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The Honolulu Advertiser

Updated at 2:39 p.m., Wednesday, May 29, 2002

State speller survives national round, but falls in test

By Greg Toppo
AP Education Writer

Jessica Menor Palola of 'Ewa Beach makes it through the first round of the Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee by correctly spelling "trichotillomania," an abnormal desire to pluck out one's hair. But she then failed to make the cut in a written test.
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON – Hawai'i's Jessica Menor Palola, 14, of 'Ewa Beach, Hawai'i, didn’t make the cut, but she impressed the national spelling bee crowd earlier today by slowly ticking off the many letters of “trichotillomania,” an abnormal desire to pluck out one’s hair.

Ninety die-hard contestants will compete for the title of the nation’s top speller tomorrow, after surviving the crucible of Round 1 plus a grueling, 25-word written test in the Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee.

The competition began early today with 250 contestants, but only 175 made it as far as the test.

Paloloa was among those who misspelled more than 10 words on the written test and were eliminated.

The written test was unprecedented but necessary to reduce the competition from three days to two, organizers said. The 25 words ran the gamut from elementary (“allot,” “solvency”) to advanced (“decoupage”) to nearly impossible (“geusioleptic,” “boswellize,” “scagliola”).

Most contestants said the exam was tougher than they had anticipated.

“This was the hard part, this test,” said Michael Zivat, 14, of Chicago, as he looked over the list. “The oral rounds were easier — you only had one word and you had time to think it over.”

Asked how he did, Michael shook his head. “Not too good.” He went back over many of the words, changing the spellings. “I second-guessed myself.” He didn’t make it, missing more than the nine words allowed.

As he reviewed the official list, Andy Wade, 10, of Scott Depot, W.Va., said he got 18 correct. Asked how he knew, Andy simply said, “I remembered how I spelled the words.” He was right — he’ll continue on Thursday.

Sarah Brand, 12, of Knoxville, Tenn., said she studied an 18,000-word list of all the words from past spelling bees, an exercise that “helped me with a couple of the words.” She’ll continue to the final rounds.

Ashley Bose of McAllen, Texas, didn’t make it, but took the fall in stride.

“I had it coming,” she said. “I didn’t really study too hard.”

Abhijith Eswarappa, 14, of Memphis, Tenn., said he copied his spellings onto scrap paper and matched them with the printed list, which was “surprisingly hard, compared to the practice test.”

Abhijith, who tied for seventh place last year, said the words this year seem “somewhat harder” than last year’s. He will continue on Thursday.

Spelling bee lists are always tricky, but this year’s list has its share of humdingers, including “scrobiculate,” “escabeche,” “farinaceous,” “iatrogenic,” “psittacism” and “Nietzschean.”

Other contestants stumbled on words that would make even well-read adults pull their hair out: “soubise,” “seguidilla,” “thalassocrat,” “heaume,” “Ogygian” and “ulotrichous.”

This year’s winner takes home $12,000. The spellers come from every state except Vermont and Utah, and from several U.S. territories.

The spellers are sponsored by newspapers around the country. Palola is sponsored by The Honolulu Advertiser.