Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Indian-American Student Pranay Varada Wins National Geographic Bee Contest

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 May, 2017 10:38 AM
    Pranay Varada, the 14-year-old Indian-American student, has won the prestigious USD 50,000 National Geographic Bee competition, maintaining the dominance of the community in the contest. 
     
    "I was absolutely sure I could win that challenge," Varada said soon after bagging the coveted competition, which for the past one decade has been dominated by Indian- Americans. "Having done this for such a long time and winning it now, it's just a feeling of satisfaction," Varada, an eighth grader from Texas, said.
     
    A runner up last year, Varada this time did not want to give any chance. He was declared the winner as he won the first tie breaker question when he correctly identified the Kunlun Mountains as the 1,200 mile range that separates the Taklimakan Desert from the Tibetan Plateau.
     
    As a result, he gets USD 50,000 in scholarship and other prizes.
     
    Veda Bhattaram another Indian-American from New Jersey finished third at the finals held here last night, while Thomas Wright from Wisconsin was declared the runner up. Wright received USD 25,000 and Bhattaram got USD 10,000 in scholarships.
     
     
    This year, six of the 10 finalists were Indian-Americans.
     
    Indian-Americans have won the National Geographic Bee competition for the last six consecutive. Last year, Rishi Nair, a sixth grader from Florida, had won the contest.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Doctors Remove Live Cockroach From An Indian Woman’s Skull In Chennai

    Doctors Remove Live Cockroach From An Indian Woman’s Skull In Chennai
    The doctors are glad that Selvi turned up at the right time because if the cockroach would have died, it might have harmed her brain.

    Doctors Remove Live Cockroach From An Indian Woman’s Skull In Chennai

    Twitter Employees Are Donating $1.59 Million To The ACLU After Trump’s Travel Ban

    Twitter Employees Are Donating $1.59 Million To The ACLU After Trump’s Travel Ban
    Despite US President Donald Trump being a prolific Twitter user, the employees of the micro-blogging site donated $1.59 million to an organisation to fight Trump, a media report said.

    Twitter Employees Are Donating $1.59 Million To The ACLU After Trump’s Travel Ban

    Donald Trump’s Senior Adviser Uses Fictitious Incident To Justify Travel Ban

    Donald Trump’s Senior Adviser Uses Fictitious Incident To Justify Travel Ban
    Kellyanne Conway, President Trump's adviser, who made an assertion to defend the White House's refugee ban that appeared to be factually indefensible was on Friday pushed back on her claim.

    Donald Trump’s Senior Adviser Uses Fictitious Incident To Justify Travel Ban

    Can't Rule Out More Surgical Strikes: Rajnath Singh

    Home Minister Rajnath Singh said India may go for more cross-border surgical strikes, if the need arises, to safeguard its territories.

    Can't Rule Out More Surgical Strikes: Rajnath Singh

    WATCH: Pakistan 'Eye-Popping' Boy Becomes Internet Sensation

    WATCH: Pakistan 'Eye-Popping' Boy Becomes Internet Sensation
    A 14-year-old Pakistani boy from Lahore in Pakistan has become an internet sensation for his bizarre 'eye popping' skills. Ahmed Ali possesses a bizarre talent of squeezing his eyes out beyond eye sockets by over 10 mm.

    WATCH: Pakistan 'Eye-Popping' Boy Becomes Internet Sensation

    Trial On For B.C. Woman Who Crown Says Told Her Husband She Would Help Him Die

    Trial On For B.C. Woman Who Crown Says Told Her Husband She Would Help Him Die
    CRANBROOK, B.C. — The prosecution says a woman accused of pushing her husband to kill himself offered the man pills and then told him she would get him a gun.

    Trial On For B.C. Woman Who Crown Says Told Her Husband She Would Help Him Die