artspaper/around town advertising sizes, rates & deadlines...

1
in The Coastal Star special section dedicated to our Jubilee Year Celebrate St. Vincent Ferrer with a Commemorative Message The COASTAL STAR November 2013 Celebrating 75 years 21 Congratulations to the “Little School by the Sea” as you celebrate 75 years. Your Friends At Crocker Pavilion is shaping up ABOVE LEFT: The rendering of the new wing ABOVE RIGHT: During the groundbreaking for the new wing, Garret Sargeant, ’13, and Sage Mattson, ’22, tag-teamed a shovel during the groundbreaking . LEFT: A painter working for KAST construction sprays the ceiling of the Multi-Use center in late October. The Crocker Pavilion will be dedicated on Dec. 13. 5 columns x 15.85 inches tall The COASTAL STAR November 2013 Celebrating 75 years 19 We have grown together, and our future is bright. Congratulations from the Town Gulf Stream School – Class of 2016 6th Grade Salutes GSS on its 75th! School board embraces five key visions As it moves into the future, Gulf Stream School is continuing on the path first blazed by the Johnstons three quarters of a century ago. At its center, there will always be an emphasis on offering students a high- quality education in an environment that prepares them for a successful future. During its most recent strategic-planning session, held in 2012, the school’s board of trustees outlined five key visions for the future: School Identity and Culture Gulf Stream School will continue to honor its past, embrace its present and sustain its future through a commitment to high standards of character and academic performance while developing an awareness of, and the ability to thrive in, the global community. • Program Gulf Stream School will continue to provide an academically challenging curriculum while addressing the needs of an increasing variety of ability levels and learning styles. Character development will factor prominently throughout the program. e school will foster a supportive learning environment in which the children develop perseverance as they encounter setbacks and gain the confidence to succeed. Students will be required to participate in arts and athletics and will be given the opportunity to develop and pursue areas of specific interest and talent. • Faculty Gulf Stream School is committed to an outstanding faculty dedicated to its mission of inspiring and empowering students to develop intellectual curiosity and achieve personal success. • Advancement e school’s endowment, “no-debt” policy and ability to attract quality students are the keys to its long-term financial stability and security. Working collaboratively, the development and admissions office will expand the school’s advancement efforts. • Facilities Gulf Stream School will maintain facilities of the highest quality, which are necessary to support its academic, arts, athletic and technical programs and to attract talented new students, families, and faculty. With its course clearly charted, Gulf Stream School remains well positioned to continue the legacy of those who went before them and built, in the words of Miss Gibb, “a good wee school by the sea.” Supporting 75 Years of Gulf Stream School Providing a quality education for our children is the best investment you can make. Purveyors of Fine School Furnishings, Gifts and Accessories of Distinction Phone: 561-276-4038 Fax: 561-276-3778 Email: [email protected] Website: www.personalizedproductsweb.com Maddox Kumar – Class of 2013 Love, Mom, Dad and Maya From your 1st day of Kg to the 4th Grade play and now 8th Grade...... It has been a great ride! We are so proud of your accomplishments. Florida and worked his way up at TransMedia, Palm Beach County’s largest public relations firm. Community involvement: Serves on the board of Boca Raton Children’s Museum and supports other non-profit organizations. oughts about Gulf Stream School: “Gulf Stream School was the most important part of my educational career. e school provided me with a strong foundation of academic excellence and offered me the chance to grow, explore and refine my writing skills. Kristin and I are proud that our children are second- generation Gulf Stream School students. We want them to grow and learn in the same nurturing and enriching environment that I know as Gulf Stream School.” Paige Kornblue, 1994 Former television journalist at WPTV, Channel 5 in West Palm Beach. Career: Worked at stations in New Hampshire and Louisiana and provided live reports for CNN and e Weather Channel. Currently living in Dallas, with husband Andrew Hunter, and raising a 1-year-old daughter, Maya Blue. oughts about Gulf Stream School: “Gulf Stream School stands apart because it creates an environment where each student can grow and thrive academically and personally. Gulf Stream School made us feel special as individuals and as a class. It becomes a part of you. I just wish I could blink my eyes and a Gulf Stream School campus would appear in Dallas so my children could experience it too.” John Gracey Backer, 2000 Treasurer, Gracey-Backer Inc. Insurance. Career: Worked for Price- waterhouse- Coopers LLP in Birmingham, Ala., as a CPA before returning to South Florida to join the family business.Community involvement: A member of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, active in the community with a special passion for Habitat for Humanity. oughts about Gulf Stream School: “I am forever indebted to Gulf Stream School’s wonderful teachers and faculty. It is near and dear to my heart, and I hope to send my children to Gulf Stream one day. I have especially fond memories of Miss Gibb’s Shakespeare lessons, Mr. Winans’ beach days, and sports