PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS Hall of Fame honors two Two Kansas editors took their place alongside their 49 counterparts in the new Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame Seminar Room in Flint Hall. ★ ★ ★ ★ The late Arthur J. Carruth Jr., Topeka, and Fred W. Brinkerhoff, Pittsburg, were honored Saturday during Editor's Day activities here. Brinkerhoff attended KU As Kansas history was one of Brinkerhoff's chief interests, he was considered one of the best-informed Kansans on that subject. During his editorship of the Pittsburg Headlight and Sun, it is estimated that Fred W. Brinkerheff wrote nearly 100 editorials a month and had a hand in training 500 aspiring journalists. Brinkerhoff received his formal education from Ottawa University and the University of Kansas. After graduating, he worked for the Fort Scott Republican, the Chanute Tribune, and the Kansas City Star before going to Pittsburg in 1911. He was a past president of the William Allen White Foundation. It was during his term of office that the Foundation voted to finance the construction of the Hall of Fame room. Members of the Brinkerhoff family attending the Saturday program were a nephew and his wife, and a niece and her husband. Carruth built State Journal Arthur J. Carruth Jr., named Saturday to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame, was once called, "the man who has made the Topeka State Journal." He was born into a journalistic family in New York, and came to Kansas with his parents in 1900. Carruth became a reporter for the Topeka State Journal after graduation from Washburn. From reporter, he advanced from city editor, to managing editor and later to co-publisher. As a high school student he worked on the Herington Times and Sun. Later he attended Washburn University and was editor of both the yearbook and the newspaper. Mrs. Arthur J. Carruth Jr., wife of the honoree, attended the Editor's Day activities along with her son and daughter-in-law, and a daughter and her husband. Hawks to一 (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) ly KU could move up and down the field. It was still a close game as far as I was concerned. We didn't move the ball real well until after we blocked the kick. I think that was the real turning point." The second touchdown in the second quarter was a repeat of the first performance. It came with 12:38 left to play. The Sooners started their scoring push early in the game. After receiving the opening kick, they ground out 16 plays in almost eight minutes to go 80 yards for their first six-pointer. KU FOLLOWED with its only Call rush meeting Freshman women will register for spring rush Thursday in Room 229 of the Kansas Union. The room will be open from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Information meetings for possible registrants are at 10 p.m. tonight. The registration procedure, as well as the entire spring rush schedule, will be explained, according to Christie Lee, Florissant, Mo., senior and chairman of the Panhellenic Rush Council. Miss Lee stressed the importance of this meeting for freshman women, including the Lawrence women who should attend the meeting with their affiliated floors. BAD DRIVER McKINNEY, Tex. — (UPI) — A 75-year-old man who had not driven a car for 10 years hitch-hiked from Frisco, Tex., and put $100 on a used car. Within 15 minutes, the man was involved in six traffic accidents and received 10 tickets. Police impounded his car, relatives paid a $100 fine and drove him home. scoring threat, but was extinguished on the two-yard line, when the Hawks could not push across the goal line on the fourth down. The second half was more of the same for KU. The blocked punt counted for the third score. Then two more long drives pushed the score to 35-0. The defeat was the worst the Jayhawks have suffered in the series since 1958. Then Oklahoma whipped the Jayhawks, 43-0. It was the first shutout for Kansas in 12 games. The loss brings the KU eleven 0-2 in the conference. They have a chance to even up this record in their next two games which are on the road. Saturday they face Oklahoma State. The following week they meet the other Kansas half of the Big Eight, K-State. CARRUTH WAS A long-time editor of the Topeka State Journal and was known for his column, "Under the Whispering Willow." MODEL-M-4610 $219.00 Reg. $279.95 Brinkerhoff was editor of the Pittsburg Headlight and Sun for 55 years. Editors are named to the Hall of Fame by members of the Quarter Century Club, a group composed of editors with at least 25 years service in Kansas. The new seminar room was dedicated during the morning program of Editor's Day. "This room should mean a place of sanctity and high inspirations for all those who are enlisted under the banner of the Fourth Estate, to the end that we may strive to conduct our own lives and newspapers in a comparable fashion to what these triumphant titans of the Kansas press have done," Rolla A. Clymer, editor and publisher of the El Dorado Times, said. Daily Kansan Monday, October 17, 1966 FINEST CLEANING ON THE FACE OF THE GLOBE! 3 NOW OPEN! LOADS OF WASHING FOR THE PRICE OF Offer Expires 11:00 p.m., Oct. 21 CLEAN! NEAT! NEW! Counselor on Duty At All Times Open 7:00 a.m.-11 p.m. 7 Days A Week Soft Water - Air-Conditioning Free Parking Free Parking 2346 Iowa VI 3-9868 on Highway 59 South Experimental Theatre THEATRE U.S.A. Oct.27, 28, 29 8:20 p.m. Dramatic Excerpts Tickets 75¢ with current Certificate of Registration Murphy Hall Box Office Telephone UN 4-3982 Flying home over THANKSGIVING and CHRISTMAS vacations? Make Your Reservations Early Flights are filling fast NEW FLIGHT SCHEDULES NOW AVAILABLE CONTACT: MAUPINTOUR ON THE MALLS VI 3-1211