ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Wednesday, January 24, 1996            TAG: 9601270001
SECTION: VIRGINIA                 PAGE: C-3  EDITION: NEW RIVER VALLEY 
DATELINE: CHRISTIANSBURG
SOURCE: KATHY LOAN STAFF WRITER 


'DIVERSITY' MESSAGE COVERED UP GAY RIGHTS GROUP UPSET AT BROKEN PACT

"Diversity Enriches" was the simple message of the rainbow-colored billboard on Roanoke Street.

"That was a board that I could drive by and ask my 12-year-old, `Do you know what that means?''' said Mary Arnold, a health care professional who lives in Christiansburg.

That's why she was upset Tuesday when she drove by the sign and saw workers covering the billboard - which had been up since last Thursday - with a new message. It now touts downtown Pulaski as being "open for business."

Arnold, was concerned that a picture of the sign in Tuesday's New River Current section of The Roanoke Times had been its undoing.

The sticking point for those who objected to the "Diversity Enriches" billboard likely is a tag line at the bottom that attributes the message to the informal group, "Gay & Straight Citizens of Southwest Va.''

The billboard message, paid for by advocates of gay and lesbian rights, was scheduled to be up for a month in the 1300 block of Roanoke Street near the Hill's shopping center. It cost the group $450.

Though a similar billboard message in Roanoke provoked anti-gay criticism in 1994 and prompted an outdoor advertising company to give the thumbs-down to a Roanoke group who wanted to pay for "Diversity Enriches" billboards in Roanoke last fall, no one had called to complain about the Christiansburg billboard through Monday, said Frank Amburn, manager of the Dublin office of Outdoor East, the company that owns the billboards. That apparently changed Tuesday, when the photo ran in the newspaper.

"Today, a floodgate broke loose," Amburn said Tuesday night. The company received at least 50 phone calls Tuesday afternoon complaining about the sign, he said.

"They could find nothing offensive about the copy itself, except for the name of the group," he said.

The decision to cover up the billboard came down to a fear for his company's property, Amburn said. Several callers threatened to destroy other billboards owned by the company.

He said he'll refund the money the group put up for the billboard.

Peggy Eaton, with the local chapter of Parents, Friends and Family of Lesbians and Gays, said her group helped get the billboard up in Christiansburg.

She said no one had told her the sign was going to be covered up and that she is irritated that her signed contract is not being honored.

Staff writers Betty Hayden and Brian Kelley contributed to this story.


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