The National Lutheran Council (NLC) was established on September 6, 1918 as a common agency of participating Lutheran church bodies to administer domestic programs, publicize Lutheran activities and beliefs, and provide overseas emergency relief to areas devastated by World War I. In 1956, the NLC created an administrative assistant position devoted to the management and direction of its exchange programs. Ruth C. Wick officially assumed the position in 1957. Her responsibilities involved assisting the NLC's Department of Lutheran World Service in administering the American part of the LWF's Department of World Service Church Workers.
Exchange; the Department of Theological Cooperation in administering the American part of the LWF's Department of Theology student exchange; and the Department of World Missions Cooperation in administering its scholarship program in Tanganyika Territory, East Africa, which became Tanzania in 1964.
From the description of Correspondence Files, 1956-1966. (Evangelical Lutheran Church in America Library). WorldCat record id: 37605487