University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Oct. 14, 1959 STUDY PAYS OFF—Gary D. Hays, Dodge City graduate student, receives a $250 national patriotic service scholarship from Mrs. Robert L. Webb of Topeka. The scholarship is given by the National Society of Colonial Dames of America in Kansas. George L. Anderson, left, chairman of the KU history department, watches the presentation. THIS MAN WAS A REBEL WITH A CAUSE!! This picture is one of the most stirring, forceful and significant adventures ever to come out of movieland. Wonderful production techniques...beautiful photography and a fine cast make this unusually good for those who like the best in the theater. As the manager of your theater, this is a "movie" which I am privileged to display with pride . . . and a feeling of contributing something wonderful toward helping keep America great in a troubled world! Dennis Montee, Mgr. Granada Theatre STARTS THURSDAY!! GRANADA Miss Pfeiffer testified; Perry Riddle, Salina junior, was instructed to pay the $36 in fines collected while he was enrolled as a student. His other tickets were waived because he received them after withdrawing from KU in March. Student Court Acquits Two Two of the six students appealing parking tickets in Student Court last night received reductions of fines and two were acquitted. Ends Tonite "Diary of Anne Frank" Miss Pleiffer, who had received 16 tickets on her parents' car in May, said she had been going immediately from classes to the KU Medical Center to see her father. "My father was near death. It was like a nightmare. I couldn't get concerned over parking tickets at the time." The $206 parking violations bill of Sara Pfeiffer, Parsons sophomore, was cut to $14. Two cases involved serious illnesses and large numbers of parking tickets. She received tickets for parking without a permit in specific zones and for parking illegally in the women's dormitory area. "Everything that happened at school during those 12 days while my father was sick in Kansas City seemed secondary," she said. Since I was in a state of confusion and didn't understand the details about parking permits. I didn't get concerned enough over the tickets to do anything about them. Perry Riddle appealed seven tickets he had received last March for parking without the proper permit in the zone behind Watson library. Riddle testified that he had parked there because his wife was sick and worked in the library. Sylvester Clark, Perry sophomore, was relieved of further prosecution after he received a ticket for not having the proper sticker on his car. Clark said he had replaced the rear window of his car the day before he got the ticket and had not had time to put another sticker on his new window. Wife Was Ill Brenda Riddle, his wife, said: My doctor told me I had a chronic kidney infection that was rather serious and that I should park as close as I could to my work. That way I wouldn't wear myself out by walking." Ritter, summer Kansan photographer had been unloading photographic equipment from his car behind Flint Hall. Thirteen days passed between Mrs. Riddle's first treatment and the day the first ticket was issued. The judges denied the appeal of Robert Bruce Gardner, Lawrence senior, on parking tickets received last fall. They said the traffic regulations book clearly states that appeals must be made within 10 days after tickets are issued. Gardner's fines totaled $16. Arthur McKinley, Medicine Lodge 2nd-year law student and chief justice of the Student Court conferred with the other judges on the bench for 15 minutes. He announced that no waiver would be given because Riddle had not attempted to obtain a temporary parking permit during the 13 days before the first ticket. The judges acquitted Harry Bitter The judges acquitted Harry Ritter, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student. Phillip Jacka, Wichita sophomore, was found guilty of parking in a zone designated "For Museum Visitors Only." Judges said that since Jacka was a regularly enrolled student at the time the tickets were given he could not be considered a visitor to the museum. Jacka was picking up typed papers from an employee in Dyche Museum when campus police issued the ticket. Sell it with a Kansan Classified Ad Tonite: Kirk Douglas • Anthony Quinn "Last Train from Gun Hill"