Good evening,


Eintracht Frankfurt invites you to the Waldstadion for the game against Glasgow Rangers, autistic people don't have it easy at the university, in Offenbach there is apparently more money than previously published: The overview at the end of the day with news from Rhein- Main.

Jacqueline Vogt

Department head of the Rhein-Main editorial team of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.

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University life:

Many people like to use terms from psychology.

The speaker is not always correct.

Often not, for example, when he calls someone autistic, which generally means that the person in question is difficult to communicate with.

But there is still a long way to go from stubbornness to autism;

Those who actually suffer from autism do not primarily make it difficult for others, they themselves have a difficult time.

At the universities, for example, when unclear course times, a lack of information on the forms of examinations and lecture formats caused by the pandemic make learning complicated, autistic people even more so.

Kim Maurus wrote down why this is the case and why offers of help for disabled students don't make things any better.

Surplus in Offenbach:

The fact that in Offenbach, with the restriction of the range of local public transport, in short: public transport, a lamentable reversal of transport policy progress is in the house, has already been mentioned several times at this point.

Caritas recently said that a retirement home on the outskirts of the city was in real danger of being left behind and questioned expansion plans for this center with an investment volume in the tens of millions.

Now the opposition Offenbach CDU has reported on the subject.

On Monday, she expressed a lack of understanding that the coalition of SPD, Greens and FDP was planning to cut public transport, even though the State Statistical Office reported a funding surplus of 50.3 million euros for the city for 2021.

The allegation of the party:

The coalition intentionally does not want to make the budget figures public before the city council has decided on the cuts.

Jochen Remmert reports on this new twist in this special traffic dispute.

See Eintracht:

No riot, just joy, that's what everyone is hoping for next Wednesday and for Eintracht to win in the final of the Europa League against Glasgow Rangers.

Thousands will travel to Seville, where the game will take place, and a few thousand Eintracht fans will also be able to follow the match in the stadium there.

Eintracht will make a public viewing offer for those who stay in Frankfurt: the club will broadcast the final live in Frankfurt's Waldstadion, which it announced on Monday.

A 400 square meter screen is to be set up in the arena for this purpose.

Admission is scheduled for 6 p.m., the game starts at 9 p.m.

Tickets cost ten euros, and if you're lucky you can get one on the Eintracht website (www.eintracht.de).

And in addition

, Kristjan Glibo will be the head coach of the U21 soccer team at Eintracht Frankfurt in the summer, the forty-year-old is currently working at Wormatia Worms and will receive a contract with Eintracht until June 30, 2024 +++ the airport operator Fraport AG holds its minority stake in the airport in Russia St. Petersburg-Pulkovo festival +++ the library of the Carthusian monastery in Mainz is now fully accessible on the internet a good 240 years after it was dissolved;

so far 290 of the 850 manuscripts are online.

Greetings from the editorial team

Jacqueline Vogt

You can also read current reports from the region in Skyline-Blick, our live news blog for the Rhine-Main region, and on the Rhein-Main-Zeitung website at www.faz.net/rmz

The

weather

for Tuesday

It's mostly friendly.

High clouds will gather during the day.

Highs around 27 degrees.

Moderately cloudy at night with 13 degrees.

have birthday

on

Tuesday May 10th

Peter Seyffardt

, President of the Rheingau Winegrowers' Association, Eltville (68);

Ingolf Kluge

, President of the Hessen Chamber of Engineers, Wiesbaden (60);

Eva Baronsky

, writer living in Kronberg (54);

Tanja Brühl

, President of the Technical University of Darmstadt (53);