anchoring script for spell bee competition
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anchoring script for spell bee competition
anchoring script for spell bee competition
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#2
Spelling bee
A spelling bee (also sometimes a "Spelling B") is a competition in which contestants are asked to spell a broad selection of words, usually with a varying degree of difficulty. The concept is thought to have originated in the United States,and spelling bee events, along with variants, are now also held in some other countries around the world. The first winner of an official spelling bee was Frank Neuhauser, who won the 1st National Spelling Bee in Washington, D.C. in 1925 at age eleven.
Contest Rules
You may also download a PDF copy of the Contest Rules for the 2016 Scripps National Spelling Bee.

Rule
1: Eligibility

A speller qualifying for the 2016 Scripps National Spelling Bee (the Bee) must meet
these requirements:

(1)
The speller must not previously have been declared champion of the Bee.

(2) The speller must attend a
school that is officially enrolled with the
Bee.

(3) The speller must not have passed beyond the eighth grade on or before February 1,
2016.

(4) The speller must not have repeated any grade for the purpose of extending spelling bee eligibility.
If the speller has repeated any grade, the speller must notify the Bee of the circumstances of grade repetition by March 31, 2016; and the Bee will, in its sole discretion,
determine the speller's eligibility status on or before April 30, 2016.

(5) The speller -
or
the speller's parent, legal guardian or school official acting on the speller's behalf - must not have
declared to
another entity an academic classification
higher than eighth grade for any purpose including high school graduation equivalency or proficiency
examinations and/or examinations such as the PSAT, SAT or ACT.

(6) The speller must not have earned
the
legal equivalent of a
high school diploma.

(7) The speller must not have completed nor ever been enrolled in more than six high school-level courses or two college-level courses on or
before April 30, 2016.

(8) The speller must not bypass or circumvent normal school activity to
study for spelling bees. The Bee defines normal school activity as adherence to
at least four courses of study other than language arts, spelling, Latin, Greek, vocabulary and etymology for at least four
hours per weekday for 34 of the 38 weeks between August 23, 2015,
and May 21, 2016.

(9) The speller must not have
reached the age of 15 on or before August 31, 2015.

(10) The speller must have been declared a champion of a final
local spelling bee on or after February 1, 2016.

(11) The speller must not have been disqualified at any level of a sponsor's spelling
bee program between June 2015 and April 2016. Further,
if the speller becomes disqualified at any level of a sponsor's spelling bee program before April 2016, the speller will be ineligible to compete in the Bee and may not seek advancement in the Bee through another sponsor and/or enrollment in another school.

(12) The speller must not have any first-, second- or third-degree relatives (i.e., sibling,
parent, grandparent,
aunt, uncle, niece, nephew, half-sibling
or first cousin) who are
current employees of The E.W. Scripps Company.

(13) The speller, upon qualifying for the Bee, must submit a
completed online Champion Registration form, a
signed Appearance Consent and Release Agreement, a signed Certification of
Eligibility Form, and a
hard or electronic copy of a photo to the Bee. The speller will notify the Bee, at least 24 hours prior to
the
first day of
competition, if any of the statements made on the Certification of Eligibility Form are no longer true or require updating.

The Bee may disqualify prior to
or
during competition any
speller who is
not in compliance with any of the above Eligibility Requirements; and it
may - at any time between the conclusion of the 2016 Scripps National Spelling Bee and April 30, 2017 - require any speller who
is found to have
not been in compliance with any of the Eligibility Requirements to forfeit any prizes, rank and other benefits accorded to the speller
as a result of
participation in the 2016 Scripps National Spelling Bee.



Rule
2: Preliminaries Format

The Preliminaries
takes place on May 24 and 25 and is the first of two distinct segments of the competition,
Preliminaries and Finals.

The Preliminaries consists of a
multiple choice test (Preliminaries Test) administered
Tuesday, May 24 at 8:30
a.m. EDT, and two rounds of oral
spelling onstage on Wednesday, May 25 between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and
6:00 p.m. EDT. Spellers may earn up to
36 points during the Preliminaries: up to 30 points on the Preliminaries Test,
three points for correctly
spelling in Round Two
and
three points for correctly spelling in Round Three.

The Preliminaries Test has 26 multiple choice items divided in four sections,
with spellers identifying their responses on Scantron test forms. A
speller receives one point for each of the 12 items identified correctly in the
Round One Spelling section, one point for each of the 12 items identified
correctly in the Round One Vocabulary section, three points for a correct
answer to the single item in the Round Two Vocabulary section, and three points
for a correct answer to the single item in the Round Three Vocabulary section.

