| Question 1: After spending the war in the relative safety of ________, Buber-Neumann fled at the end of the war, reaching safety with Anglo-American forces just ahead of the advancing Soviet troops. | |||
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| Question 2: Münzenberg was one of the few KPD leaders of ________ origin, a fact that was a source of immense pride for Münzenberg. | |||
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| Question 3: Willi Münzenberg (1889 – 1940) was a ________ political activist. | |||
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| Question 4: Willi Münzenberg was born 14 August 1889 in ________, Thuringia the son of a tavern keeper, Münzenberg grew up in poverty. | |||
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| Question 5: His new journal, Die Zukunft, was the intellectual forerunner of Encounter and other ________ publications. | |||
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| Question 6: In June 1940 Münzenberg fled from ________, where he had been making anti-Nazi broadcasts, in order to escape from the German advance. | |||
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| Question 7: As a young man, he became involved with trade unions and in the ________ (SPD). | |||
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| Question 8: He was a leading propagandist for the ________ (KPD) during the Weimar Era. | |||
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| Question 9: During World War One, Münzenberg often visited Vladimir Lenin at his home in Zurich, ________ . | |||
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| Question 10: Münzenberg was the first head of the ________ in 1919-20 and established the famine-relief and propaganda organization Workers International Relief in 1921. | |||
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