Reel 38); 1950-1970 44:1 | |
| Home Office matters (Reel 38); 1963-1969 44:2 | |
| Proposed projects (Reel 38); 1956-1957 44:3 | |
| Subject file: Charismatic manifestations; Dialogue, Ecumenism, Unity; Roman Catholic/LAM relations; "Separation" & cooperation; "Compromise" so called - Various; Miscellaneous criticisms (Reels 38,39); 1952-1971 44:4 [C: 1963-1970; D: ca. 1957-1967; R: 1963-1964; S: 1952-1970; M: 1959-1971] | |
| History project (collected in 1980); 1980 44:5 | |
Reel 45 - Restricted. Confidential papers: R. Kenneth Strachan. 16mm. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 46 - Restricted. Confidential papers: R. Kenneth Strachan, Elizabeth Strachan, and children. 16mm. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 47 - Restricted. Confidential personnel records of ex-LAMers (A-G). 16mm. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 48 - Restricted. Confidential personnel records of ex-LAMers (J-T). 16mm. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
Reel 49 - Restricted. Confidential personnel records of ex-LAMers (V-Z), Summer/short term workers/volunteers. 16mm. There are no corresponding hard copies of these documents in the collection.
*****LOCATION RECORD
Accession #: 82-142, 87-36
Type of material: Oversize Material
The following items are located in the Oversize Material File.
Pre- Evangelism-in-Depth Campaigns: Central America (Costa Rica); 1952 (OS 27). Poster announcing an annual Holy Week evangelistic conference at Templo Biblico in San Juan. 1952. Spanish; 9" x 12"; printed blue on newsprint. Removed from folder 43-21.
Pre- Evangelism-in-Depth Campaigns: Auxiliary ministries (Films); 1949-1954 (OS 27). Poster promoting the showing of the film Caribbean Crusade, which depicted LAM-sponsored city-wide evangelistic campaigns. 1954. English; 8.5" x 10.75"; printed red, yellow and blue on white paper. Removed from folder 43-14.
Evangelism-in-Depth Campaigns: Bolivia; 1965 (OS 27).
1. Poster promoting a women's congress in Cochabamba, highlighting the speaker and other
features. August 5-8, 1965. Spanish; 10.75" x 16.5"; Spanish; printed black on white paper.
Removed from folder 51-3.
2. Stock poster promoting a women's meeting, announcing the speaker and features; leaves blank spaces for local application. 1965. Spanish; 12" x 17.5"; printed red and blue on newsprint. Removed from folder 51-3.
3. Poster linking spiritual interest and national improvement: "New men for a new Bolivia;" leaves a large blank space for local application. Spanish; 10.75" x 16.5"; printed red, orange and black on white paper. Removed from folder 51-3.
4. Poster promoting the Evangelism-in-Depth national day of prayer, highlighting featured guests and program. 1965. Spanish; 15.25" x 20"; printed red and blue on white paper. Removed from folder 51-3.
5. Poster promoting a young people's congress in Santa Cruz. Spanish; 10.75" x 16.5"; printed red, yellow and black on white paper. Removed from folder 51-3.
6. Poster promoting the La Paz meeting of the "National Campaign of Evangelism-in-Depth," highlighting speaker, musician, and other features. Spanish; 21" x 26"; printed red, blue and black on white paper. Removed from folder 51-3.
Evangelism-in-Depth Campaigns: Costa Rica; 1960 (OS 27). Poster promoting the Evangelism-in-Depth campaign in Costa Rica: "For a Better Country - Costa Rican Evangelicals United in Evangelism-in-Depth." Poster outlines in detail the aspects of the campaign. 1960. Spanish; 16.75" x 22"; printed black on light green paper. Removed from folder 52-3.
Evangelism-in-Depth Campaigns: Nicaragua; 1958-1960 (OS 27). Poster promoting a "Large United Crusade of Managua," highlighting speaker, guests and program features. 1960. Spanish; 15.75" x 22.5"; printed black on light green paper. Removed from folder 54-3.
Evangelism-in-Depth Campaigns: Zone 1 - North (Mexico); 1965 (OS 27). Poster inviting the public of Puebla, Mexico, to a series of evangelistic lectures on religion and philosophy, highlighting speaker, musician and other features. 1965. Spanish; 12.75" x 19.5"; printed red and green on white paper (one quarter is discolored, presumably due to exposure to sunlight). Removed from folder 47-1.
Evangelism-in-Depth Campaigns: PERT chart (Tabasco, Mexico); 1966 (OS 27). Blueprint of a PERT chart, "Study of Tabasco, Mexico: A Sample Presentation of the Application of PERT Planning to a Specific Mission Project." Prepared at Fuller Theological Seminary. 1966. English; 36" x 94". Removed from folder 47-15.
*****LOCATION RECORD
Accession #: 82-142, 87-36
Type of material: Photographs
The following items are located in the Photo File.
Camp Roblealto (Costa Rica). Promotional postcards depicting activities at the camp with young boys. Undated. Removed from folder 12-17. 4 b&w.
Evangelism-in-Depth. Series of photographs compiled as a book to promote and explain the Evangelism-in-Depth program. Includes narrative text, dividing the book into sections on preparation, promotion, prayer, training, visitation, local evangelism, special events, regional campaigns, parades, national campaign, and follow-up. Images depict orientation for Christian leaders, training sessions, promotional pieces, radio promotion, printing, a small group prayer meeting, visitation planning, visitation evangelism, an evangelistic church meeting, evangelism among children and civic leaders, street evangelism, mass evangelism rallies, evangelistic parades with signs, and follow-up instruction. Countries depicted include Bolivia, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and Venezuela. The 46-page book, consisting of 32 8"x 10" b&w photos, although originally bound with a spiral spine, was received without the spine. Ca. 1969. Removed from folder 46-6, which contains material on the production of the book.
Missions--Colombia. Series of shots documenting a 1952 trip to the Choco Indians by LAM missionary Ernie Fowler. Photographs are pasted to pages, accompanied by handwritten descriptions. The images depict transportation (primarily by canoe and on foot), local scenery, Colombians, and the Choco Indians and their dwellings. 66 b&w. Removed from folder 23-9, Colombia: Indian work; 1952-1972.
CONTAINER LIST
The number appearing at the end of each folder title entry is the corresponding microfilm reel:segment #. The notation 1:1 means the file appears on microfilm reel 1 as the first file filmed. In most cases each reel:segment # corresponds with a single file folder.| Box | Folder | Description | ||||
| I. Field Executive Bodies (1941-1971) | ||||||
| 1941-1954: | ||||||
| - | - | Inter-Field Council: Minutes; 1945-1953. 1:1 | ||||
| 1 | 1 | Inter-Field Conference: Minutes (suppl.); 1948-1950 40:1 | ||||
| - | - | Quorum Resident in Costa Rica of the Inter-Field Conference of the LAM (Q-IFX): Minutes; 1954. 1:2 | ||||
| - | - | Colombia Field Council: Minutes; 1941-1954. 1:3 | ||||
| 1 | 2 | Colombia Field Council: Minutes (suppl.); 1945-1954 40:2 | ||||
| - | - | Costa Rica Field Council: Minutes; 1941-1954. 1:4 | ||||
| 1 | 3 | Costa Rica Field Council: Minutes (suppl.); 1944-1954 40:3 | ||||
| - | - | Colombia Annual Mission Mtgs: Reports & minutes; 1945-1954. 1:5 | ||||
| 1 | 4 | Colombia Annual Mission Mtgs: Reports & minutes (suppl.); 1947-1953 40:4 | ||||
| - | - | Costa Rica Annual Mission Mtgs: Reports & minutes; 1944-1954. 1:6 | ||||
| 1 | 5 | Costa Rica Annual Mission Mtgs: Reports & minutes (suppl.); 1945-1953 40:5 | ||||
| 1955-1958: | ||||||
| 1 | 6 | Inter-Field Council: Minutes (suppl.); 1955-1958 40:6 | ||||
| - | - | Inter-Field Council: Minutes; 1956-1958. 2:1 | ||||
| - | - | Q-IFX: Minutes; 1955-1958. 2:2 | ||||
| 1 | 7 | Q-IFX: Minutes (suppl.); 1957 40:7 | ||||
| - | - | Colombia Field Council: Minutes; 1955-1958. 2:3 | ||||
| 1 | 8 | Colombia Field Council: Minutes (suppl.); 1958, n.d. 40:8 | ||||
| - | - | Costa Rica Field Council: Minutes; 1955-1958. 2:4 | ||||
| 1 | 9 | Costa Rica Field Council: Minutes (suppl.); 1955-1957 40:9 | ||||
| - | - | Colombia Annual Mission Meetings: Reports & minutes; 1955-1958. 2:5 | ||||
| 1 | 10 | Colombia Annual Mission Meetings: Reports & minutes (suppl.); 1958 40:10 | ||||
| - | - | Costa Rica Annual Mission Mtgs: Reports & minutes; 1955-1958. 2:6 | ||||
| 1959-1963: | ||||||
| - | - | Inter-Field Council: Minutes; 1959-1963. 2:7 | ||||
| 1 | 11 | Inter-Field Council: Minutes (suppl.); 1963 40:12 | ||||
| - | - | Inter-Field Council Executive: Minutes; 1959-1963. 3:1 | ||||
| - | - | Colombia Field Council: Minutes; 1959-1963. 3:2 | ||||
| 1 | 12 | Colombia Field Council: Minutes (includes Annual Mission mtgs., Costa Rica Field Council & annual meetings) (suppl.); 1948, 1960 (suppl.), 1962 40:13 | ||||
| - | - | Costa Rica Field Council: Minutes; 1959-1963. 3:3 | ||||
| - | - | Colombia Annual Mission Meetings: Reports & minutes; 1959-1963. 3:4 | ||||
| - | - | Costa Rica Annual Mission Mtgs: Reports & minutes; 1959-1963. 3:5 | ||||
| 1 | 13 | Costa Rica Annual Mission Mtgs: Reports & minutes (suppl.); 1959 40:11 | ||||
| 1964-1971: | ||||||
| - | - | Inter-Field Council: General Directors in Executive Session: Minutes & appendices; 1964-1971. 3:6 | ||||
| 1 | 14 | Inter-Field Council: Minutes (suppl.); 1964-1969 40:14 | ||||
| - | - | Inter-Field Council: Minutes; 1964-1971. 4:1 | ||||
| - | - | Colombia Field Council: Minutes; 1964-1971. 4:2 | ||||
| 1 | 15 | Colombia Field Council: Minutes (suppl.); 1968-1971 40:15 | ||||
| - | - | Costa Rica Field Council: Minutes; 1964-1971. 4:3 | ||||
| 1 | 16 | Costa Rica Field Council: Minutes (suppl.); 1965-1966 40:16,17 | ||||
| - | - | Personnel Commission: Minutes; 1964-1967. 4:4 | ||||
| - | - | Orientation Committee: Minutes; 1968-1969. 4:4 | ||||
| 1 | 17 | Personnel Commission meetings & Orient. Committee (suppl.); 1966-1968 40:18 | ||||
| - | - | Properties Commission: Minutes; 1964-1969. 4:5 | ||||
| 1 | 18 | Properties Commission meetings (suppl.); 1967-1968 40:19 | ||||
| - | - | Colombia Annual Mission Mtgs: Reports & minutes; 1964-1971. 4:6 | ||||
| 1 | 19 | Colombia Annual Mission Mtgs: Reports & minutes (suppl.); 1965 40:20 | ||||
| - | - | Costa Rica Annual Mission Mtgs: Reports & minutes; 1964-1971. 4:7 | ||||
| 1 | 20 | Costa Rica Annual Mission Mtgs: Reports & minutes (suppl.); 1964-1968 40:21 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reels 2,3,4); 1960-1968 43:1 | ||||
| II. Association of Bible Churches of Costa Rica (AIBC, 1939-1972) | ||||||
| 1 | 21 | Administration, Legal and Office Affairs; 1963-1970. 7:1 | ||||
| 1 | 22 | Legal affairs (suppl.); 1967 40:44 | ||||
| Council Minutes and Pertinent Memos: | ||||||
| 1 | 23 | 1957-1963. 7:2 | ||||
| 1 | 24 | 1963-1970. 7:3 | ||||
| 2 | 1 | Articles of Incorporation; 1945-1972. 7:4 | ||||
| 2 | 2 | Circuit: Minutes; 1961-1965. 7:5 | ||||
| 2 | 3 | Letters to Pastors: 1945?-1968. 7:6 | ||||
| Committee of Christian education | ||||||
| 2 | 4 | Study Committee on LAM Outreach to children & young people - Reports, memos, etc.; 1958-1969. 7:7 | ||||
| 2 | 5 | Memos & correspondence; 1958-1969. 8:1 (very light), 9:13 | ||||
| 2 | 6 | Sunday schools; 1954-1968. 8:2, 9:14 | ||||
| 2 | 7 | Sunday schools, conventions, finances, individual congregations (suppl.); 1929-1971 40:45 | ||||
| 2 | 8 | Teachers association; 1959-1969. 8:3 | ||||
| 2 | 9 | Vacation Bible schools; 1958-1970. 8:4 | ||||
| 2 | 10 | Youth society, Committee finances, How to organize a library; 1959-1970. 8:5 | ||||
| 2 | 11 | Committee on Ordination/Ministerial Relations; 1962-1970. 8:6 | ||||
| Congresses and conventions: | ||||||
| 2 | 12 | 1939-1961. 8:7 | ||||
| 2 | 13 | 1961-1971. 8:8 | ||||
| 2 | 14 | Finances; 1952-1970. 8:9 | ||||
| 2 | 15 | Correspondence; 1950-1968. 8:10 | ||||
| 2 | 16 | Youth Federation and Women's Societies; 1959-1970. 8:11 | ||||
| Individual congregations: | ||||||
| 3 | 1 | San Jose, Alajuela, Heredia Provinces; 1949-1968. 8:12 | ||||
| 3 | 2 | Templo Biblico; 1929-1969. 8:13 | ||||
| 3 | 3 | Limon, Guanacaste, Puntarenas Provinces; 1952-69. 8:14, 9:1 | ||||
| 3 | 4 | Institute in Guanacaste; 1954-1966. 9:2 | ||||
| 3 | 5 | Miscellaneous; 1959-1970. 9:3 | ||||
| 3 | 6 | Misc., pastoral matters, independent pastors, LAM-church relations, church & LAM-affiliated entities (suppl.); 1947-1968 40:46 | ||||
| 3 | 7 | Pastors: Meetings, Retreats, etc.; 1946-1965. 9:4 | ||||
| 3 | 8 | Individual pastors; 1950-1971. 9:5 | ||||
| 3 | 9 | Projects, activities; 1952-1970. 9:6 | ||||
| Relations: | ||||||
| LAM: | ||||||
| 4 | 1 | 1947-1960. 9:7 | ||||
| 4 | 2 | 1961-1970. 9:7 | ||||
| 4 | 3 | Non-LAM Organizations; 1955-1969. 9:8 | ||||