with Mr. Edward Wilson, Larry Handler and Bryan Cook.” The COASTAL STAR November 2013 Celebrating 75 years 23 Paige John e Little Club takes great pleasu in sending Congratulations to our neighbo Hunter and Peyton Presson Class of 2020 and 2022 Congratulations on an awesome school year. We are so proud of you! The COASTAL STAR 4 Celebrating 75 years November 2013 The classes of the 1930s and ‘40s 1949 Barbara Annan Francis Mullin Martha Lattner (Walker) 1948 Frederick Peirsol Howard Phipps Fred Prichard 1939 Faith Munro-Kerr 1943 Jean Babenzien 1944 Don-Michael Bird 1946 Anne Sidamon-Eristoff It was the late 1930s and South Florida — along with the world around it — was changing dramatically. Many American families were still reeling from the impact of the Great Depression. Turbulence in Europe during Adolf Hitler’s rise to power was having a rippling impact here at home. Yet the tiny barrier island town of Gulf Stream, only incorporated since the end of the Roaring Twenties, was mostly immune to the problems of the rest of the world that seemed light years away. Sparsely populated, Gulf Stream was home to polo fields and the Gulf Stream Golf Club. By and large, it was still a mesh of wilderness and swampland, inhabited with hordes of mosquitoes and an abundance of other less menacing critters. It seemed a very unlikely place for a school. Yet the desire of two parents to provide a comfortable home for their daughter suffering from asthma and the aspirations of a well-funded development company to create a thriving community of affluent residents, along with a bit of serendipity, came together to create the Gulf Stream School. New London, Conn., could be brutally cold in the winter and by 1938, Ada Belle and Bill Johnston had enough. Seeking a new home where their daughter Judith’s medical ailments could be eased, the Johnstons embarked on a cross-country journey that eventually took them to West Palm Beach. During the three weeks they were there, the Johnstons saw a noticeable change in Judith’s condition, and the idea of moving to the area was born. Not long aſterward, Ada Belle Johnston was introduced to the manager of Bessemer Properties — a development company owned by brothers Howard C. Phipps and John Phipps — who made her an offer. Knowing that Mrs. Johnston had a master’s degree and spent seven years running a private school in Connecticut, the manager, Jim Riley, offered to convert one of the polo barns into a school if the Johnstons would run it. Several months later, while in San Francisco on a dreary Fourth of July, the Johnstons put a letter in the mail accepting Riley’s offer. “e decision had been made,” wrote teacher David Winans in his book e Little School by the Sea. “A school would be built and the Johnstons’ legacy would begin.” It would take several months for the construction to be completed, with Mrs. Johnston making frequent trips to the site during her stays at the Colony Hotel in Delray Beach. Finally on Dec. 1, 1938, the first student arrived at Gulf Stream School. His name was Fred Piersol, a 7-year-old, who discovered, aſter being walked to school by Mrs. Johnston, that he was the only student. Other students, mostly children of wintering northerners, would soon arrive at what essentially was a one- room schoolhouse. Lessons were taught from books and plans provided by teachers from up north, with the school day usually concluding by 1 p.m. Before long, a new teacher, Miss Naomi Irwin, would be added to assist Mrs. Johnston and eventually others would follow. By the end of the ’30s, Gulf Stream School had helped educate 35 students. Now it was time for the first of what would be many expansion projects. Daughter’s asthma motivated couple to found Gulf Stream School Love, Mom and Dan We wish Samantha and Ashley all the best that life has to offer. We miss their Gulf Stream School years and hope all their dreams come true!!! We congratulate Gulf Stream School and honor the memory of Emily Dosch ‘99 from Rhea and Nick Hagoort and Jason Ziegler ‘99 Emily Dosch Jason Ziegler Gulf Stream School Class of 1999 Dalton Lee Davis Congratulations, Dalton - You are a dream come true! Headed to play lacrosse & attend Bard College, Fall 2014! Love you, Mom & Dad GSS Class of 2010 Saint Andrew’s Class of 2014 Editors Note These listing reflect the names of students who attended Gulf Stream School. Married names are shown (in parentheses) if those records were available. Heads of School 1938-’66 Ada Belle Johnston poses with her daughter, Judith. 520 E. Linton Blvd., Delray Beach (next to Chipotle) 561-266-2222www.creamdelray.com 2 new locations COMING SOON! 1163 East Atlantic Ave. Delray Beach 1367 Palmetto Park Rd. Boca Raton Congratulations on 75 years of excellence Bill Johnston 5 columns x 8 inches tall 3 columns x 7 inches tall N 2 columns x 5 inches tall 2 columns x 10 inches tall t 3 columns x 3.34 inches tall Full Page: Color: 10” wide x 15.85” deep business rate: $2,400 family/school grade rate: $2,000 Half Page: Color: 10” wide x 8” deep business rate: $1,300 family/school grade rate: $1,100 Quarter Page: Color: 5.92” wide x 7.5” deep or 7.96” wide x 10” deep business rate: $750 family/school grade rate: $695 Eighth Page Color: 3.88” wide x 5” deep or 5.92” wide x 3.34” deep business rate: $390 family/school grade rate: $300 Half page - Commercial Quarter page - family Eighth page - classroom Eighth page - family Deadline: Publication Date: February, 2016 in the Coastal Star as well as distribution at the Gala in December, 2015 For more information: call Chris Bellard 561-901-7717 or email her [email protected] a special section by: January, 2016 Monday, November 16, 2015

