On Friday TU Delft commemorates the victims of the Second World War at the then Technical University of Applied Sciences. Betty Biegel (1886-1943) is the only woman on the remembrance plaque. The story of an academic who fought for her independence until the holocaust took it away from her.
She felt that she owed it to her younger self to write about her student experiences. So Rosanna wrote about them in a novel. “My memories turned out to be an inexhaustible source of inspiration.”
According to the jury, he is an advocate who inspires students and alumni to make their time as a student count. What else is Bas Buchner, former director of MARIN, who’s being presented the Alumnus of the Year award on Tuesday?
Delta again has a chance of being awarded the prestigious Tegel – which literally means tile – award. Delta’s Editor in Chief, Saskia Bonger, is one of the nominees for the most important award in journalism in the Netherlands for her investigative article about the Innovation & Impact Centre at TU Delft.
Thanks to five avid architecture students, there is now a real sauna on the TU Delft campus. Delta attended the busy, boiling hot and icy cold opening.
One quarter of master’s degree programmes in the Netherlands do not admit applicants from universities of applied sciences, research by the Inspectorate of Education shows. This while universities are required to evaluate admission according to individual ability. At TU Delft, this pertains to three of the 34 master’s degrees.
Delta’s editor-in-chief Saskia Bonger was close to becoming journalist of the year 2024. She was one of the last three remaining candidates for the award, which is presented each February by Dutch journalism trade magazine Villamedia. Winner was Saskia Belleman, court reporter for De Telegraaf. It was not previously announced who the nominees were. Villamedia…