Office of Interdisciplinary Programs and Centers
College of Arts and
Sciences
Welcome to the Office of Interdisciplinary Programs and Centers website. This site has been developed as a resource for Interdisciplinary Programs and Centers in the College of Arts and Sciences, and is intended to assist faculty and departmental staff in planning and implementing of events and special programs. Services of the Interdisciplinary Programs Office are provided on a fee basis. The Office provides assistance in the preparation of events and program budgets for grant applications (no charge for grant proposal budget preparation). For more information, call 216/368-8961.
| Free Public Symposium
Terrorism in Europe:
The 'German Autumn' of 1977
after Thirty Years
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Mailing Address/Phone/Fax:
Case Western Reserve University Office of Interdisciplinary Programs and Centers
Clark Hall, Room 101
10900 Euclid Avenue
Cleveland, OH 44106-7120
Phone: 216/368-8961
Fax: 216/368-5241
Deliveries & Visitors:
Clark Hall, Room 101, 11130 Bellflower Road (across from the Peter B. Lewis Building)
Staff
Please note that a listing in the Related Sites menu on this page is provided for general assistance only and does not constitute a recommendation or endorsement by the Interdisciplinary Programs Office.
Fifty Years' Perspective on the Hungarian Revolution of 1956

President Gregory Eastwood (Case Western Reserve University), Mrs. Edith Lauer (Hungarian-American Coalition), Dr. Csaba Bekes (Cold War Research Institute), Dr. John Grabowski (Case Western Reserve Univerity and the Western Reserve Historical Society), The Honorable George Herbert Walker, III (former U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Hungary), Dr. Kenneth Ledford (Case Western Reserve University), and Mr. Max Teleci (American Hungarian Federation) participated in a three-day conference commemorating the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. The conference was held at Case Western Reserve University in September 2006 and was sponsored by the College of Arts and Sciences, and the Ohio Humanities Council, with the generous support of Mrs. Edith K. Lauer.
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