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Present in Dutch

Do you already speak quite a bit of Dutch, but are you struggling to put your knowledge to good use in presentations? Or would you like to become a more confident presenter? Then attend the upcoming first Dutch Oostmasters workshop on 21 April. Dutch native speakers, from students to faculty members, are present to assist you with grammar, spelling and pronunciation. You will also receive feedback on your presentation skills in general. Or work on your leadership skills, for example by chairing some meetings. The free-of-charge ‘learning by doing’ workshop takes place in room four in the Bastille building and starts at 5pm. In case you cannot make it that day, many more sessions will follow. See also utwente.nl/mb/oostmasters/Dutch

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Fit for Free

Do you want to improve your endurance or streamline your figure for summer? Or do you just like to dance and keep fit? Then try Spring Dance for free on 21 and 28 April, in the UT Sports Center. Lessons start at 6:30pm in room three. Spring dance is the latest trend in fitness and perceived to be the next successor of Zumba. It seeks to combine fitness and dance on popular Top 20 music. Following the two, free try-outs in April, more courses are offered in May and June. For further information see sport.utwente.nl/sports

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Open Market

Not sure yet what to do during the holidays? The biggest and oldest annual market in Eastern Netherlands takes place in Deventer on Good Friday, 22 April. Over 350 stalls selling a wide range of items spread out over the city’s historic center, start at the Zandpoort and extend to the Central Station. The market opens at 9am and lasts until 5pm. Ten thousand visitors are expected. Escape the busyness of the market and stroll along the grassy shores of the nearby river The IJssel.

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Christian Fellowship welcomes all

They gather from around the world every Sunday in the ITC Hotel Schermerhorn Lounge to sing and pray together. The ITC Christian Fellowship is there to remind everyone that ‘You are (still) home.’

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Beyond pomp & circumstance

Masses of Dutch ‘commoners’ will flock to the streets on 30 April to celebrate Queen Beatrix’s birthday. But who are the Dutch royals, really? Meet some of the Royal Family’s most remarkable members. Marloes van Amerom The hidden artist If Queen Beatrix hadn’t already been destined to be queen then she would probably have become an artist. Claying is one of her favorite pastimes and some of her paintings have been sold at international auctions. Besides her creativity, Bea’s good memory is notorious. Most (prime) ministers fear her sharp tongue when they have forgotten some essential facts and Trixhasn’t. Her perfectionist tendencies have made her pretty popular. ‘At least our queen works,’ the Dutch can be frequently overheard mumbling. Her one known weakness relates to social media. Still denouncing Facebook and Twitter for causing ‘societal isolation’ in 2009, Bea is now a dedicated ‘twitteress.’ Prince Pint Crown Prince Willem-Alexander was for long known as ‘Prince Pint,’ following several publications of him with pint-in-hand. Many also feared that Alex was not endowed with Trix’s sharp intelligence, unlike his brothers. He obtained his History degree with a mere seven out of ten score. Tongues wagged at his university city in Leiden that the mark had been artificially upgraded to please the House of Orange. But times have changed. Was the Prince still ridiculed in the Nineties for studying a new and curious subject like ‘water management,’ with climate change fears on the rise this specialization of the now proud father-of-three suddenly appears far less foolish, if not reassuring in a rather water-rich country. The spin-doctor Former Argentinean banker Princess Maxima quickly obtained Lady Di-like status in the Netherlands. Even discoveries that father Zorreguita had been a minister under Argentina’s former bloody dictator Videla did not really harm her popularity: merely banning him from the royal wedding sufficed. In fact, as soon as Alex introduced the Latina as his fiancée, the Dutch became putty in her hands. Take October 2008. Lovebird Alex was under severe attack for falsely claiming that Maxima’s father was, in fact, innocent. All Maxi had to do was stammer in charmingly faltering Dutch, admitting that her future hubby ‘had been a little bit stupid’ – and all was forgiven. ‘Viva Maxima’ has but one neurosis when it comes to cameras. For yet unknown reasons, Dutch newspapers have been instructed to neverphotograph Maxi with her glasses on – or it would cost them dearly. The quest for suitable glasses may also explain the royal couple’s increasingly costly ‘jet setting’ trips around the world. An initially kept-quiet road accident caused by oversight on Maxi’s part suggests that good glasses may be a wise investment. The royal rascal The late Prince Bernard, Beatrix’ father, is whispered to have inspired Ian Fleming’s famous James Bond character. Following his marriage to Princess Juliana the once impoverished German prince certainly accessed a James Bond like lifestyle, characterized by good booze, girls and plain adventure. During the Second World War, the Prince played a pivotal role in the Dutch resistance, although recent research suggests he may also have been spying for the Nazis. In the post-war years, the prince got in trouble after accepting bribes from an arms factory. Following this incident, the Prince happily traveled the world to protect wildlife as Chairman of the World Wide Fund for Nature. On the love front, the prince was also busy, fathering two love children: French Alexia and American Alicia, both recognized in his will. Her Majesty Beatrix of the Netherlands: leader of the royal pack since 1980.

