SOLAIR INTER-COLLEGIATE NUDIST DAY
 SOLAIR RECREATION LEAGUE
New England’s first nudist resort invites you to attend:
Date: Saturday, May 5, 2007
Meet other college nudists.
Enjoy a day of nude activities or just chill out on our 400+ acres in nearby bucolic Woodstock, Connecticut.
Special rate: $10/person for all activities, including dinner and dance (see below)
Pre-register and receive FREE gift!
A partial list of the schools invited to attend: UConn, URI, Wesleyan, Brown, Tufts, UMass, Mount Holyoke, Hampshire, Smith, Amherst, Northeastern, Clark, Harvard/Radcliffe, BU, BC, Yale, SCSU, Central, RISD, Trinity, St. Joseph’s, Connecticut College, Bennington , University of Hartford, Springfield College, The Worcester Consortium, Hartford’s Community College
Outdoor Activities (weather permitting): Inter-mural Competitions: hiking, tennis, biking, swimming (lake and pool), tug-of-war, Ultimate Frisbee, fishing, volleyball, shuffleboard, boating.
Indoor Activities: Sauna, hot tub, dance lessons, body painting and temporary tattooing, black-light pool, ping pong.
Bring your hiking shoes and flip flops, sunscreen, tennis racket, fishing rod, mountain bike, a towel and a smile!


Roses complement the body-art painting worn by Sabrina Vizzari, marketing director of Paradise Lakes. A body artist from Orlando painted participants in the nudist resort’s body art festival.
AANR is pleased to announce its newest member benefit. AFLAC insurance and AANR have an agreement that makes two insurance plans–one that covers accidents and one that provides supplemental cancer coverage–available to AANR members at special member savings. AFLAC is a credible name in the insurance industry, and the company’s advertisements are instantly recognizable due to the quacking duck that appears when people are discussing their insurance needs. To find out more about AFLAC and how you, as an AANR member, can save, visit the
A recent edition of the Arizona State University
Salem, Oregon, cartoonist Glen Bledsoe’s inspiration for his latest cartoon strip Nota Bene was inspired by his misreading of the recent House bill proposed by Representative Donna Nelson to ban human cloning. Bledsoe’s three previous strips were titled “Nude Anatomy,” “The Naked Hitchhiker” and “Skin Deep,” and thought Nelson had come around to his way of thinking and was inspired to create legislation that revealed the beauty of the human body. His latest cartoon is called “The Ban on Human Clothing.” Read Bledsoe’s
A controversial nude sculpture was removed from a roundabout sculpture park in Loveland, Colorado. Residents were concerned about children viewing the sculpture that depicts two women and one man. Artist Kristin Kokkin wanted the sculpture to be “kind of a wheel so that the energy is flowing from all three of them and it really and truly is how humanity relies on support of people.” According to Jim Baldwin, of the Loveland Visual Arts Commission, there has been controversy about every nude that has been part of the collection. A poll on cbs4denver.com revealed that 71% of respondents felt the statue should not be removed.The 1,200 lb. bronze was moved in a flatbead truck across town at a cost of about $8,000.




