Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
International

Two Indian-Origin Students Win US Spelling Bee Contest

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 May, 2016 12:13 PM
    Two Indian-origin students won the the 2016 Scripps National Spelling Bee, third straight year of double winners.
     
    Nihar Janga, 11, of Austin, Texas, and Jairam Hathwar, 13, of Corning, New York, were declared co-champions at the National Spelling Bee on Thursday night, CNN reported.
     
    "It was just insane, I don't even know how to put it in words," Jairam said.
     
    "I'm just speechless. I can't say anything. I'm only in fifth grade," Nihar said. 
     
    Nihar correctly spelled the word "gesellschaft", which refers to a type of social relationship and Jairam correctly spelled the word "Feldenkrais", a trademark that refers to a system of aided body movements.
     
    Jairam's brother Sriram won the 2014 spelling championship. 
     
    Twice, it looked as if Jairam would be eliminated, after he misspelled "drahthaar", a breed of dog, and "mischsprache", a language. But Nihar missed his follow-up words, which put Jairam back in contention, USA Today reported.
     
    The spellers took home $40,000 in cash and other prizes.
     
    Ten contestants made it to the finals and competed for the title of national champion before a live television audience. 
     
    The bee began Tuesday with 284 (boys: 143 and girls: 141) contestants but was pared to 45 Wednesday evening, after a written test and two rounds of onstage spelling.
     
    By Thursday afternoon, the field had been further narrowed to the 10 finalists, who came from California, Colorado, Florida, Indiana, Massachusetts, New York and Texas.
     
    For the first time, competitors included a first-grader - 6-year-old Akash Vukoti of San Angelo, Texas.
     
    Last year’s winners were Vanya Shivashankar of Olathe, Kansas, and Gokul Venkatachalam of Chesterfield, Missouri.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Canadian Journalist Mohamed Fahmy Pardoned By President In Egypt

    Canadian Journalist Mohamed Fahmy Pardoned By President In Egypt
    Fahmy and his colleague and co-accused Baher Mohamed were among 100 people — including dozens of prominent human rights activists — pardoned by President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi.

    Canadian Journalist Mohamed Fahmy Pardoned By President In Egypt

    US Lawmakers Hail Modi's Trip To Silicon Valley

    Welcoming Prime Minister Narendra Modi's second visit to the US, several US lawmakers have hoped it would deepen Indian investment in the US and drive more development in India with use of US technological knowledge.

    US Lawmakers Hail Modi's Trip To Silicon Valley

    Keystone Xl Followup: Hillary Clinton Wants Canada-U.S.-Mexico Climate Change Plan

    Hillary Clinton has released a policy paper that calls for a wide-ranging, co-ordinated Canada-U.S.-Mexico climate-change plan one day after announcing her opposition to the Keystone XL pipeline.

    Keystone Xl Followup: Hillary Clinton Wants Canada-U.S.-Mexico Climate Change Plan

    717 Killed In Haj Stampede, Worst Tragedy In 25 Years

    717 Killed In Haj Stampede, Worst Tragedy In 25 Years
    An Indian woman from Telangana was among the 717 people killed on Thursday in a horrific Haj stampede in Saudi Arabia, the worst tragedy to hit the world's holiest Muslim pilgrimage in 25 years.

    717 Killed In Haj Stampede, Worst Tragedy In 25 Years

    Breast-Feeding In Public: US Library Apologises To Indian Origin Woman Sherry Singh

    Breast-Feeding In Public: US Library Apologises To Indian Origin Woman Sherry Singh
    Sherry Singh, a regular visitor at the Forest Hills library, was last weekend told to stop feeding her child in the library and breast-feed her four-month-old daughter in the restroom.

    Breast-Feeding In Public: US Library Apologises To Indian Origin Woman Sherry Singh

    Narendra Modi Connects With Indian Diaspora In Ireland, Promises More Visits

    Narendra Modi Connects With Indian Diaspora In Ireland, Promises More Visits
    Modi, who is on a day-long visit to Ireland, in his address to a crowded reception by the Indian diaspora apologised for not being able to give the Indian-origin people more time.

    Narendra Modi Connects With Indian Diaspora In Ireland, Promises More Visits