LA Times, June 10, 2005
Wal-Mart PR Exec in Ad Flap Resigns
By Leslie Earnest, Times Staff Writer

A community affairs representative for Wal-Mart Stores Inc. has resigned,
four weeks after the retail giant was forced to apologize for a newspaper
ad that appeared to equate an Arizona zoning proposal with a Nazi book-burning.

Peter Kanelos, whose resignation is effective today, handled public
relations in Arizona as well as Southern California. Kanelos was the
prominent voice for Wal-Mart during last year's failed bid to build a
Supercenter in Inglewood.

Wal-Mart on Thursday declined to say why Kanelos was leaving, and would not
confirm whether he or his San Diego office had approved the advertisement.
Wal-Mart spokeswoman Daphne Moore, declining to give specifics, would say
only that the retailer approved the ad without realizing the photo's
"historical context."

Wal-Mart also said it was no longer working with HighGround Inc., the
Phoenix company that created the ad.

"They offered their resignation and we accepted it," Moore said. HighGround
could not be reached for comment.

Wal-Mart Watch, a nonprofit advocacy group in Washington, said the retailer
"did the right thing" by accepting Kanelos' resignation.

"We believe that Kanelos' resignation signifies some degree of
accountability on the company's part," spokeswoman Tracy Sefl said.

Kanelos, said in an e-mail that he submitted his resignation two weeks ago
and was leaving "on mutually agreeable terms." The controversy erupted
after the publication of an ad in the Arizona Daily Sun on May 6 and 8 that
urged readers to reject a city ordinance in Flagstaff designed to limit the
development of such big-box stores as Supercenters. Wal-Mart already has
one Supercenter in Flagstaff.

The ad featured a picture that showed Nazi supporters throwing books onto a
fire. The text under the photo read: "Should we let government tell us what
we can read? Of course not." The ad continued, "So why should we allow
local government to limit where we can shop?"

The group that took out the ad, Protect Flagstaff's Future, is financed by
Wal-Mart.

"There was not an attempt to equate anything about Flagstaff to Nazi
Germany," Moore said Thursday.

The retailer, which has been struggling to buff its image, took out an ad
apologizing to Flagstaff residents. It also apologized to the
Anti-Defamation League, which had contacted the company after receiving
many complaints about the advertisement.

According to a story in the Daily Sun on May 14, Kanelos declined to
comment on the ad, saying he had not seen it. But HighGround President
Chuck Coughlin told the newspaper he believed Kanelos had seen it.

The Flagstaff proposal was defeated.

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