| 4 | 4 | LAM-related Organizations; n.d. 9:9 | ||||
| 4 | 5 | Reports of Church Department; 1949-1966. 9:10 | ||||
| 4 | 6 | Statistics, Financial reports, Directories; 1950-1969. 9:11 | ||||
| 4 | 7 | Publications; 1945-1970. 9:12 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reels 7,8,9); 1958-1970 43:3 | ||||
| III. Editorial Caribe (1944-1973) | ||||||
| 4 | 8 | Advisory Board: Minutes, agenda, memos; 1952-1970. 10:1 | ||||
| 4 | 9 | Advisory Board, Exec. Committee (suppl.); 1964-1970 40:47 | ||||
| 4 | 10 | Executive Committee: Minutes, memos; 1961-1969. 10:2 | ||||
| 4 | 11 | Administration; 1949, 1960-1969. 10:3 | ||||
| Bookstores: | ||||||
| 5 | 1 | San Jose, Costa Rica; 1953-1970. 10:4 | ||||
| Panama: | ||||||
| 5 | 2 | Board minutes & reports; 1954-1971. 10:5 | ||||
| 5 | 3 | Financial reports, memos, etc.; 1955-1972. 10:6 | ||||
| 5 | 4 | Correspondence; 1948-1972. 10:7 | ||||
| 5 | 5 | Publicity; 1955-1970. 10:8 | ||||
| New York: | ||||||
| 5 | 6 | Legal Matters, Reports, Minutes; 1956-1973. 10:9 | ||||
| 5 | 7 | Location, Physical Arrangements; 1956-1963. 10:10 | ||||
| 5 | 8 | Correspondence; 1956-1973. 10:11 | ||||
| 5 | 9 | Finances; 1956-1973. 10:12 | ||||
| 5 | 10 | Personnel; 1956-1968. 10:13 | ||||
| 5 | 11 | Publicity; 1957-1970. 10:14 | ||||
| 6 | 1 | Mexico; 1960-1969. 10:15 | ||||
| 6 | 2 | Limon, Costa Rica; 1961-1963. 10:16 | ||||
| 6 | 3 | New prospects; 1954-1966. 10:17 | ||||
| 6 | 4 | Book deposits; 1961-1963. 10:18 | ||||
| 6 | 5 | Bookstores & deposits (suppl.); 1956-1972 40:48 | ||||
| Books: | ||||||
| 6 | 6 | New concordance; 1954-1970. 10:19 | ||||
| 6 | 7 | Bible Dictionary; 1949-1971. 10:20 | ||||
| 6 | 8 | Dictionary of theology; 1961-1970. 10:21 | ||||
| 6 | 9 | Escuadron publications; 1961-1970. 10:22 | ||||
| 6 | 10 | Books (suppl.); 1962-1970. 40:49 | ||||
| 6 | 11 | Building and equipment; 1954-1969. 10:23 | ||||
| 6 | 12 | Space needs, consultations, production, miscellaneous correspondence; 1953 (suppl.), 1967-1971 40:50 | ||||
| Consultations and workshops: | ||||||
| 6 | 13 | Within the division; 1952-1967. 10:24 | ||||
| 6 | 14 | Inter-Mission and international; 1955-1970. 10:25 | ||||
| 7 | 1 | Correspondence, Editorial and plans; 1949-1971. 10:26 | ||||
| 7 | 2 | Misc. correspondence; 1952-1972. 10:27, 11:1 | ||||
| 7 | 3 | Misc. correspondence, Misc., finances (suppl.); 1966-1971 40:51 | ||||
| 7 | 4 | Financial reports and correspondence; 1949-1972. 11:2 | ||||
| Gospel Light: | ||||||
| 7 | 5 | Correspondence; 1944-1970. 11:3 | ||||
| 8 | 1 | Intra-Mission correspondence concerning GL; 1959-1971. 11:4 | ||||
| 8 | 2 | Market Studies; n.d. 11:5 | ||||
| 8 | 3 | Plans, reports; 1949, 1963-1968. 11:6 | ||||
| 8 | 4 | Publicity, promotion; 1950, 1963-1970. 11:7 | ||||
| 8 | 5 | Special projects (suppl.); 1968-1970 40:52 | ||||
| 9 | 1 | Literature Dept. evaluations; 1967-1968. 11:8 | ||||
| 9 | 2 | Projects, Special; 1956-1970. 11:9 | ||||
| 9 | 3 | Publications; 1964-1972. 11:10 | ||||
| 9 | 4 | Publicity; 1949-1972. 11:11 | ||||
| 9 | 5 | Publicity (suppl.); 1970-1972 40:53 | ||||
| 9 | 6 | Reports; 1949-1972. 11:12 | ||||
| Reorganization | ||||||
| 9 | 7 | 1968-1971. 11:13 | ||||
| 9 | 8 | (suppl.) 1968-1970 40:54 | ||||
| 9 | 9 | [Print Shop] Litographia Caribe; 1968-1969. 11:14 | ||||
| 9 | 10 | Lithografia Caribe, relationships (suppl.); 1949-1971 40:55 | ||||
| 9 | 11 | Personnel; 1960-1972. 11:15 | ||||
| Relationships: | ||||||
| 10 | 1 | American Tract Society; 1948-1968. 11:16 | ||||
| 10 | 2 | Back to the Bible Broadcast; 1962-1968. 11:17 | ||||
| 10 | 3 | Moody Bible Institute/Moody Lit. Division; 1947-1969. 11:18 | ||||
| 10 | 4 | Publaciones Juventad/LOGOI; 1960-1971. 11:19 | ||||
| 10 | 5 | Scripture Press; 1957-1965. 11:20 | ||||
| 10 | 6 | TEAM; 1959-1972. 11:21 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reels 10,11); 1957-1970 43:4 | ||||
| IV. Escuadron (1946-1970) | ||||||
| 10 | 7 | Administration; 1955-1970. 12:1 | ||||
| 10 | 8 | Administration, Esc.-Brigade-LAM relationships (suppl.); 1946-1968 40:56 | ||||
| 10 | 9 | National Council: Minutes; 1957-1968. 12:2 | ||||
| - | - | Scholarship committee: Minutes; 1958-1959. 12:3 | ||||
| 10 | 10 | Brigade - LAM Relationships; 1949-1970. 12:4 | ||||
| 10 | 11 | Activities; 1955-1968. 12:5 | ||||
| 10 | 12 | Correspondence, Miscellaneous; 1957-1969. 12:6 | ||||
| 10 | 13 | Finances; 1956-1970. 12:7 | ||||
| 10 | 14 | Finances, personnel, promotion (suppl.); 1952-1969 40:57 | ||||
| 10 | 15 | Personnel; 1960-1963. 12:8 | ||||
| 10 | 16 | Publicity and Promotion; 1953-1965. 12:9 | ||||
| 11 | 1 | Publications; 1955-1970. 12:10 | ||||
| 11 | 2 | Publications (suppl.); 1958-1960 40:58 | ||||
| 11 | 3 | Reports; 1957-1970. 12:11 | ||||
| 11 | 4 | Training & Program Materials; n.d. 12:12 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reel 12); 1950-1967 43:5 | ||||
| V. Pre-Minamundo & Minamundo (1946-1972) | ||||||
| Pre-Minamundo: | ||||||
| 11 | 5 | Reports; 1949-1955. 12:13 | ||||
| 11 | 6 | Finances; 1951-1955. 12:14 | ||||
| 11 | 7 | Miscellaneous; 1951-1957. 12:15 | ||||
| Minamundo: | ||||||
| 11 | 8 | IVCF/LAM Correspondence; 1946-1969. 12:16 | ||||
| 11 | 9 | IFES/LAM Relationships in Univ. Student Work; 1954-1967. 12:17 | ||||
| 11 | 10 | IVCF & IFES relations w/ LAM in university work (suppl.); 1962-1970 40:59 | ||||
| 11 | 11 | Administration and Organization; 1966-1972. 12:18 | ||||
| 11 | 12 | General Correspondence; 1964-1971. 12:19 | ||||
| 11 | 13 | General corresp., finances, high sch. work, relationships (suppl.); 1961-1971 40:60 | ||||
| 11 | 14 | Finances; 1963-1971. 12:20 | ||||
| 11 | 15 | High School Work; 1965-1971. 12:21 | ||||
| 11 | 16 | Literature Committee; 1965-1967. 12:22 | ||||
| 11 | 17 | Penetracion; 1969-1970. 12:23 | ||||
| 12 | 1 | Miscellaneous; 1963-1971. 12:24 | ||||
| 12 | 2 | Publicity and Promotion; 1962-1970. 12:25 | ||||
| 12 | 3 | Personnel; 1961-1971. 12:26 | ||||
| 12 | 4 | Relationships with Other Student Organizations; 1963-1968. 12:27 | ||||
| 12 | 5 | Reports; 1965-1970. 12:28 | ||||
| 12 | 6 | Student Work Course in Sem. Bibl. Latinoamericano; 1970-1971. 12:29 | ||||
| Universities: | ||||||
| 12 | 7 | AUC (Agrupacion de Universitarios Cristianos); 1963-1966. 12:30 | ||||
| 12 | 8 | ACEE (Asoc. Costarricense de Estudiantes Evangelicos); 1966-1972. 12:31 | ||||
| 12 | 9 | Colombia; 1962-1972. 12:32 | ||||
| 12 | 10 | University Consultations on Student Work; 1963-1968. 12:33 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reel 12); 1964-1968 43:6 | ||||
| VI. Roblealto (1949-1972) | ||||||
| Administration | ||||||
| 12 | 11 | Administration; 1959-1968. 12:34 | ||||
| 12 | 12 | Committee meetings & planning sessions; 1956-1964. 12:35 | ||||
| 12 | 13 | Buildings & equipment; 1956-1972. 12:36 | ||||
| 12 | 14 | Finances; 1952-1971. 12:37 | ||||
| 12 | 15 | Personnel; 1958-1969. 12:38 | ||||
| 12 | 16 | Program; 1957-1971. 12:39 | ||||
| 12 | 17 | Publicity; 1949-1969. 12:40 | ||||
| 12 | 18 | Publicity (suppl.); 1951-1972 40:61 | ||||
| 12 | 19 | Relation w/ Camp-of-the-Woods; 1957-1969. 12:41 | ||||
| 12 | 20 | Relationship w/ Camp-of-the-Woods (suppl.); 1957-1969 40:62 | ||||
| Bible Home: | ||||||
| 12 | 21 | Statutes; 1963, n.d.. 13:1 | ||||
| 12 | 22 | Statutes, minutes, administration (suppl.); 1969 40:63 | ||||
| Minutes, correspondence | ||||||
| 13 | 1 | Provisional Council; 1962-1966. 13:2 | ||||
| 13 | 2 | Council: Poultry farm; 1966. 13:3 | ||||
| 13 | 3 | Orphanage staff meetings; 1950-1962. 13:4 | ||||
| 13 | 4 | Orphanage planning meetings; 1951-1957. 13:5 | ||||
| 13 | 5 | Administration & personnel; 1950-1969. 13:6 | ||||
| 13 | 6 | Children; 1952-1970. 13:7 | ||||
| 13 | 7 | Enrique Strachan School; 1959-1968. 13:8 | ||||
| 13 | 8 | Finances; 1949-1971. 13:9 | ||||
| 13 | 9 | (and Farm): Properties, Construction, Equipment; 1949-1970. 13:10 | ||||
| 13 | 10 | (and Dairy Farm/Poultry Farm): Reports; 1949-1971. 13:11 | ||||
| 13 | 11 | Miscellaneous; 1956-1970. 13:12 | ||||
| 13 | 12 | Day Nursery Project Proposal; 1959. 13:13 | ||||
| 13 | 13 | Dispensary; 1962-1968. 13:14 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reel 13); 1949-1970 43:7 | ||||
| Association: | ||||||
| 13 | 14 | Projects, statutes & minutes of the Council; 1966-1970. 13:15 | ||||
| 13 | 15 | Organization, publicity (suppl.); 1969-1970, n.d. 40:64 | ||||
| 13 | 16 | Administration; 1969. 13:16 | ||||
| 13 | 17 | Day Care Centers; 1970. 13:17 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: Day Care Centers (Reel 13); 1970 43:7 | ||||
| 13 | 18 | Publicity & promotion; 1954-1971.. 13:19 | ||||
| Dairy/Crop Farm & Poultry Farm: | ||||||
| 13 | 19 | Reports; 1949-1962. 13:18, 13:20 | ||||
| 13 | 20 | Reports, dairy farm (suppl.); 1969-1971 40:65 | ||||
| 13 | 21 | Correspondence, reports, etc.; 1964-1971. 13:21 | ||||
| 13 | 22 | Collaboration with FARMS Inc.; 1967-1970. 13:22 | ||||
| - | - R | *Confidential (Reel 13); 1968-1970 43:8 | ||||
| VII. Colegio Monterrey (1955-1971) | ||||||
| 14 | 1 | Administration (suppl.); 1957? 40:82 | ||||
| - | - | Administration; 1957-1967. 16:1 | ||||
| 14 | 2 | Administration (suppl.ary documents); 1958-1971. | ||||
| - | - | First steps, Commission Pro-liceo Evangelico/Comision Pro-liceo y Comite Organizador, Board of Governors: Minutes & correspondence; 1955-1971. 16:2 | ||||
| 14 | 3 | Organization: Board of Governors (suppl.); 1967-1971 40:83 | ||||
| - | - | Statutes and regulations; 1955-1961. 16:3 | ||||
| - | - | Activities; 1956-1970. 16:4 | ||||
| - | - | Association of parents & teachers; 1964-1970. 16:5 | ||||
| - | - | Christian Children's Fund; 1962-1965. 16:6 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential; 1959-1967. 16:7 | ||||
| - | - | Faculty & staff; 1955-1967. 16:8 | ||||
| 14 | 4 | Faculty & staff, Finances (suppl.); 1955-1970 40:84 | ||||
| - | - | Finances; 1955-1968. 16:9 | ||||
| - | - | Kindergarten; 1966-1969. 16:10 | ||||
| - | - | Miscellaneous; 1957-1966. 16:11 | ||||
| 14 | 5 | Miscellaneous, Publications, Reports (suppl.); 1957-1967 40:85 | ||||
| - | - | Program, curriculum, academic affairs; 1955-1965. 16:12 | ||||
| - | - | Promotion & publicity; 1955-1968. 16:13 | ||||
| - | - | Property matters/equipment (projects; 1955-1970. 16:14 | ||||
| - | - | Publications; 1955-1965. 16:15 | ||||
| - | - | Reports; 1958-1963. 16:16 | ||||
| - | - | Student affairs; 1955-1968. 16:17 | ||||
| - | - | Supplementary documents; 1958-1970. 17:1 | ||||
| VIII. Evangelical Alliance of Costa Rica (1944-1972) | ||||||
| - | - | History; 1948-1964. 16:18 | ||||
| - | - | Relation of LAM to AEC; 1950-1972. 16:19 | ||||
| 14 | 6 | LAM/AEC relationship (re WCC) (suppl.); 1958-1961 40:86 | ||||
| - | - | Statutes (1954) & minutes (1964-1971); 1954-1971. 16:20 | ||||
| - | - | Annual assemblies; 1955-1970. 16:21 | ||||
| - | - | Statistics, directories, index of churches; 1958-1970. 16:22 | ||||
| - | - | Activities & program; 1954-1971. 16:23 | ||||
| 14 | 7 | Activities (suppl.); 1960-1968 40:87 | ||||
| - | - | Miscellaneous; 1949-1965. 16:24 | ||||
| - | - | Association of ministers; 1944-1959. 16:25 | ||||
| Committee of rural "obra" | ||||||
| - | - | 1962-1969. 16:26 | ||||
| - | - | Minutes (incomplete); 1964-1970. 16:27 | ||||
| 14 | 8 | Social Action Committee, Alianza (suppl.); 1961-1965 40:88 | ||||
| 14 | 9 | Supplementary documents; 1944-1969. 17:2 | ||||
| IX. Goodwill Caravans (1962-1973) | ||||||
| 14 | 10 | Constitution, minutes; 1969-1970. 17:3 | ||||
| 14 | 11 | Correspondence; 1962-1971. 17:4 | ||||
| 14 | 12 | Correspondence, Finances, Programs & projects (suppl.); 1967-1970 40:89 | ||||
| 14 | 13 | Finances; 1964-1970. 17:4 | ||||
| 14 | 14 | Cooperation with FARMS, MAP; 1965-1971. 17:5 | ||||
| 14 | 15 | Programs and Projects; 1963-1971. 17:6 | ||||
| 15 | 1 | Promotion and Publicity; 1962-1973. 17:7 | ||||
| 15 | 2 | Promotion & publicity (suppl.) ; 1964, n.d. 40:90 | ||||
| 15 | 3 | Publications; 1967-1971. 17:8 | ||||
| 15 | 4 | Reports; 1962-1972. 17:9 | ||||
| X. Clinica Biblica (1929-1971) | ||||||
| 15 | 5 | Philosophy & principles of Missionary Medicine; 1929, 1957-1965. 17:10 | ||||
| 15 | 6 | Principles of missionary medicine, Finances (suppl.); 1949-1965 40:91, 41:1 | ||||
| 15 | 7 | Administration; 1951-1967. 17:11 | ||||
| 15 | 8 | Board Minutes; 1959-1968. 17:12 | ||||
| 15 | 9 | Finances; 1949-1968. 17:13 | ||||
| 15 | 10 | Reports and history; 1949-1969. 17:14 | ||||
| 15 | 11 | Medical Congresses; 1961-1967. 17:15 | ||||
| 15 | 12 | Miscellaneous; 1940-1967. 17:16 | ||||
| 15 | 13 | Miscellaneous, Nurses Training School (suppl.); 1957-1967 41:2 | ||||
