2 Monday, April 17, 1972 University Daily Kansan Kansan Photo by TERRY SHIPMAN Drill Routine Highlight of Friday's NROTC Spring Review Bill Stevens, Dodge City senior, center, was the drill team commander at the annual NORC Spring Review Friday. The review, in front of Allen Field House, also featured the announcement of the "Honor Company" of the year and the presentation of the Navy's "Color Girl!" A third ceremony, the changing of the color guard, symbolized the change of NROTC leaders from this year's seniors Garden of Eden Opening Festivities Saturday to Include Band, Bunnies By LINDA CHAPU1 Kanyon Staff Writer The Garden of Eden will host its grand opening Saturday complete with Playboy bunnies, a live broadcast via p站 KU21 and broadcast via p站 KU31. When new people come to the camp, I just go up and talk to them. I let them have one day to look around, and if they show a sincere interest, we can get along with people, we glad to have them " They needed all sorts of character references and detailed information before they knew someone to become a member. COLLEMAN, AN electrician at the University of Kansas, has been a muslist for three years. He lives with five children live at the camp all year The Garden of Eden is a ludist camp opened two years ago on an 80-acre piece of land north of Omaha, Nebraska, associated with the American Sunbathing Association, but now it operates independent of any other garden. Coleman commutes to Lawrence to work, and he said he loved being able to escape the city every night when he came home. "We found we had too many disagreements in policies to remain associated with the ASA." A owner Vernon Coleman "I sometimes start taking my clothes off in the car when I'm almost home," he said. "Sure. I believe in clothes. But there is a proper time for nudity. "We find the atmosphere out here so relaxing that we lost track of time. And the campers usually just mark their time out by the sunrise and the sunset. Coleman and his wife both said they hadn't seen anyone who had tried nudism and didn't like it. "If we can get people to try it, the always come back. Let them be called by their full names, though, and many people are killed." "WE HAVE doctors, lawyers, bankers, newspaper editors." Mrs. Coleman said. The Colemans said they had members from Kansas, Missouri, Iowa and Nebraska. They said their publicity had received a response, but no responses outnumbered the women's responses ten to one. The Garden of Eden operated on a yearly fee basis in the past but has changed its policy so that people can come on a day to day basis for $3 per person, couple or group. The Garden of Eden free of charge THE COLEMANS have built a new TEAM to the camp, a volleyball court, horse shoe pitching courts and have built up the Student Senate Choice Disputed By CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writer David Hull, Whittier, Calif. junior and one of two students not approved by the Student Senate last Wednesday as members of the Senate Committee on Appeal to appeal to either the Senate at its next meeting or the Student Rights Committee in an effort to support the Union Operating Board. Hull, who was originally recommended by the Senate Committee Board which in turn recommended him to the Senate committee applicants to the Senate for approval, said Sunday he has washing his appeal on a charge of conflict of interest and that he is being urged by Union Operating Board members "I DON'T think that any of the Committee Board members should be elected to a Senate committee," Hull said. "If you want to be on a committee, you must be on the Committee Board." Hull said that he disapproved of the selection of Richard Mackenzie, Hilburn's first year law student in the office to Operate the Board because Mackenzie was also a member of the vice-member Committee Board. Hull said Mackenzie's election to the Union Operating Board was, in effect, actually a conflict of interest. Hull said that although Mackenzie had not been involved in the Committee Board, he had spoken in his own behalf at the Senate meeting. Hull said that technicize, under the Senate Code, his charge of conflict of interest because he had reimbursed any claims to monetary benefit on the position, advantage ground for conflict of interest under the code applicable when a Senator places himself in a own behalf, Hull said. Hull said that he was planning to propose an amendment to the code that would not allow any member of the Committee Board to serve on any Senate Com-mittee, but temporarily resigned from the board. He no part in the selection of the committee he was applying for. HULL SAID he was not attacking the Mackenzie but masked the Mackenzie had openly campaigned for the Committee Board so that he could become a member of the Union Operating Board, but was attacking the board and disallowed this kind of activity. Hull said the system was setup so that members would have ownership on the Union Operating Board was to become a member of the Committee Board, and he would be involved. Mackenzie was elected to the Union Operating Board after he and Molly Laflin, Lawrence Committee Board member, submitted alternate report to the majority Committee Board report, asking for membership changes in three committees on the grounds that she was not representative of minority groups. Laflin and Mackenzie also said the proposed Union board was "dominated by SUA players." LAFIL AND Mackenzie told the Senate that the Union Operating Board already had run out of additional addition of two more SUA members. Hui and the other officers were in charge of the Operating Board member Dave Murfur. Wichita sophomore, would not provide wide enough experience. Mackenzie then appealed to the Senate to elect him to the Union Operating Board. He told the Senate of plans he and Laflin had formulated to improve the food supply in the Union, which he termed the worst university food service that he had ever seen. Several senators at the meeting charged that Mackenzie was using his position on the Committee Board to be elected to the Senate. Mr. Mackenzie said that this was the way it had been done in the past and that he had openly campaigned for the Committee Board on the premise that he would be charged to the Union Operating Board. "I REALLY wanted to be on the Union