[net.rec.nude] Sunbather is Cleared in Public Nudity Case

coop@rdin.UUCP (Robert Cooper) (10/29/85)

Taken from NY Times, 10/27/85

SUNBATHER IS CLEARED IN PUBLIC NUDITY CASE

TITUSVILLE, Fla., Oct 26 (UPI) 
- A jury says naked buttocks do not "outrage the sense of public decency" and 
that ruling sent Sheriff Jake Miller of Brevard County back to reconsider 
measures he had taken against nude sunbathing.
  Mr. Miller ordered his deputies in June to arrest nude sunbathing at 
Playalinda Beach. On June 20, they arrested Samuel Anderson, of Winter Park,
and Sara Cunningham, of Altamonte Springs, for disorderly counduct.
  Miss Cunningham decided Thursday to plead no contest before Judge Lawrence
Johnson. But Mr. Anderson challenged the state law and won in a jury decision
Thursday.
  His lawyer, Louis Cianfrogna, told the jury that state laws describe 
disorderly conduct as acts that "corrupt public morals or outrage the sense 
of public decency".
  "We're talking about bare buttocks here," Mr. Cianfrogna said. "I don't
think nudity among consenting adults outrages the public anymore."
  The jury took only 15 minutes to find Anderson not guilty Thursday.

_____________________________________________________________________________
I love it!!!!!

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Robert Cooper                         Resource Dynamics Inc.
{philabs|delftcc}!rdin!coop           150 East 58th Street New York, NY 10155
                                      (212) 486-9150

charliep@polaris.UUCP (Charlie Perkins) (11/01/85)

=============
Thanks, Robert, for this encouraging news.  According to
what I read in "Clothed with the Sun", Floridian nudists have
recently been subjected to many unpleasant experiences at
the hands of the state law enforcement agencies there.

What constantly dismays me is the attitude that, because
some (apparently a vocal minority) find public nudity
"outrageous", "distasteful", or "offensive", we must all
endure laws which I consider to be unconstitutional.
I long for the day when arriving at work in the nude
would be acceptable -- when going to movies or museums
or sailing or dining in the nude (weather permitting!)
is tolerated.  I wouldn't even mind a few disdainful
stares!  But I feel certain that I'd be locked up or
fired or beat up or generally treated inhumanely if I
ever did try to do those things.  And to think that these
actions are, at their very heart, an affirmation that we
as humans are good and worthy of respect just as we
REALLY ARE!

I find myself drawn to works of art that display the beauty
of the human body.  Surely there is nothing "intrinsically
evil" about the sight of it.  I suppose that the immediacy
of real nude human bodies creates the apprehension, in many
people, that illicit sexual energy is crowding their personal
lives and that such energies must never find public expression.
Certainly there is a sensual wonderfulness about nudity that
mingles easily with our sexuality.  But I have always found
that the sensuality is very very nice in and of itself.
Therefore I feel frustrated and dismayed that this wonderful
part of existence is practically never available to me.
It is worse than if I were suddenly required to "practically
never" drink wine or eat fresh spinach salad.

I'm afraid I'll die before these thoughts about nudity
become common sense.
-- 

Charlie Perkins, IBM T.J. Watson Research	philabs!polaris!charliep,
		perk%YKTVMX.BITNET@berkeley,  perk.yktvmx.ibm@csnet-relay