Design professor appointedBruno Ninber van Eyben, the man who designed the national or ‘Dutch’ side of Holland’s Euro coins, has been appointed a part-time professor of design at the TU’s Faculty of Industrial Design.
Ninber van Eyben, who has run his own design company since 1997, is internationally renowned designer. His work can be found in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, and the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam.
New TU Engineers
This week TU Rector Fokkema awarded engineering degrees to 126 foreign students who have recently completed the two-year MSc degree course. The graduates hail from some 35 countries. Currently, there are more than 400 foreign students enrolled in the TU Delft’s MSc Program, which is open to foreign and Dutch students, and in which English is the language of instruction.
Drink less!
Utrecht University is acting to reduce alcohol abuse among its students. The 5,000 incoming new students are the focus of a campaign called ‘I’m drunk? And who are you?’ (Ik ben zat. En wie ben jij?). During the new student introduction week, students were asked to take part in an Alcohol Knowledge Quiz, which covered the risks and consequences of alcohol abuse. Moreover, bar staff at Utrecht’s student society bars must follow a ‘Responsible Alcohol Use’ course.
Design professor appointed
Bruno Ninber van Eyben, the man who designed the national or ‘Dutch’ side of Holland’s Euro coins, has been appointed a part-time professor of design at the TU’s Faculty of Industrial Design. Ninber van Eyben, who has run his own design company since 1997, is internationally renowned designer. His work can be found in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, and the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam.
New TU Engineers
This week TU Rector Fokkema awarded engineering degrees to 126 foreign students who have recently completed the two-year MSc degree course. The graduates hail from some 35 countries. Currently, there are more than 400 foreign students enrolled in the TU Delft’s MSc Program, which is open to foreign and Dutch students, and in which English is the language of instruction.
Drink less!
Utrecht University is acting to reduce alcohol abuse among its students. The 5,000 incoming new students are the focus of a campaign called ‘I’m drunk? And who are you?’ (Ik ben zat. En wie ben jij?). During the new student introduction week, students were asked to take part in an Alcohol Knowledge Quiz, which covered the risks and consequences of alcohol abuse. Moreover, bar staff at Utrecht’s student society bars must follow a ‘Responsible Alcohol Use’ course.

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