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Indian origin sweep the US National Geographic bee competition

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By Sevil Omer, msnbc.com
A Houston-area whiz kid is the new champion of 2012 National Geographic Bee after correctly answering the question: "Name the Bavarian city located on the Danube River that was a legislative seat of the Holy Roman Empire from 1663 to 1806."

Rahul Nagvekar’s answer: Regensburg.

The 14-year-old eighth-grader from Quail Middle School in Missouri City, Texas, won the grand prize, including a $25,000 college scholarship and a trip to the Galapagos Islands.
“My parents have helped me tremendously and everyone -- my family, my teachers, my friends, all the students at the school -- have been so encouraging and supportive,” Nagvekar told msnbc.com on Thursday. “I could not have done this without them.”

Nagvekar admits he was a little nervous during the competition.
“I knew that if I remained calm and focused and listened to the questions I would do well,” Nagvekar said. “I was nervous, but relaxed.”
After four rounds of intense tie-breaker questions, Nagvekar finally ousted Vansh Jain, a 13-year-old bee veteran from northwestern Wisconsin, to win the coveted prize, according to NBC News.

Jain, an eighth-grader at Minocqua-Hazelhurst-Lake Tomahawk Elementary School in Minocqua, Wis., had been in the finals the past three years. Jain's second-place finish earned him a $15,000 college scholarship.

“I saw him on TV in the finals last year. I admired him for being so well-versed and looked forward to competing with him,” Nagvekar said.

Nagvekar said he will crack open more books, maps and National Geographic publications to prepare for more contests. Nagvekar has a chance to represent the U.S. at the world championship in Russia in 2013.

But first things first, he said. He wanted to chat a little more with some of his competitors during a dinner on Thursday evening, hosted by National Geographic staff in Washington, D.C.
He described his peers as "very nice, very welcoming."


Varun Mahadevan, a 13-year-old seventh-grader at Prince of Peace Christian School in Fremont, near San Francisco, won third place and a $10,000 scholarship, according to National Geographic.
Alex Trebek of “Jeopardy!” hosted the event, which will be televised on the National Geographic Channel Thursday at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. ET/PT.

This is the third time in four years that a student from Texas has won the National Geographic Bee, according to National Geographic. Last year's winner was Tine Valencic of Fort Worth. The 2009 winner was Eric Yang from The Colony, Texas, according to the National Geographic.
Millions of students from thousands of schools took part in the 2012 National Geographic Bee, sponsored by Google.

MSNBC: National Geographic Bee Awards 2012

1st: Rahul Nagvekar
2nd: Vansh Jain
3rd: Varun Mahadevan


:tup::tup::tup::tup:
 
So basically, Americans sweep the US National Geographic bee competition?

While actual Indians, score the lowest in the entire world on the OECD Educational tests. :cheesy:

Indian American to correct you..

They are in this competition, and those Americans won. :lol:

Sure, American won it who's doubting that? Though the news is about Indian Origin which is not wrong as well, so what exactly is your problem Chini?
 
No, I am genuinely curious. :P Especially given the fact that Indians always try to claim that they are "Aryans".

Whitening cream contains sun screen elements containing SPF. Its a good thing to avoid tan since India lies near equator, hence has more sunlight to deal with.

Anyway , no use to describe since you will be asking the same a 100 times more like an annoying kiddy who has Alzheimers disease.
 
So basically, Americans sweep the US National Geographic bee competition?

While actual Indians, score the lowest in the entire world on the OECD Educational tests. :cheesy:

Does that tell you something? If anything it tells you that your race based IQ tests are flawed, when the same race which has a low score on your IQ test excels when given a level playing field. Indian Americans are successful because they have their priorities right.
 
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