Tuesday, July 26, 1988/The Battalion/Page 3 State and Local onvention for sunbathers draws nudists to resort By Alan Sembera Staff Writer I More than 400 people had shown dp by Saturday at the Live Oak Ranch between Navasota and Bren- ifam. The occasion was a convention jr nudists. Live Oak Ranch is a family nudist ilesort and is the site of the South western Sunbathing Association’s S' th annual convention, which be- Banjuly 18 and ended Sunday. I Members of 13 nudist clubs from Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas tnvened at the 25-acre country re- )«. While the convention did take re of some business, the partici- ants spent most of their time just aving fun. They held dances Thursday, Fri- ay and Saturday nights. The gimp’s secretary, Patsy, said clothes ere worn during the dances. I She said she didn’t know if the Jountry and western bands who layed Friday and Saturday were Aiide, but Thursday’s rock ’n’ roll jBand did play in the buff after its in termission, she said. 1 ^ Much of the outdoor activity at ■ie resort centered around the pool, ■len and women, young and old, sat around and visited while the water t :med with young skinny-dippers. ■ Near the pool, volleyball teams ; E Hompeted on the fenced-in court |H/hile friends watched from the \ Bhade of a nearby tree. 1 ■ For those inclined toward less • Strenuous activities, there’s a club- Souse on the other side of the pool ^Sith a pingpong table, a pool table, “HIidoor bathrooms and showers, a h'l i'ide-screen television and video ['■< irnes ' For outdoor sports, there’s horse- Hhoes, washers, lawn darts and bad- 'luitton. OjH There’s even a hot tub for those who just want to sit back and relax. I In fact, if all the people weren’t to- Sillv nude, this would be your typical pieekend resort. ]fl Jim, a member of the club, said |jSie “weekend resort” nature of nud- iKi camps is one of the things the ^■nudist movement” is trying to pub- frize. I “A lot of people think its orgies But here and all that stuff,” he said. |rlt doesn’t happen. It’s a family at mosphere. See all the kids?” These are the misconceptions that live nudists a bad image, Jim said, .the convention is one of the things I.Biey are doing to help mollify the yBnage. rB “The last couple of years the '"'I whole movement has just experi- llc 4 eiiccd a great openness,” Jim said. zeB onfl “There’s just a real push for open ness now in the movement,” he said, “where in the past, people didn’t want their neighbors to know they’re nudists, and their boss to know . . . and that still exists. “I thought, before I started, ‘Nud ist resort — you go out to a back road somewhere and there’s a stock pond and a volleyball net, and that’s it.’ ” The nudist movement also is try ing to clear up misconceptions about what kind of people go to nudist camps, Jim said. “People think ... if you went to a “A lot of people think its orgies out here and all that stuff. It doesn’t hap pen. It’s a family atmo sphere. See all the kids?” —Jim, member of Southwestern Sunbathers Association nudist camp everybody would be beautiful — all the women would be playmates, all the men would be male models,” he said. “Well, they’re not. “There’s all shapes . . . there’s fat people, skinny people, tall people, short people, all kinds. It’s just like your town except that nobody wears clothes.” The club members also encom pass a broad scope of professions, he said, including doctors, lawyers, con struction workers, pilots, farmers, ranchers and even a genetic engi neer. “You name it, there’s some body here that’s a member.” Another member of the resort, Don Q., said the diversity of people at nudist camps is what makes them special. This diversity is possible because of the lack of social barriers created by clothing, he said. “When you take your clothes off and you’re meeting people that you’ve never seen before in your life, that communication barrier is gone,” Don said. “All you have is your per sonality and your mind. “You come up to a place like this, you’ll find more people, people like you’ve never met in your life. You talk to them like you’ve known them all their life.” Charlie Moss, owner of the Bluebonnet nudist resort, which is north of Fort Worth, agreed that nu dism brings club members closer to gether. “Nudism removes barriers rather than creating them,” Moss said. “It’s a good vehicle for sociability. People end up becoming friends and com municating with each other with a great deal more ease. “In this world people tend to iso late themselves and to have a para noia as far as engaging strangers in conversation. The opposite occurs in nudist parks. “It’s not for everyone. It’s not a to tal panacea, but it is a much better conduit for conversation and com munication in the ‘textile’ world.” This attitude fosters a family type atmosphere, and parents bring their children with them to the resorts. The children have an organiza tion of their own, the Junior South western Sunbathing Association. The JSWSA held its convention at the ranch July 18-20. More than 50 children partici pated in tournaments, saw movies, discussed “Young Nudist Health Concerns” and went on field trips. The junior sunbathers visited the Bluebell Creamery in Brenham and the Washington-on-the-Brazos State Park. They wore clothing during the trips. There are about 1,500 members of the Southwestern Sunbathing As sociation. More than 275 of them are members of the Live Oak Ranch. Larry and Sabra Hilderbrand bought the resort in April, and have added a number of improvements since then. They expanded the bathroom fa cilities in the clubhouse, built a pavil ion and added enough RV hookups to bring the total number to 65. The resort also has a restaurant, which serves three meals a day, al though the selection is limited. The new owner also built a 10- foot fence around the volleyball court and covered the surface with sand. The new owners have even ex tended an invitation for the A&M volleyball teams, including intramu ral