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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2017
1. Ward Morehouse, “American University Student Interest in International Studies, “ an informal survey by the Center for International Programs and Comparative Studies, State Education Department, University of the State of New York, Albany, January 1970.
2. Black, Cyril E. and Thompson, John M., eds., American Teaching About Russia (Bloomington, 1959)Google Scholar; also, Fisher, Harold H., ed., American Research on Russia (Bloomington, 1959).Google Scholar
3. Robert E. Ward, “Area Studies in the 1970's,” an informal memorandum prepared for the Social Science Research Council, Nov. 28, 1969.
4. See the conclusion in Black and Thompson, American Teaching About Russia, that the only successful examples of interdisciplinary study involved advanced graduate students, young teachers, and senior scholars. “This suggests that inter-disciplinary study is possible only after a multi-disciplinary knowledge of the area has been acquired, some command of and practice in a disciplinary skill has been developed, and some reflection and maturing of judgment has occurred” (p. 83).