THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT Copyright (c) 1994, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: WEDNESDAY, June 29, 1994 TAG: 9406290008 SECTION: FRONT PAGE: A10 EDITION: FINAL SOURCE: Medium DATELINE: 940629 LENGTH:
A couple of issues are worth pursuing here: Is it the newspaper's place to facilitate the introduction of lonely singles? If so (and why not?), then is it the newspaper's place to endorse only the introduction of women to men and men to women, thereby implying that only straight relationships are legitimate and fit for public consumption?
{REST} It would be specious to argue that a newspaper has the right to sell advertising space of any kind to whomever it chooses. Like any theoretical enterprise, a newspaper sells ads for profit, not for politics, and there are plenty of gay men and women who are willing to spend $2 a minute to find Mr./Ms. Right. The newspaper is not acting in its better financial interest by denying gays access to personal ads; instead, the editors are purposefully promoting the myth that gay relationships are neither ``suitable'' nor family oriented.
Most of my straight friends and even a few of my gay friends have accused me of amplifying a non-issue. However, most have reconsidered their position when I've reminded them that what we gay men and women anticipate (sometimes with patience, sometimes with apathy) is the day when same-sex relationships are not ipso facto headline news.
The place for gay relationships, like all healthy human relationships, is closer to the personals page than the front page.
JOSEPH P. BUFFINGTON
Chesapeake, June 8, 1994 by CNB