Monday, Jan. 7, 1963 University Daily Kansar Around the Campus Page 5 French Musicians To Perform Tonight The University of Kansas Chamber Music series will present Le Rondeau de Paris at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. A trio of French musicians touring the United States in a station wagon will be at KU tonight. The trio of Laurence Boulay, harpsichord, Genevieve Noufflard, flute, and Marie-Therese Heurtier, cello, was organized in 1957 to make ancient music better known to modern listeners. Programs are composed with alternating trios, harpsichord solos, flute or cello sonatas. The repertoire of Le Rondeau covers the 17th and 18th centuries composers up to Haydn and Mozart. It includes French, German, Italian, British and Swedish works. The organization was founded in 1959 by a group of St. Louis, Mo. parents who had become alarmed over federal aid to education which they believed discriminated against their children in private schools. There will be no student ID exchange. Tickets can be purchased at Murphy Hall Box Office and the Union Ticket Center. The right of parents to select the education of their children, without losing tax benefits, will be discussed at 4:30 p.m. today in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. David LaDriere, St. Louis lawyer and member of the Citizens for Educational Freedom (CEF) will discuss "The Real Issue in Federal Aid to Education" in a SUA Minority Opinions Forum. The purpose of CEF is to promote fair treatment in the distribution of government tax money for federal education. LaDriere has been practicing law in St. Louis for about 14 years and since July of last year has devoted full time to the position of national executive director of the CEF. Federal Aid Issue Is Forum Topic Ingo Reiffenstein of the University of Munich, Germany will be a visiting professor at the University of Kansas during the spring semester. German Professor To Teach at KU At the time he joined the Munich faculty in 1959, Prof. Reiffenstein was also appointed general editor of the Bavarian Dictionary of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences. He is the author of four books and many articles. A native of Salzburg, Austria, he studied at the University of Innsbruck, later becoming an instructor and assistant in German philology there. He also was an assistant for the linguistic atlas at the University of Marburg. Model UN Officers Chosen By Committee Last Thursday the Model UN steering committee members selected four officers to preside over the annual Model United Nations to be held this spring. Officers elected were; Betty Sue Reynolds, Wellington senior, secretary-general; Stan Walton, Kansas City senior, president; Bob Strevey Clayton junior, parliamentarian, and Diane Lane, Kansas City senior, secretary. The committee also worked on the revision of last year's General Assembly rules. They were referred to a sub-committee for further study. Beth to Discuss Right of Privacy A recent concept in American law—the right of privacy—will be the topic discussed tomorrow night by Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism at KU, in the 100th Humanities Lecture. "Privacy; Your Right to be Let Alone" is the title of the lecture to be delivered at 8 p.m. in Fraser Theater. It will be the 16th lecture by a KU professor since the lecture series began in 1947. David M. Mills, third year law student from Arkansas City, has been elected editor-in-chief of the Kansas Law Review, a quarterly law publication of KU law students. Mills Named Editor Of Law Review Mills heads the eight-man board of governors which directs the writing and publication of legal articles. Election to the board is one of the highest honors awarded in the School of Law, and membership in the Kansas Law Review is comparable to honor roll standing. Prof. Beth has lectured on defamation and privacy to various groups, including national conventions of the National Editorial Association and the National Press Photographers Association. New members of the board of governors, all of whom will be note editors, are: Robert R. Crawford, third year student from Salina; Robert L. Driscoll, second year student from Lawrence; and Jerry G. Elliott, second year student from Hutchinson. The Law Review representative to the School of Law Honors Committee is Lynn L. Anderson, second year student from Atwood. Woman would be more charming if one could fall into her arms without falling into her hands.—Ambrose Bierce State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off. hi. VI 3-568 530 W 230 Res. ph. VI 3-594 Lawrence, Kan It's easy to feel that way when you can't seem to get ahead of financial woes. But, things probably aren't as bad as they seem. A good way to begin your financial planning is through life insurance. 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