Carolyn Wilson Digital Collections (Lipscomb Univ.)
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Marshall Keeble preaching at a youth rally.
A picture of Marshall Keeble (NCI President 1942-1958) preaching at a youth rally at the College Church of Christ (now University Church of Christ) in Abilene, Texas in 1966.https://digitalcollections.lipscomb.edu/nci_misc/1007/thumbnail.jp
Cultivating Gratitude in Christian Sport Professionals
Using the framework of the eight dimensions of wellness and the five habits of a flourishing life, this presentation will focus on how to cultivate the virtue of gratitude and thanksgiving in order to combat the undesirable vice of entitlement. This presentation will outline what gratitude is, how we express it, and how to embody it as a part of our character. Cultivating a grateful disposition can be the result of practicing spiritual disciplines and the session will brainstorm ideas of how this might look in our current profession and in our personal lives
Mrs. Susie Endsley, 1962.
Headshot of Mrs. Susie Endsley, cafeteria assistant at the Nashville Christian Institute in 1962.https://digitalcollections.lipscomb.edu/nci_head/1004/thumbnail.jp
Reginald Harding, 1962.
Headshot of Reginald Harding, a senior at the Nashville Christian Institute in 1962.https://digitalcollections.lipscomb.edu/nci_head/1029/thumbnail.jp
William Walker, 1962.
Headshot of William Walker, a senior at the Nashville Christian Institute in 1962.https://digitalcollections.lipscomb.edu/nci_head/1021/thumbnail.jp
Sewell Hall circa 1940s-1950s
Lipscomb University\u27s Sewell Hall circa 1940s or 1950s.https://digitalcollections.lipscomb.edu/historical_photos2/1020/thumbnail.jp
Pittman, S. P.
From setting foot on campus as a student in 1892 until his death in 1965, S. P. Pitman was an almost constant fixture on the Lipscomb campus. He spent his life teaching oratory and Bible to such Lipscomb students as B. C. Goodpasture, Charles R. and G. C. Brewer, and H. Leo Boles. Respected among colleagues as a thorough scholar, he always had time to talk with a student and often helped students in financial need from his own pocket. Free from envy, malice, and possessing a forgiving spirit, S. P. Pitman was a shining light to Lipscomb students, faculty, staff and alumni.https://digitalcollections.lipscomb.edu/legends/1012/thumbnail.jp
Students in a first-floor dormitory room.
A photo of students in a first-floor dormitory room at the Nashville Christian Institute.https://digitalcollections.lipscomb.edu/nci_misc/1022/thumbnail.jp