Operating Board, and since in the past all the Union Operating Board members either with the president or vice-president or were on the Committee Board, I ran for the Committee Board with the express condition that I could be on the Operating Board." Mackenzie said. Downtown Beautification To Begin This Summer "I was hard pressed to find any exception to this arrangement. I Brian Kubota, architect for the downtown beautification project, explained plans to about 40 students and officials Friday morning at City Hall. The major portion of the project will be federally funded through the University Development Program, the city will fund the removal of the 'crown' and downtown buildings which help finance the new sidewalks. Parking meters will be attached to new streetlights and bricks will be laid around each streetlight pole. Kabota said these 'sawtooth curbs' would expand to 70 or 75 spaces for each block and parking would be at a 45 degree angle instead of 60 degrees. Kubota said the plans included the planting of 210 trees in the four-block downtown area. Wheelchair ramps will be placed in a raised bench. Trash receptacles and two drinking foundations will be put at the three mid-block Eighteen inches of the "crown," or elevation, of Massachusetts Street will be According to Don Schaake, Program director, the construction should begin in June and be completed by Oct. 1. Mackenzie was not on the Committee Board's majority recommendation, because David Dilhout, Hutchinson junior, was a member of the Committee Board, said the Committee Board objected to the idea that Mackenzie had campaigned for the Committee board so that he could put himself on the Union Operating Board. Officials of Housing and Urban Development in Kansas City, Mo., attended March 16 to the approved beautification project planned by members of the Lawrence Woodhood Development Program. removed so that drainage will be directed toward parking. No traffic pattern in the downtown area but a change in the beautification would be beneficial. saw no reason to assume that it would be any different this time." Dillon said that Mackenzie's position on the Committee Board gave him an unfair advantage over everyone else. DILLON SAID it was the Senate committee members, and since the Senate elected Mackenzie to the Union Operating Board, he was removed. decision and satisfied with all the committees approved by the Senate. Dillon questioned, however, whether the Senate should have taken on the job that they had taken up before he was sworn. He said the Senate should have given Hull, who was not present at the meeting, an opportunity to speak instead of going on hearsey and making changes in the board recommendations. Hull also questioned the Senate's action without hearing the petition, and he said he was not notified or asked to come to the Senate. "I would think that if the Senate would remove someone from a committee that they had been part of, they would want to hear both sides of the story instead of just one," Hull said. Mackenzie said Sunday that he thought Hull had ample representation as the Senate of people who spoke for him. In response to the charge that he was an "SUA jock," Hull said, "My claim is that I am a student of the University and should be considered on my individual behalf as I have been claimed at SUA board meetings that the student body was my constituency." HULI SAID that he also had managemen- ture to improve Union managemen- ture, and service in the Union, but he did not think that this was mentioned. Loyalty Oath Required by Law Of All State Employes at KU Every employee of the state of Kansas is required by the Kansas constitution to take a loyalty oath before every job, failure or refusal to take the oath periodically can lead to dismissal from the employee position. According to Chuck Burrows, assistant university compraller, "Anyone who wants to get paid must take the oath." The oath reads, "I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support the constitution of the United States and the constitution, of the state of Kansas and frequently discharge the duties of her employment. So help me God." State employees are required to sign the oath when they fill out their income tax exemption form. The form is bottom of the form and its signed Burrows said that he knew of no one who had refused to take the oath, despite the fact that those employees who simply didn't like it. at the same time as the form itself. Burrows said that he knew of no cases that had tested the oath, but one of those oath, which replaces an oath that was declared unconstitutional in 1972, does. The old oath, first adopted in ancient Greece, is the case of Ehrenreich versus Landerholm because it specified mere membership in an army. FEMINISM WORKSHOPS Tuesday, April 18 Political and Economic Aspects of Feminism ★ Women and Their Bodies Women-Identified Women All Three Held at 10:30,2:30 and 3:30. (Men Invited to Our 2:30 Session) Women and The Law Workshop (1:30 only) Parlors A, B and C in the Student Union FREE WOMENS DANCE 8 to 12 p.m. in the Big 8 Room CHILD CARE PROVIDED Sponsored by Womens Coalition Stopping feminine odor is easier than you think. Each tiny as-a-fingergirl Notforma's safe to safe insert as a tiny tampon. Just insert - it begins dissolving instantly to kill bacteria, stop feminine odor where it may internally, in the vaginal tract. beach since last year. They plan to build a club house with an indoor swimming pool and a large lake on the 80-acre tract. You feel clean, food, odor free for hours. No shower, no douche stops odor the way Nortorms do. FREE NORFORS MINI-PACK plus booklet! Write to: Norwich Pharmalco Co. Dept CNC-N, Norwich, N.Y. 13815; Enclose 25¢ to cover mailing and handling. Name Street City State Don't forget your zip code. Norwich Products Division The Norwich Pharmalco Co. "It won't be perfect like the Garden of Eden," Coleman said, "but we're doing the best we can." "HUNDREDS JUST ARRIVED" Skinny Fit. Low rise. Super bell. To fit your life style. Bootleger CENTER OF NOW FASHION LEE HOURS: 10 to 10 Mon-Sat. 12-6 Sun. 523 West 23rd Street OUTSTANDING WOMEN SCHOLARSHIPS Applications for scholarships for outstanding women students may be picked up at the Dean of Women office 220 Strong Hall. Applications due 3:30 p.m. April 18, 1972