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This Issue
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Study abroad: International Fair is Oct. 5
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President of Tanzania to speak here Sept.
28
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Study abroad: International Fair is Oct. 5
The
2006 International Fair will be held from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30
p.m. Thursday, Oct. 5, in Coughlan Field House.
See the world from the inside when you tour the 17-foot tall
(22-foot diameter) Earth Balloon. Enter through an entrance in
the Pacific Ocean to learn about rain forests, the "ring of
fire," time zones, population clusters, migration, man's impact
on the earth and numerous other topics.
Tour a 17-foot-high Earth balloon and see the world from the
inside. When you enter the 22-foot diameter Earth balloon
through an entrance in the Pacific Ocean, you will learn about
rain forests, the "ring of fire," time zones, population
clusters, migration, human impact on the Earth and many other
topics. (See fun facts below.)
Vendors selling international items will include:
- Irish on Grand
- Maria's Children International
- Hmong Arts, Books and Crafts
The Show'd Up Band will perform.
The Student Cafe line will be moved to the Field House and will
feature an international dish.
Here are some Earth balloon fun facts:
- Scale: 1 inch=30 miles. At this scale, the moon would be
two football fields away and the sun would be 49 miles away.
- At the scale of the Earth balloon, planes would fly
1/4-inch above the surface of the globe.
- At this scale, 99 percent of the Earth's atmosphere
would be within 1 inch of the globe's surface.
- At this scale, the Earth's inner core would be a 2 1/2
foot ball of solid iron and its outer core of molten iron
would be 12 feet in diameter.
- At this scale, the amount of rain forest destroyed
annually would equal an area approximately 4.2 inches
square.
- At this scale, the space shuttle would fly 5 1/2 inches
(165 miles) from the globe's surface.
President of Tanzania to speak
here Sept. 28
Jakaya Kikwete, president of
the United Republic of Tanzania since December, will
speak about his East African country’s growing economy
on Thursday, Sept. 28, at the University of St. Thomas
campus in Minneapolis.
The 10:45 a.m. speech in Schulze Grand Atrium of the St.
Thomas School of Law is free and open to the public.
St. Thomas will confer an honorary doctor of laws degree
on Kikwete, who is visiting Minneapolis, New York,
Boston and Los Angeles with a delegation of about 90
Tanzanian government officials and business leaders.
Kikwete, 55, has been active in political and government
work his entire adult life. After graduating from the
University of Dar es Salaam in 1975 with a degree in
economics, he was commissioned a lieutenant at the
Tanzania Military Academy, where he later taught. He
held several positions for the ruling party, Chama Cha
Mapinduzi (CCM), and was elected to its National
Executive Committee in 1982.
He became a member of parliament and deputy minister of
water, energy and minerals in 1988, and was promoted to
minister in 1990. He became finance minister in 1994 and
a year later was named minister of foreign affairs and
international cooperation, a position he held for 10
years.
Kikwete won election less than a year ago as the fourth
president of Tanzania. His priorities as president are
to carry out a CCM platform that calls for 10 percent
annual growth in the gross domestic product by 2010, up
from 6.7 percent today. He also is emphasizing the
importance of scientific research, tourism, an active
fight against poverty, more schools in villages,
electricity in all corners of the country and an
expanded telecommunications network.
Tanzania was formed in 1964 through a union of
Tanganyika and Zanzibar, and is home to more than 38
million people and 120 tribal groups. Agriculture
employs 80 percent of the workforce, and commercial
mining of diamonds, other gemstones and gold is
increasing. Tourism also has been growing steadily in
importance.
Tanzania has a spectacular landscape that includes Mount
Kilimanjaro, the highest point in Africa at 19,341 feet;
Serengeti National Park, a popular safari destination;
and Lake Victoria, the largest lake in Africa. Tanzania
has more land – 13,000 square miles – devoted to
national parks and game reserves than any other wildlife
area in the world.
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