| 16 | 1 | Personnel; 1931-1970. 17:17 | ||||
| 16 | 2 | Publicity; 1929-1961. 17:18 | ||||
| 16 | 3 | Services (Pharmacy, Psychology, Radiology); 1962-1967. 17:19 | ||||
| 16 | 4 | Statistics, Other patient matters; 1951-1967. 17:20 | ||||
| 16 | 5 | Patient matters, Evaluations (suppl.); 1956, n.d. 41:3 | ||||
| 16 | 6 | Surveys, evaluations and other recommendations; 1957-1965. 17:21 | ||||
| 16 | 7 | MAP Analysis of Clinic situation; 1961-1968. 17:22 | ||||
| 16 | 8 | Clinic "closing"; 1968. 17:23 | ||||
| Servicios Medicos | ||||||
| 17 | 1 | Organization; 1968-1969. 17:24 | ||||
| 17 | 2 | Correspondence; 1968-1970. 17:25 | ||||
| 17 | 3 | Finances; 1968-1971. 17:26 | ||||
| 17 | 4 | Publicity; 1968-1970. 17:27 | ||||
| 17 | 5 | Organization, Correspondence, Finances (suppl.); 1968-1971 41:4 | ||||
| 17 | 6 | Supplementary correspondence; 1955-1970 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reel 17); 1951-1968 43:13 | ||||
| XI. Seminario Biblico (SBLA, 1927-1972) | ||||||
| 17 | 7 | History (suppl.); 1963-1967 41:54 | ||||
| Academic Affairs | ||||||
| - | - | Curriculum committee: Minutes & memos; 1960-1962. 27:1 | ||||
| - | - | Academic Affairs Commission: Minutes; 1963-1970. 27:2 | ||||
| - | - | Separate courses; 1959-1970. 27:3 | ||||
| 17 | 8 | Curriculum committee, A.A. Commission minutes, Sep. course (suppl.); 1956-1971 41:55 | ||||
| Miscellaneous academic affairs | ||||||
| - | - | Teaching loads, class schedules, etc.; 1952?-1970. 27:4 | ||||
| - | - | Correspondence, outlines re: courses, levels of training, accreditation, degrees, etc.; 1951-1970. 27:5 | ||||
| 17 | 9 | 1. Teaching loads & class sched., 2b & c. Levels of accreditation, 2d. Prosp. faculty, 4. Corresp. between faculty (suppl.); 1952-1972 41:56,57,58,59 | ||||
| - | - | Prep. of a thesis and other student papers; 1957-1965. 27:6 | ||||
| - | - | Academic affairs: To and from faculty; 1960-1970. 27:7 | ||||
| - | - | Graduation regulations; 1963-1966. 27:8 | ||||
| - | - | Harry Strachan medal; 1963-1966. 27:9 | ||||
| Activities | ||||||
| - | - | I; 1927-1959. 27:10 | ||||
| - | - | II; 1960-1968. 27:11 | ||||
| 17 | 10 | I & II (suppl.); 1949-1971 41:60 | ||||
| Administration | ||||||
| - | - | Reports; 1949-1967. 27:12 | ||||
| - | - | Organization & administration; 1949-1971. 27:13 | ||||
| - | - | Correspondence "acerca" of the administration; 1956-1968. 27:14 | ||||
| - | - | Rectorship; 1968-1971. 27:15 | ||||
| - | - | Miscellaneous; 1953-1968. 27:16 | ||||
| 17 | 11 | 1. Reports, 2. Organization, 3. Pertinent correspondence, 4. Rectorship, 5. Miscellaneous (suppl.); 1951-1971 41:61,62,63,64 | ||||
| Advisory board | ||||||
| - | - | Miscellaneous plans, correspondence; 1964-1966. 27:17 | ||||
| - | - | Minutes; 1966-1970. 27:18 | ||||
| - | - | Statutes; 1970. 27:19 | ||||
| 17 | 12 | 1. Corresp. 2. Minutes, 3. Constitution (suppl.); 1967-1972 41:65 | ||||
| ALIBT (Latin American Association of Bible-Theological Institutions) - ALET (Latin American Association of Theological Schools) - TUGC (Training Men of Greater Colombia) | ||||||
| - | - | Documents, minutes, reports, history of ALIBT/ALET; 1963-1968. 27:20 | ||||
| - | - | Miscellaneous correspondence; 1960-1970. 27:21 | ||||
| - | - | TUGC: Papers, correspondence; 1967-1968. 27:22 | ||||
| 17 | 13 | Supplementary materials; 1966-1967 41:66 | ||||
| Alumni | ||||||
| - | - | 1950-1962. 27:23 | ||||
| 17 | 14 | 1. Lists, 2. Reunions, 3. Correspondence (suppl.); 1953-1967 41:67 | ||||
| CAMEO | ||||||
| - | - | Minutes, reports, etc.; 1964-1969. 27:24 | ||||
| - | - | Correspondence; 1959-1968. 27:25 | ||||
| 17 | 15 | Supplementary materials; 1966-1969 41:68 | ||||
| - | - | Confidential; 1952-1968. 27:26 | ||||
| - | - | Coordinating Committee; 1968. 27:27 | ||||
| Correspondence course | ||||||
| - | - | Administration; 1950-1969. 27:28 | ||||
| - | - | Certificate; 1968. 27:29 | ||||
| - | - | Committee meetings; 1955-1956?. 27:30 | ||||
| - | - | Criticism; 1968. 27:31 | ||||
| - | - | Curriculum; 1954-1968. 27:32 | ||||
| - | - | Finances; 1966-1968. 27:33 | ||||
| - | - | Publicity & promotion; 1964-1972. 27:34 | ||||
| - | - | Reports; 1949-1968. 27:35 | ||||
| - | - | Testimonies; 1956-1959. 27:36 | ||||
| 17 | 16 | 1. Administration & general correspondence, 3. Committee meetings to revise correspondence courses, 5. Curriculum, 6. Finances (suppl.); 1953-1970 41:69,70,71,72 | ||||
| 17 | 17 | 7. | Publicity (suppl.); 1950's-1969 41:73 | |||
| 18 | 1 | 8. Reports (suppl.); 1954-1970 41:74 | ||||
| Criticism & conflicts | ||||||
| - | - | 1946-1963. 27:37 | ||||
| - | - | 1963-1969. 28:1 | ||||
| 18 | 2 | Criticisms & compliments (suppl.); 1969 41:75 | ||||
| - | - | Exchange programs: Coop. with other groups; 1945-1968. 28:2 | ||||
| 18 | 3 | Exchange programs, Cooperation (suppl.); 1956-1971 41:76 | ||||
| - | - | Executive Committee meeting: Minutes; 1955-1963. 28:3 | ||||
| 18 | 4 | Executive Committee minutes (suppl.); 1957-1961 41:77 | ||||
| - | - | Night School & Extension School; 1951-1969. 28:4 | ||||
| 18 | 5 | Extension (ETE) & night schools, Proposed extension in New York (suppl.); 1967-1971 41:78 | ||||
| - | - | Finances; 1953-1968. 28:5 | ||||
| 18 | 6 | Finances: 1. General, 2. Seminary donors, 3. Student support (suppl.); 1951-1971 41:79,80,81 | ||||
| - | - | Faculty discussion; 1959-1967. 28:6 | ||||
| 18 | 7 | Faculty discussions, Fuller School of Missions (suppl.); 1962-1965 41:82 | ||||
| - | - | Fuller School of Missions; 1964-1965. 28:7 | ||||
| - | - | Graduate study & fellowships (incl. church growth participation); 1951-1968. 28:8 | ||||
| 18 | 8 | Graduate study & fellowships (suppl.); 1963-1969 41:83 | ||||
| - | - | Guest lecturers; 1962-1968. 28:9 | ||||
| 18 | 9 | Guest lecturers (suppl.); 1962-1969 41:84 | ||||
| - | - | Library; 1959-1968. 28:10 | ||||
| 18 | 10 | Library: 1. Growth, 3. Personnel (suppl.); 1957-1967 41:85 | ||||
| - | - | Long-range planning; 1961-1968. 28:11 | ||||
| 18 | 11 | Long-range planning: 1. Correspondence 2. Committee (suppl.); 1953-1972 41:86 | ||||
| - | - | Miscellaneous; 1950-1970. 28:12 | ||||
| 18 | 12 | Miscellaneous (suppl.); 1962-1972 41:87 | ||||
| - | - | Physical properties/Physical Affairs Commission; 1946-1965. 28:13 | ||||
| 18 | 13 | Physical properties: 1. Miscellaneous, 2. Present plant construction, 3. Men's dorm, 4. Future expansion, 5. Arrangements (suppl.); 1952-1972 41:88 | ||||
| - | - | Practical work; 1959-1971. 28:14 | ||||
| 18 | 14 | Practical work (suppl.); 1967 41:89 | ||||
| - | - | Public Relations Committee (Commission); 1960-1968. 28:14 | ||||
| Public relations | ||||||
| 18 | 15 | 1. Committee/commission, 2. Newsletter (English), 3. Newsletter (Spanish) (suppl.); 1954-1972 41:90,91 | ||||
| Newsletters | ||||||
| - | - | English; 1956-1969. 28:15 | ||||
| - | - | Spanish; 1960-1969. 28:16 | ||||
| - | - | Promotional trips; 1951-1966. 28:17 | ||||
| 18 | 16 | 4. Promotional trips, 6. News releases, 7. Program (suppl.); 1949-1972 41:92,93,94 | ||||
| - | - | News releases; 1951-1972. 28:18 | ||||
| - | - | Public relations program; 1949-1967. 28:19 | ||||
| 18 | 17 | 8. Publicity, 9. Promotional materials (Spanish), 10. Promotional materials (English) (suppl.); 1951-1971 41:95,96 | ||||
| - | - | Articles re SBLA; 1959-1968. 28:20 | ||||
| Promotion materials | ||||||
| - | - | Spanish; ca. 1950-1970. 28:21 | ||||
| - | - | English; 1951-1969. 28:22 | ||||
| - | - | Projects: Equipment; 1966-1969. 28:23 | ||||
| 18 | 18 | Projects: Corresp., presentations (suppl.); 1960-1970 41:97 | ||||
| Publications | ||||||
| - | - | Memos; 1964. 28:24 | ||||
| 18 | 19 | Memos (suppl.); 1956-1964 41:98 | ||||
| Prospectus | ||||||
| - | - | 1928-1963. 28:25 | ||||
| 18 | 20 | (suppl.) 1928-1959 41:99 | ||||
| 19 | 1 | (suppl.) 1960-1973 42:1 | ||||
| - | - | 1964- 29:1 | ||||
| - | - | Miscellaneous; 1938-1970 29:2 | ||||
| - | - | Vinculos; 1956-1970 29:3 | ||||
| 19 | 2 | Vinculos (suppl.); 1955-1973 42:2 | ||||
| - | - | ID; 1956 29:4 | ||||
| 19 | 3 | ID (suppl.); 1956-1957 42:3 | ||||
| - | - | Discipulo; 1962 29:5 | ||||
| 19 | 4 | Discipulo (suppl.); 1962-1963 42:4 | ||||
| - | - | Ecos; 1961-1968 29:6 | ||||
| 19 | 5 | Ecos (suppl.); 1938, 1961-1969 42:5 | ||||
| - | - | Spiritual life; 1960-1971 29:7 | ||||
| Harry Strachan Lectures | ||||||
| - | - | 1961-1970 29:8 | ||||
| 19 | 6 | (suppl.) 1960-1972 42:6 | ||||
| Pastor's Institutes | ||||||
| 19 | 7 | (suppl.) 1959-1962, n.d. 42:7 | ||||
| - | - | 1960, 1963 29:9 | ||||
| Theological Education Fund | ||||||
| - | - | 1960-1969 29:10 | ||||
| 19 | 8 | (suppl.) 1964-1970 42:8 | ||||
| Student affairs | ||||||
| - | - | Student body; 1949-1969 29:11 | ||||
| - | - | Miscellaneous; 1955-1967 29:12 | ||||
| - | - | Student Council; 1955-1966 29:13 | ||||
| - | - | Finances, medical plan, etc.; 1950-1970 29:14 | ||||
| - | - | Dining room committee; 1960 29:15 | ||||
| - | - | Student Affairs Division minutes; 1963-1970 29:16 | ||||
| - | - | Internal regulations; 1956-1970 29:17 | ||||
| - | - | Students (individual); 1951, 1964 29:18 | ||||
| - | - | Student ex-priests; 1956-1965 29:19 | ||||
| 19 | 9 | 1. Student body lists, 2. Miscellaneous matters, 4. Finances, medical plan, board, etc. (suppl.); 1952-1972 42:9,10,11 | ||||
| 19 | 10 | 6. Comision de Asuntos Estudiantiles, 7. Reglamento Interno, 8. Individual students (suppl.); 1962-1971 42:12,13,14 | ||||
| Faculty meetings | ||||||
| - | - | 1938-1941 (incomplete) 29:20 | ||||
| - | - | 1942-1943 29:21 | ||||
| - | - | 1944-1945 (incomplete) 29:22 | ||||
| - | - | 1946; 29:23 | ||||
| - | - | 1947-1949 (incomplete) 29:24 | ||||
| - | - | 1953 (incomplete) 29:25 | ||||
| - | - | 1954 (incomplete) 29:26 | ||||
| - | - | 1955 29:27 | ||||
| - | - | 1956 29:27 | ||||
| - | - | 1957 29:28 | ||||
| - | - | 1958 29:29 | ||||
| - | - | 1959 29:30 | ||||
| - | - | 1960 29:31 | ||||
| - | - | 1961 29:32 | ||||
| - | - | 1962 29:33 | ||||
| - | - | 1963 29:34 | ||||
| - | - | 1964 29:35 | ||||
| - | - | 1965 29:36 | ||||
| - | - | 1966 29:37 | ||||
| - | - | 1967 29:38 | ||||
| - | - | 1968 29:39 | ||||
| - | - | 1969 29:40 | ||||
| - | - | 1970 29:41 | ||||
| 19 | 11 | Faculty meetings & retreats (suppl.); 1960-1971 42:15 | ||||
| Faculty | ||||||
| - | - | 1. Visiting & part-time faculty, 2. Study furloughs, 3. Memos to faculty, 4. Misc. faculty correspondence; 1951-1969 29:42 | ||||
| 19 | 12 | 1. Visiting or part-time professors, 2. Study furloughs, 3. Memos & communiques (suppl.); 1961-1972 42:16,17,18 | ||||
| 19 | 13 | Stam, John; 1965 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (incl. Education Div., Reels 27,28,29); 1951-1972 43:19 | ||||
| XII. Colombia (1932-1972) | ||||||
| Administration: Correspondence & memos | ||||||
| 19 | 14 | 1949-1954. 18:1 | ||||
| 19 | 15 | (suppl.) 1951-1970. 41:5 | ||||
| 20 | 1 | 1955-1958. 18:1 | ||||
| 20 | 2 | 1959-1962. 18:2 | ||||
| 20 | 3 | 1963-1972. 18:3 | ||||
| Association of Evangelical Churches of the Caribbean | ||||||
| Administrative Committee minutes | ||||||
| 20 | 4 | 1949-1954. 18:4 | ||||
| 20 | 5 | 1955-1960. 18:4 | ||||
| 20 | 6 | 1961-1964. 18:4 | ||||
| 20 | 7 | 1965-1968. 18:4 | ||||
| 20 | 8 | 1969-1971. 18:4 | ||||
| 20 | 9 | --- & Evang. Missions Officers Council (EMOC) (suppl.); 1944-1969 41:6 | ||||
| Correspondence and reports | ||||||
| 21 | 1 | 1947-1964. 18:5 | ||||
| 21 | 2 | 1965-1970. 18:5 | ||||
| 21 | 3 | Individual churches; 1949-1969. 18:6 | ||||
| Congresses | ||||||
| 21 | 4 | 1946-1962. 18:7 | ||||
| 21 | 5 | 1963-1970. 18:7 | ||||
| 21 | 6 | Bulletins, Teaching materials; 1960, n.d.. 18:8 | ||||
| Field Council | ||||||
| 21 | 7 | Meetings; 1943-1971. 18:9 | ||||
| Evangelical Missions Officers Council/Evangelical Confederation of Colombia (EMOC/CEDEC): Reports, Bulletins, Correspondence | ||||||
| 22 | 1 | 1944-1952. 18:10 | ||||
| 22 | 2 | 1953-1960. 18:10 | ||||
| 22 | 3 | 1961-1966. 18:10 | ||||
| 22 | 4 | 1967-1971. 18:10, 19:1 | ||||
| 22 | 5 | Bookstores and Literature Ministry; 1958-1970. 19:2 | ||||
| Centro Biblico del Caribe | ||||||
| 22 | 6 | Correspondence; 1942-1971. 19:3 | ||||
| 22 | 7 | Publications & Extension School; 1956-1970. 19:3 | ||||
| 22 | 8 | Centro Biblico del Caribe, Communications (suppl.); 1946-1962 41:7 | ||||
| 23 | 1 | Communications Division; 1965-1967. 19:4 | ||||
| 23 | 2 | Charisma; 1963-1968. 19:5 | ||||
| 23 | 3 | Equipment, Property, Construction; 1949-1972. 19:6 | ||||
| 23 | 4 | Property, Finances, Field activities, Indian work (suppl.); 1950-1970 41:8 | ||||
| 23 | 5 | Finances; 1943-1972. 19:7 | ||||