During the afternoon of
Wednesday, May 25 the Bee will email Preliminaries Test score reports to parents and spellers.

Eliminations: There are
no
immediate eliminations for providing an incorrect answer in the Preliminaries Test. Upon incorrectly
spelling a word in Round Two or Three, the
speller is eliminated from the competition. Spellers eliminated during Round Two are tied for the same place. Spellers eliminated during Round Three are tied for the same place. Immediately after Round Three a
"maximum of 50" standard is applied to remaining spellers' scores accrued during the Preliminaries. Spellers' scores are plotted on a
chart. Beginning at 36 on the chart, spellers at each consecutive scoring level are added until a
sum of no more than 50 spellers
has
been attained.
All remaining spellers are eliminated. All spellers
eliminated after Round Three and before the start of the Finals are tied for the same place.



Rule
3: Finals Format

The Finals
takes place on Thursday, May 26, and
is the second of two
distinct segments of the competition,
Preliminaries and Finals.

The Finals consists of rounds of
oral spelling beginning with Round Four and continuing, with breaks as the
officials deem necessary, until a champion is declared, or co-champions are
declared.

All spellers who have not been eliminated from the competition spell one word in each round. Upon incorrectly spelling a word,
the speller is eliminated from the competition except as provided under "End-of-Bee Procedure" herein. All spellers eliminated in the same round are tied for the same
place.

Provision for Declaration of Co-Champions: If one champion fails to emerge at the conclusion of 25 consecutive
rounds of competition involving three or fewer spellers, the remaining spellers
in the competition will be declared co-champions.

End-of-Bee Procedure: If all spellers in a round misspell, all remain in the competition and a
new
round begins with
the spellers spelling in their original order. If only one speller
spells correctly in a round, a new one-word round begins and the speller is given an opportunity to spell
the
next word on the list (anticipated winning word). If the speller
succeeds in correctly spelling the anticipated winning word in this one-word
round,
the speller is declared the
champion. If the speller misspells the anticipated winning word in a
one-word round,
a new round begins with all
the
spellers who
spelled correctly and incorrectly in the previous round: These spellers spell in their original order.



Rule 4: Official Dictionary and Source of Words

Webster's Third New International Dictionary
and its addenda
section, copyright 2002, Merriam-Webster (Webster's Third) is
the final authority
and
sole source for the spelling of words; the primary source used
to craft the pronunciations, definitions
and
language origins for the Bee; and the only printed authority consulted by officials,
as well as the sole source used during the Bee to verify the information in our
prepared lists. If more than one spelling
is listed for a
word, any of these spellings will be accepted as correct if the following three criteria are met: (1) the
pronunciations are
identical, (2) the definitions are identical, and (3)
the
words are identified as being variants of each other. Spellings having temporal labels (such as archaic, obsolete), stylistic labels (such as substand, nonstand) or regional labels (such as North, Midland, Irish) which differ from main entry spellings not having these status labels will not be accepted as correct.



Rule 5: Time

Constraints: During the Preliminaries Test: The speller may make or change responses on the test
form during the time that the test is being administered by the pronouncer, and
for 10 minutes afterward. During oral spelling rounds in the Preliminaries and Finals: The speller's time at the microphone has a limit of 2 minutes. Time begins when the
pronouncer first pronounces the word. For the first 1 minute and 15 seconds, the speller will have
the benefit of viewing a monitor displaying a green traffic light. After 1 minute and 15 seconds, the monitor will show
a yellow traffic light and the time clock as it counts down to
the
30-second mark. At the 30-second mark, the monitor will show a red traffic light and a countdown of the remaining 30 seconds. The judges and pronouncer will not communicate with the speller during the final
30 seconds. The judges will disqualify
any speller who does
not provide a
complete spelling before the
expiration of time (0 seconds). If the judges and pronouncer need to
discuss a competition-related matter while a speller is
contemplating a
word, they may pause the time clock, and they will inform the
speller when they pause and resume the time clock.

Schedule modifications: Bee officials may, in their sole discretion, announce schedule and/or
location changes in response to unexpected circumstances.



Rule 6: Special Needs

The Bee strives to
provide accommodation for spellers who
have diagnosed medical conditions. All requests for accommodation of special needs should be directed in writing to
the director of the Bee before May 1,
2016. The judges have discretionary power to amend spelling requirements on a case-by-case basis for spellers with diagnosed medical conditions.



