Arab Times

Don’t call 12-yr-old Mexican university student ‘genius’

Talks about finding cures for rare diseases

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MEXICO CITY, Aug 4, (AP): The youngest student ever admitted to Mexico’s National Autonomous University wouldn’t call himself a “genius.”

Carlos Santamaria Diaz, a 12-year-old who will begin classes for an undergradu­ate degree in biomedical physics Monday, was dwarfed by the upholstere­d blue chair he sat in to answer reporters’ questions Friday.

With his feet barely brushing the floor, he laughed out loud and shook his head when a reporter asked if he considered himself a genius. “I don’t like to use that word,” he said. Carlos passed the university’s entrance exam and has already done preparator­y work at the university’s school of chemistry in its genetics sciences center.

The boy from western Guadalajar­a grew bored with public school at an early age and turned to the web where he taught himself calculus and physics. By the age of nine, he participat­ed in university programs in analytical chemistry, biochemist­ry and biology.

Nervously running his hands through his Twelve-year-old child prodigy Carlos Santamaria Diaz answers questions during a press conference at the rectory of the National Autonomous University of Mexico

(UNAM), in Mexico City on Aug 3. (AFP) hair and speaking passionate­ly of finding cures for rare diseases, his behavior seemed typical of a confident albeit young college student until the university’s photograph­er asked him to pose with a stuffed mascot and the boy emerged.

When asked if he ever felt isolated because of his intelligen­ce, Carlos shrugged off the question: “The truth is, no, I feel like the university has been very good to me, especially the chemistry faculty.”

His mother Arcelia Diaz said that like any mom she was proud of her son.

Carlos offered advice to Mexico’s President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador: “First off, I would tell him not to make the same mistakes as the previous presidents.”

Politician­s should “take care of the country like they take care of themselves,” he said. “This a country filled with people who have dreams and at the same don’t have any dreams because they don’t have any opportunit­ies.”

The university said Carlos would be treated like any other student, with no special privileges or benefits.

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