Close X
Monday, October 7, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian Students Bring US, India Closer: Envoy Richard R. Verma

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 May, 2015 10:47 AM
    US Ambassador Richard R. Verma on Thursday said Indian students played an important role in helping build closer ties between the two countries.
     
    "You are doing this for maybe your individual career pursuits, but I also want to tell you how important it is to our two countries, as we both are building closer and closer relations as the president and prime minister have been working on," Verma said on the occasion of Student Visa Day here.
     
    "The work that you do at your individual level is important and what you are doing is (pulling) our two countries together and that's a great thing for peace and prosperity," he added.
     
    Marked by the US Embassy, the Student Visa Day saw Verma interacting with students and handing over passports to two students with issued visas, going to the United States to pursue higher studies.
     
    Last year Indian students in the US contributed $3.3 billion to the US economy.
     
    According to a fact sheet issued by the embassy, the nearly 1,03,000 Indian students in the US are more than double the number of students 15 years ago, with student visa applications across India increasing by 60 percent last year.
     
    It added that 78 per cent of Indian students opt to study Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) fields. Engineering is the most popular major, followed by computer science.
     
    Addressing students, Verma said that interaction between people from different countries tends to break down stereotypes.
     
    "People get educated, people learn a lot. And I think the benefits the American students will have from all of you, is that they hear about your backgrounds and your stories...learning takes place between the students which is just as impactful as the learning that comes from the teachers," he said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Denmark claims North Pole through Arctic underwater ridge link from Greenland

    Denmark claims North Pole through Arctic underwater ridge link from Greenland
    COPENHAGEN — Scientific data shows Greenland's continental shelf is connected to a ridge beneath the Arctic Ocean, giving Danes a claim to the North Pole and any potential energy resources beneath it, Denmark's foreign minister said.

    Denmark claims North Pole through Arctic underwater ridge link from Greenland

    IS blows up biggest prison in northern Iraq

    IS blows up biggest prison in northern Iraq
    The Islamic State (IS) jihadi group has blown up the biggest prison in northern Iraq after transferring the prisoners to the Syrian province of Raqqa, its main...

    IS blows up biggest prison in northern Iraq

    Indian arrested for drug possession at Kuala Lumpur airport

    Indian arrested for drug possession at Kuala Lumpur airport
    The Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) Customs Department has detained a 27-year-old Indian national in connection with the seizure of 5.34 kg...

    Indian arrested for drug possession at Kuala Lumpur airport

    Da Vinci's earlier Mona Lisa makes world debut

    Da Vinci's earlier Mona Lisa makes world debut
    An earlier version of one of Leonardo Da Vinci's most celebrated works of art, "Mona Lisa", Monday made its world premiere in Singapore....

    Da Vinci's earlier Mona Lisa makes world debut

    Al Qaeda affiliate seizes Syrian military base

    Al Qaeda affiliate seizes Syrian military base
    Al Qaeda's affiliate in Syria Monday took control of a government military base in the northern province of Idleb, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said....

    Al Qaeda affiliate seizes Syrian military base

    Independent inquiry into Britain's flight chaos

    Independent inquiry into Britain's flight chaos
    An independent inquiry will be initiated into the air traffic control computer failure which disrupted flights at Britain's airports last week, officials said Monday....

    Independent inquiry into Britain's flight chaos