Walla Walla College, a Seventh-day Adventist institution, prepared for United States involvement ... more Walla Walla College, a Seventh-day Adventist institution, prepared for United States involvement in World War II by providing military-style basic training for its draftable students. Most declared noncombatancy status, sought a 1-A-O draft classification, and took Medical Cadet Corps training for physical education credit. Like other schools, Walla Walla College experienced drastic demographic shifts during the war. Afterward, returning veterans made a significant long-term impact on institutional demographics because of their large numbers, their status as older students, and their interest in reshaping college policies on an adult level. WWC students continued taking MCC training during the Korean War, but when the U.S. military armed medics during the Vietnam War, students sought noncombatant roles such as Project Whitecoat, a biological warfare research program.
Contributors Acknowledgments Foreword - Grant Wacker 1. A Portrait - Jonathan Butler 2. Visions -... more Contributors Acknowledgments Foreword - Grant Wacker 1. A Portrait - Jonathan Butler 2. Visions - Ann Taves 3. Testimonies - Graeme Sharrock 4. Prophet - Ronald Graybill 5. Author - Arthur Patrick 6. Speaker - Terrie Aamodt 7. Builder - Floyd Greenleaf and Jerry Moon 8. Theology - Fritz Guy 9. Practical Theology - Bert Haloviak 10. Second Coming - Jonathan Butler 11. Science and Medicine - Ronald L. Numbers and Rennie B. Schoepflin 12. Society - Douglas Morgan 13. Culture - Benjamin McArthur 14. Race - Eric Anderson 15. Gender - Laura Vance 16. Death and Burial - T. Joe Willey 17. Legacy - Paul McGraw and Gilbert Valentine 18. Biographies - Gary Land Index
Walla Walla College, a Seventh-day Adventist institution, prepared for United States involvement ... more Walla Walla College, a Seventh-day Adventist institution, prepared for United States involvement in World War II by providing military-style basic training for its draftable students. Most declared noncombatancy status, sought a 1-A-O draft classification, and took Medical Cadet Corps training for physical education credit. Like other schools, Walla Walla College experienced drastic demographic shifts during the war. Afterward, returning veterans made a significant long-term impact on institutional demographics because of their large numbers, their status as older students, and their interest in reshaping college policies on an adult level. WWC students continued taking MCC training during the Korean War, but when the U.S. military armed medics during the Vietnam War, students sought noncombatant roles such as Project Whitecoat, a biological warfare research program.
Contributors Acknowledgments Foreword - Grant Wacker 1. A Portrait - Jonathan Butler 2. Visions -... more Contributors Acknowledgments Foreword - Grant Wacker 1. A Portrait - Jonathan Butler 2. Visions - Ann Taves 3. Testimonies - Graeme Sharrock 4. Prophet - Ronald Graybill 5. Author - Arthur Patrick 6. Speaker - Terrie Aamodt 7. Builder - Floyd Greenleaf and Jerry Moon 8. Theology - Fritz Guy 9. Practical Theology - Bert Haloviak 10. Second Coming - Jonathan Butler 11. Science and Medicine - Ronald L. Numbers and Rennie B. Schoepflin 12. Society - Douglas Morgan 13. Culture - Benjamin McArthur 14. Race - Eric Anderson 15. Gender - Laura Vance 16. Death and Burial - T. Joe Willey 17. Legacy - Paul McGraw and Gilbert Valentine 18. Biographies - Gary Land Index
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