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"He's not that interested," the father said. "He's more into tennis." Second place went to Stuti Mishra of West Melbourne, Fla., who misspelled "schwarmerei"
-- which means excessive, unbridled enthusiasm. While many spellers pretend to write words with their fingers, 14-year-old Stuti had an unusual routine
-- she mimed typing them on a keyboard. The week began with 278 spellers, including the youngest in the history of the competition
-- 6-year-old Lori Anne Madison of Lake Ridge, Va. The field was cut to 50 semifinalists after a computer test and two preliminary rounds, and Lori Anne was two misspelled words away from a semifinal berth. The tiny, blue-eyed prodigy said she'd be back next year. Gifton Wright of Spanish Town, Jamaica, was hoping to be the first winner from outside the United States since 1998, but he couldn't correctly spell "ericeticolous." Twelve-year-old Arvind Mahankali of New York aspired to be the first non-teen to win since 2000, but he couldn't spell "schwannoma" and finished third for the second straight year. "I got eliminated both times by German words," said Arvind, who has one year of eligibility remaining. "I know what I have to study."
[Associated
Press;
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