2 Wednesday, October 25, 1972 University Daily Kansan Manning Speaks on Voting Laws Kansas Staff Photo by JOE COLEMAN Candidate wants reform Manning Opposes Ruling On Voter Name Change By PATTY JOHNSON Kansas Staff Writer Mike Manning, Democratic candidate for Kansas Secretary of State, denied Wednesday that he was planning to倡 legal saint against his Republican opponent. Evil Shanahan, in recent voter registration decision by Atyl, Gen. Vern Miller. During a meeting of the Young Democrats in the Kansas Union, Mr. Miller said that a lawsuit Miller's ruling, that persons changing their names between Oct. 17 and Nov. 7 will be unjustified, was not initiating a separate suit. He said the suit, which will be held Wednesday or Thursday by District Court, will protest a blatant example of potential voters. MANNING SAID he hoped to mature and more accessible to all voters. Many voting laws in Kansas, he designed to be discriminators. "We must look at these antiquated laws and say, 'no more,'" he said. HE CHARGED that his opponent, Shanaham, was uninformed about voter registration laws and did not inform the election reform. He said she had not made many friends or even participated in the election just doesn't do anything." she Manning said the office of the federal focal point for pushing through election reform laws. He said it was an office that could come under attack. Referring to the Shanahan family who have filled the office of secretary of state for 22 years, he said, "It's time for a change." He also advocated a lid on campaign spending and a closer examination of the lobbying processes in the Kansas Senate. According to Manning, many of the problems with voting laws are due to the part of the vote that makes voters want to see the 18-21 year-old age group vote. He said they thought it would destroy their power Manning, a former graduate student at the University of Kansas in American government, served as the executive The resolution does not mention any school specifically. Band Uniforms Damaged at K-State A resolution concerning crowd behavior at Big Eight games will be presented to Kansas Student Senate during its regular meeting at 7:30 tonight in the building. The student governments of each Big Eight school would be requested to write an open letter Senate to Discuss Game Resolution The resolution was drafted in response to an incident during the KU-KState football game in which K-State fans allegedly struck two players on hand, injuring two band members and staining 160 uniforms. Kathy Allen, Topeka junior and student body vice president, and student body president, will junior and KU band president will sponsor the resolution which asks for action by student governments of all Big Eight The 1972 homecoming com- memoranda were the details Tuesday finalizing plans for the surprise halffire ceremony and the decorations The committee decided to uphold their classification of two-dimensional decorations as those having no moving parts. to its student body at least once a year urging the students to refrain from such actions as taking place during the K-State game. The KU Senate would be required to direct the chairman of the Student Executive Committee (STUDEX) to send a copy Big Eight school and a copy to the Kansas Board of Regents. The bill received a favorable The KU Interfraternity Council will provide rides to all people who need transportation to the places on election day Nov. 7. Final Details Settled For Homecoming IFC to Provide Rides To Polls for Balloting Hoch Will Host SUA Concert Interested persons will be able to call a central office number and the IFC will provide a ride to and from the polling place. "The SUA Board members and I felt that we could afford to than in the Field House." Dan Mayo, special events board member and junior sponsor, visited campus junior, said Tuesday. vice president of the National Association of Student Government in Washington, D.C. that administers registration reform programs. Mayo said that as of Tuesday 1300 tickets had been sold to the concert. Lee McLaughlin, Dallas senator who passed away last month, the council would divide the 124 voting period into equal time slots for each participating student. Further details of the election day car pool will be worked out at the Oct. 26 IFC meeting, McLaughlin said. The IFC is also working on a promotional drive for the Blood Bank to celebrate its 10th Anniversary. Rifles. The Blood Mobile will be on the UC campus Oct. 31, 2016. The blood drive is hoping for and points of blood from University hospitals. The IFC hoped to have fraternity members contribute a large amount of blood. The IFC has also scheduled a football game with bunnies from the Kansas City Playboy Club for Sun, Nov. 5. An appeal was presented by Craig Snook and Kim Chapman, both totope juniors, on behalf of the 2013 class at Beta Pi sorority, to change their entry in the decorations competition from three to two. McLaughlin said donations for the game will go to the Burn Center at the University of Kansas Medical Center. recommendation from the Senate Student Rights and Privileges Committee Monday night. An impeachment procedures bill, sponsored by Richard Snyder, the president of the year law student is also on the agenda. The bill would establish procedures to be followed by the impeachment proceedings against students in university government positions. No formal procedure exists. A bill that would urge the Senate to seek alternate means of funding the university to overcome the