Page 6 University Daily Kansan ___ Two Found Guilty By Student Court Three parking violation cases were heard by the student court Thursday night. One of the three students was found not guilty. Larry L. Marshall, Salina junior, was found guilty of parking in a driveway. Donald R. Sexton, Lawrence junior, was found guilty of over-parking in a restricted zone in front of Spooner-Thayer Museum of Art. Larry Herrelson, Galena junior, was found not guilty of over-parking. His car ran out of gas and he left it to go to classes from 9 a.m. to noon. He removed the car in a reasonable time as soon as classes were out. The court said classes have preference. Student court was changed from once a month to twice a month this year so that fewer appeals would be heard on any given date and each case would go faster. Any student receiving a traffic ticket for a non-moving traffic violation may appeal to the student court. Appeal forms may be obtained at the traffic office in Hoch. The court meets on the first and third Thursdays of each month. "This is an aid to students, since they don't have to wait so long to be heard," Thomas Hampton, Salina third-year law student and chief justice of the court, said. He said the court has no jurisdiction over faculty members or moving traffic violations. Justices of the court are: Division A—Charles W. Hedges, Lawrence, presiding judge; Don Mu- Lain Bradley, Blue Mound, and Donald W. Meeker, Leavenworth. Hedges and Bradley are third-year law students and Meeker is a second-year law student. Division B—Sarah K. Renner, Goodland; Bernard E. Whalen, Lawrence, presiding judge, and William D. Raine, Kahoka, Mo. Miss Renner is a third-year law student and Whalen and Raine are second-year law students. Barbara Lou Ghornley, Partridge senior, is the clerk of the court. The court meets at 7 p.m. in the student courtroom of Green Hall. Anyone not satisfied with the court's decision can file a motion for a re-hearing. If not satisfied with the second ruling, he may appeal to a faculty committee. K. U. vs.M.U. MOVIES Everyone Welcome to KU Quarterback Club 7:30 p.m. Mon., Nov. 24 Jayhawk Room Kansas Union REFRESHMENTS Student Union Activities Katherine Ann Porter Visits Campus Katherine Anne Porter novelist and short story writer, made two appearances on the campus Friady under the sponsorship of the department of English. Miss Porter read passages from her new novel "Ship of Fools" before an audience of several hundred in Fraser Theatre at 4 p.m. The novel tells the story of a group of unusual people on a trip from Mexico to Europe just before World War II. At 11 a.m. she spoke on writers and writing in an informal session in the Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. Miss Porter urged her morning audience to become acquainted with the great classics of literature. "The university must lay the foundation for appreciation of the arts," she said. "It is a mistake to think that we must regard only contemporary works." so powerful as to move one to tears. "The arts should be taken seriously but not solemnly," she said. "They are for our joy. Nature is not kind. It is a savage world. The artist can reconcile you and help you not to be a victim of it. Arts add to the fullness of the human spirit." Miss Porter said great art can be so powerful as to move one to tears. Miss Porter said she began to write seriously when she was 16, and spent years imitating such authors as Shaw, Poe, and Johnson. "A writer must develop his own style," she said. "But he can be helped by studying others." She said that a writer must develop his own working routine. When he started out she had only her evenings in which to write. She said she had to survive somehow and yet leave a little time and energy for writing. Ever since then she has attempted to finish all of her stories in one sitting. She will not even take a page out of her typewriter until it is finished. Miss Porter said she reached a critical period in her writing when she was 29. She finished a story in one 17-day grind and felt she had won her battle. Miss Porter said a writer must be sincere and honest but have more than mere sincerity and honesty. "A writer is worth nothing without these two qualities. And he is worth nothing if they are all he has," she said. Graduate Student Wins $100 Thomas F. Rogers, Galena graduate student, has been awarded second prize of $100, the A. C. Marshall Award, in the Student Problem Contest of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. In 1896, the name of University Hall was changed to Fraser Hall to honor KU's first chancellor. 835 Mass. Downtown Thanksgiving Top 'O Twelfth On The Campus CLEARANCE SALE! Starts Tuesday, 9.30 a.m. Reduced Fall Dresses - Skirts - Blouses 40% (Both Stores) Reduced Fall • Coats - Suits 40% (Downtown Only) One Dresses Group - Hats - Sweaters One Half Price (Downtown Only) No Approvals, No Exchanges BROW stadiu Lost S SLIDI Frida no.15 RONS Rewa PAIR blue brary VI 3- PART weeke Robert OPPO model low to te old, VI 3 Office CHRl that Order on 1 maga will Avai staff.