Katherine Close, 13 yrs, wins US National Spelling Bee...
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N.J. girl wins 1st
prime-time spelling bee By
JOSEPH WHITE,
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - The
winner of the first national
spelling bee on prime-time
network television didn't
display any
made-for-reality-TV
theatrics. She didn't write
imaginary letters in the
air, scream her letters into
the microphone or punch
her fist when she got a
word right.

No, all 13-year-old
Katharine Close did was
spell big words with a nod
of the head and her hands
in her pockets, her left
hand clutching an unseen
pendant labeled "Angel in
My Pocket."
No one was close enough. Katherine Close,
winner of the spelling bee.
"It was given to me by a family in my town," said the eighth-grader
from H.W. Mountz School in Spring Lake, N.J. "And I always put it in my
pocket during spelling bees. I think it brings good luck, for some
reason."

Katharine's modest but disarming smile turned into a gasp of joy
Thursday when she aced "ursprache" — which means a parent language
— to claim the Scripps National Spelling Bee title. She is the first girl to
take the top prize in seven years.
"I couldn't believe it. I knew I knew how to spell the word and I was just
in shock," said Katharine, who won more than $42,000 in cash and
prizes. "I couldn't believe I would win."

The ratings will determine whether Katharine's winning performance
was worth two hours of prime-time programming on ABC, but there was
little doubt that on a day when she was champion, TV ruled the show.

ESPN has broadcast the second day of the bee in the afternoon since
1994, but the contest's growing popularity prompted the prime-time
move that would yield a larger viewing audience at the expense of the
flow of the competition. There were interminable delays for
commercials and up-close-and-personal profiles of the contestants,
piling on the boredom for some — as evidenced by on-stage yawns —
and the anxiety for others.

"You're about to go up to spell and you have to wait about four
minutes," Katharine said. "It's kind of nerve-racking."

Sometimes there were as few as two words spelled between commercial
breaks. "Again, more bad news," bee director Paige Kimble said as she
announced yet another stoppage, eliciting moans from the audience.

Even one of the most charming moments of the evening — when the
finalists spontaneously gathered in a huddle and chanted "One-Two-
Three-Spell!" — had to be repeated for the TV cameras.

"It does make the spelling bee a bit more show biz," said James Maguire,
author of "American Bee, The National Spelling Bee and the Culture of
Word Nerds."

"I realize it's a bit more stage-managed than before," Maguire said.
"We're living in a TV age. The spelling bee has been shaped by TV more
than ever before."

At least the drama was compelling. Katharine and runner-up Finola Mei
Hwa Hackett, a 14-year-old Canadian, were the last two standing for
seven rounds, both confidently spelling words such as "maieutic,"
"poiesis" and "tmesis."

Finally, Finola, from Edmonton, Alberta, stumbled on the intriguing word
"weltschmerz," which essentially means a kind of sentimental pessimism.
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The bee is enjoying popularity unrivaled in its 79-year history. "Akeelah
and the Bee," a movie about a Los Angeles girl who overcomes adversity
to win the national bee, opened nationwide in late April.

That followed last year's "Bee Season," about a man focused on his
daughter's quest to become a spelling bee champ. It was based on the
best-selling novel by Myla Goldberg.

Also last year, the Broadway musical, "The 25th Annual Putnam County
Spelling Bee," won two Tony awards. And the 2002 documentary
"Spellbound" followed eight teenagers during their quest to win the
1999 National Spelling Bee.

The Louisville Courier-Journal started the bee in 1925. The E.W. Scripps
Co., a media conglomerate, assumed sponsorship in 1941.
Third-place went to Saryn Hooks, a 14-year-old from West Alexander
Middle School in Taylorsville, N.C., who was disqualified earlier in the
evening, then returned to competition after the judges corrected their
mistake. Saryn eventually fumbled on "icteritious," an adjective
describing a jaundiced color.

Katharine was appearing in the bee for the fifth time, having tied for
seventh-place last year. She studied by typing lists of words on her
computer and hopes someday to be a journalist.

Asked what she'll remember most about the bee, she said: "Probably
just hearing 'ursprache.'"
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