university spending freeze will be presented to the Senate by Leroy Meyer, Lawrence graduate student. Advisory Committee To Meet Privately The secrecy draped over activities of the University of Kansas and the University for the selection of a new chancellor has been arranged by design according to several members of the com- Rick Von Ende, KU executive secretary and secretary for the committee, said Thursday that meetings were closed to the public and presided over an agreement among committee members that privacy is needed "It is necessary to have a closed meeting when discussing individuals," said Von Ende. Kansas law requires “... all meetings (of) agencies of the state... supported in whole or in part by public funds shall be open to the public...” The advisory committee will not have to conform to this because it is not funded by the state, said Von Ender. "It would be impossible to have frank discussions about individuals in an open meeting" Kleinfeld, kleinberg, commit chairman. "A search committee about two years ago at the University of Chicago had its choice for chancellor William A. Paprocki, a newspaper before they announced it," said Von Ende, "and who was their choice within the university." Kleinberg said that he thought disclosure of any names before the final decision had been reached, "up" the whole selection process. Jr. was conducted in a closed manner, said Von Ende. He also mentioned that there may have been a leak earlier this year when it was announced that Chalmers would take the position of chancellor at Ohio State and be resulting in Chalmers disclosing his information. David Dillon, student body president and member of the committee, agreed that closed meetings were an absolute The selection committee in 1968 that chose E. Laurence Chalmers "It has to be this way," said Dillon, "because these interviews put the candidates in a delicate position." Snook argued that the committee's definitions were made after the deadline for entering the competition. He said that his team didn't have a chance against more expensive, elaborate ones. "If a name of a candidate were to get out, we would be jeopardizing his present position, he said. "It would make the committee's job much easier if the meetings could be open, without having to worry about the problems solved," said Von Ende, "but it is just not possible." "The next meeting we will have with the press," he said, "will be when the choice for chancellor is announced." The next scheduled meeting is Nov. 4. The location of the meeting has not been divulged. The party is free to class card holders and $2 for others. Music will be provided by TIDE, Shine Soul Messengers, Harkey work John Hackey, Wichita senior teacher and the committee about the all-class party planned for 8 p.m. to midnight Friday at the National "I'm sympathetic to their position," said Bill Adams, Lenexa senior and decorations chairman. Adams had been the least one group that had changed their plans after learning of the committee's definitions and that changing the committee's forays before homecoming would only compound the problem. Man is responsible for turning technology against his own society, Melvin Kranzberg, Calloway professor of the history of technology at the Georgia University, technology, said Monday in the second lecture of this year's Humanities Lecture Series. SUA Featured Speakers JULIAN BOND Hoch 8:00 October 26 Kranzberg's lecture was a rebuttal of arguments by environmentals and spreaders of science, and the technology for contemporary problems. By DAVID HEALY Free blue beer will be served Historian Speaks On Technology He compared modern technology with Frankenstein's monster and said that the fault was in the way he created by man but in man himself. Kansan Staff Writer Contemporary society, he said, seems to harbor a死 death, but he remains a historian and views historical events with light of historical perspective. He said that technology was a prime cause of civilization and that man's original settlement in the Middle East is on the technology of agriculture. "Man has sought to use nature for his own ends," Kranzberg said. "I derive solace from the fact that people have been crying woll for years," he said. "If we depended on horse and buggies instead of automobiles we would literally be up to horse manure," Krangzher said. He said the pollution of modern technology against its use because the goods it produced had less pollution per unit than the older ones. Kranzberg pointed to the predictions of world starvation ten years ago as an example. He said that the green revolution in the predicted problem and he was confident technology would solve other He said that the problem of modern society was not technology but that man used Topic:"What's Next" Followed by: Question & answer period SUA FEATURED SPEAKERS SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — Chil- ean President Rodrigo "Dai- son of Day" to protest Presi- destion Salvador Allende's pro- grams to lead Chile "down the water." technology to further his own comfort with disregard to its effect on the whole community The question is not 'is there a technological imperative that man cannot control.' he said, but 'Are men-controlled?' Kranzberg said that institutions are run for the convenience of those who control them and that the American government must to hold institutions responsible for the technology they use. Register of Deed Paid Political Advertisement by Committee to Re-electure Beem. David G. Miller, Secretary