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in The Coastal Star special section dedicated to our Jubilee Year

Celebrate St. Vincent Ferrer witha Commemorative Message

The COASTAL STARNovember 2013 Celebrating 75 years 21

Congratulations to the “Little School by the Sea”

as you celebrate 75 years.

Y o u r F r i e n d s At

Crocker Pavilion is shaping up

ABOVE LEFT: The rendering of the new wingABOVE RIGHT: During the groundbreaking for the new wing, Garret Sargeant, ’13, and Sage Mattson, ’22, tag-teamed a shovel during the groundbreaking .LEFT: A painter working for KAST construction sprays the ceiling of the Multi-Use center in late October. The Crocker Pavilion will be dedicated on Dec. 13.

ArtsPaper/Around Town Advertising sizes, rates & deadlines (prices shown are per month)

Full Page

5 columns x 15.85 inches tall

5 columns x 8 inches tall

1 x per year, color or b&w $2,7003 x per year, color or b&w $2,55012 x per year, color or b&w $2,400

Eighth Page

3 columns x3.34 inches tall

5columns x2 inches tall

2 columns x5 inches tall

Half Page

1 x per year, color or b&w $1,4253 x per year, color or b&w $1,35012 x per year, color or b&w $1,275

Quarter Page

1 x per year, color or b&w $7953 x per year, color or b&w $71512 x per year, color or b&w $650

2 columns x 10 inches tall

3 columns x7 inches tall

1 x per year, color or b&w $4503 x per year, color or b&w $41512 x per year, color or b&w $375

DESIGN SPACE:Design spaces are no bleed, no trim.Ad widths are in columns:• 2 columns = 3.88 inches• 3 columns = 5.92 inches• 4 columns = 7.96 inches• 5 columns = 10 inchesFull page ads should be 10 in. X 15.85 in.to leave room for our page folio at the top.

• Four color ads: CMYK onlyTotal ink density = 250 maximum, 200 DPIMinimum - recommended 300 DPI• For b&w Ads: Grayscale, 200 DPI minimumTID = 280 maximum• Paper type & printing: Cover Sheet is 50# newsprint, inside is 35# at 100 line screen.

Prepress Details

Color & Reproduction

Space Reservation* Completed Ads Due Distribution**

2014 - 2015 Advertis ing Deadlines

August 24

September 19

August 26

September 23

September 5

October 4 (SEASON PREVIEW)October 20

November 24December 19

January 26, 2015February 23

March 23April 20May 22June 22July 20

October 22November 26December 22

January 28, 2015February 25

March 25April 22May 27June 24July 22

November 1December 6

January 3, 2015February 7

March 7April 4May 2June 6July 4

August 1

*

2015 – 2016 Advertising DeadlinesSpace Reservation* Completed Ads Due Distribution**

June 22 June 24 July 4, 2015July 20 July 22 August 1, 2015

August 24 August 26 September 5, 2015September 21 September 23 October 3, 2015 (SEASON PREVIEW)November 20 November 24 December 5, 2015December 18 December 22 January 2 , 2016

January 25 January 27 February 6, 2016February 22 February 24 March 5, 2016

March 21 March 23 April 2, 2016April 25 April 27 May 7, 2016May 23 May 25 June 4, 2016June 20 June 22 July 2, 2016July 25 July 27 August 6, 2016

*Reservations are due by noon on this day **Distributed on the first weekend of the month

The COASTAL STARNovember 2013 Celebrating 75 years 19

We have grown together,and our future is bright.

