Piet Kee to play in organ recital Piet Kee, one of Europe's ranking organists, will play KU's new organ in the dedicatory recital series at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall. Kee is organist of two churches in Haarlem, and Alkmaar, the Netherlands. Joan Lippincott, head of the organ department of Westminster Choir College, will give the final recital in the series at 3:30 p.m. March 9. Science departments receive grants Three KU science departments have received research and training grants totaling $131,938 from the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Robert H. Bussell, professor of microbiology, and director of a research program studying myxoviruses received a $22,583 grant. Three graduate students will work with him. The department of chemistry, with a $15,047 grant, is researching the molecular switches in the central nervous system under the direction of Richard L. Schowen, associate professor of chemistry. Two Ph.D. candidates in chemistry are assisting with the project. Edward Smissman, professor of medicinal chemistry, has received $94,308 for research support for 10 predoctoral and 2 postdoctoral fellows. Davidson to help select NSF fellows John P. Davidson, professor of physics, will be in Washington, D.C., this week to help select National Science Foundation (NSF) fellows for research grants. Davidson is a member of a joint selection panel of the NSF and the National Academy of Sciences. This is the second year Davidson has been a member of the committee. Social work program to expand Pi Phi awards to nine Arthur J. Katz, chairman of the social work department, announced that an expanded training program in social work with emphasis on correctional institutions is being planned at KU with support from a grant for $38,664 from the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Nine KU girls recently received scholarships from Pi Beta Phi Educational Foundation for the 1969 spring semester. Phi Beta Phi Scholarship recipients are: Mary K. Beck, Council Grove senior; Louise A. Bednar, Topea senior; Frances L. Craig, Garnett senior; Doris F. Eisenbrandt, Moran senior; Patricia S. Grover, Hays senior; Katharine L. Reed, Independence senior; Sheryl A. Richard, Lyons senior; Irma I. Stephens, Pratt senior; and Catherine L. Weir, Wichita junior. Feb. 25 1969 KANSAN 3 This new program for graduate students will train professionals for correctional institutions. Field instructional centers will be established in Kansas City, Mo., and Topeka. Graduate students receiving fellowship grants for training under the programs are: Susan Elizabeth Ashwell, Kansas City, Mo.; Daniel D. Huff, Pittsburg; Melanie Ann Morgan, Hammonsport, N.Y.; Joseph E. Jones, Kansas City, Mo. Denise A. Shea, Kansas City, Mo.; and Larry A. Trompeter, Kansas City, Mo. $3,500 grant received KU's chemistry department will receive a $3,500 grant-in-aid as part of 3M Company's annual aid-to-education program, Leon Carr, public relations director for the 3M Company, Saint Paul, Minn., announced recently. KU is among 350 colleges and universities in 36 states receiving scholarships, fellowships grants-in-aid and other special programs totalling $525,000 during the 1969-70 academic year. Training sessions for women who want to be KU pom pon girls will begin at 7 p.m. March 4 in Allen Field House, Vince Bilotta, pompon squad adviser, announced yesterday. The hour and a half sessions will be coached by former pom pon girls March 4, 6, 10, 11 and March training sessions slated for pom pon squad and yell leaders Five KU officials hold posts in national group for state universities Five KU administrators and the chancellor-designate hold positions this year in the National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges (NASULGC). Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, immediate past president of NASULGC, is board chairman, executive committee chairman and a member of the advisory committee to the Office of Institutional Research. Chancellor-designate E. Laurence Chalmers, serves on the executive committee of the association's Academic Affairs Council. William P. Smith, dean of the School of Engineering, is a member of the Commission on Education for the Engineering Profession. James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor for University Relations, and Bruce A. Linton, journalism professor, are members of the information committee. Robert L. Smith, civil engineering professor, serves on the water resources committee. Official Bulletin Kansas Conference on Aging. All Day. Karege, Heitem TODAY County Clerks School. All Day. Kansas Union. Schwabacher, Swarthout Recital Hall. Panel. 4 p.m. "Career Opportunities in Latin America." Pine Room, Kansas Union. Math Colloquium. 4 p.m. Prof. Ernest A. Michael, University of Washington. "Products of Quotient Maps" 103 Strong. KU Film Society, 7 & 9 p.m. "The Labyrinth" Auditorium. Open to the Public. **English Colloquium**, 7:30 p.m. T. D. Davidson, Indexing. Noun Phrases,"1"s, 2"s. Le Certeur Français se reunitra mer- cissime depuis 1982 au Salle Jayhawk Programme par Monsteur le professeur R. W. Tobin: con- ference sur 'Phedre' tragedie de Rae Henry Werner Lecture, 3 p.m. Prof LaMont C, Cole, Cornell University "Man's Effect on the World Environment." 124 Malotti. TOMORROW Carillon Recital. 7 p.m. Albert Gerken. Classical Film. 7 & 9 p.m. "An Eve Douglas Fairbanks, Dyche Auditorium." **AIAA:** 7:30 p.m. Dr. David L. Kohlhuber 201 Runway Concepta* 200 Learned Lecture. 8 p.m. Prof. Michael L. Katzev, Oberlin College: "Excavating a Greek Shipwreck-Kyrenia, Cyprus." Pine Room, Kansas Union. SUA Culture Forum. 7:30 p.m. "Students, Studies, and Revolts in Spain." Juan Manuel Fernandez. Pearson College Conference Room. Guest Recital. 8 p.m. Piet Kee, organist. Swarthwout Recital. THE TIME DRAWS NEAR FOR MIDNIGHT MADNESS Wednesday Feb.26 7:30-12 18. The first cut will be on March 11 and finals will be held March 20. Women students who have at least a 1.0 overall grade point average and a 1.0 or better for the fall semester are eligible, Bilotta said. Prospective pom pon girls should attend all training sessions, he said. Five of last year's regulars will not enter the competition this year because of marriage or graduation. "This is the largest number not returning we've ever had." Bilotta noted. This year's pom pon girls who wish to be on the squad again next year will compete on an even basis with those who are trying out for the first time, Bilotta said. The girls last year traveled to the Orange Bowl, to Manhattan, Lincoln, Neb., Columbia, Mo., Ames, Iowa and Boulder, Colo. while cheering for the Jayhawks, Bilotta said. Eight regulars and four alternates will be chosen March 20 by a panel of judges which will include students and faculty. Similar training sessions for yell leaders will begin March 25, Bilotta said. The training will emphasize gymnastics. NSF to pay students for summer research 920 MASSACHUSETTS More than 35 KU undergraduates will do research this summer, and get paid for it, in a program sponsored by the National Science Foundation (NSF). $45,200 in grants have been made to KU professors by the NSF for six programs, with the goal of motivating superior undergraduates toward advanced degrees. Pay is $60 a week Rain song Pom pon girl Kandee Klein, Tribune junior, sings a rainy melody during the New Mexico football game here last semester. Tryouts for the 1969-70 pompon squad begin next month. Miss Janice Mitchell . . . testing her LADYBUG raincoat. at the back of the Town Shop 839 Mass. St. Uptown VI 3-5755