tv Euromaxx Deutsche Welle May 15, 2023 2:02am-2:31am CEST
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the w dot com, the natural beauty under stretch how photographer radner access and draws attention to the dramatic consequences of climate change in the architect, the crown jewel of cheeses, why pull it is considered the most expensive in the world, and colorful creative and calling every what to see and do on a visit to the polar city, a process. all this and more coming up on your romance, the germany is the land of poets and thinkers. so it's no wonder there are more than $400.00 universities and technical colleges. here we take
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a look at university life for those who want to study in germany. excuse me. yes. hi, i'm enrolling today. can you let me know how much i owe you? nothing. it's a 9 flown need to in germany university education is almost completely free. so it's no wonder that it's one of the most popular countries in the world to study. and here are a few things that i bet you didn't know about studying in germany. the most important thing you need to know about study in germany is that there are no education fees that public gimme even for international students. there are some small semester fees that were entered 400 year old. but these go towards things like your public transport and the student union. germany's home to over 400 colleges and universities. universities emphasized the academic, while colleges are probably techniques focused on practical skills, but the degrees it'd be close to ending the a bachelor's program in germany,
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usually takes 6 semesters as or 3 years. but many students take 8 semesters to finish. it's generally no problem if it takes a bit longer. there are almost half a 1000000 foreign students in germany, most of which study in the state of north ryan west valia, which has the most students in general. international students receive a lot of support here for things like scholarships, canceling initial steps and cycling and germans also like to study abroad. the number of students doing erasmus is on the rise. that's an e you program that enables students to study abroad for a year or a semester. there's even financial incentive, as you get paid to do it. i also did in harassment right here in berlin. studying itself might be free, but the average cost of living is around the size and yours a month, depending on where you live. this covers things like rent, groceries, textbooks, and socializing. so most students have a part time job to help cover these costs. now i'm heading to the student service organization like the student union. it's important for students in germany. there
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i'm using yanna, you dish. she's a contact person for everyone's questions about the university. as education is considered a public good, caring for student also is considered the public good. so that's why we exist in germany, and we are basically responsible for all that isn't research or education. we do the housing, the meals that contains the consultation. do you have any tips for international students when you get your enrollment? that doesn't mean you have accommodations because most do not know that. and they come here and get often emails next week. i'm coming and please show me my room. and then we have to tell them no, there is no room. so do we all 11 in the office too late. please check, but please look on the, on the, on the free market. most students live in shared flats. however, these are getting more and more expensive unit construct guards and the most expensive cities to study in, followed by berlin, where a cities in what used to be east germany are considerably cheaper. goes in session
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time for some german vocab. being fluent environment isn't necessarily a requirement as there are specialized english courses, or you can often write your papers in english. however, most universities 1st language is german. so here are 3 essential words to help you get started. good guy. this i write play translates to listening, but it's basically a lecture hall means that this is the sco counting where students get their lunch and asked the pressure students in their 1st semester. i'd like to hear a little about what university life is like from 2 students in portland, members of the asked general students committee for this student life in general. look like for you. do you have a part time job to go out partying a lot? most of the students have part time jobs, just like me. it's like a balance. it's not always easy,
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especially during exams. i have a lot of fun with the thing i study. so i don't feel a lot of pressure from that. we do drink a lot of sierra you do not have to do it and like you shouldn't feel the pressure to do it. but it's a good way to meet new people and to speak to you have to get to know. yes, villain. yeah. some key us, some speed through safelite, dean, today's and music. and how do you meet people? the stereotype, the germans can be quite cold. uh, maybe rings to true to some international students. but i think if you just like of protest openly, we don't 5 and we actually quite nice, but we have a child pay nothing education for today. personally, i loved studying in germany so much so that i decided to move here permanently decided that it's free is obviously a major benefits, but they're also great programs on offer as a lot of support for students. the,
