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1-13 of 13
- In another dimension, the villainous scientist Duke of Zill, with the help of his mechanical, geometric army, takes over the Land of Oriana, prompting Felix the Cat to save its princess and restore order once again.
- The principle of the program is to guess words in a grid, similar to a crossword puzzle.
- Newtown, which is a normal small town is famous for one special thing: the zoo has a talking elephant: Benjamin Blümchen. Everyone knows and loves him because he always helps out where help is needed or comes to the rescue.
- The men from the K3.
- Eurocops is a European television crime TV-series.
- Stories and adventures with Rabe Rudi, the suitcase and Mrs. Siebenstein.
- Logo - the info magazine for children and teenagers.
- A round of four literature critics review books. Since 1990 each episode introduces a guest critic.
- The evening news from RTL.
- November 7, 1918: Revolutionary night in Munich. After a large demonstration, Kurt Eisner leads the crowd to the barracks. The war-weary soldiers immediately defect. The king and his entourage flee. Without bloodshed, the Free State of Bavaria is born. Subsequently, revolutionary and reactionary forces fight for power with all means. Eisner is assassinated. Two soviet republics are short-lived. The young democracy is vulnerable and fails, is bloodily crushed. It goes through the world a whisper was made in 1988 and interweaves contemporary film documents and interviews. The audience includes contemporary witnesses from the anarchist, communist and socialist spectrum who were already very old at the time, such as Benno Scharmanski, Centa Herker, Hugo Jakusch, Sophie Radischnigg, Minna Dittenheber, Emil Meier and Peter Lichtinger. They are children and young people from the working-class milieu who experienced the revolution at close quarters, sympathized with it or fought with it. The achievements of the revolution are just as much a theme as its failures. This includes the upheavals within the left as well as the heroines of the women's movement; first and foremost the lesbian couple Anita Augspurg and Lida Gustava Heymann, the revolutionaries Hilde Kramer, Zenzl Mühsam, Sarah Sonja Lerch and Hedwig Kämpfer, the only female judge in the revolutionary tribunal.