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Story November 28, 1952

The Indian Leader

Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas

What is this article about?

Journalism students at Haskell Institute held a contest to learn the most student names in 16 days. Sarah Franklin won with 167 names, Jo Ann Pepper second with 148, and several others exceeded 100, averaging 100.3 per student.

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OCR Quality

98% Excellent

Full Text

"YOUR NAME, PLEASE"

Haskellites who may have considered the journalism students especially nosey the past three weeks should be informed of their contest as to which "cub" reporter could learn the names of the most students.

The person who merits the coveted title of Nosiest Reporter is Sarah Franklin, who learned the names of 167 students during the 16 days of the contest. Jo Ann Pepper placed second with 148 names. Others who hit above the hundred mark were Mary Jo Tahsuda, Jolene Carnes, Alice Jefferson, Anne Ninham, Nora Postoak, Darlena Camp and Mary Belle Ray, bringing the average for the class to 100.3 for each student.

What sub-type of article is it?

Curiosity Personal Triumph

What themes does it cover?

Triumph Social Manners

What keywords are associated?

Name Learning Contest Journalism Students Haskell Institute Nosiest Reporter Student Names

What entities or persons were involved?

Sarah Franklin Jo Ann Pepper Mary Jo Tahsuda Jolene Carnes Alice Jefferson Anne Ninham Nora Postoak Darlena Camp Mary Belle Ray

Where did it happen?

Haskell Institute

Story Details

Key Persons

Sarah Franklin Jo Ann Pepper Mary Jo Tahsuda Jolene Carnes Alice Jefferson Anne Ninham Nora Postoak Darlena Camp Mary Belle Ray

Location

Haskell Institute

Story Details

Journalism students competed to learn the most names in 16 days; Sarah Franklin won with 167, averaging 100.3 per student.

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