Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Indian-Americans Sweep National Geographic Bee in the U.S.

From Indo-Link: Indian-Americans Sweep National Geographic Bee in the U.S.
Washington: Indian-American students have swept the prestigious National Geographic Bee, bagging the top four positions of this year's tough national competition, where US President Barack Obama played a quizmaster. Rahul Nagvekar (14) from Texas bagged the first position, by beating 13-year-old Vansh Jain from Wisconsin at the finals of the annual competition held yesterday. Both are class eighth students.

The third and fourth positions went to Varun Mahadevan from San Francisco and Raghav Ranga from Arizona respectively.

Nagvekar has won a$25,000 college scholarship, lifetime membership in the National Geographic Society and a trip for two to the Galapagos on an expedition aboard the National Geographic Endeavour.

Second prize winner, Jain received $15,000 college scholarship.

13-year-old seventh-grader Mahadevan, who took third place, got $10,000 college scholarship, while 14-year-old eighth-grader Ranga, who bagged fourth place, took $1,000, an official release said.

The winning question was: "Name the Bavarian city located on the Danube River that was the legislative seat of the Holy Roman Empire from 1663 to 1806?", which Nagvekar won by correctly answering as "Regensburg".

"It was a guess, a 50-50 chance. It just happened to be a good guess" Nagvekar said after the competition.

US President Barack Obama asked one question this year via video, quizzing the young contenders on their knowledge of recent events.

Obama asked which Asian capital city on the Han River hosted a gathering of world leaders in March for a Nuclear Security Summit. The answer to which was "Seoul".

Obama said that studying geography is "about more than just memorising places on a map".

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