343.7 linear meters (2654 archival and 38 card boxes)
Materials in this subfonds include press clippings, news agency releases, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty research papers and background analyses, information items, index cards, samizdat and émigré publications, posters, leaflets, photo negatives and prints, and audio tapes.
The records of the Hungarian Unit give a broad picture of the postwar Hungarian political life, economics, culture and arts, religions, media, social and military issues. The files on the 1956 Revolution are of outstanding interest: in the Hungarian and English language Subject Files there are useful cross-references documenting this crucial event of the contemporary Hungarian history.
Originating from unofficial and non-public but usually reliable sources (interviews with refugees, escapees, and dissidents), the Information Items also have a special value among the records.
The three types of biographical series, together with the biographic sections of the Subject Card Files, contain invaluable information on thousands of individuals playing major or less important roles in Hungary's political, economic, and cultural life.
The collected correspondence of "DJ" Laszlo Cseke/Geza Ekecs of the Hungarian Broadcasting Department's highly popular "Teenager Party" - which broadcast music on request - is a very special imprint of Hungarian youth culture of the 70s.
343.7 linear meters (2654 archival and 38 card boxes)
Materials in this subfonds include press clippings, news agency releases, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty research papers and background analyses, information items, index cards, samizdat and émigré publications, posters, leaflets, photo negatives and prints, and audio tapes.
The records of the Hungarian Unit give a broad picture of the postwar Hungarian political life, economics, culture and arts, religions, media, social and military issues. The files on the 1956 Revolution are of outstanding interest: in the Hungarian and English language Subject Files there are useful cross-references documenting this crucial event of the contemporary Hungarian history.
Originating from unofficial and non-public but usually reliable sources (interviews with refugees, escapees, and dissidents), the Information Items also have a special value among the records.
The three types of biographical series, together with the biographic sections of the Subject Card Files, contain invaluable information on thousands of individuals playing major or less important roles in Hungary's political, economic, and cultural life.
The collected correspondence of "DJ" Laszlo Cseke/Geza Ekecs of the Hungarian Broadcasting Department's highly popular "Teenager Party" - which broadcast music on request - is a very special imprint of Hungarian youth culture of the 70s.