| 23 | 6 | Field Activities; 1951-1971. 19:8 | ||||
| 23 | 7 | Field publications (newsletters); 1949-1970. 19:9 | ||||
| 23 | 8 | General Letter (to supporters); 1949-1968. 19:10 | ||||
| 23 | 9 | Indian Work; 1952-1972. 19:11 | ||||
| 23 | 10 | Inter-Mission Relationships; 1944-1971. 19:12 | ||||
| 23 | 11 | Launch [river boat] Ministry; 1939-1959. 19:13 | ||||
| 23 | 12 | Legal; 1932-1972. 19:14 | ||||
| 23 | 13 | Medical work; 1959-1970. 19:15 | ||||
| 23 | 14 | Miscellaneous; 1950-1970. 19:16 | ||||
| Personnel | ||||||
| 24 | 1 | Entrance of missionaries; 1947-1960. 19:17 | ||||
| 24 | 2 | Lists, assignments, needs, problems; 1949-1971. 19:17 | ||||
| 24 | 3 | Housing; 1940's, 1961-1971. 19:17 | ||||
| 24 | 4 | Missionary health and medical plan; 1949-1966. 19:17 | ||||
| 24 | 5 | Regulations and missionary handbook; 1940's-1966. 19:17 | ||||
| 24 | 6 | Orientation; 1962-1969. 19:17 | ||||
| 24 | 7 | Support; 1949-1971. 19:17 | ||||
| 24 | 8 | MK education; 1953-1971. 19:17 | ||||
| 24 | 9 | Political-religious situation; 1949-1968. 19:18 | ||||
| 25 | 1 | Politico-religious situation (suppl.); 1950-1968 41:9 | ||||
| Colegio Latinoamericano | ||||||
| 25 | 2 | 1950-1964. 19:19 | ||||
| 25 | 3 | 1965-1970. 19:19 | ||||
| 25 | 4 | Promotion and publicity; 1939-1972. 19:20 | ||||
| 25 | 5 | Reports; 1947-1972. 19:21 | ||||
| 25 | 6 | Educational matters, Promotion & publicity, Reports (suppl.); 1950-1972 41:10 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reels 18,19); 1951-1971 43:14 | ||||
| XIII. Mexico (MILAMEX, 1962-1973) | ||||||
| 25 | 7 | Incorporation & administration; 1962-1970. 13:23 | ||||
| 25 | 8 | Finances (suppl.); 1965-1971 40:66 | ||||
| 25 | 9 | Finances; 1967-1970. 13:24 | ||||
| 25 | 10 | "Spearhead;" 1970-1973. 13:25 | ||||
| XIV. Panama (1952-1971) | ||||||
| 25 | 11 | Incorporation; 1953-1963. 13:26 | ||||
| 25 | 12 | Incorporation, administration, miscellaneous (suppl.); 1963-1971 40:67 | ||||
| 25 | 13 | LAM Confab; 1956-1958. 13:27 | ||||
| 25 | 14 | Administration & finances; 1957-1963. 13:28 | ||||
| 26 | 1 | Alianza Evangelica; 1956. 13:29 | ||||
| 26 | 2 | West Indian work; 1958-1962. 13:30 | ||||
| 26 | 3 | Valiente Indian Project; 1952-1956. 13:31 | ||||
| 26 | 4 | Miscellaneous; 1955-1971. 13:32 | ||||
| XV. New York Project (1954-1968) | ||||||
| 26 | 5 | Reports & minutes; 1954-1962. 13:33 | ||||
| 26 | 6 | Correspondence; 1954-1968. 13:34 | ||||
| 26 | 7 | Correspondence, finances, summer Spanish institute (suppl.); 1955-1958 40:68 | ||||
| 26 | 8 | Finances; 1954-1960. 13:35 | ||||
| 26 | 9 | Summer Spanish Institute; 1957-1967. 13:36 | ||||
| 26 | 10 | Publicity & promotion; 1954-1959. 13:37 | ||||
| XVI. Communications (1945-1972) | ||||||
| 26 | 11 | Policy matters, Meetings, Reports; 1958-1968. 14:1 | ||||
| 26 | 12 | Policy matters, correspondence (suppl.); 1956, 1968-1969 40:69 | ||||
| 26 | 13 | "Blue Book"; 1964-1967. 14:2 | ||||
| 26 | 14 | Correspondence; 1959-1970. 14:3 | ||||
| Radio expansion: | ||||||
| 26 | 15 | General; 1955-1957. 14:4 | ||||
| 26 | 16 | Expansion (suppl.); 1959-1966 40:70 | ||||
| 26 | 17 | Peru; 1955-1957. 14:4 | ||||
| 26 | 18 | Cuba; 1956. 14:4 | ||||
| 26 | 19 | Venezuela; 1956-1957. 14:4 | ||||
| 26 | 20 | Trinidad; 1958-1959. 14:4 | ||||
| 26 | 21 | Central America; 1961-1968. 14:4 | ||||
| 26 | 22 | Colombia; 1962-1965. 14:4 | ||||
| 26 | 23 | Mexico; 1962-1969. 14:4 | ||||
| 26 | 24 | Miscellaneous; 1953, 1970. 14:5 | ||||
| 26 | 25 | Miscellaneous, projects, promotion (suppl.); 1958-1970 40:71 | ||||
| 26 | 26 | Personnel; 1954-1967. 14:6 | ||||
| Projects: | ||||||
| 26 | 27 | Pre-tuned receivers for Colombia; 1957-1962. 14:7 | ||||
| 26 | 28 | "Hour of Decision" in Spanish; 1958-1960. 14:7 | ||||
| 26 | 29 | Radio literacy campaign; 1961-1962. 14:7 | ||||
| 26 | 30 | Drama workshop; 1963. 14:7 | ||||
| 26 | 31 | "Dia del Pastor"; 1963. 14:7 | ||||
| 26 | 32 | Radio-video production office; 1964-1969. 14:7 | ||||
| 27 | 1 | Promotion & publicity; 1953-1967. 14:8 | ||||
| 27 | 2 | Television; 1954-1971. 14:9 | ||||
| 27 | 3 | Television (suppl.); 1955-1967 40:72 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reel 14); 1953-1971 43:9 | ||||
| TIFC: | ||||||
| 27 | 4 | Staff Minutes; 1953-1963, 1967. 14:10 | ||||
| 27 | 5 | Council minutes; 1959-1970. 14:11 | ||||
| 27 | 6 | Organization, policy, council minutes, corresp. (suppl.); 1957-1970 40:73 | ||||
| 27 | 7 | Legal matters, Constitution; 1945-1969. 14:12 | ||||
| 27 | 8 | Intra-Mission Correspondence; 1951-1970. 14:13 | ||||
| 27 | 9 | General Correspondence; 1957-1968. 14:14 | ||||
| 27 | 10 | Equipment and Property; 1947-1971. 14:15 | ||||
| 27 | 11 | Equipment & property (suppl.); 1952-1971 40:74 | ||||
| 27 | 12 | Financial reports & correspondence; 1949-1970. 14:16 | ||||
| 27 | 13 | Listener Response and Surveys; 1957-1969. 14:17 | ||||
| 28 | 1 | Surveys, promotion, reports (suppl.); 1955-1969 40:75 | ||||
| 28 | 2 | Personnel; 1953-1970. 14:18 | ||||
| 28 | 3 | Promotion and Publicity; 1948-1971. 14:19 | ||||
| 28 | 4 | Reports; 1947-1971. 14:20 | ||||
| 28 | 5 | Special Events; 1954-1970. 14:21 | ||||
| HOXO: | ||||||
| 28 | 6 | Administration: Corresp. & Legal Matters; 1952-1963, 1971. 14:22 | ||||
| 28 | 7 | Correspondence, publicity (suppl.); 1950-1961 40:76 | ||||
| 28 | 8 | History project; 1978 | ||||
| 28 | 9 | General Correspondence; 1954-1962. 14:23 | ||||
| 28 | 10 | Financial matters; 1953-1963. 14:24 | ||||
| 28 | 11 | Minutes & reports; 1954-1963. 14:25 | ||||
| 28 | 12 | Promotion and Publicity; 1955-1963. 14:26 | ||||
| YNOL: | ||||||
| 29 | 1 | Organization and Legal Affairs; 1957-1959. 14:27 | ||||
| 29 | 2 | Memos, Reports, Letters; 1960-1969. 14:30 | ||||
| 29 | 3 | Publicity and Promotion; 1959-1962. 14:28 | ||||
| 29 | 4 | YSHQ: Correspondence, etc.; 1961-1965. 14:29 | ||||
| DIA: | ||||||
| 29 | 5 | Administration; 1951-1967. 14:31 | ||||
| 29 | 6 | Administration, minutes, publicity (suppl.); 1957-1969 40:77 | ||||
| 29 | 7 | Conferences and congresses - Guatemala; 1955 40:78 | ||||
| 29 | 8 | General correspondence; 1951-1972. 14:32 | ||||
| 29 | 9 | Finances; 1955-1963. 14:33 | ||||
| 29 | 10 | Minutes (Board of directors, Committee of Op.); 1951-1971. 14:34 | ||||
| 29 | 11 | Miscellaneous; 1956-1968. 14:35 | ||||
| 29 | 12 | Personnel; 1951-1971. 14:36 | ||||
| 29 | 13 | Special projects; 1952-1969. 14:37 | ||||
| Publicity: | ||||||
| 29 | 14 | Bulletins (Spanish); 1955-1968. 14:38, 15:1 | ||||
| 30 | 1 | Bulletins; 1954-1972. 15:2 | ||||
| 30 | 2 | Miscellaneous; 1954-1970. 15:3 | ||||
| 30 | 3 | Reports; 1952-1957. 15:4 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reels 14,15); 1960-1970 43:10 | ||||
| DIA-LEAL: | ||||||
| 30 | 4 | 1st Communications Congr., Cali, Colombia, 1959; 1957-1959. 15:5 | ||||
| 30 | 5 | 2nd Communications Congress, Huampani, Peru; 1961-1963. 15:6 | ||||
| 30 | 6 | 3rd Communications Congress, Huampani, Peru; 1965-1967. 15:7 | ||||
| 30 | 7 | Proposed merger; 1966-1967. 15:8 | ||||
| LEAL: | ||||||
| 30 | 8 | Preliminary Literature Conference; 1955. 15:9 | ||||
| 30 | 9 | Preliminary conf., constitutional assembly, finances (suppl.); 1955-1968 40:79 | ||||
| 30 | 10 | Constitutional assembly; 1955-1956. 15:10 | ||||
| 30 | 11 | Administration; 1955-1970. 15:11 | ||||
| 31 | 1 | Board of Directors - Minutes & correspondence; 1955-1969. 15:12 | ||||
| 31 | 2 | Correspondence; 1955-1967. 15:13 | ||||
| 31 | 3 | Finances: Reports & correspondence; 1956-1969. 15:14 | ||||
| 31 | 4 | Miscellaneous; 1956, n.d.. 15:15 | ||||
| 31 | 5 | Personnel; 1955-1965. 15:16 | ||||
| 31 | 6 | Personnel, projects, publicity (suppl.); 1957-1969 40:80 | ||||
| 31 | 7 | Projects; 1956-1968. 15:17 | ||||
| 31 | 8 | Boletin & other publications; 1955-1966. 15:18 | ||||
| 31 | 9 | Reports; 1955-1964. 15:19 | ||||
| 31 | 10 | Reorganization; 1959-1962. 15:20 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reel 15); 1963-1964 43:11 | ||||
| VERBO: | ||||||
| 31 | 11 | Organization & administration; 1954-1960. 15:21 | ||||
| 31 | 12 | Org. & admin. finances, personnel, promotion (suppl.); 1957-1958 40:81 | ||||
| 31 | 13 | General correspondence; 1953-1963. 15:22 | ||||
| 32 | 1 | Finances; 1956-1959. 15:25 | ||||
| 32 | 2 | Minutes: Board of Directors; 1955-1959. 15:23 | ||||
| 32 | 3 | Personnel; 1953-1959. 15:24 | ||||
| 32 | 4 | Promotion; 1956-1959. 15:26 | ||||
| 32 | 5 | Reports; 1955-1959. 15:27 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reel 15); 1957-1959 43:12 | ||||
| 32 | 6 | DECISION Magazine (Spanish); 1962-1964 | ||||
| XVII. Public Relations (1946-1972) | ||||||
| 32 | 7 | Administration & policy; 1946-1970. 20:1 | ||||
| 32 | 8 | General Correspondence; 1949, 1960-1972. 20:2 | ||||
| 33 | 1 | Correspondence, Intra-Mission; 1945-1970. 20:3 | ||||
| 33 | 2 | Intra-mission correspondence, Promotional letters, special mailings (suppl.); 1949-1970 41:11 | ||||
| General & Prayer/Promotional Letters. | ||||||
| 33 | 3 | 1949-1963. 20:4 | ||||
| 33 | 4 | 1963-1972. 20:4 | ||||
| Departmental Letters | ||||||
| 33 | 5 | 1947-1958. 20:5 | ||||
| 33 | 6 | 1959-1972. 20:5 | ||||
| 33 | 7 | Departmental letters, Prayer promotion [prayer lists], Deputation, Mailing lists, Audio-visuals (suppl.); 1957-1971 41:12 | ||||
| 33 | 8 | Annual reports; 1952-1971. 20:6 | ||||
| 34 | 1 | Prayer Promotion: Plans and policy; 1946-1970. 20:7 | ||||
| 34 | 2 | Departmental mailings: Plans and policy; 1959-1970. 20:8 | ||||
| 34 | 3 | Coordinated design; letterheads; 1955-1968. 20:9 | ||||
| 34 | 4 | Deputation; 1947-1969. 20:10 | ||||
| 34 | 5 | "ENVIOS" Dept.: Mailing lists - Correspondence & manuals/procedures; 1948-1970. 20:11 | ||||
| 34 | 6 | Evangelical Press Association; 1960-1967. 20:12 | ||||
| 34 | 7 | Audio-visuals; 1948-1971. 20:13 | ||||
| Films | ||||||
| 34 | 8 | Caribbean Crusade; 1953-1959. 20:14 | ||||
| 34 | 9 | Youth film (never produced); 1952. 20:15 | ||||
| 34 | 10 | Missionaries for Manana; 1953-1954. 20:16 | ||||
| 34 | 11 | Unfinished Business; 1954-1963. 20:17 | ||||
| 34 | 12 | Colombia Conflict; 1956-1964. 20:18 | ||||
| 35 | 1 | Partnership; 1958-1959. 20:19 | ||||
| 35 | 2 | Invisible Frontier (HOXO); 1959-1962. 20:20 | ||||
| 35 | 3 | E/D documentary (Valley of Decision); 1959-1966. 20:21, 21:1 | ||||
| 35 | 4 | LAM documentary (proposed); 1965-1971. 21:2 | ||||
| Filmstrips | ||||||
| 35 | 5 | Radio Plus; 1960. 21:3 | ||||
| 35 | 6 | Goodwill Caravans; 1964-1967. 21:4 | ||||
| 35 | 7 | Shadow of the Volcano (E/D Guatemala); 1962-1966. 21:6 | ||||
| 35 | 8 | I Hear Marching (E/D Venezuela); 1965. 21:7 | ||||
| 35 | 9 | They Shall Reap With Gladness (E/D Bolivia); 1965-1966. 21:8 | ||||
| 35 | 10 | Revolution (E/D Dominican Republic); 1965-1966. 21:9 | ||||
| 35 | 11 | Conquest of Peru (E/D); 1967. 21:10 | ||||
| 35 | 12 | E/D Films and Filmstrips: General; 1962-1968. 21:5 | ||||
| 35 | 13 | Films & slides, 50th anniversary, Miscellaneous (suppl.); 1959-1971 41:13 | ||||
| 35 | 14 | 40th anniversary (1961); 1960-1961. 21:11 | ||||
| 50th anniversary (1971) | ||||||
| 35 | 15 | 1968-1970. 21:12 | ||||
| 35 | 16 | (suppl.) 1968-1970 41:4 | ||||
| 35 | 17 | 1971-1972. 21:12 | ||||
| 35 | 18 | Miscellaneous; 1946-1970. 21:13 | ||||
| 35 | 19 | Finances; 1952-1970. 21:14 | ||||
| 36 | 1 | Foundations; 1963-1970. 21:15 | ||||
| 36 | 2 | Foundation presentations; 1967-1970. 21:16 | ||||
| 36 | 3 | Foundations, Fund raising (suppl.); 1949-1971 41:14 | ||||
| 36 | 4 | Fund raising: Efforts, methods, consultations; 1963-1972. 21:17 | ||||
| 36 | 5 | Beavan Consultant Services; 1968-1970. 21:18 | ||||
| 36 | 6 | LAM: Use of the name; 1949-1969. 21:19 | ||||
| 36 | 7 | Use of LAM name, Promotion by Emerson, Spanish PR, Budget (suppl.); 1947-1970 41:15 | ||||
| News releases | ||||||
| 36 | 8 | 1948-1964. 21:20 | ||||
| 36 | 9 | 1965-1972. 21:20 | ||||
| 37 | 1 | Projects presented to Christian colleges; 1952-1969. 21:21 | ||||
| 37 | 2 | Promotional efforts by Alfred Emerson; 1961-1964. 21:22 | ||||
| 37 | 3 | Public relations in Spanish; 1967-1970. 21:23 | ||||
| 37 | 4 | Publicity pieces; 1946-1970. 21:24 | ||||
| 37 | 5 | Publicity pieces, Contribution patterns, Latin America Reporter (suppl. 1962-1970, n.d. 41:16 | ||||
| 37 | 6 | Mensajero Biblico: Admin. & planning (suppl.); 1946-1963 41:17 | ||||
| 37 | 7 | Opinion surveys; 1951-1966. 21:25 | ||||
| 37 | 8 | Departmental reports; 1961-1966. 21:26 | ||||
| Radio promotion | ||||||
| 37 | 9 | Non-Latin America Reporter; 1958-1964. 21:27 | ||||
| 37 | 10 | Latin America Reporter: Correspondence; 1961-1972. 21:28 | ||||
| Latin America Reporter: Scripts | ||||||