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the assignment changes having a devastating effect on the highly sensitive ecosystem and unspoiled natural beauty of the arctics. plants and animals are bearing the brunt as melting sea ice. nowhere else on earth is global warming, happening faster than in the arctic. the photographs of iceland a photographer rag, not access and draw attention to these dramatic developments. their world is mounting. the thousands of years of tradition is and then this fading away for over 4 decades. iceland and photographer retina access on has traveled to the remotest regions of the northern hemisphere to capture the extreme changes in habitat and environment. for him, his mission is clear. freezing those moments in someone's life in their environment . never coming back. with count his photography of the arctic change,
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our perception of the climate crisis, the regular has seen 1st hand the drastic changes in nature and habitat in greenland. iceland and siberia i think it is very important as the documents life i guess engine. yeah, i think he does it. i think all lies will be facing the thinking coming is people's life changing light in green. i'm done in february of a on the thumb drive, sewing and also smaller, but it has been closed down and we want to see if we're moving to a bigger townsend. the hunting grounds is getting a little bit more difficult when to see us is getting thinner. these drastic changes are plainly visible in greenland, where the photographer has seen vast ice sheets melt into the sea within 2 decades . and when i was in 70 field, 1995,
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i was traveling on the docks that tony is late that i was standing about. the hunters community, thousands of years of tradition is fading away, kind of and the dog with dogs, with 30000 dogs, some 10 years ago now the 11000. so it goes down with the, with the hunters. so it's changing. young generation will be facing a different kind of 5 for somebody say, so ratner returns again and again to these remote regions. getting to know the people who photographs and their way of life. it's hard for him to pick a favorite photo for his collection. he says it's like picking a favorite child, but there are some that have memories that like the picture of the hunt to standing on the c as in inclusive field and to live in green. and it was minus 48 degrees of the windshield and the sun was going down and there was a storm coming and we were heading back home. and the dog said,
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i took my gloves of 10 minutes and my fingers froze and got totally wide. and then it was totally black. the when i look at that photograph, i just look at it. so there you are. i like you, but i also, i almost lost my fingers here in dice, 1200 and gallery and hamburg some 3000 kilometers from greenland. visitors from all over the world can explore this ever changing and melting arctic reg. now extra zones where's the world is. mounting is one of the galleries most popular expeditions to date featuring a selection of has black and white photographs. curator ingo telephone believes ratner's photography has the power to drive a badly needed debate. the most important thing we have to talk about is this kind of church. the viewer is in the conflict situation. you are
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touched from this a very beautiful photo across. yeah. and see the landscape in a way you have never seen before. but then in your mind is, oh my god, this has something to do with the lens. come to change. what does it mean if the snow is matter? think that the ice is melting? yeah. it means that everything goes out of the balance. it's hard to, to, to know that in 150 years of them in the climate will change and extremely change. i have the, the children were changing, but 1st i'm impressed the photos. i felt really small because uh, the show the this really gigantic landscape and how i'm charged that it still is. a lot of people say, oh,
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it's so wonderful and so wonderful pictures. and then i'm really, uh, i'm, i, i stopped and think it's the so right of words when you come to the office, like in green and you're in the biggest and most beautiful gallery in the well, if you my say so, and this is in, on his beauty and this, i want to return the question back. do you want this beauty to play the way i just document things as i sees, like when i flying over the places and i see them, you know, they're retreating, they're thinking. if you look into the outside, the walls of them, you see all kinds of figures and faces. and also when you're flying above and there's all kinds of figures you could see if you look at it with the open mind. and it's like, like, live talking to and it's up to you what you want to hit. and so beauty or not beauty, i just want to ask facts. do you want this beauty to fade away? think about that.
