J
James T. Kirk
Guest
From http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2007/10/11/national/a151450D92.DTL&type=bondage
A graphic goof on signs welcoming travelers has this upstate community facing an identity crisis.
That's because the "Welcome to Malone" signs feature a bucolic image of the New England countryside, not northern New York.
Town supervisor Howard Maneely said a Vermont resident who was passing through happened to recognize the Green Mountain State's scenery on the signs and alerted Malone officials.
Maneely said the image a scene of red barns, rolling hills and fall foliage was actually from a photograph taken at the Jenne Farm outside Woodstock, Vt.
The image was chosen by a committee after a contest that included local schoolchildren and arts groups. It's not clear how the photo, which is available on the Internet, slipped into the competition.
"We paid $5,000 for them five years ago," Maneely said of the signs. "But if the public wants them down, we can see about getting new ones."
A graphic goof on signs welcoming travelers has this upstate community facing an identity crisis.
That's because the "Welcome to Malone" signs feature a bucolic image of the New England countryside, not northern New York.
Town supervisor Howard Maneely said a Vermont resident who was passing through happened to recognize the Green Mountain State's scenery on the signs and alerted Malone officials.
Maneely said the image a scene of red barns, rolling hills and fall foliage was actually from a photograph taken at the Jenne Farm outside Woodstock, Vt.
The image was chosen by a committee after a contest that included local schoolchildren and arts groups. It's not clear how the photo, which is available on the Internet, slipped into the competition.
"We paid $5,000 for them five years ago," Maneely said of the signs. "But if the public wants them down, we can see about getting new ones."