Rule
7: Pronouncer's Role

The pronouncer
strives to pronounce words according to the diacritical markings in Webster's Third.

Homonyms: If a word has one or more homonyms, the pronouncer indicates which word is to
be
spelled by
defining the word.

Speller's requests: In oral competition the pronouncer responds only to the speller's requests for repetition of the word's pronunciation, a definition, sentence, part of speech, language(s) of origin and alternate pronunciation(s). When presented with requests for alternate
pronunciations, the
pronouncer or associate pronouncer checks for alternate pronunciations in Webster's Third. If
the speller wishes to
ask
if the dictionary lists a
specific root word as the
root
of the word to be spelled, the speller must specify a pronunciation of the root (not a spelling), its
language and its definition. The pronouncer will grant all
such requests as long as they are in accordance with time constraints outlined in Rule 6.

Pronouncer's sense of helpfulness: The pronouncer may offer word information -
without the speller having requested the information - if the pronouncer senses that the information is helpful and the information appears in the 2016 Scripps National Spelling Bee word list or Webster's Third.



Rule 8: Judges' Role

The judges listen carefully, determine whether or not words are
spelled correctly, and uphold the rules. The decisions of the judges
are final.

Misunderstandings: The judges will not respond to
the
speller's question(s) about
the word and its pronunciation but, if the judges sense that the speller has misunderstood the word, the judges will direct the
speller and pronouncer to interact until they are satisfied that reasonable attempts have been made to assist the speller in understanding the word within the time constraints outlined in Rule 5. It is sometimes impossible to detect a misunderstanding until
a spelling error has been made, and the judges are not responsible for the speller's misunderstanding.

Pronouncer Errors: The judges compare the pronouncer's pronunciation with the diacritical markings in the word list.
If the judges feel that the pronouncer's pronunciation does
not match the pronunciation specified in the diacritical markings, the judges will direct the
pronouncer to
correct the error as soon as it is detected.

Disqualifications for reasons other than clear misspelling: The judges will disqualify a speller (1) who does not approach the microphone when it is the speller's time to
receive the word unless there are
extenuating circumstances that, in the judges' sole discretion, merit holding the speller's
word
in reserve and offering it to the speller after all other spellers in the round have spelled and before the close of the round; (2) who engages in
unsportsmanlike conduct; (3) who, in the process of retracing a spelling, alters the letters or sequence of letters from those first uttered; or (4) who, in the process of spelling, utters unintelligible or nonsense sounds.

Speller activities that do not merit disqualification: The judges may not disqualify a speller (1) for failing to pronounce the word either before or
after spelling it, (2)
for
asking a question,
or
(3) for noting or failing to note the capitalization of a word, the presence of a diacritical mark or the presence of a hyphen or other form of punctuation.



Rule 9: Speller's Role

The speller makes an effort to
face
the judges and pronounce the word for the judges before
spelling it and after spelling it.
The speller while facing the judges makes an effort to utter each letter distinctly and with
sufficient volume to be understood by the judge. The speller may ask the pronouncer to say the word again, define it, use it in a sentence, provide the part of speech, provide the language(s) of origin and/or provide an alternate pronunciation or pronunciations. The speller may also ask root word questions that meet the specifications delineated in Rule 7.

Misunderstandings: The speller is responsible for any misunderstanding of the word unless (1)
the pronouncer never provided a
correct
pronunciation; (2) the pronouncer provided incorrect information regarding the definition, part of speech, or language of origin; or (3) the speller correctly spelled a homonym of the word and the pronouncer failed to
either offer a definition or distinguish the
homonyms.

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#3

The Farewell Party

The Farewell Party (Hebrew: מיתה טובה‎‎ Mita Tova) is a 2014 Israeli drama film about the use of a euthanasia device, directed by Tal Granit and Sharon Maymon. It was nominated for the Ophir Award for Best Film.[1] The film was screened in the Venice Days section of the 71st Venice International Film Festival[2] and has been selected to be screened in the Contemporary World Cinema section at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival.[3] The film was also screened in the 44th edition of the International Film Festival Rotterdam, reaching the second place in the IFFR audience award.[4]

Cast

Ze'ev Revach as Yehezkel
Aliza Rosen as Yana
Raffi Tavor as Rafi
Levana Finkelstein as Levana
Ilan Dar as Dr. Daniel
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