| 37 | 11 | 1961-1962. 21:29 | ||||
| 37 | 12 | 1963. 21:30, 22:1 | ||||
| 38 | 1 | 1964. 22:1 | ||||
| 38 | 2 | 1965-1966. 22:2 | ||||
| 38 | 3 | 1967-1968. 22:3 | ||||
| 38 | 4 | 1969-1970. 22:4 | ||||
| 38 | 5 | 1971-1972. 22:5 | ||||
| 39 | 1 | 1973-1974. 22:6 | ||||
| Latin America Evangelist | ||||||
| 39 | 2 | Intra-Mission Correspondence; 1948-1970. 22:7 | ||||
| 39 | 3 | Miscellaneous/General; 1952-1976. 22:8 | ||||
| 39 | 4 | Criticisms; 1961-1971. 22:9 | ||||
| 39 | 5 | Tributes (sampling); 1961-1970. 22:10 | ||||
| 39 | 6 | 2nd class shipping permit; 1961-1971. 22:11 | ||||
| 39 | 7 | Editorial planning; 1956-1971. 22:12 | ||||
| 39 | 8 | Editorial correspondence (some); 1961-1971. 22:12 | ||||
| 39 | 9 | Production; 1960-1969. 22:13 | ||||
| 39 | 10 | Promotion; 1947-1963. 22:14 | ||||
| 39 | 11 | (suppl.) 1961-1967 41:18 | ||||
| 39 | 12 | Devotional leaflets; 1961-1965, n.d.. 22:15 | ||||
| 39 | 13 | Missionary workbooks; 1955-1956. 22:16 | ||||
| 40 | 1 | Donor letters; 1947-1966. 22:17 | ||||
| 40 | 2 | Donor letter, Supporter letters, Magazine articles, Book reviews, Operation Outreach I & II (suppl.); 1958-1967 41:19 | ||||
| 40 | 3 | Letters to supporters; 1958-1970. 22:18 | ||||
| 40 | Magazine Articles | |||||
| 40 | 4 | Fenton, Horace; 1964-1974. 22:19 | ||||
| 40 | 5 | Howard, David; 1965-1966. 22:20 | ||||
| 40 | 6 | Roberts, W. Dayton; 1953-1967. 22:21 | ||||
| 40 | 7 | Various LAMers; 1966-1971. 22:22 | ||||
| 41 | 1 | Book reviews; 1960-1971. 22:23 | ||||
| Operation Outreach | ||||||
| 41 | 2 | I; 1962. 22:24 | ||||
| 41 | 3 | II; 1964-1965. 22:25 | ||||
| 41 | 4 | III; 1966-1967. 23:1 | ||||
| 41 | 5 | IV; 1968-1969. 23:2 | ||||
| 41 | 6 | III & IV, Confidential Memo, Lowdown From Miami, Memos From Dit [Fenton], Intra-Mission memos, Statistics (suppl.); 1953-1970 41:20 | ||||
| 41 | 7 | V (canceled); 1969-1970. 23:3 | ||||
| 41 | 8 | 50th anniversary tour (1972); 1970-1972. 23:4 | ||||
| In-house publications | ||||||
| 41 | 9 | LAMECOS; 1947. 23:5 | ||||
| 41 | 10 | Costa Rica Field Reporter (incomplete); 1949-1955. 23:6 | ||||
| Entre Nos | ||||||
| 41 | 11 | 1955-1957. 23:7 | ||||
| 41 | 12 | 1958-1959. 23:8 | ||||
| 41 | 13 | 1960-1961. 23:9 | ||||
| 41 | 14 | 1962-1963. 23:10 | ||||
| 42 | 1 | 1964-1965. 23:11 | ||||
| 42 | 2 | 1966-1967. 23:12 | ||||
| 42 | 3 | 1968-1969. 23:13 | ||||
| 42 | 4 | 1970-1971. 23:14 | ||||
| 42 | 5 | Lowdown; 1970. 23:16 | ||||
| 42 | 6 | Confidential Memo; 1958-1967. 23:15 | ||||
| 42 | 7 | Memo From Dit [Fenton]; 1965-1970. 23:17 | ||||
| 42 | 8 | Intra-Mission memos; 1962-1971. 23:18 | ||||
| 42 | 9 | Questionnaires & statistical reports; 1964-1966. 23:20 | ||||
| 42 | 10 | LAM Conferences; 1954-1972. 23:21, 23:22 | ||||
| 43 | 1 | LAM conferences (suppl.); 1952-1972 41:21 | ||||
| Publication projects | ||||||
| 43 | 2 | Guidelines; 1967-1968. 23:23 | ||||
| 43 | 3 | Hammered As Gold, Howard; 1966-1969. 23:24 | ||||
| 43 | 4 | Strachan of Costa Rica, Roberts; 1968-1971. 23:25 | ||||
| 43 | 5 | Publication projects, Criticisms (suppl.); 1961-1970 41:22 | ||||
| 43 | 6 | Criticism of LAM & E/D, Replies; 1958-1971. 23:26 | ||||
| 43 | 7 | TV series (Costa Rica); 1962. 23:27 | ||||
| 43 | 8 | Computer studies (mailing list); 1970. 23:27 | ||||
| 43 | 9 | Publicity in other publications; 1965-1972. 23:19 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reels 20,21,22,23); 1961-1972 43:15 | ||||
| XVIII. Evangelism (1944-1972) | ||||||
| A. Pre-Evangelism-in-Depth Campaigns (1944-1958) | ||||||
| 43 | 10 | Plans & summaries; 1944-1958. 24:1 (beginning overexposed) | ||||
| 43 | 11 | Plans & summaries (suppl.); 1947-1957 41:23 | ||||
| 43 | 12 | Finances; 1949-1954. 24:2 | ||||
| 43 | 13 | Publicity & deputation; 1952-1956. 24:3 | ||||
| 43 | 14 | Auxiliary ministries: Children's work, Films, Lit.; 1949-1955. 24:4,5,6 | ||||
| 43 | 15 | Travel; 1951-1952. 24:7 | ||||
| 43 | 16 | Personnel; 1949-1955. 24:8 | ||||
| 43 | 17 | Personnel (suppl.); 1956-1957 41:24 | ||||
| 43 | 18 | Survey trips; 1952-1956. 24:9 | ||||
| 43 | 19 | Mexico; 1949-1956. 24:10 | ||||
| 43 | 20 | Mexico (suppl.); 1956 41:25 | ||||
| 43 | 21 | Central America (Belize, Canal Zone, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua) & Panama; 1949-1954. 24:11 | ||||
| 44 | 1 | Central America (Belize, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama) (suppl.); 1950-1951 41:26,27,28,29,30,31 | ||||
| 44 | 2 | Colombia; 1949-1952. 24:12 | ||||
| 44 | 3 | Colombia (suppl.); 1957 41:32 | ||||
| 44 | 4 | Venezuela; 1951-1955. 24:13 | ||||
| 44 | 5 | Ecuador; 1951-1952. 24:14 | ||||
| 44 | 6 | Bolivia; 1951-1952. 24:15 | ||||
| 44 | 7 | Peru; 1951-1953. 24:16 | ||||
| 44 | 8 | General (Cono del Sur); 1954-1955. 24:17 | ||||
| 44 | 9 | Paraguay; 1954. 24:17 | ||||
| 44 | 10 | Argentina; 1954. 24:17 | ||||
| 44 | 11 | Argentina (suppl.); 1954 41:33 | ||||
| 44 | 12 | Uruguay; 1953-1954. 24:17 | ||||
| 44 | 13 | Chile; 1951-1953. 24:17 | ||||
| 44 | 14 | British West Indies; 1952-1953. 24:18 | ||||
| 44 | 15 | Trinidad; 1956. 24:19 | ||||
| 44 | 16 | Trinidad (suppl.); 1956. 41:34 | ||||
| 44 | 17 | Jamaica; 1952-1954. 24:20 | ||||
| 44 | 18 | Jamaica (suppl.); 1953. 41:35 | ||||
| 44 | 19 | Barbados, St. Lucia, Grenada; 1953. 24:21 | ||||
| 44 | 20 | Barbados, St. Lucia, Grenada (suppl.); 1953 41:36 | ||||
| 44 | 21 | Puerto Rico; 1950-1953. 24:22 | ||||
| 44 | 22 | Puerto Rico (suppl.); 1953 41:37 | ||||
| 44 | 23 | British Guiana; 1951-1953. 24:23 | ||||
| 44 | 24 | Cuba; 1955-1957. 24:24 | ||||
| 44 | 25 | Cuba (suppl.); 1955 41:38 | ||||
| 44 | 26 | New York City; 1950. 24:25 | ||||
| 44 | 27 | Texas & California; 1957. 24:26 | ||||
| 44 | 28 | New York City; 1960. 24:27 | ||||
| Billy Graham Crusade, 1958 | ||||||
| 44 | 29 | General; 1952-1958. 24:28 | ||||
| 44 | 30 | Individual campaigns (Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Barbados, Trinidad, Venezuela, Panama, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Mexico); 1957-1959. 24:29 | ||||
| 44 | 31 | Program & publicity (suppl.); 1957-1958 41:39,40 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reel 24); 1953-1957 43:16 | ||||
| B. Evangelism: Evangelism-in-Depth (1948-1972) | ||||||
| Administration | ||||||
| - | - R | Confidential: Various matters (Reels 30,31,32); 1964-1969 43:20 | ||||
| 44 | 32 | General correspondence; 1960-1971 30:1 | ||||
| Evangelism-in-Depth Finances | ||||||
| 44 | 33 | Correspondence; 1961-1969 30:2 | ||||
| 44 | 34 | Statements 1961-1966 30:3 | ||||
| Office for World-wide Evangelism in Depth Finances | ||||||
| 44 | 35 | Correspondence; 1967-1971 30:4 | ||||
| 44 | 36 | Statements; 1968-1971 30:5 | ||||
| 44 | 37 | Foundations: General & foundations approached; 1965-1972 30:6 | ||||
| R.K. Strachan Memorial Fund for World Evangelization | ||||||
| 45 | 1 | Correspondence, minutes; 1965-1970 30:7 | ||||
| 45 | 2 | Financial reports; 1966-1971 30:8 | ||||
| 45 | 3 | Publicity; 1965-1967 30:9 | ||||
| Evangelism-in-Depth | ||||||
| 45 | 4 | Correspondence & promotion; 1961-1966 | ||||
| Materials | ||||||
| - | - | 1961-1966 30:10 | ||||
| 45 | 5 | Manuals (Spanish); n.d. | ||||
| 45 | 6 | Manual (English); 1966 | ||||
| 45 | 7 | Manual (Spanish); 1966 | ||||
| 45 | 8 | Coordinator's manual; 1969 | ||||
| Trips | ||||||
| 45 | 9 | Lores/Roberts to Asia & Europe; 1966 30:11 | ||||
| 45 | 10 | Fenton/Lores to England & Portugal; 1968 30:12 | ||||
| 45 | 11 | Fenton to Africa; 1968 30:12 | ||||
| Audio-visuals | ||||||
| 45 | 12 | General; 1964-1968 30:13 | ||||
| Training filmstrip scripts | ||||||
| 45 | 13 | (como Ninos Recien Nacidos) Neglected Steps; 1965? 30:14 | ||||
| 45 | 14 | Orad (Pray Ye); 1960's 30:15 | ||||
| 45 | 15 | Gifts to the Church; 1960's 30:16 | ||||
| E/D and the Local Church | ||||||
| 46 | 1 | n.d. | ||||
| - | - | 1962-1971 (includes manual) 30:19 | ||||
| 46 | 2 | Program manual: In-Depth Evangelism; 1971 | ||||
| Promotion | ||||||
| 46 | 3 | Materials; 1950's-1970's 30:20 | ||||
| 46 | 4 | Special mailings; 1963-1967 30:21 | ||||
| 46 | 5 | Correspondence, plans, presentations, etc.; 1963-1970 30:22 | ||||
| 46 | 6 | Picture book; 1965-1969 30:17 | ||||
| Books | ||||||
| 46 | 7 | 1960-1971 | ||||
| - | - | Evangelism-in-Depth; 1960-1966 30:23 | ||||
| - | - | Revolution in Evangelism; 1965-1970 30:24 | ||||
| - | - | The Other Revolution; 1967-1969 30:25 | ||||
| - | - | The Inescapable Calling; 1966-1970 30:26 | ||||
| 46 | 8 | Evangelism-in-Depth: News releases; 1962-1969 30:27 | ||||
| 46 | 9 | En Marcha (English); 1965-1966 30:28 | ||||
| 46 | 10 | En Marcha Internacional (Spanish); 1963-1974 30:29, 31:1 | ||||
| 46 | 11 | Newsletter: "In-Depth Evangelism Around the World"; 1969-1971 31:2 | ||||
| 46 | 13 | Publicity; 1961-1969 31:3 | ||||
| 47 | 1 | Zone 1: North; 1961-1968 31:4 | ||||
| 47 | 2 | Zone 2: Central; 1964-1967 31:5 | ||||
| 47 | 3 | Zone 3: South; 1963-1966 31:6 | ||||
| 47 | 4 | Strachan-Hayward debate: "Call to Witness"; 1962-1966 31:7 | ||||
| 47 | 5 | Evaluation of E/D by George Peters; 1967-1972 31:8 | ||||
| 47 | 6 | E/D statistics; 1960-1969 31:9 | ||||
| 47 | 7 | Use and registration of E/D name; 1961-1969 31:10 | ||||
| E/D cooperation with other organizations | ||||||
| 47 | 8 | A-N; 1954-1971 31:11 | ||||
| 47 | 9 | O-Y; 1963-1971 31:11 | ||||
| Comite Latinoamericana al Servicio de la Evangelizacion (CLASE): | ||||||
| 47 | 10 | Organization and administration (minutes); 1961-1965 31:12 | ||||
| 47 | 11 | Correspondence; 1962-1966 31:12 | ||||
| 47 | 12 | Finances; 1963-1968 31:12 | ||||
| 47 | 13 | Boletin Informativo; 1964-1966 31:12 | ||||
| 47 | 14 | Publicity; 1964-1965 31:12 | ||||
| 47 | 15 | PERT chart: "A System for Strategically Planning World Mission"; 1966 | ||||
| 47 | 16 | Research questionnaire; n.d. | ||||
| Division consultations | ||||||
| 48 | 1 | 1965-1968 (Spanish) 31:13 | ||||
| 48 | 2 | 1969 (Spanish) 31:13 | ||||
| 48 | 3 | 1971 31:13 | ||||
| 49 | 1 | Consejo Ejecutivo de los Asesores (CEDA): Minutes; 1964-1971 31:14 | ||||
| 49 | 2 | Papers on evangelism [in depth], Miscellaneous; 1969-1971, n.d. 31:15 | ||||
| 49 | 3 | Miscellaneous; 1966-1968, n.d. 31:16 | ||||
| 49 | 4 | Intra-Mission Correspondence; 1954-1970 31:17 | ||||
| 49 | 5 | E/D seminars, pastoral institutes & workshops; 1962-1971 31:18 | ||||
| 49 | 6 | Institute of Theology & Evangelism; 1960 31:19 | ||||
| E/D Institutes | ||||||
| 49 | 7 | August 1963; 1962-1963 31:20 | ||||
| 49 | 8 | August 1966; 1966 32:1 | ||||
| Office of Worldwide Evangelism in Depth (OWED) | ||||||
| 49 | 9 | Administration & organization; 1967-1972 32:2 | ||||
| 49 | 10 | Idea: Board of trustees; 1971-1972 32:3 | ||||
| 49 | 11 | Staff meetings; 1967-1972 32:4 | ||||
| 49 | 12 | Consultations; 1967-1971 32:5 | ||||
| 49 | 13 | Retreat for pastors & Christian workers, on-the-job training seminars; 1966-1968 32:6 | ||||
| Africa | ||||||
| 49 | 14 | Office (Kinshasa): Correspondence & materials; 1961-1971 32:7 | ||||
| 49 | 15 | Similar programs: Zaire, Nigeria, Zimbabwe, South Africa; 1962-1970 32:7 | ||||
| 49 | 16 | Similar programs: Burundi, Cameroon, Egypt, Ethiopia, Mali, Malawi, Sierra Leone, Zambia; 1967-1970 32:7 | ||||
| - | - | New Life For All/Relationship (Africa); 1967-1970 32:8 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: OWED/New Life For All relationship (Reel 32); 1967-1970 43:21 | ||||
| 50 | 1 | E/D possibilities in Europe: Belgium, France, England, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Spain; 1963-1969 32:9 | ||||
| Asia | ||||||
| 50 | 2 | General & OWED office (Singapore); 1963-1971 32:10 | ||||
| 50 | 3 | Coordination Office for Asian Evangelism (COFAE) and Consultation on Evangelistic Strategy (COES); 1969 32:10 | ||||
| 50 | 4 | Individuals movements: Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Philippines; 1961-1971 32:10 | ||||
| 50 | 5 | Latin America: E/D possibilities in Latin America: Argentina, Belize, El Salvador, Haiti, Panama, Puerto Rico, Trinidad; 1961-1969 32:11 | ||||
| 50 | 6 | New Zealand and Australia: E/D possibilities; 1968-1970 32:12 | ||||
| 50 | 7 | United States & Canada: Canada, inner city, Colorado Springs, Newark, Omaha, Other (incl. denominations and universities), nationwide concept & OWED/local church agreement; 1966-1971 32:13 | ||||
| United States | ||||||
| Appalachia | ||||||
| 50 | 8 | 1966-1968 32:14 | ||||
| 50 | 9 | Appalachian Council for Evangelism: Minutes & newsletter; 1969-1972 32:15 | ||||
| Eastern Pennsylvania | ||||||
| 50 | 10 | Christ for Eastern Pennsylvania: Reports & minutes; 1971-1972 32:16 | ||||
| 50 | 11 | Correspondence; 1969-1972 32:17 | ||||
