US | spelling bee What It Takes to Become a C-H-A-M-P-I-O-N Spelling bee winners weigh in on dos and don'ts of success By Sam Gale Rosen Posted May 27, 2008 7:05 PM CDT Copied Sarah Harmsworth, 13, of Corvallis, Mont., writes her word in the air during the third round of the Scripps 2007 Spelling Bee in Washington, Wednesday, May 30, 2007. (AP Photo/Lawrence Jackson) Prevailing in the Scripps National Spelling Bee isn't easy, say former contestants and winners, but it can change your life. "To be a champion, I think it takes a certain tenaciousness and a will to succeed, and that will pretty much take you far in anything," 1973 winner and MIT grad Barrie Trinkle tells USA Today. This year's bee is under way in DC and will have a winner by Friday. Read These Next "Admiral Piett" of the Star Wars universe died from COVID. Trump voter who supported mass deportations could be deported herself. Rescuer in floods gets a poignant question. Michael Douglas 'had to stop'—but he's not retired. Report an error