Congratulationsfrom the Town

Gulf Stream School – Class of 2016

6th Grade Salutes GSS on its 75th!

School board embraces five key visions

As it moves into the future, Gulf Stream School is continuing on the path first blazed by the Johnstons three quarters of a century ago.

At its center, there will always be an emphasis on offering students a high-quality education in an environment that prepares them for a successful future.

During its most recent strategic-planning session, held in 2012, the school’s board of trustees outlined five key visions for the future:

• School Identity and Culture

Gulf Stream School will continue to honor its past, embrace its present and sustain its future through a commitment to high standards of character and academic performance while developing an awareness of, and the ability to thrive in, the global community.

• ProgramGulf Stream School will

continue to provide an academically challenging curriculum while addressing the needs of an increasing variety of ability levels and learning styles. Character development will factor prominently throughout the program. The school will foster a supportive learning environment in which the children develop perseverance

as they encounter setbacks and gain the confidence to succeed. Students will be required to participate in arts and athletics and will be given the opportunity to develop and pursue areas of specific interest and talent.

• FacultyGulf Stream School is

committed to an outstanding faculty dedicated to its mission of inspiring and empowering students to develop intellectual curiosity and achieve personal success.

• AdvancementThe school’s endowment,

“no-debt” policy and ability to attract quality students are the keys to its long-term financial stability and security. Working collaboratively, the development and admissions office will expand the school’s advancement efforts.

• FacilitiesGulf Stream School will

maintain facilities of the highest quality, which are necessary to support its academic, arts, athletic and technical programs and to attract talented new students, families, and faculty.

With its course clearly charted, Gulf Stream School remains well positioned to continue the legacy of those who went before them and built, in the words of Miss Gibb, “a good wee school by the sea.”

Supporting 75 Years of Gulf Stream School

Providing a quality educationfor our children is the

best investment you can make.

Purveyors of Fine School Furnishings, Giftsand Accessories of DistinctionPhone: 561-276-4038 Fax: 561-276-3778

Email: [email protected] Website: www.personalizedproductsweb.com

Maddox Kumar – Class of 2013 Love, Mom, Dad and Maya

From your 1st day of Kg to the 4th Grade play and now 8th Grade...... It has been a great ride! We are so proud of your accomplishments.

Florida and worked his way up at TransMedia, Palm Beach County’s largest public relations firm.

Community involvement: Serves on the board of Boca Raton Children’s Museum and supports other non-profit organizations.

Thoughts about Gulf Stream School: “Gulf Stream School was the most important part of my educational career. The school provided me with a strong foundation of academic excellence and offered me the chance to grow, explore and refine my writing skills. Kristin and I are proud that our children are second-generation Gulf Stream School students. We want them to grow and learn in the same nurturing and enriching environment that I know as Gulf Stream School.”

Paige Kornblue, 1994Former television journalist

at WPTV, Channel 5 in West Palm Beach.

Career: Worked at stations in New Hampshire

and Louisiana and provided live reports for CNN and The Weather Channel. Currently living in Dallas, with husband Andrew Hunter, and raising a 1-year-old daughter, Maya Blue.

Thoughts about Gulf Stream School: “Gulf Stream School stands apart because it creates an environment where each student can grow and thrive academically and personally. Gulf Stream School made us feel special as individuals and as a class. It becomes a part of you. I just wish I could blink my eyes and a Gulf Stream School campus would appear in Dallas so my children could experience it too.”

John Gracey Backer, 2000Treasurer, Gracey-Backer

Inc. Insurance.Career:

Worked for Price-waterhouse-Coopers LLP in Birmingham, Ala., as a

CPA before returning to South Florida to join the family business.Community involvement: A member of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, active in the community with a special passion for Habitat for Humanity.

Thoughts about Gulf Stream School: “I am forever indebted to Gulf Stream School’s wonderful teachers and faculty. It is near and dear to my heart, and I hope to send my children to Gulf Stream one day. I have especially fond memories of Miss Gibb’s Shakespeare lessons, Mr. Winans’ beach days, and sports with Mr. Edward Wilson, Larry Handler and Bryan Cook.”

The COASTAL STARNovember 2013 Celebrating 75 years 23

Paige

John

The Little Club

takes great pleasure in sending Congratulationsto our neighbors

Hunter and Peyton PressonClass of 2020 and 2022

Congratulations on an awesome school year.We are so proud of you!

