Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

State spellers miss out on finals

- FRANK E. LOCKWOOD

NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. — Two Arkansas students correctly spelled words Wednesday during the third round of the Scripps National Spelling Bee, but were edged out for spots in the finals.

A third, who had survived Tuesday’s rounds, was eliminated after giving a wrong answer Wednesday morning.

Dasha Blalock, 12, of Jonesboro started her day by correctly spelling the word “reclamatio­n,” the “act or process of reclaiming.”

Weston Sills, 13, of Farmington stepped to the microphone moments later, but misspelled “meringue,” a “dessert topping consisting of a baked mixture of stiffly beaten egg whites and sugar.”

Pavani Chittemset­ty, 12, of Bentonvill­e quickly followed, accurately spelling “wight.” The noun, which is pronounced like “white,” means “a living being; a creature.”

This was Weston’s final year of eligibilit­y. Pavani

and Dasha say they’ll be digging through their dictionari­es, trying to get a leg up for next year’s competitio­n.

Overall, 452 spellers, including all three Arkansans, had made it through the first day of competitio­n. Sixty- seven others failed to advance beyond the initial stages, tournament officials said.

On Wednesday, 321 of the remaining 452 students spelled words correctly.

Under the rules, no more than 50 spellers could advance to today’s final rounds. So the results of a multiple-choice spelling and vocabulary test, administer­ed earlier in the week, were used to sharply winnow the remaining field.

Today’s championsh­ip, the 91st annual bee, will air live on ESPN.

The winner will receive $42,500, a trophy, trips to New York City and Hollywood, and a reference library, bee officials said.

Tuesday’s words were entirely foreseeabl­e. They came from a list of 600 words that contestant­s received ahead of time.

Wednesday’s words came from the Merriam-Webster Unabridged, a dictionary containing more than 470,000 entries.

Pavani, a two-time state champion, qualified for the contest by winning this year’s Arkansas State Spelling Bee, sponsored by the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. A student at Northwest Arkansas Classical Academy in Bentonvill­e, she is the daughter of Murali Chittemset­ty and Dhana Varikunta.

Dasha and Weston earned spots on the stage by entering RSVBee, a new program that gives spellers an alternativ­e route to the national competitio­n.

RSVBee participan­ts must win their school spelling bees, be invited to participat­e and pay a $750 fee.

Dasha, a sixth- grader at the Visual & Performing Arts Magnet School in Jonesboro, has won the Craighead County spelling bee three times. She is the daughter of Tim and Mary Ann Blalock.

Weston, an eighth-grader at Randall G. Lynch Middle School in Farmington, is the son of Andy and Jocelyn Sills. He won the Washington County spelling bee in 2017.

The national spelling bee has been held in recent years at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center, a complex on the banks of the Potomac River, 10 miles south of downtown Washington.

All 50 states and the District of Columbia are represente­d, along with eight foreign nations and a variety of U.S. territorie­s and possession­s.

Only students in eighth grade or below are eligible. Contestant­s’ ages this year range from 8-15.

Pavani, who has already won the Arkansas title twice, said she plans to “go back home and try again for next year, study harder and [come] back.”

Dasha also has her eye on 2019.

“I will be studying as much as I can,” she said.

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 ?? Special to NWA Democrat-Gazette/PETE MAROVICH ?? Pavani Chittemset­ty, 12, from Bentonvill­e, participat­es in the third round of the 2018 Scripps National Spelling Bee on Wednesday in Oxon Hill, Md.
Special to NWA Democrat-Gazette/PETE MAROVICH Pavani Chittemset­ty, 12, from Bentonvill­e, participat­es in the third round of the 2018 Scripps National Spelling Bee on Wednesday in Oxon Hill, Md.
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Sills

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