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Colorado Teen Letter Perfect in 1st Try at National Spelling Bee

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From Associated Press

After slowly and deliberately working his way through a mountain of words, a Colorado seventh-grader spelled “prospicience”--meaning foresight--to win the 75th Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee.

Pratyush Buddiga, 13, survived 11 rounds, outlasting 249 other contestants who began the competition Wednesday. He took home an engraved trophy and $12,000.

“I didn’t think I really had a chance to win,” he said. “I just wanted to be in the top five.”

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The first public school student to win the competition since 1999, Pratyush attends Mountain Ridge Middle School in Colorado Springs. His family hails from India, but Pratyush was born in New Zealand, and the family came to the United States in 1995.

A first-time competitor in the national bee, he went head-to-head in the final rounds with Steven Nalley, 14, of Starkville, Miss. Steven was returning for his second try at the championship.

Ninety spellers began the day onstage, having survived a 25-word written test Wednesday.

In the final day of competition, contestants successfully worked their way through words including “kakemono,” “stultiloquence,” “hermeneutics,” “soavemente” and “toreutics.”

The final rounds featured sudden exits by several contestants who seemed almost invincible.

The capacity crowd gasped when Michael Hessenauer, 14, of Dublin, Ohio, bowed out in Round 5, misspelling “verticil,” which means a circular arrangement, as with flowers or hairs, around a central point. Michael was the highest-ranked speller returning from the 2001 competition. He tied for third last year, and was in the finals for the third time.

Erik M. Bolt, 14, of South Bend, Ind., one of two finalists making their fourth trip to the competition, was among the final nine contestants. He was eliminated in Round 7 on “badigeon,” a cement used to cover holes in wood or stone.

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Also eliminated was Mallika Thampy of St. Louis, younger sister of the 2000 champ. She tripped up on “batture,” a French word meaning an elevated riverbed or seabed.

Emily Cole, 14, of Boiceville, N.Y., another speller making her fourth trip to the bee, correctly spelled “pugilist,” a boxer, on Wednesday, but was eliminated in the written test.

Other finalists stumbled on these tough nuts: “throstle,” “roriferous,” “objicient” and “icteric,” among others.

Thursday’s finals were broadcast live on ESPN, the cable sports network. First Lady Laura Bush opened the broadcast with taped comments, telling the contestants, “I am very proud of you. I hope you’ll always work hard at spelling and at reading. The more you read, the better your spelling will become and the more your vocabulary will grow.”

Among the guests of honor watching the competition Thursday was Frank Neuhauser, 88, winner of the first National Spelling Bee in 1925. After he won, Neuhauser got to shake hands with President Calvin Coolidge and received a hero’s welcome in his hometown of Louisville, Ky.

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