Beginnings • The Post-War Years • The New Millennium • Student Work Off-Campus
Carleton experienced an “opening up to the world” in the years following World War II. Interest in the wider world, fueled now by intellectual curiosity rather than missionary zeal, expanded and took on new forms, including interdisciplinary area studies programs, credit-bearing off-campus study programs, and increased political activism among students.
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Carletonian feature on the Carleton-in-Japan program
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Events in Asian Studies 1967-1968
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Latin American Studies Newsletter
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Architectural sketch of the Japanese Garden
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Professor Bardwell Smith gives a speech at the dedication ceremony of the Japanese Garden
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Melinda Hunter ‘61, while serving as a Peace Corps volunteer in the Philippines
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Peace Corps volunteer Grace Whitmore ‘14 in Vanuatu
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Carleton in Pau participants on excursion in the Pyrenees
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Carleton in Pau brochure
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French Studies in Paris participants at the Luxembourg Garden
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German in Nuremburg group
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Carleton German Seminar in Nuremberg brochure
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Faculty director David Tompkins with German and European Studies in Berlin participants
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Carleton student converses with a local on the Spanish in Morelia program.
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Spanish in Morelia brochure
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Spanish Studies in Madrid group on a “paseo de arquitectura.”
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Participants of Professor Gary Wagenbach’s marine biology program aboard the Micmac in Bermuda.
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English in London students tour Stonehenge.
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Carletonian special issue covering the student strike against the Vietnam War
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Algol yearbook feature on student rallies for college divestment from apartheid South Africa