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the cheese is popular throughout europe and comes in countless varieties. most of them are made from count sheep or goats milk. but you'll be surprised to find out which animals mill produces the most expensive cheese in the world, and where it's made will also it means you this cheese costs $1000.00 heroes per kilo. but why is it so incredibly expensive? to find out? we have to take a trip just to be in nature reserve and was dr. west of bel. great. doesn't feel the same as your but my name is slow, but on somebody just thought, if i am the director of this doesn't reach on nature as to what fits you and is that i paid on you created today? probably the well, the most expensive cheese which animals milk is used. the usual suspects may be
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beans. no. it comes from the middle to the tiny sweetened patients. bolton, don't p talk orthodontist you mama. very well known worldwide for 300 trustees don't claim as looked on in 1997. no, but then submit a form of politician, created a sanctuary for old breeds of animals here. he tells us that before finding a new peaceful home, many of the don't case have been mistreated by some goddesses for me. and then the next day, all very calm, animation, and very on demanding. we hardly have to feed them and that is not true. will they find that only food right here in the past? you according to some of them, he was simply looking for a clever way to use the milk he got from as many don't keys when he thought of making cheese. but he soon realized it would be expensive. a donkey man needs
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almost 3 months to produce the daily use of a dairy cow. from that, don't keys only have 2 teeth and must be milk by hand. the milk is set to have a very special taste. as all reports you've got to find out for himself the kind of this week, but let's you squeeze. instead of you a lead to cost us at no mean remote complete don't came out. it takes all very similar to human breast milk, all you what's going? so don't you know cuz i'm already quite expensive, but there is yet another problem. oh my god, there was a pc then the smoke, but you need the protein for cheese make came. america is not the only real and the only ones in the world who have figured out how to turn it into cheese. well, somebody says it took slow, but then 2 years of trial and error. this whole coming up with his top secret
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recipe. he reveals that his donkey cheese does contain 40 percent go silk. so we brain will say that you have 50 grams of cheese. that's was 50 years a year. right. the ground is customers on mainly rich, foreigners willing to pay a hefty price for something noble and exclusive, but smaller than himself was. 7 he become a millionaire from his business, p. o. he sells around 20 q. i was a yes. i'm going to say an hour and a mile. it's a very fine price. because for one sheet of, of changes, we need 25 liters of middle commodity. the cost of production is very high. your suppose the gods, to be honest, the ones we should probably be charging much mold and whatever the dock looks like you're there. but does he still like his own luxury cheese? i love it. yeah, he has found true happiness all way more on the right place in the whole world.
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it's always beautiful stuff. yeah, i have a little slow, but i love says cuddly ball couldn't, don't keys. and there was nothing cheesy about that our journey now takes us to crook off in eastern europe, the 2nd largest city in poland. it's historic center survived the 2nd world war almost on skate, and the tracks around $13000000.00 taurus each year. the trinity district of kashmir is known for its creativity and diversity. we have 3 travel tips for your next visit, the visiting clinic town, looking for inspiration for places to visit. here at 3 things you shouldn't miss. some consider crack owl pellets, unofficial capital, and bunch of it has unesco world heritage status. last almost a quarter of its 800000 inhabitants. all students making crack out a very comfortable and vibrant place. there are over 200 companies in the city,
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40 museums, and a 125 on galleries. accounts huge market square dating back to the 13th century is an absolute must see. but any visitor spending 40000 square meters, it's one of the largest many years old town square. as in europe, take a stroll and soak up the fantastic atmosphere and definitely stopped by the renaissance era, across the whole dating back to the 16th century. you will find plenty of great souvenirs on the ground floor top of the little houses highlands national museum of which showcases mazda one to pony shots from the 19th century. from april to october. you can also visit the town of saint mary's judge to watch chronic house famous trumpet to play the so called painful every hour on the hour. the bugle corps has an historic origin dating back centuries. 2
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the investment banking bill. okay. awesome. so nothing about 800 years ago was a watchman, saw the tar tars were approaching crack off and we're about to attack the phone without that provides the crackles, casually the melody and also woke up the cry covian. so what i would do on this cancelled, thanks to him with the city gates were close to that and the city was save. wondering what counts speciality to sample, desperately go for fill the dumplings known as p l. d. you can find them almost everywhere. we recommend going to crack house trendy caching me. i should district way. you'll find plenty of both. then take publish quiz and it takes about 15 minutes to walk that from the city center style cut restaurants. that's excellent here. all right, sean helena has been making them for over 10 years to make the dumplings,