teams, to come out and practice for free on the newly fixed-up court during the week, a member said. A few years ago an A&M team had asked for permission to use the court to practice but was refused, the member said. “The previous owners wouldn’t let them, but we will now,” he said. “If your team wants to come out and practice on our court — keep their clothes on or take them off — it’s up to you guys,” Hilderbrand said. Larry Hilderbrand said mem bership at the club has gone up 22 percent since he took over. He said he wants more members, and said A worker at Live Oak Ranch, far left, talks with some campers Thursday at the sixth annual Photo by Jay Jan net Southwestern Sunbathers Convention. The con vention for nudists was July 18 through July 24. everybody is welcome to visit the camp. More information and directions can be obtained by calling (409) 878- 2216. Visitors are allowed three visits. All they have to do is come to the of fice and sign in. After three visits, they can apply for membership. The camp is not a clothes-optional camp, so everyone inside must be nude unless weather or medical problems make clothing a necessity. First-time visitors can keep their clothes on until they are acclimatized to the nudity. This time period should last a maximum of a half hour to an hour. A couple of the club members said men often have trouble undressing in public because they are afraid of having an erection when they get around nude women. They emphasized that unwanted erections are never a problem. “When everyone is like you, it just doesn’t happen,” one said. Applicants must be screened and approved by a membership commit tee before they can become a mem ber. Since the resort is primarily for families, single men have a more dif ficult time getting approved than single women or families do, because of the long waiting list for single men. “They try to keep it balanced,” a camp employee said. “We have a tendency to get more male appli cants than we do female. They don’t always get in. “You pretty well get approved if you’re respectable, decent sort of people. They don’t screen too heav ily on families. Males, they watch you a little more.” Visitors must pay $15 per day to stay at the camp. Members pay $12 per day. There is an extra charge for staying overnight at the resort. There is also a yearly membership fee. Members of the Live Oak Ranch are automatically members of the SWSA and the American Sunbath ing Association. The ASA has seven regions, with 200 parks, resorts and camps in the United States. There are rules of conduct at the ranch, and the “don’ts” outnumber the “do’s.” The resort prohibits the use of il legal drugs, excessive drinking, pro fanity, obscene and vulgar language, “offensive familiarities” and “indis creet behaviors.” The rules also bar public dis cussion of “swinging” and any un due demostration of affection. Patsy, the secretary, said these prohibitions are nothing more than would be expected in daily public- life. “We want your conduct to be the same as it is in the main street of Houston,” she said. fDomputer network links universities in Texas By Reisha Tucker Reporter larflWhen Texas A&M talks the University of , Tlexas will listen and vice versa because of a ^ statewide computer network that is expected to vastly improve communications between 1 more than 30 academic institutions. 3 BThe Texas Higher Education Network, or id THEnet, is the largest state academic com- isetputer network in the nation, linking A&M, l|r and 32 other universities and academic institutions. [■THEnet links colleges and universities and 0 | f gives them access to important national data ...bases and libraries. Each university can get ac cess to the network through existing com puter systems. The system helps researchers, administra tors and students collaborate on research pro jects, George Kemper, assistant director for technical services at A&M, said. With this system for example, two profes sors from different universities who are writ ing a book together can communicate faster. “Before, if you were real lucky, you would get something sent through the mail in a week or so,” Kemper said. “With THEnet, electronic mail can be received in a matter of minutes.” Users of the network can share library re sources, compare notes and perhaps in the future utilize video teleconferencing. The 3,000-mile network originally began two years ago when the UT system started connecting all of their universities with the Cray supercomputer in Austin, Frank Walter, public relations manager at ClayDesta Com munications, said. In spring 1987, plans were carried out to link UT’s systems with A&M’s. ClayDesta, owned by Clayton W. Williams Jr., Class of ‘54, provides the telecommunica tions for THEnet. “Kemper and William Bard, director of UT’s System Office of Telecommunications Services, were the masterminds behind this idea,” Walter said. Because of Williams’ loyalty to A&M, he wanted the state-wide digital network based in Bryan-College Station, Walter said. “When all these lines were interconnected, we had to find a long distance carrier,” Kemper said. “ClayDesta ha/d the best service and the cheapest price.” Having this connection among Texas scholars builds the infrastructure of Texas, Kemper said. Now, Texans can communicate and more effectively compete for grants, he said. “Our two universities coming together,” Kemper said, “proved that we were deter mined and serious about working together cooperatively.” Teen escapes drowning BAY CITY (AP) — A teen ager working late at a city swim ming pool says he escaped drowning after two men who anchored his feet and threw him into 14 feet of water failed to tie his hands. Due Tran, 17, said he was lock ing a gate at the pool shortly after 6 p.m. Sunday when a man grabbed him from behind, cov ered his eyes and held his arms. 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For The 1988-89 Student Directory To Place an advertisement call 845-2697 Deadline is August 15th!