University Daily Kansan Page 3 Wednesday, March 3, 1965 representative. Connie Roeder, Burlington junior; Joy Long, Princeton junior; Denise Burt, Kirkwood, Mo., junior; Cathy Beagle, Boulder, Colo., sophomore; Kathy Sweney, Wichita junior, all candidates for Inter-residence Council representative. Marguerite Davis, Bellarie, Tex., sophomore; Jo Ann Emerick, Murray Hill, N.J., sophomore, both candidates for treasurer. (Fourth row). Susan Menke, Webster Groves, Mo., freshman; Vicki Mathews, Leawood sophomore; Andrea Speer, Kansas City sophomore; Linda Glina, Manhattan sophomore; Susan Lawrence, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, all candidates for senator-at-large. Glenda Hork, Kansas City sophomore; Carol Crouch, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Terry Beach, Hays sophomore; Marcia Bunn, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore, all candidates for Cwens advisor; Cheris Shelton, Edna, Minn., junior; Kathryn Hewett, Fort Scott sophomore; Kathryn Mize, Salina sophomore; and Alice Clovis, Salina sophomore, all candidates for treasurer. HOPEFUL CANDIDATES for AWS elections next week gathered last night in the Kansas Union to plan campaigns. (Left to right), first row—Carolyn Hoke, Prairie Village junior; Carol Jo Weber, Raytown, Mo., junior; Margaret Tietze, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, all candidates for vice-president. Mary Lasley, Mission junior; Ann Peterson, Shawnee Mission junior, candidates for president. (Second row), Susan Hartley, Atwood junior; Jo Lee, Kansas City sophomore; Margaret Brown, Prairie Village sophomore; Jareth Donnain, Webster Groves, Mo., sophomore; Jean Ann Evans, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, all candidates for fashion board representatives; Nancy Gallup, Lawrence freshman; Janice Mendenhall, Wichita freshman, and Deanell Reece, Scandia freshman; Laurie Streib, Lawrence freshman, are candidates for secretary. (Third row), Susan Sorem, Hutchinson sophomore; Janice Sutton, El Dorado junior; Martha Mullen, Kalamazoo, Mich., sophomore; Anne Machin, Ottawa sophomore; Kris Bergman, St. Louis, Mo., junior, all candidates for Panhellenic notarized statement signed by those listing housing facilities with the University declaring non-discriminatory policy. At the time of the demonstration, Neil Stone, Shawnee Mission freshman and president of the CRC, said, "We will give the administration one week and if no definite action is taken, another demonstration will be made." CRC To Discuss Demonstration nior The demonstration staged by the Civil Rights Council (CRC) last week prior to the speech in Hoch Auditorium will be one of the topics for discussion at their 7:30 p.m. meeting in the Cottonwood Room of the Kansas Union. A pamphlet was distributed during the demonstration requesting an end to de facto discriminatory policies of fraternities and sororities. It also asked for a refusal of the University Daily Kansan to accept advertisements from clients who practice discrimination and a Music Room in Union During the week-long interim Stone met with Donald K. Alderson, dean of men. The results of this meeting will be presented tonight. Thursday, March 4 Dr. Ronald Tobin will read a Selection of French Poetry 4:30 p.m. Thursday March 4 SUA POETRY HOUR Free Coffee Free Coffee Defense Loans To be Retired For Teachers College teachers who have participated in the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) loan program, will now be able to benefit from the "Forgiveness Provision," according to Robert Billings, KU Director of Aids and Awards. Before amendments in the law, the forgiveness provision applied only to primary and secondary school teachers. This provision enables one who has received a NDEA loan to have as much as 10% of his loan retired for every year he or she teaches up to five years or a total of 50%. THIS PROVISION is not retroactive. It will take effect in the Fall semester of 1965, Billings said. "If a girl would borrow $1,000 from NDEA, for every year she taught after graduation, $100 and 3% interest would be cancelled." Each year, NDEA loans are granted to about 1,250 KU students for a total of over $900,000 a year. Another amendment discussed by the Aids and Awards Committee, raised the ceiling for the amount a graduate student may receive from $1.000 to $2.500. Billings said he felt that few, if any, of these loans would be granted. For Your BEST Haircut 8-5 Sat. - 8-6 Mon.-Fri. 4 Chairs Come to PLAZA Barber Shop In Dillon's Plaza 1804 Mass. Business School Council presents Balfour Jeffery President of Kansas Power and Light Speaking on "Opportunities in Kansas" Juniors and Seniors Are Urged to Attend TONIGHT 7:30 p.m., Dyche Auditorium