| 50 | 12 | Materials, promotion, publications, publicity; 1970-1972 32:17 | ||||
| 50 | 13 | New England; 1966-1971 32:18 | ||||
| 50 | 14 | "Tell DuPage," Illinois; 1967-1969 32:19 | ||||
| 51 | 1 | Ray Loyola Campaign Reports; 1968 32:20 | ||||
| Criticism of Evangelism-in-Depth and other evangelistic efforts | ||||||
| - | - | 1954-1970 32:21 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reel 32); 1954-1970 43:22 | ||||
| Evangelism-in-Depth Campaigns | ||||||
| Bolivia | ||||||
| 51 | 2 | 1960-1964. 24:30 | ||||
| 51 | 3 | 1965. 24:30 | ||||
| 51 | 4 | 1966-1967. 24:30 | ||||
| 51 | 5 | En Marcha; 1964-1965. 24:31 | ||||
| 51 | 6 | Brazil; 1962-1971. 24:32 | ||||
| 51 | 7 | Chile; 1968-1973. 24:33 | ||||
| Colombia | ||||||
| 51 | 8 | 1962-1967. 24:34 | ||||
| 51 | 9 | (suppl.) 1967-1968 41:41 | ||||
| 51 | 10 | January-June 1968. 24:34 | ||||
| 51 | 11 | July-December 1968. 24:34 | ||||
| 51 | 12 | 1969-1970. 24:34, 25:1 | ||||
| 52 | 1 | En Marcha; 1968. 25:1 | ||||
| 52 | 2 | Postmarked Colombia; 1968. 25:2 | ||||
| Costa Rica | ||||||
| 52 | 3 | 1960. 25:3 | ||||
| 52 | 4 | (suppl.) 1960 41:42 | ||||
| 52 | 5 | 1961, 1968. 25:3 | ||||
| 52 | 6 | En Marcha; 1960-1961. 25:4 | ||||
| Dominican Republic | ||||||
| 52 | 7 | 1961-1964. 25:5 | ||||
| 52 | 8 | 1965. 25:5 | ||||
| 52 | 9 | (suppl.) 1965 41:43 | ||||
| 52 | 10 | 1966-1968. 25:5 | ||||
| 52 | 11 | En Marcha; 1965-1966. 25:6 | ||||
| Ecuador | ||||||
| 52 | 12 | 1961-1971. 25:7 | ||||
| 52 | 13 | Impacto; 1969-1970. 25:7 | ||||
| Guatemala | ||||||
| 53 | 1 | 1960-1961. 25:8 | ||||
| 53 | 2 | 1962. 25:8 | ||||
| 53 | 3 | (suppl.) 1962-1968 41:44 | ||||
| 53 | 4 | 1963-1967. 25:8 | ||||
| 53 | 5 | En Marcha; 1962. 25:9 | ||||
| Honduras | ||||||
| 53 | 6 | 1961-1968. 25:10 | ||||
| 53 | 7 | (suppl.) 1964 41:45 | ||||
| 53 | 8 | En Marcha; 1963-1964. 25:11 | ||||
| Mexico | ||||||
| 53 | 9 | 1960-1969. 25:12 | ||||
| 53 | 10 | (suppl.) 1964-1965 41:46 | ||||
| 53 | 11 | 1970-1972. 25:12 (end overexposed), 26:1 (beginning overexposed) | ||||
| 54 | 1 | En Marcha; 1970-1971. 26:2 | ||||
| 54 | 2 | En Marcha (suppl.); 1971 41:47 | ||||
| Nicaragua | ||||||
| 54 | 3 | 1958-1960. 26:3 | ||||
| 54 | 4 | (suppl.) 1959-1960, 1965 41:48 | ||||
| 54 | 5 | En Marcha; 1960. 26:4 | ||||
| Atlantic Coast | ||||||
| 54 | 6 | 1965-1967. 26:5 | ||||
| 54 | 7 | En Marcha; 1967. 26:6 | ||||
| Paraguay | ||||||
| 54 | 8 | 1961-1972. 26:7 | ||||
| 54 | 9 | En Marcha (suppl.); 1971 41:49 | ||||
| Peru | ||||||
| 54 | 10 | 1961-1966. 26:8 | ||||
| 54 | 11 | January-June 1967. 26:8 | ||||
| 54 | 12 | July-December 1967. 26:8 | ||||
| 54 | 13 | 1968. 26:8 | ||||
| 54 | 14 | Publications; 1966-1967. 26:9 | ||||
| 54 | 15 | Postmarked Peru; 1967. 26:10 | ||||
| Venezuela | ||||||
| 55 | 1 | 1958-1963. 26:11 | ||||
| 55 | 2 | 1964-1969. 26:11 | ||||
| 55 | 3 | (suppl.) 1964 41:50 | ||||
| 55 | 4 | Publications; 1963-1965. 26:12 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: E/D movements by country (Reels 24,25,26); 1960-1968 43:17 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: Various, during E/D (Reel 26:9,10,12); 1963-1970 43:18 | ||||
| 55 | 5 | Origins of Evangelism-in-Depth; 1958-1962. 26:13 | ||||
| 55 | 6 | Philosophy; 1959-1971. 26:14 | ||||
| 55 | 7 | Philosophy (suppl.); 1965-1968 41:51 | ||||
| 55 | 8 | Organization & administration; 1961-1971. 26:15 | ||||
| 55 | 9 | Plans & strategy; 1958-1971. 26:16 | ||||
| Campaigns | ||||||
| 55 | 10 | Plans & strategy (suppl.); 1967-1968 41:52 | ||||
| 55 | 11 | Personnel (suppl.); 1961-1969 41:53 | ||||
| 55 | 12 | Procedures; 1966. 26:17 | ||||
| 55 | 13 | Materials, promotion; 1961, 1965, n.d. 39:12,13 | ||||
| 55 | 14 | CEDA: Miscellaneous OWED Seminars; 1967-1969 39:14 | ||||
| 55 | 15 | E/D in Belgium: Consultation on Saturation Evangelism, 1969; 1969 39:15 | ||||
| Principles | ||||||
| 56 | 1 | Flip chart script; n.d. | ||||
| 56 | 2 | Flip chart (early version); n.d. | ||||
| 56 | 3 | Flip charts (English and Spanish); 1960's 30:18 | ||||
| 57 | 1 | Thesis re E/D by Raymond Rosales; 1966-1967 | ||||
| Personnel | ||||||
| 57 | 2 | 1951-1965 | ||||
| 57 | 3 | 1960-1970. 26:18 | ||||
| 57 | 4 | Reports; 1964-1971. 26:19 | ||||
| 57 | 5 | Reports (suppl.); 1965-1970 41:54 | ||||
| Congresses | ||||||
| 57 | 6 | Asian-South Pacific Congress on Evangelism, 1968; 1968 32:22 | ||||
| 57 | 7 | Consultation on Evangelistic Strategy; 1968-1972 32:23 | ||||
| 57 | 8 | Wheaton Seminar, 1969; 1968-1969 32:24 | ||||
| 57 | 9 | Consultation of Saturation Evangelism, 1969; 1968-1969 32:25 | ||||
| 57 | 10 | US Congress on Evangelism, 1969; 1969 32:26 | ||||
| 57 | 11 | Miscellaneous w/ LAM delegates; 1961-1964 37:3, 39:22 | ||||
| Congresos Latinoamericanos de Evangelizacion (CLADE) | ||||||
| - | - | I; 1969 32:27 | ||||
| 57 | 12 | I & II; 1968-1970 37:9, 37:10 | ||||
| 57 | 13 | Key Bridge Meetings; 1968-1970 37:11 | ||||
| Miscellaneous w/ LAM delegates | ||||||
| 57 | 14 | 1948-1964 37:12 | ||||
| 57 | 15 | 1965-1968 37:13 | ||||
| 57 | 16 | 1969-1970 37:14 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reel 37); 1960-1969 43:30 | ||||
| XIX. Education (1960-1971) | ||||||
| - | - | 1. Blue books, 2. Training Division, 3. Education Division consultation, 4. Weekly consultations, 5. Budget, 6. Goals, 7. Personnel matters, 8. Reports; 1964-1968 29:43 | ||||
| 58 | 1 | Training division (suppl.); 1964-1965 42:19 | ||||
| 58 | 2 | Blue Book: 1. Seminary, 2. Training division, 3. Education division (suppl.); 1964-1968 42:20 | ||||
| 58 | 3 | Division consultation, December 1967 (suppl.); 1966-1968 42:21 | ||||
| 58 | 4 | Weekly consultations; 1966-1968 42:22 | ||||
| 58 | 5 | Budget (suppl.); 1966 42:23 | ||||
| 58 | 6 | Goals (suppl.); 1967-1968 42:24 | ||||
| 58 | 7 | Personnel matters (suppl.); 1967-1968 42:25 | ||||
| 58 | 8 | Reports by Training/Education Div. (suppl.); 1960-1971 42:26 | ||||
| 58 | 9 | Miscellaneous documents (suppl.); 1966-1968 42:27 | ||||
| XX. Early Administrative Files (1920-1951) | ||||||
| Personnel | ||||||
| - | - | Missionaries & national workers; 1924-1948. 5:1, 6:1 | ||||
| - | - R | Individual missionary records & correspondence; 1921-1948. 5:2, 6:2 | ||||
| - | - | Missionary lists & assignments; 1940-1947. 5:3 | ||||
| 58 | 12 | Missionary lists & assignments (suppl.); 1945-1948 40:23 | ||||
| - | - | Candidate forms, requirements; 1924-1948. 5:4 | ||||
| - | - | New Missionaries: Outfits, orientation, entrance problems, etc.; 1940-1948. 5:5 | ||||
| 58 | 13 | New missionaries: Outfits, orientation, entrance problems, etc. (suppl.); 1945-1948 40:24 | ||||
| - | - | Insurance, dismissals, health care, field activities; 1943-1948. 5:6 | ||||
| 58 | 14 | Personnel matters (suppl.); 1946 40:25 | ||||
| 58 | 15 | Personnel: General correspondence (suppl.); 1947-1948 40:26 | ||||
| LAEC/LAM Public relations: | ||||||
| - | - | Publicity materials; 1920-1948. 5:7 | ||||
| 58 | 16 | Brochures, prayer letters, publications (suppl.); 1930-1948 40:27 | ||||
| - | - | Internal communications: Miscellaneous publications; 1945-1947. 5:8 | ||||
| Costa Rica/Panama: Projects discontinued or dropped; 1930-1948 | ||||||
| - | - | Dropped: Leprosy work; 1930. 5:9 | ||||
| - | - | Discontinued: Evangelical Mutual Benefit Society of C.R.; 1934-1935. 5:10 | ||||
| - | - | Dropped: National Council for Physical Education; 1946-1951. 5:11 | ||||
| - | - | Dropped: Valiente Indians (Panama); 1947-1948. 5:12 | ||||
| 58 | 17 | Dropped: Panama Indian work (suppl.); 1947 40:28 | ||||
| Finances | ||||||
| - | - | Records, reports; 1919-1948. 5:13 | ||||
| 58 | 18 | Records, reports (suppl.); 1944-1948 40:29 | ||||
| - | - | Donor correspondence, legacies; 1938-1948. 5:14 | ||||
| 58 | 19 | Donor correspondence (suppl.); 1946-1948 40:29 | ||||
| 58 | 20 | Miscellaneous correspondence (suppl.); 1947 40:29 | ||||
| - | - | Miscellaneous correspondence; 1943-1948. 5:15 | ||||
| 58 | 21 | Missionary support, student & orphan support (suppl.); 1945-1947 40:29 | ||||
| - | - | Missionary support, student & orphan support; 1946-1948. 5:16 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: Personnel & Finances (Reels 5,6); 1935-1955 43:2 | ||||
| Constitutions, by-laws | ||||||
| - | - | US, Colombia; 1944-1948. 5:17 | ||||
| 58 | 22 | (suppl.) | 1946-1947 40:30 | |||
| Colombia | ||||||
| Station reports | ||||||
| - | - | 1938. 6:3 | ||||
| - | - | 1939. 6:4 | ||||
| - | - | 1940. 6:5 | ||||
| - | - | 1941. 6:6 | ||||
| - | - | 1942. 6:7 | ||||
| - | - | 1943. 6:8 | ||||
| - | - | 1944. 6:9 | ||||
| - | - | 1945. 6:10 | ||||
| - | - | 1946. 6:11 | ||||
| 58 | 23 | (suppl.) 1946-1948 40:31 | ||||
| - | - | 1947. 6:12 | ||||
| - | - | Administration: Correspondence re properties, finances, personnel, etc.; 1938-1948. 6:13 | ||||
| 58 | 24 | Administration (suppl.); 1946-1948 40:32 | ||||
| Launches | ||||||
| - | - | 1938-1951.. 6:14 | ||||
| 58 | 25 | (suppl.) 1947 40:33 | ||||
| - | - | "El Heraldo": Correspondence & reports; 1941-1950. 6:15 | ||||
| - | - | New/proposed launches; 1944-1951. 6:16 | ||||
| - | - | Campaigns; 1939-1940. 6:17 | ||||
| Finances | ||||||
| - | - | Reports, missionary support, corresp., etc.; 1941-1948. 6:18 | ||||
| 58 | 26 | Finances (suppl.); 1946-1948 40:34 | ||||
| - | - | Iglesia Evangelical de Monteria: Minutes; 1941-1947. 6:19 | ||||
| - | - | Monthly missionary meetings: Sincelejo & Cartagena | ||||
| - | - | 1942-1947. 6:20 | ||||
| 58 | 27 | (suppl.) 1947 40:35 | ||||
| - | - | Iglesias Evangelicas bajo la Mision Latino-Americano en Colombia: Administrative Committee - Minutes, meetings; 1944-1948. 6:21 | ||||
| 58 | 28 | Association of churches (suppl.); 1946-1948 40:36 | ||||
| - | - | Historical sidelights; 1945-1948. 6:22 | ||||
| Costa Rica | ||||||
| Ministries; 1921-1948 | ||||||
| - | - | Churches; 1921-1948. 6:23 | ||||
| Institute - Seminary | ||||||
| - | - | 1923-1948. 6:24 | ||||
| 58 | 29 | (suppl.) 1924-1948 40:37 | ||||
| Clinic - Nursing school | ||||||
| - | - | 1930-1948. 6:25 | ||||
| 58 | 30 | (suppl.) 1931-1946 40:38 | ||||
| - | - | Bible Home - Farm; 1931-1948. 6:26 | ||||
| Publishing program | ||||||
| - | - | 1937-1948. 6:27 | ||||
| 58 | 31 | (suppl.) 1946-1948 40:39 | ||||
| 58 | 32 | Radio TIFC (suppl.); 1945-1948. 6:28, 40:40 | ||||
| Youth department | ||||||
| 58 | 33 | (suppl.) 1947 40:40 | ||||
| - | - | 1948. 6:29 | ||||
| Historical sidelights, statistics of LAM | ||||||
| - | - | 1944-1948. 6:30 | ||||
| 59 | 1 | (suppl.) 1947-1949 40:41 | ||||
| Evangelical congresses: Programs, registr., minutes | ||||||
| - | - | 1936, 1938, 1948. 6:31 | ||||
| 59 | 2 | 1936 (suppl.), 1948 40:42 | ||||
| Inter-Mission relationships | ||||||
| - | - | Correspondence; 1931-1948. 6:32 | ||||
| 59 | 3 | Agreements, conflicts (suppl.); 1930-1947 40:43 | ||||
| XXI. Personnel & Field Administration (1932-1972) | ||||||
| Candidates | ||||||
| 59 | 4 | Personnel/Candidate Secretary: Reports/correspondence; 1959-1971 33:1 | ||||
| 59 | 5 | Candidate Secretary: Visits to campuses; 1965-1971 33:2 | ||||
| Candidate procedures & correspondence | ||||||
| 59 | 6 | Correspondence; 1950-1971 33:3 | ||||
| 59 | 7 | Applications; 1962-1970, n.d. 33:3 | ||||
| Personnel requirements (training) | ||||||
| 59 | 8 | Qualifications & policies; 1963, 1971 33:4 | ||||
| 59 | 9 | Training; 1950-1971 33:4 | ||||
| 59 | 10 | Stam/Glover exchange on divorce as disqualification (also R.C. McQuilkin); 1939, 1962, 1971 33:4 | ||||
| 59 | 11 | Tentative assignments; 1953-1971 33:4 | ||||
| 59 | 12 | Candidate needs & recruitment; 1949-1971 33:5 | ||||
| 59 | 13 | Candidate procedures: Medical & psychological; 1942-1971 33:6 | ||||
| 59 | 14 | Candidates: Documents for entrance; 1944-1968 33:7 | ||||
| 59 | 15 | Candidate problems: Support; 1957-1971 33:8 | ||||
| 59 | 16 | Candidate orientation programs; 1950-1971 33:9 | ||||
| 59 | 17 | Candidate orientation; 1958 39:16 | ||||
| 59 | 18 | Candidates: Commissioning service; 1951? 33:10 | ||||
| 59 | 19 | Candidates & new missionaries: Reading lists; 1948-1970 33:11 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: Candidates; 1951-1966 43:23 | ||||
| Field | ||||||
| 60 | 1 | General; 1950-1971 33:12 | ||||
| 60 | 2 | Minutes of Field Executives; 1961-1970 33:13. | ||||
| Costa Rica | ||||||
| 60 | 3 | Council minutes; 1951-1971 33:14 | ||||
| 60 | 4 | Field Council; 1963 39:16 | ||||
| 60 | 5 | Special committees; 1954-1970 33:15 | ||||
| 60 | 6 | LAM Communications Committee; 1969 39:16 | ||||
| 60 | 7 | Director's reports; 1950-1951, 1962, 1964, 1966 33:16 | ||||
| Activities | ||||||
