REGION Thursday, August 27, 2015 East Oregonian Page 3A Wordsmith to research Council moves toward PILOT ROCK Spelling champ uses both sides of brain $4 million sewer project By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian Ever wonder what happened to that guy? That girl? Take the case of Chris- topher Barnhart. Twenty years ago, the Pendleton boy won both district and state spelling competitions. Those who knew the precocious 12-year-old weren’t awfully surprised. From toddlerhood, Chris- topher loved words. One year, he asked for a dictio- nary for Christmas. He read the newspaper when most children were working their way through “Green Eggs and Ham” or “Goodnight Moon.” Christopher’s mother, Melinda Slatt, said Christo- pher’s brain was sponge-like and his pronunciation spot- on. She remembers asking her four-year-old son to run to the backyard one summer day to get a sprinkler for her. He returned a few moments later with a question. “You mean the oscillating sprinkler?” he asked. “I didn’t even know he knew the word,” Slatt said. “He had read it somewhere.” Christopher and his aunt often went head to head doing the daily newspaper crossword puzzle. After procuring two identical papers, they raced to see ZKR FRXOG ¿QLVK ¿UVW +H often won. So what happened to this talented wordsmith, this lover of etymology, grammar and spelling? Surely he carved out a career as a writer, maybe an up-and-coming author whose name will one day grace the New York Times bestseller list. Sit back in your chair and get ready to glide Google Earth-style slowly toward the East Coast, the state of 1HZ