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Private and home schoolers took first and second place in the annual Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee at the Grand Hyatt Washington hotel in the nation's capital on May 28th and 29th. The new champ (and 76th winner of the event) is 13-year-old Sal Gunturi of Plano, Texas, who recently completed eighth grade at the St. Mark's School of Texas, a nonsectarian independent school in Dallas with an enrollment of just over 800 boys in grades one through 12.
This year's final field of 251 contestants, ages eight to 15, was the largest ever. Participants qualified by winning one of the preliminary events sponsored throughout the United States and in Europe, Guam, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Bahamas, and American Samoa. Thirty-one home schoolers, 53 private school students, and 167 government school attendees earned trips to Washington.
Young Sai told reporters that his goal had been to at least place higher than he had in past years. His steady ascent to the top included ties for 32nd place in 2000, 16th place in 2001, and 7th place in 2002. At the end of nearly nine hours of grueling final-round competition on May 29th, Sai emerged the winner after correctly spelling "pococurante," a word that suggests nonchalance or indifference.
In his spare time, Sai plays the violin and studies Indian classical music. Warren Foxworth, head of the St. Mark's middle school, describes him as a "very strong student, an Honor Roll student, popular among the boys and involved in a lot of activities." Sai's mother, Lakshmi, is a homemaker, and his father, Sarma, is a chemical engineer with ...