| 60 | 8 | 1948, 1965-1970 39:16 | ||||
| 60 | 9 | 1951-1959 33:17 | ||||
| 60 | 10 | #1; 1960-1970 33:18 | ||||
| 60 | 11 | #2; 1960-1969 33:18 | ||||
| 60 | 12 | #3; 1967-1970 33:18 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: Field administration; 1965-1967 43:24 | ||||
| Annual meetings | ||||||
| Related materials | ||||||
| 60 | 13 | 1944-1962 33:19 | ||||
| 61 | 1 | 1963-1970 33:19 | ||||
| 61 | 2 | 1966-1970 39:16 | ||||
| New missionaries | ||||||
| 61 | 3 | Information; 1940-1969 33:20 | ||||
| Orientation | ||||||
| 61 | 4 | Program; 1945-1969 34:1 | ||||
| 61 | 5 | Correspondence; 1939-1968 34:1 | ||||
| 61 | 6 | Materials; 1959-1962 34:1 | ||||
| 61 | 7 | Activities; 1952-1969 34:1 | ||||
| Orientation committee, personnel committee | ||||||
| 61 | 8 | Membership & responsibilities; 1951-1970 34:2 | ||||
| 61 | 9 | Minutes; 1945-1964 34:2 | ||||
| 61 | 10 | Reports; 1945-1965 34:2 | ||||
| Language study | ||||||
| 61 | 11 | Program in Costa Rica; 1937-1967 34:3 | ||||
| 61 | 12 | Spanish Language School (Mexico); 1965-1968 34:3 | ||||
| 61 | 13 | Toronto Institute of Linguistics; 1967-1968 34:3 | ||||
| 61 | 14 | AIBC relationship; 1946-1968 34:4 | ||||
| 61 | 15 | "Big Brother" program; 1957-1968 34:5 | ||||
| 61 | 16 | Guanacaste assignment; 1963 34:6 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: New missionaries; 1963-1968 43:25 | ||||
| Personnel | ||||||
| 62 | 1 | Data; 1950-1970 34:7 | ||||
| 62 | 2 | Internal rules & regulations (Costa Rica); 1939?, 1956-1969 34:8 | ||||
| 62 | 3 | Internal rules; 1965-1967 39:17 | ||||
| 62 | 4 | Membership requirements; 1964-1970 34:9 | ||||
| 62 | 5 | Missionary health (on the field); 1962-1971 | ||||
| 62 | 6 | Medical health/insurance plan; 1957-1970 34:10 | ||||
| 62 | 7 | Medical plan; 1964 39:17 | ||||
| 62 | 8 | Social security, insurance, income tax; 1954-1970 34:11 | ||||
| 62 | 9 | Social security & insurances; 1962, 1968 39:17 | ||||
| 62 | 10 | Missionary housing; 1951-1969 34:12 | ||||
| 62 | 11 | Outside employment; 1962-1972 34:13 | ||||
| 62 | 12 | Special assistance fund, transportation subsidy (empty); 1956-1964 34:14 | ||||
| 62 | 13 | Temporary absences, vacations; 1945, 1961-1971 34:15 | ||||
| 62 | 14 | Absences, vacations; 1965 39:17 | ||||
| 62 | 15 | Work assignments; 1953-1972 34:16 | ||||
| 62 | 16 | Missionary/national relationships; 1962-1970 34:17 | ||||
| Partnership policy | ||||||
| 62 | 17 | 1956-1969 34:18 | ||||
| 62 | 18 | Projects; 1963-1967 34:18 | ||||
| 62 | 19 | (Field) Pastoral & psychological help; 1963-1968 34:19 | ||||
| 62 | 20 | (Field) Death, retirement, resignation; 1949-1972 34:20 | ||||
| Furloughs, etc. | ||||||
| 62 | 21 | Furloughs; 1951-1971 34:21 | ||||
| 62 | 22 | Study leaves; 1963-1964 34:21 | ||||
| 62 | 23 | Leaves of absence; 1960-1970 34:21 | ||||
| 62 | 24 | Credit cards; 1965-1967 34:22 | ||||
| 62 | 25 | Deputation; 1952-1966 34:22 | ||||
| 62 | 26 | Financial matters; 1960-1977 34:22 | ||||
| 62 | 27 | LAM weekend at Keswick; 1971 34:22 | ||||
| 63 | 1 | ID cards, clergy discounts; 1965-1970 34:23 | ||||
| 63 | 2 | ID cards; 1967 39:17 | ||||
| (Field) Local witness | ||||||
| 63 | 3 | Minutes: Evangelism Committee, Christian Service Committee; 1949-1960 34:24 | ||||
| 63 | 4 | Correspondence, papers, etc.; 1958-1968 34:24 | ||||
| 63 | 5 | Operation Evangelism, K. Hood's reports; 1959-1970 34:24 | ||||
| 63 | 6 | (Field) Miscellaneous memos, correspondence, papers; 1956-1970 34:25 | ||||
| 63 | 7 | Miscellaneous memos; 1964-1968 39:17 | ||||
| 63 | 8 | MK's (missionary kids): General; 1951-1970 34:26 | ||||
| 63 | 9 | MK's; 1947, 1966 39:17 | ||||
| 63 | 10 | MK schooling; 1952-1970 34:27 | ||||
| 63 | 11 | (Field) National workers (non-missionary status); 1956-1970 34:28 | ||||
| 63 | 12 | Associate membership & contracts; 1953-1971 34:29 | ||||
| 63 | 13 | Associate membership; 1956 39:17 | ||||
| 63 | 14 | (Field) Emergency plans; 1961-1965 34:30 | ||||
| 63 | 15 | (Field) Hospitality; 1955-1969 34:31 | ||||
| 63 | 16 | Field hospitality; n.d. 39:17 | ||||
| 63 | 17 | (Field) Visitors; 1942-1970 34:32 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: Field personnel; 1964-1967 43:26 | ||||
| (Field) Properties | ||||||
| 63 | 18 | (suppl.); 1939, 1966 39:18 | ||||
| Construction & maintenance committees | ||||||
| 63 | 19 | Minutes; 1954-1964 35:1 | ||||
| 63 | 20 | Reports; 1952-1963 35:1 | ||||
| 63 | 21 | Correspondence; 1950-1971 35:1 | ||||
| 63 | 22 | Long-range planning committee; 1967-1970 35:2 | ||||
| 63 | 23 | Equipment; 1951-1970 35:3 | ||||
| 63 | 24 | Office space; 1956-1971 35:4 | ||||
| 63 | 25 | Property offers; 1948-1968 35:5 | ||||
| 64 | 1 | Lists, Legal structures, Disposal; 1943-1972 35:6 | ||||
| 64 | 2 | Miscellaneous; 1945-1966 35:7 | ||||
| 64 | 3 | Internal phone system; 1960-1966 35:8 | ||||
| 64 | 4 | Telex & cable credit cards; 1965-1966 35:9 | ||||
| 64 | 5 | Utilities; 1932-1968 35:10 | ||||
| 64 | 6 | Vacation houses; 1946-1972 35:11 | ||||
| 64 | 7 | Vehicles; 1951-1970 35:12 | ||||
| Finances | ||||||
| 64 | 8 | (suppl.); 1961-1966 39:19 | ||||
| 64 | 9 | Policy; 1947-1968 35:13 | ||||
| 64 | 10 | Business structure of LAM; 1954-1969 35:14 | ||||
| 64 | 11 | Business activities; 1955-1969 35:15 | ||||
| 64 | 12 | Bank accounts & signatures; 1947-1971 35:16 | ||||
| 65 | 1 | Budgets (incl. correspondence); 1960-1971 35:17 | ||||
| 65 | 2 | Reports & statements; 1949-1970 35:18 | ||||
| 65 | 3 | Correspondence; 1947-1971 35:19 | ||||
| 65 | 4 | Deficits, crises, austerity; 1949-1971 35:20 | ||||
| Deferred giving | ||||||
| 65 | 5 | 1960-1969 35:21 | ||||
| 65 | 6 | Publicity; 1961-1970 35:21 | ||||
| 65 | 7 | Tax exemptions (for LAM donors); 1957-1968 35:22 | ||||
| 65 | 8 | Special gifts, Gifts in kind; 1954-1969 35:23 | ||||
| 65 | 9 | Source of income studies; 1962-1970 35:24,26 | ||||
| 65 | 10 | Missionary support; 1952-1971 35:25 | ||||
| 65 | 11 | Special funds; 1956-1964 35:27 | ||||
| 65 | 12 | Taxes (Costa Rica); 1935-1970 35:28 | ||||
| 65 | 13 | Other legal matters (Costa Rica); 1952-1961 35:28 | ||||
| Affiliations | ||||||
| 65 | 14 | (suppl.); 1947, 1966-1967 39:20 | ||||
| EFMA | ||||||
| 65 | 15 | 1948-1971 35:29 | ||||
| 65 | 16 | Mission Executives Retreats; 1964-1971 35:30 | ||||
| 65 | 17 | ELO; 1954-1972 35:31 | ||||
| IFMA | ||||||
| 65 | 18 | Annual meetings; 1959-1969 35:32 | ||||
| 65 | 19 | Executive board meetings; 1960-1971 35:32 | ||||
| 65 | 20 | Committee on Latin America; 1950-1969 35:33 | ||||
| IFMA/EFMA cooperation | ||||||
| 65 | 21 | Relations; 1950 35:34 | ||||
| 65 | 22 | ECLA; 1956-1971 35:34 | ||||
| 65 | 23 | EMIS; 1954-1971 35:34 | ||||
| 65 | 24 | EMQ; 1965-1966 35:34 | ||||
| 65 | 25 | Committee on Christian Higher Education Overseas; 1962-1963 35:34 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: Affiliations & relationships (reel 35); 1949-1971 43:27 | ||||
| Relationships | ||||||
| Church councils | ||||||
| 66 | 1 | International Council of Christian Churches; 1949-1954 35:35 | ||||
| 66 | 2 | Committee on Cooperation in Latin America; 1948-1964 35:35 | ||||
| 66 | 3 | National Association of Evangelicals; 1959-1970 35:35 | ||||
| 66 | 4 | World Evangelical Fellowship; 1966-1969 35:35 | ||||
| 66 | 5 | World Council of Churches; 1946, 1962-1968, n.d. 35:35 | ||||
| Nondenominational or interdenominational agencies | ||||||
| 66 | 6 | A-C; 1952-1971 35:36 | ||||
| 66 | 7 | E-I; 1954-1971 35:37 | ||||
| 66 | 8 | L-O; 1957-1971 35:38 | ||||
| 66 | 9 | P-U; 1947-1970 35:39 | ||||
| 66 | 10 | V-Y; 1955-1970 35:40 | ||||
| 66 | 11 | Denominational agencies; 1955-1972 35:41 | ||||
| 66 | 12 | Local ministries; 1949-1969 35:42 | ||||
| Temporary workers | ||||||
| 66 | 13 | Summer workers: Correspondence & policy; 1960-1970 | ||||
| 66 | 14 | Policy & procedures; 1962-1967 | ||||
| XXII. New Jersey Office & Field Administration (1921-1973) | ||||||
| 66 | 15 | Principles & practice (P&P); 1924-1963 37:15 | ||||
| Principles & government (P&G) | ||||||
| 67 | 1 | 1963-1972 37:16 | ||||
| 67 | 2 | Correspondence re revisions; 1963-1973 37:17 | ||||
| Doctrinal statement | ||||||
| 67 | 3 | Statement plus revisions; 1962-1972 37:18 | ||||
| 67 | 4 | Correspondence re statement (intra-mission); 1956-1970 37:18 | ||||
| 67 | 5 | Criticisms re doctrinal basis; 1960-1967 37:18 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: Organizational documents [doctrinal statement] (Reel 37); 1949-1970 43:31 | ||||
| Personnel & administrative regulations (P&AR) | ||||||
| 67 | 6 | 1938, 1963-1971 37:19 | ||||
| 67 | 7 | 1967 39:23 | ||||
| 67 | 8 | Revisions & correspondence; 1960-1972 37:20 | ||||
| Handbooks | ||||||
| 67 | 9 | Missionary handbook: Costa Rica & Colombia; 1963-1966 37:21 | ||||
| 67 | 10 | Fenton's: P&G, P&AR, division Blue books; 1964-1968 37:22 | ||||
| Legal documents | ||||||
| 67 | 11 | Certificate of incorporation; 1921 37:23 | ||||
| 67 | 12 | Certificate of Change of name; 1939 37:23 | ||||
| 67 | 13 | By-laws; 1921-1970 37:23 | ||||
| 67 | 14 | Correspondence re by-laws; 1969-1970 37:23 | ||||
| 67 | 15 | Power of attorney, incorporation: Costa Rica; 1952-1971 37:23 | ||||
| 67 | 16 | Power of attorney: Colombia; 1945 37:23 | ||||
| Organizational structure | ||||||
| 68 | 1 | I; 1945-1959 37:24 | ||||
| 68 | 2 | II; 1960-1970 37:25 | ||||
| 68 | 3 | II; 1963 39:24 | ||||
| - | - R | Mission structure/Administration (Reel 37); 1963-1968 43:32 | ||||
| 68 | 4 | Organizational charts; 1958-1970 37:26 | ||||
| Internal correspondence | ||||||
| 68 | 5 | (mainly Mrs. S.B. Strachan, C.E. Mason, Thompsons, Mabel Gamewell, Margaret Neely, RKS, CT, B. Helgesen); 1938-1946 37:27 | ||||
| 68 | 6 | 1944-1947 39:25 | ||||
| 68 | 7 | (mainly Margaret Neely, B. Helgesen, E. Lionberger, R.K. Strachan, C.E. Mason); 1946 37:27 | ||||
| 68 | 8 | 1946-1949 37:28, 38:1 | ||||
| 68 | 9 | 1949-1950 38:1 | ||||
| 68 | 10 | 1951-1955 38:2 | ||||
| 68 | 11 | 1956-1971 38:3 | ||||
| 68 | 12 | 1961 39:26 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reel 38); 1950-1970 44:1 | ||||
| Inter-Field Council (IFC): Matters and correspondence | ||||||
| 69 | 1 | 1947-1970 38:4 | ||||
| 69 | 2 | 1961-1971 39:27 | ||||
| Inter-Field Executive (IFC-X), Quorum Inter-Field Council (Q-IFC): Reports and memos | ||||||
| 69 | 3 | 1954-1964 38:5 | ||||
| 69 | 4 | 1957-1963 39:28 | ||||
| US offices | ||||||
| 69 | 5 | West Coast office; 1953-1964 38:6 | ||||
| 69 | 6 | Southern office; 1952-1958 38:7 | ||||
| 69 | 7 | Representatives abroad (England, New Zealand); 1950-1967 38:8 | ||||
| 69 | 8 | US office: Property, cars, equipment; 1939-1970 38:9 | ||||
| New Jersey office | ||||||
| 69 | 9 | Home office executive meetings; 1960-1965 38:10 | ||||
| 69 | 10 | Organization and reports; 1939-1969 38:10 | ||||
| 69 | 11 | Personnel and activities; 1935-1968 38:10 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: Home Office matters (Reel 38); 1963-1969 44:2 | ||||
| Proposed "Lay Missionary Fellowship" | ||||||
| 69 | 12 | Correspondence, memos, etc; 1955-1966 38:11 | ||||
| 69 | 13 | Questionnaire; 1963 38:11 | ||||
| 69 | 14 | Proposed projects (not begun); 1946-1970 38:12 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: Proposed projects (Reel 38); 1956-1957 44:3 | ||||
| Restructuring | ||||||
| 69 | 15 | Pre-restructuring meetings & memos; 1970 38:13 | ||||
| 69 | 16 | Background papers; 1970-1971 38:14 | ||||
| 70 | 1 | Miscellaneous correspondence; 1970-1972 38:15 | ||||
| 70 | 2 | Meetings re restructuring; 1971 38:16 | ||||
| 70 | 3 | Transition period; 1971 38:17 | ||||
| 70 | 4 | CLAME constitution; 1971 39:29 | ||||
| 70 | 5 | Development of CLAME Constitution & by-laws; 1971 38:18 | ||||
| 70 | 6 | Disposition of properties (also Federation of Ministries of Costa Rica); 1971-1972 38:19 | ||||
| 70 | 7 | Official Intra-Mission communications; 1968-1972 38:20 | ||||
| 70 | 8 | Publicity; 1970-1971 38:21 | ||||
| XXIII. North American Council and Boards (1933-1972) | ||||||
| US General Council | ||||||
| 70 | 9 | Membership & miscellaneous correspondence; 1963-1964 36:1 | ||||
| 70 | 10 | Meetings and minutes; 1963-1969 36:2 | ||||
| 70 | 11 | Function & purpose; 1961-1971 36:3 | ||||
| 70 | 12 | Memoranda; 1962-1970 36:4 | ||||
| 70 | 13 | "Notes" and enclosures; 1964-1971 36:5 | ||||
| 70 | 14 | 1968 39:21 | ||||
| 71 | 1 | US Council of Reference; 1971 36:6 | ||||
| US Home Council/Board of Trustees | ||||||
| 71 | 2 | Special Committees; 1956-1968 36:7 | ||||
| Letters & memoranda (non-confidential) | ||||||
| 71 | 3 | 1945-1963 36:8 | ||||
| 71 | 4 | 1964-1971 36:8 | ||||
| 71 | 5 | 1957, 1964 39:21 | ||||
