http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,522705,00.html

Excerpt:

Cool and collected, Kavya Shivashankar wrote out every word on her palm and 
always ended with a smile. The 13-year-old Kansas girl saved the biggest smile 
for last, when she rattled off the letters to "Laodicean" to become the 
nation's spelling champion.

The budding neurosurgeon from Olathe, Kan., outlasted 11 finalists Thursday 
night to win the Scripps National Spelling Bee, taking home more than $40,000 
in cash and prizes and, of course, the huge champion's trophy.

Click here to see photos from the event.

After spelling the winning word, which means lukewarm or indifferent in 
religion or politics, Kavya got huge hugs from her father, mother and little 
sister.

Kavya was making her fourth appearance at the bee, having finishing 10th, 
eighth and fourth over the last three years. She enjoys playing the violin, 
bicycling, swimming and learning Indian classical dance, and her role model is 
Nupur Lala, the 1999 champion featured in the documentary "Spellbound."

Second place went to 12-year-old Tim Ruiter of Centreville, Va., the only 
non-teenager in the finals. He misspelled "maecenas," which means a cultural 
benefactor.

Aishwarya Pastapur, 13, from Springfield, Ill., who loved to pump her arm and 
exclaim "Yes!" after getting a word correct, finished third after flubbing 
"menhir", a type of monolith.

[end of excerpt]

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