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World view:
conversations with our international students
By Kalsey Larson '08
News intern
Last fall, the University of St. Thomas enrolled
258 graduate students and 63 undergraduates from countries outside
the United States. To help you get to know some of them, Bulletin
Today presents a periodic column, "World view." Today's column
profiles Chile.
Located in southern South America, Chile is
bordered by Argentina, Bolivia, Peru and 6,435 kilometers of
coastline on the South Pacific Ocean.
Chile was under Inca rule until the Spanish
arrived in the 16th century. In 1810, Chile declared its
independence in a victory over Spain In the War of the Pacific
(1879-83), Chile won its northern regions by defeating Peru and
Bolivia. Chile has maintained sound economic policies and
increasingly assumed regional and international leadership roles
befitting its status as a stable democratic nation.
Here are a few facts about Chile, courtesy of the
CIA World Factbook:
- Total area: 756,950 sq. km., slightly less than two times
the size of Montana
- Capital: Santiago
- Currency: Chilean peso
- National language: Spanish
- Population: 16,432,674 (July 2006)
- Government type: Republic
- Literacy rate: 96.2 percent
- Religion: Roman Catholic 89 percent, Protestant 10.9 percent
and Jewish 0.1 percent
What you might not know:
- In Chile, dinner is rarely served earlier than 9 p.m. and
often runs as late as midnight.
- Chile's No. 1 export is copper, and the world's largest
open-pit mine is found at Chuquicamata in northern Chile.
- Most peaches imported to the United States during the winter
months come from Chile.
Diego and Claudio Jaque-Pino, brothers from a
small town outside Santiago, Chile, are studying at the University
of St. Thomas. Diego began studying in the United States through a
high-school exchange program but didn't make many friends – except
for a bus driver named Paul.
One day, Paul invited Diego and his brother on a
tour of the Twin Cities. He took them everywhere, including a drive
to see the beautiful houses on Summit Avenue. "I was so lost that I
did not know where I was," Diego said. "Then we passed St. Thomas
and I saw the architecture."
Diego asked Paul what those buildings were and was
told that they were part of "a very well-known and prestigious
university."
"From that moment on, I decided to attend UST. I
began to do research about the university and, after my second try,
I was accepted. I can say that I fell in love with UST at first
sight."
Diego believes attending St. Thomas has been one
of the best decisions he ever made. He has been encouraged to
challenge himself and grow as a person, mentally and spiritually.
"It has been wonderful to go to class knowing that I am going to
learn something important that I can apply to my life," Diego said.
"It has been awesome to meet people from around the United States
and the globe."
Diego enjoys playing tennis and soccer and eating
his favorite American foods – pizza and hamburgers – with the people
he has met and with his brother. While he misses Chile's warm and
predictable weather, ease of transportation and slower day-to-day
pace of life, Diego has been very happy with his time at St. Thomas.
"Sometimes I see Claudio on my way to class, in
the library or even at work," said Diego. "We talk for a while and
find out how each of us is doing in school and other activities. It
is great to have him here because we are the only two Chileans on
campus."
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