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though, is rolled out and then carefully wrapped around various different feelings. one setting costs 6 to 7 year a p are all the all proteins, national dish b, l d. not eating peer to be on christmas. eve is traditional him. it's a mandatory he thought. so we'll have funeral key with cabbage and mushrooms. preferably for cheney mushroom 50 foot over there. dried then soaks, and finally boiled, and salt paid with onions, mazda sheets, a board, k. sightseeing, done fairly filled. now, what goosey oscar schindler's enamel factory. another must see. the museum is always busy, so book your tickets in advance. entrepeneur oscar schindler saved about 1200 cues from the nazi desktops, by pulling them here at these factory. the story is told and steven spielberg's
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film should list. the exhibition paints a detailed picture, his current account during the nazi occupation and shows that both i last cushion plus saved many lines to remains. and i'm bid lynn seagul. first of all, he was a member of of did not. and then as a party, then when he came to crackle, he was running a business, taking a jewish profile of the day to get the he's personal advantage back to the steel 2 coats a band on those people and did all his best to say lies the finally, for a panoramic view of a crack, i'll head to costco, skill about 3 kilometers south of the city center. for more videos like this, subscribe to our youtube channel. elaborate stucco,
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decorate ceilings and faults in numerous cathedrals and palaces. worldwide. stucco is usually made of plaster and painted by hand. the work or portuguese artist diva vienna prove that stucco can also be modern and contemporary. we travel to portugal to find out more see all the one that is, it's something very special to work, but this material because it's always such a great inspiration says every step in the process is important to me from the really big ones to the smaller ones because i enjoy every step along the way my skin go, students pass through the process is to leave with yes, my name's even the m a and diamond sculptors. i work exclusively with plaster, which is always be my passion. you question. there's the same vienna do crushed at about 75 kilometers north of porto. eva vienna lives and works here. in our studio, she creates stucco artwork and all shapes and sizes per
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creations are a departure from traditional or native stucco decorations. they grace private houses, restaurants and hotels, the world over to the seasonal pass. so everything from the past, the surface, great inspiration to me with the, the so there's a long tradition that i try to draw and split, then i want to maintain respect for what's gone a for, but employed the technique and a more contemporary fashion for me to put a news, every project starts out with a sketch like this one for up private clients in the united states. move cause this to this for this panel. it was important to me to add element of water. for example, i'm in to live with the client for this work is you not from here. an ocean lies between his country and particle books, but of the use, the stories that i'm telling through the work or my own re interpretation thought is google or usually it will contend with the ink tend to you for
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the artist pores, the liquid plaster into a silicon mold fashioned, especially for this relief. to make the stucco more durable. she mixes size so him fibers into it. spreading the paste evenly is hard work. it sets for about 15 minutes before the mould can be lifted off the dried stucco. in the end, there will be 17 separate stucco panels, each one a work of art in itself, measuring about 3 by 5 meters. about 5 months of work go into a large scale release like this or the, the vienna prefers not to reveal what it will sell for or who will buy it. it says selling it. so search thing, the people who commission something like this, have a taste pretty unusual and a love for detailing it was done. some best of these are one of the kind pieces as
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the price reflects value in the design is made especially for a single client and it's not repeated nowhere. so the kind of person who commission says wants to invest in a work of art. the artist was born and deanna do crushed. she wouldn't even think of leaving the area. she's far too intimately connected to it. and it's many stucco treasures such as the stairwell of this design or hotel. a singleton cutting the. it's impossible to be indifferent to what's gone before. buildings like this one has been restored so well that it makes me happy just to see the care that was put into it. there an important inspiration for my own work study is the thing. if them, if someone could at least be to some, to this, to some of our clients live right close by the entrance wall of the house belonging to the entrepreneurs, isabel and shows a show to is decorated by
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a stucco floor to ceiling relief of 2 white deer is about a shot to remembers her 1st meeting with the artist. even this could very well evo: discovery to fit. it's a tenderness we feel as a family is something quite deep, very much our own. and also he put these 2 little deer in the vines around them stand for the tenderness we have between us and our 3 children to speak with somebody receives, even in the mountain environment, show something of what we have all around us that focus most of the other 2 can assume kind of some of the tradition of a crap, dating back centuries, reinterpreted for the present. it's this blend that makes eva vienna's stucco. work so captivating. and that wraps up another edition of your own max. be sure to check us out on social media for more stories from the world of culture and lifestyle. thanks for tuning in and join us again next week. the
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