Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Indian American Boy Arnav Krishna In Fray For $100,000 'Child Genius' Prize

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Mar, 2016 12:28 PM
    An Indian American boy, with his terrific memory skills and mathematical abilities, is all set to lock horns with two other finalists in the second season of Lifetime Television's competition "Child Genius: Battle of the Brightest", a media report said.
     
    Nine-year-old Arnav Krishna from New York stands a chance to win a whopping $100,000 college fund and the title of Child Genius 2016, the American bazaar reported on Wednesday. 
     
    The winner of the competition will be declared on Thursday night.
     
    Arnav's mother Seema Krishna is a marketing executive, and father Vijay Krishna works as a financial services executive.
     
    The Lifetime Television cited Arnav as someone “with an eye to becoming an architect and a mathematician when he is older” and as one who is always inquisitive and bears a researcher's instinct.
     
    “Arnav is off to a good start with successive rankings in national math competitions,” Lifetime Television was quoted as saying.
     
    In addition to his academic prowess, Arnav is also good at playing tennis. He loves piano, swimming and chess.
     
     
    The second edition of the competition, which premiered on January 7 this year, featured some of the most extraordinary and talented children in the US as they braced for the ultimate battle of the brains.
     
    The competition, created in cooperation with the American Mensa -- a standardised intelligence test, takes place over ten weeks and tests the nation's brightest young minds on their knowledge in categories such as math, spelling, geography, and current events.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    New FDA Rules Will Put Calorie Counts On Menus, Supermarket Meals, Movie Popcorn

    New FDA Rules Will Put Calorie Counts On Menus, Supermarket Meals, Movie Popcorn
    WASHINGTON — Whether they want to or not, consumers will soon know how many calories they are eating when ordering off the menu at chain restaurants, picking up prepared foods at supermarkets and even eating a tub of popcorn at the movie theatre.

    New FDA Rules Will Put Calorie Counts On Menus, Supermarket Meals, Movie Popcorn

    It's Fall, Boxelder Bugs Are Looking For A Winter Home

    It's Fall, Boxelder Bugs Are Looking For A Winter Home
    Batten down the hatches. It's that time of year when boxelder bugs are snooping around looking for a winter home. Your home and mine, that is.

    It's Fall, Boxelder Bugs Are Looking For A Winter Home

    Empty liquor bottles can reveal alcohol use

    Empty liquor bottles can reveal alcohol use
    Can counting the empty liquor bottles in dustbins gauge drinking habits of people? Yes, say researchers, adding that this is an inexpensive, unobtrusive and relatively easy method....

    Empty liquor bottles can reveal alcohol use

    Take shower selfie challenge to fight AIDS

    Take shower selfie challenge to fight AIDS
    If you are done with the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge, pull up your shirts for the HIV Shower Selfie Challenge....

    Take shower selfie challenge to fight AIDS

    Fake bombs don't make sniffer dogs smarter

    Fake bombs don't make sniffer dogs smarter
    Genuine explosive materials are traditionally used to train dogs to detect explosives and to test their performance later on....

    Fake bombs don't make sniffer dogs smarter

    Energy Board Hears Expanded BC Pipeline Threatens First Nations Food, Hunting

    Energy Board Hears Expanded BC Pipeline Threatens First Nations Food, Hunting
    VICTORIA — A First Nations elder told a National Energy Board hearing that Kinder Morgan's proposed pipeline expansion threatens traditional hunting and food sources and the archeological sites of his people.

    Energy Board Hears Expanded BC Pipeline Threatens First Nations Food, Hunting