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Escape from East Berlin is a 1962 American-West German thriller film that was directed by Robert Siodmak. It stars Don Murray, Christine Kaufmann and Werner Klemperer. It was shot at the Tempelhof Studios in Berlin. The film's sets were designed by the art director Dieter Bartels and Ted Haworth.
Radical Candor: Be a Kick-Ass Boss Without Losing Your Humanity is a business leadership book written by former Apple and Google executive Kim Malone Scott. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In the book, Scott defines the term radical candor as feedback that incorporates both praise and criticism. [ 3 ]
escape to West Germany by breaking through the Berlin Wall with armoured personnel carrier Wolfgang Engels (born 1943) is a former civilian employee of the East German National People's Army , employed as a car mechanic and driver, who in 1963 used a stolen BTR-152 armoured personnel carrier to escape to West Germany by breaking through the ...
The Unternehmen Reisebüro, also known as the Girrmann Group, was one of the first and most influential groups helping people escape from East Berlin during the Cold War. It was started by students from the Free University of Berlin, and located in the "House of the Future". The founders of the group were three law students, including Detlef ...
In the Alex Gibney documentary “Boom! Boom: The World vs. Boris Becker,” the then-active tennis player recalls a 1980s conversation with a tabloid newspaper editor who told him that only three ...
Winfried Freudenberg (29 August 1956 – 8 March 1989) was the last person to die in an attempt to escape from East Germany to West Berlin across the Berlin Wall as he fell from an improvised gas balloon at high altitude over West Berlin. [1] [2] [3]
Her real-life character, Paloma Noyola Bueno, was the central figure in a Wired article that "Radical" is partially derived from. Movie review: Flamin' Hot Cheetos get a loaded origin story, one ...
Mila 18 is a historical novel by Leon Uris set in German-occupied Warsaw, Poland, before and during World War II. Mila 18 debuted at #7 on The New York Times Best Seller list and peaked at #2 in August 1961. [1]