| 71 | 6 | Membership; 1933-1975 36:11 | ||||
| Correspondence | ||||||
| 71 | 7 | A-D; 1938-1972 36:12 | ||||
| 71 | 8 | E-G; 1938-1972 36:12 | ||||
| 71 | 9 | H-Mar; 1956-1975 36:13 | ||||
| 71 | 10 | Mason-Moffat; 1944-1971 36:13 | ||||
| 72 | 1 | P-R; 1947-1966 36:14 | ||||
| 72 | 2 | Slocum, Stam; 1938-1972 36:15 | ||||
| 72 | 3 | Stiles-Z; 1939-1973 36:15 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: US Board/Administration correspondence (Reel 36); 1948-1968 43:28 | ||||
| 72 | 4 | Miscellaneous; 1963-1971 36:9 | ||||
| 72 | 5 | General Director's Executive: Memoranda; 1962-1971 36:10 | ||||
| Canada | ||||||
| 73 | 1 | Incorporation; 1955-1970 36:16 | ||||
| 73 | 2 | Administration: General; 1956-1971 36:17 | ||||
| 73 | 3 | Corporation, membership, etc.; 1951-1971 36:18 | ||||
| Council & Board | ||||||
| 73 | 4 | Minutes & correspondence; 1949-1971 36:19 | ||||
| 73 | 5 | Memos, "Corporation Notes"; 1962-1971 36:21 | ||||
| 73 | 6 | Board: Member correspondence; 1946-1971 36:20 | ||||
| 73 | 7 | Relationship between Canada & US Boards; 1961-1971 36:21 | ||||
| LAM Canada | ||||||
| 73 | 8 | Activities; 1964-1971 36:22 | ||||
| 73 | 9 | Representation; 1939-1970 36:23, 37:1 | ||||
| 73 | 10 | Correspondence re Canadian personnel; 1947-1971 37:2 | ||||
| 73 | 11 | Financial reports & correspondence; 1955-1971 37:3 | ||||
| 73 | 12 | Gifts: Procedures; 1954-1969 37:4 | ||||
| 73 | 13 | Promotion; 1955-1970 37:5 | ||||
| 73 | 14 | Property & pension plan; 1954-1967 37:6 | ||||
| 73 | 15 | Annual reports; 1960-1965 37:7 | ||||
| 73 | 16 | 50th Anniversary Planning Committee; 1971 37:8 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential (Reel 36); 1961-1971 43:29 | ||||
| XXIV. Su 73 bject Files (1927-1982) | ||||||
| 73 | 17 | Charismatic gifts & Dialogue, ecumenism, unity; 1957-1967 39:30 | ||||
| 73 | 18 | Charismatic gifts; 1963-1972 38:22 | ||||
| 74 | 1 | Church-state feud, Costa Rica; 1927-1962 38:23 | ||||
| 74 | 2 | Cuba; 1959-1963 38:24 | ||||
| Dialogue, ecumenism, unity | ||||||
| 74 | 3 | Mission papers & documents; 1949-1967 38:25, 39:1 | ||||
| 74 | 4 | Intra-mission & other correspondence; 1950-1967 39:1 | ||||
| 74 | 5 | Missionary casualties; 1955-1957 39:2 | ||||
| 74 | 6 | Mission mergers; 1961-1970 39:3 | ||||
| 74 | 7 | Racism on the mission field; 1955-1965 39:4 | ||||
| Roman Catholic - Evangelical relations | ||||||
| 74 | 8 | Antagonism between; 1947-1963 39:5 | ||||
| 74 | 9 | Attempts to bring together; 1949-1969 39:5 | ||||
| 74 | 10 | Clippings, articles; 1943-1969 | ||||
| Relationships & cooperation | ||||||
| 74 | 11 | IFMA-LAM correspondence re rel.; 1950-1962 39:6 | ||||
| 74 | 12 | IVCF/FMF; 1955-1963 39:6 | ||||
| 74 | 13 | Miscellaneous; 1951-1968 39:6 | ||||
| 74 | 14 | LAM & Roman Catholic relationships; 1961-1969 39:7 | ||||
| 74 | 15 | Historical resumes & sidelights of LAM (covering the period from before 1921-1981); 1957-1982 39:8 | ||||
| 74 | 16 | Miscellaneous; 1949-1971 39:9 | ||||
| 74 | 17 | "Patterns in the LAM" by Harry Strachan; 1966 39:10 | ||||
| 74 | 18 | Miscellaneous papers by R.K. Strachan & C.H. Troutman; 1954, 1970 39:11 | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: Subject file: Charismatic manifestations; Dialogue, Ecumenism, Unity; Roman Catholic/LAM relations; "Separation" & cooperation; "Compromise" so called - Various; Miscellaneous criticisms (Reels 38,39); 1952-1971 44:4 [C: 1963-1970; D: ca. 1957-1967; R: 1963-1964; S: 1952-1970; M: 1959-1971] | ||||
| - | - R | Confidential: History project (collected in 1980); 1980 44:5 | ||||
| XXV. R. Kenneth Strachan and Family Papers (1949-1975) | ||||||
| - | - R | Correspondence, mostly administrative; 1949-1965 45:1 | ||||
| - | - R | Death: Announcements & correspondence; 1965 45:2 | ||||
| - | - R | Publicity in var. periodicals & Correspondence; 1965-1966 45:3 | ||||
| - | - R | Death: Tributes; 1965 45:4 | ||||
| - | - R | Thoughts, notes, messages (& outlines), articles; 1956-1965 45:5, 46:1 | ||||
| - | - R | Elizabeth W. Strachan papers: mostly correspondence; 1949-1972 46:2 | ||||
| Correspondence with Strachan children: | ||||||
| - | - R | Harry Wallace Strachan (b. 1941); 1959-1975 46:3 | ||||
| - | - R | Catherine Grace Strachan (b. 1943); 1964-1966 46:4 | ||||
| - | - R | Robert Kenneth, Jr. (b. 1944); 1966-1966 46:5 | ||||
| - | - R | Clare Elizabeth Strachan (b. 1947); 1956, 1963-1965 46:6 | ||||
| - | - R | John William Strachan (b. 1948); 1964-1967 46:7 | ||||
| - | - R | Susan Marie Strachan (b. 1951); 1965-1966 46:8 | ||||
| XXVI. Individual missionaries: Records & correspondence (1929-1985) | ||||||
| 58 | 10 | A-H (suppl.); 1937-1963. 40:22
| ||||
| 58 | 11 | J-S (suppl.); 1936-1970 40:22
| ||||
| Confidential: Ex-LAM personnel (continued from Reel 5, those fully affiliated plus associates, alphabetical order, includes all who are no longer with LAM as of 1984, except retirees still living): | ||||||
| - | - R | Acheson, Margaret; 1949-1981 47:1 | ||||
| - | - R | Anderson, Elmer; 1961-1971 47:2 | ||||
| - | - R | Anderson, Hicks E. & Bettye; 1967-1971 47:3 | ||||
| - | - R | Archilla, Rogelio & Juanita; 1933-1960 47:4 | ||||
| - | - R | Baena, Manuel & Alba; 1961-1963 47:5 | ||||
| - | - R | Ballew, Betty; 1951-1957 47:6 | ||||
| - | - R | Barber, Eleanor "Lennie"; 1975-1984 47:7 | ||||
| - | - R | Befus, David & Constance; 1973-1979 47:8 | ||||
| - | - R | Bennett, Robert; 1967-1972 47:9 | ||||
| - | - R | Blanchard, Robert & Nancy; 1951-1957 47:10 | ||||
| - | - R | Bonilla, Plutarco & Marta; 1960-1975 47:11 | ||||
| - | - R | Braun, Wilhelmina "Minnie"; 1946-1978 47:12 | ||||
| - | - R | Bryant, Mary Helen; 1953-1964 47:14 | ||||
| - | - R | Buckingham, Elizabeth; 1967-1972 47:15 | ||||
| - | - R | Burton, Lester G.; 1950-1961 47:16 | ||||
| - | - R | Burton, Helen Bryan; 1951-1961 47:17 | ||||
| - | - R | Cherry, Thomas J. & Nina Jean; 1946-1971 47:18 | ||||
| - | - R | Clement, Muriel; 1951-1971 47:19 | ||||
| - | - R | Comstock, James W. & Lois P.; 1945-1951 47:20 | ||||
| - | - R | Cook, David A. & Raquel N.; 1967-1971 47:21 | ||||
| - | - R | Costas, Orlando E. & Rosa L.; 1960-1980 47:22 | ||||
| - | - R | Coughlin, Ruth Petty; 1945-1960 47:23 | ||||
| - | - R | Coughlin, Joseph W.; 1947-1960 47:24 | ||||
| - | - R | Crespo, Dionisio & Eunice Kebler; 1944-1978 47:25 | ||||
| - | - R | Croft, Orella J.; 1940-1959 47:26 | ||||
| - | - R | Delgado, Paulita M.; 1960-1969 47:27 | ||||
| - | - R | Denyer, C. Percival; 1936-1968 47:28 | ||||
| - | - R | Downs, Jane E.; 1966-1984 47:29 | ||||
| - | - R | Dunn, J. WIlliam "Bill" & Zenobia H.; 1959-1978 47:30 | ||||
| - | - R | Ecklebarger, David E. & Catherine G.; 1966-1969 47:31 | ||||
| - | - R | Elfstrom, Marilyn; 1955-1959 47:32 | ||||
| - | - R | Emerson, J. Alfred & Helen D.; 1961-1965 47:33 | ||||
| - | - R | Foulkes, Richard T. & Irene W.; 1951-1985 47:34 | ||||
| - | - R | Fowler, Ernest L. & Eve P.; 1951-1966 47:35 | ||||
| - | - R | Fowler, H. Eve P. (post;-1966); 1966-1978 47:36 | ||||
| - | - R | Frost, Jerome P.; 1965-1968 47:37 | ||||
| - | - R | Fye, Jane; 1958-1962 47:38 | ||||
| - | - R | Gale, Bruce W. & Sonja E.; 1965-1977 47:39 | ||||
| - | - R | Gall, Mary Kathryn; 1955-1973 47:40 | ||||
| - | - R | Garcia, Israel; 1948-1964 47:41 | ||||
| - | - R | (Garcia), Linda L. Ferris; 1975-1980 47:42 | ||||
| - | - R | (Garrido), Lura A. Reed; 1946-1951 47:43 | ||||
| - | - R | Garrido, Victor M. & Lura Reed; 1951-1964 47:44 | ||||
| - | - R | Goding, Margaret S.; 1974-1976 47:45 | ||||
| - | - R | Gonzalez, Candido & Casimira; 1964-1979 47:46 | ||||
| - | - R | Griffin, Warren D. & Betty Lou; 1963-1966 47:47 | ||||
| - | - R | Grimm, Albert C. & Winifred W.; 1945-1974 47:48 | ||||
| - | - R | Guerrero, Marta; 1958-1964 47:49 | ||||
| - | - R | Guzman, Diana G.; 1977-1984 47:50 | ||||
| - | - R | Hamilton, Thomas J. & Helen M.; 1970-1975 47:51 | ||||
| - | - R | Hampshire, Ardith Marie; 1960 47:52 | ||||
| - | - R | Harril, Sherril Blair; 1964-1970 47:53 | ||||
| - | - R | Herzog, William A. Jr. & Lois E.; 1951-1967 47:54 | ||||
| - | - R | Hoffecker, Daivd C. & Melinda (Mindy) B.; 1965-1978 47:55 | ||||
| - | - R | Holder, Arthur H & Miriam F.; 1960-1967 47:57 | ||||
| - | - R | Howard, David M. & Phyllis G.; 1951-1974 47:58 | ||||
| - | - R | Hungerpiller, Irene M.; 1939-1959 47:59 | ||||
| - | - R | Jamison, Shirley T.; 1958-1983 48:1 | ||||
| - | - R | Jennings, Thelma L.; 1963-1976 48:2 | ||||
| - | - R | Johnston, Mildred E.; 1936-1953 48:3 | ||||
| - | - R | Jorgensen, Jenny M.; 1929-1957 48:4 | ||||
| - | - R | Kassay, Harriet J.; 1965-1968 48:5 | ||||
| - | - R | Kenyon, John & Jane; 1956-1976 48:6 | ||||
| - | - R | Klein, Mary Anne; 1951-1978 48:7 | ||||
| - | - R | Klinger, Joan; 1958-1971 48:8 | ||||
| - | - R | Koch, Charles & Dolores; 1960-1978 48:9 | ||||
| - | - R | Krusen, Christopher & Elizabeth; 1982-1984 48:10 | ||||
| - | - R | Leggett, Paul & Anne; 1969-1978 48:11 | ||||
| - | - R | Lenko, John & Pauline; 1944-1958 48:12 | ||||
| - | - R | Lester, J. Allan; 1968-1976 48:13 | ||||
| - | - R | Lester, William & Betty; 1938-1967 48:14 | ||||
| - | - R | Lionberger, M. Edna; 1941-1952 48:15 | ||||
| - | - R | Lonas, W. Frederick and Margie; 1957-1975 48:16 | ||||
| - | - R | Longworth, E. Jean; 1947-1956 48:17 | ||||
| - | - R | Lores, Ruben & Donna; 1960-1978 48:18 | ||||
| - | - R | Loyola, Rey & Lola; 1945-1977 48:19 | ||||
| - | - R | Marcum, Don & Cora; 1955-1961 48:20 | ||||
| - | - R | Marx, Werner & Martha; 1962-1966 48:21 | ||||
| - | - R | McConnell, R. Paul & Juliet; 1945-1951 48:22 | ||||
| - | - R | McAvoy, Dolores; 1956-1964 48:23 | ||||
| - | - R | McElroy, Richard & Carol; 1967-1977 48:24 | ||||
| - | - R | Melbourne, Benton & Hilda; 1957-1969 48:25 | ||||
| - | - R | Miller, Cora; 1950-1977 48:26 | ||||
| - | - R | Monroe, Daisy; 1939-1962 48:27 | ||||
| - | - R | Mottesi, Osvaldo & Beatiz; 1967-1976 48:28 | ||||
| - | - R | Munger, Florence; 1955-1959 48:29 | ||||
| - | - R | Murazzi, Reynaldo & Marilyn; 1966-1975 48:30 | ||||
| - | - R | Neely, Margaret; 1953-1982 48:31 | ||||
| - | - R | Newman, Robert & Barbara; 1967-1982 48:32 | ||||
| - | - R | Pent, Joseph & Clara; 1959-1979 48:33 | ||||
| - | - R | Perkins, Barbara; 1956-1959 48:34 | ||||
| - | - R | Phillips, Pearl; 1939-1964 48:35 | ||||
| - | - R | Reed, Robert & Frances; 1939-1984 48:36 | ||||
| - | - R | Rickert, Thomas & Helen; 1960-1970 48:37 | ||||
| - | - R | Ricketts, Victoria; 1965-1969 48:38 | ||||
| - | - R | Robb, A. Donaldson & Eleanor; 1976-1980 48:39 | ||||
| - | - R | Rowe, Esther; 1968-1979 48:40 | ||||
| - | - R | Sanchez, Margaret; 1945-1976 48:41 | ||||
| - | - R | Schiller, Carola; 1948-1969 48:42 | ||||
| - | - R | Schoonmaker, Mary Lou; 1960-1969 48:43 | ||||
| - | - R | Schwalm, Pete & Priscilla; 1966-1977 48:44 | ||||
| - | - R | Severe, Evelyn; 1953-1955 48:45 | ||||
| - | - R | Shepherd, Jack & Jean; 1965-1968 48:46 | ||||
| - | - R | Sieder, Herman & Mary; 1955-1963 48:47 | ||||
| - | - R | Siegfried, June; 1943-1978 48:48 | ||||
| - | - R | Skanse, Oliver; 1951?-1953 48:49 | ||||
| - | - R | Smith, Beryl; 1947-1958 48:50 | ||||
| - | - R | Smith, Robert & Dorothea; 1962-1968 48:51 | ||||
| - | - R | Soerheide, Lester & Minerva; 1951-1971 48:52 | ||||
| - | - R | Spencer, Robert; 1939-1962 48:53 | ||||
| - | - R | Stumpf, Daniel & A. Virginia; 1949-1951 48:54 | ||||
| - | - R | Suazo, Miguel & Marta; 1964-1970 48:55 | ||||
| - | - R | Taggart, Thomas & Ruth; 1946-1951 48:56 | ||||
| - | - R | Taylor, George & Miriam; 1957-1984 48:57 | ||||
| - | - R | Tenny, Mary Jane; 1955-1978 48:58 | ||||
| - | - R | Thacker, Lou; 1956-1963 48:59 | ||||
| - | - R | Thayer, Lila; 1935-1955 48:60 | ||||
| - | - R | Thompson, Darrell & Wendy; 1975-1984 48:61 | ||||
| - | - R | Thor, Christine; 1932-1983 48:62 | ||||
| - | - R | Trivette, Ethel; 1951-1958 48:63 | ||||
| - | - R | Tryon, Elsie; 1934-1979 48:64 | ||||
| - | - R | Vander Pol, Robert & Phalice; 1968-1981 49:1 | ||||
| - | - R | Van Inwagen, Richard & Doreen; 1965-1971 49:2 | ||||
| - | - R | Vasquez, James & Joanne; 1959-1972 49:3 | ||||
| - | - R | Walker, Jean; 1962-1979 49:4 | ||||
| - | - R | Washburn, Ira & Tracy; 1953?-1960 49:5 | ||||
| - | - R | Watters, Roberta; 1951-1958 49:6 | ||||
| - | - R | Wetzell, Marilyn; 1956-1964 49:7 | ||||
| - | - R | Wolcott, Richard & Marjory; 1965-1979 49:8 | ||||
| - | - R | Wortman, William & Mary; 1957-1980 49:9 | ||||
| - | - R | Summer workers: Correspondence & policy; 1960-1970 | ||||
| - | - R | Policy & procedures on short-term and temporary workers; 1962-1967 49:10 | ||||