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Bata Race

Around 8,000 students will leave Nijmegen at midnight to participate in the ‘Batavieren Race’ and run through Germany to the UT campus on Saturday 7 May. Come and cheer them on. The ‘Bata’ is the world’s biggest relay race and got listed in the Guinness World Record book. The 175 km long race involves 25 stages covering 3.3 to 11.2 km. This year, generated revenue benefits charity Right to Party. The race, in which many international teams participate, ends at 4.30pm, after which the Benelux’s biggest student party will begin. Visit batavierenrace.nl/English for further information.

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Early biking

Warning: you may be woken up by the sound of bicycle bells or chatting pedestrians as early as five o’clock on Ascension Day, 13 May. Before doing anything else, many Dutch people, especially Easterners, go dauwtrappen (dew stepping) which means to rise early to explore natural areas by either bike or foot, bringing along a picnic basket. In case you have already seen quite a bit of the Dutch countryside, enter nearby spacious Germany instead.

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Travel tip

Want to explore Dutch cities? NS train offers a Lentetoer special(Springtour)at Є45 a roundtrip ticket for two passengers to ride anywhere in the Netherlands. Tickets can be purchased at the central train station in Enschede at the information desk. Part of the Spring Tour special offer is a spot in the luxury of a first class coupe. If you want to chit-chat with your travel companion, do not sit in the ‘silent coupe’ then you are guaranteed to get a tongue-lashing. The Dutch are serious and consequent about the rule. Bring identification along to show the train checkers. And last but not least, before you step onboard, stamp the ticket in a machine located on the trains’ platform. Tickets can be purchased at a €5 discount online.

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Uitstel overheidsbezuiniging geen effect op UT-ombuiging

Behalve de boete voor langstudeerders is ook de bezuiniging van 190 miljoen euro op universiteiten en hogescholen een jaar uitgesteld. Dit betekent echter niet dat de vijftien miljoen die de UT wil ‘ombuigen’ ook kan wachten, zegt rector magnificus Ed Brinksma. ‘Het is voor dit proces gewenst om door te gaan.’

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Philip Schultz

The 2008 Pulitzer Prize winning poet Philip Schultz visits Amsterdam on Friday and Saturday, 22 and 23 April. Listen in when the literary scholar Rudolph Glitz interviews Schultz about turning autobiographical material into an expressive art form. On both days, he reads poems from The God of Loneliness, a collection of his published works and new, unpublished works. The venues take place at University of Amsterdam’s Spui 25 and The English Bookshop. Contact Nancy Matsunaga, teacher at the New York Writers Studio in Amsterdam. nancy@writerstudio.comor 06-1697-9150

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Time out?

UT Nieuws publishes one more print edition on Thursday, 16 April, before the holiday break. Keep updated by checking the online edition during weeks 17 and 18 for new articles and short news. A brand new column Expat Lensappears in week 19 and gives a humorous glimpse of what it feels like to be foreigners in Twente, letting readers know about student life through the expat’s viewpoint. Read more online utnieuws.nl

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‘De hele binnenstad is een museum’

Met vijftig man zaten ze vorige week in het zonnige Milaan. Het was smullen geblazen voor de studenten industrieel ontwerpen van studievereniging Daedalus. De studenten bezochten de Lamborghinnifabriek, het Ferrarimuseum en de Salone di Mobile, een zeer grote designmeubelbeurs.

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