The COASTAL STAR4 Celebrating 75 years November 2013

The classes of the 1930s and ‘40s1949Barbara AnnanFrancis MullinMartha Lattner (Walker)

1948Frederick PeirsolHoward PhippsFred Prichard

1939Faith Munro-Kerr

1943Jean Babenzien

1944Don-Michael Bird

1946Anne Sidamon-Eristoff

It was the late 1930s and South Florida — along with the world around it — was changing dramatically.

Many American families were still reeling from the impact of the Great Depression. Turbulence in Europe during Adolf Hitler’s rise to power was having a rippling impact here at home.

Yet the tiny barrier island town of Gulf Stream, only incorporated since the end of the Roaring Twenties, was mostly immune to the problems of the rest of the world that seemed light years away.

Sparsely populated, Gulf Stream was home to polo fields and the Gulf Stream Golf Club. By and large, it was still a mesh of wilderness and swampland, inhabited with hordes of mosquitoes and an abundance of other less menacing critters.

It seemed a very unlikely place for a school.

Yet the desire of two parents to provide a comfortable home for their daughter suffering from asthma and the aspirations of a well-funded development company to create a thriving community of affluent residents, along with a bit of serendipity, came together to create the Gulf Stream School.

New London, Conn., could be brutally cold in the winter and by 1938, Ada Belle and Bill Johnston had enough. Seeking a new home where their daughter Judith’s medical ailments could be eased, the Johnstons embarked on a cross-country journey that eventually took them to West Palm Beach.

During the three weeks they were there, the Johnstons saw a noticeable change in Judith’s

condition, and the idea of moving to the area was born.

Not long afterward, Ada Belle Johnston was introduced to the manager of Bessemer

Properties — a development company owned by brothers Howard C. Phipps and John Phipps — who made her an offer.

Knowing that Mrs. Johnston had a master’s degree and spent seven years running a private school in Connecticut, the manager, Jim Riley, offered to convert one of the polo barns into a school if the Johnstons would run it.

Several months later, while in San Francisco on a dreary Fourth of July, the Johnstons put a letter in the mail accepting Riley’s offer.

“The decision had been made,” wrote teacher David Winans in his book The Little School by the Sea. “A school would be built and the Johnstons’ legacy would

begin.”It would take several months

for the construction to be completed, with Mrs. Johnston making frequent trips to the site during her stays at the Colony Hotel in Delray Beach.

Finally on Dec. 1, 1938, the first student arrived at Gulf Stream School. His name was Fred Piersol, a 7-year-old, who discovered, after being walked to school by Mrs. Johnston, that he was the only student.

Other students, mostly children of wintering northerners, would soon arrive at what essentially was a one-room schoolhouse. Lessons were taught from books and plans provided by teachers from up north, with the school day usually concluding by 1 p.m.

Before long, a new teacher, Miss Naomi Irwin, would be added to assist Mrs. Johnston and eventually others would follow. By the end of the ’30s, Gulf Stream School had helped educate 35 students.

Now it was time for the first of what would be many expansion projects.

Daughter’s asthma motivated couple to found Gulf Stream School

Love,MomandDan

WewishSamanthaandAshleyallthebestthatlifehastooffer.WemisstheirGulfStreamSchoolyearsand

hopealltheirdreamscometrue!!!

We congratulate Gulf Stream Schooland honor the memory of

Emily Dosch ‘99

from Rhea and Nick Hagoortand Jason Ziegler ‘99

Emily Dosch Jason Ziegler

Gulf Stream School Class of 1999

Dalton Lee Davis

Congratulations, Dalton - You are adream come true!

Headed to play lacrosse & attend Bard College, Fall 2014!

Love you, Mom & Dad

GSS Class of 2010Saint Andrew’s Class of 2014

Editors NoteThese listing reflect the names of students who attended Gulf Stream School. Married names are shown (in parentheses) if those records were available.

Heads of School 1938-’66

Ada Belle Johnston poses with her daughter, Judith.

520 E. Linton Blvd., Delray Beach(next to Chipotle)561-266-2222 • www.creamdelray.com

2 new locationsCOMING SOON!

1163 East Atlantic Ave.Delray Beach

1367 Palmetto Park Rd.Boca Raton

Congratulations on 75 years of excellence

Bill Johnston

ArtsPaper/Around Town Advertising sizes, rates & deadlines (prices shown are per month)

Full Page

5 columns x 15.85 inches tall

5 columns x 8 inches tall

1 x per year, color or b&w $2,7003 x per year, color or b&w $2,55012 x per year, color or b&w $2,400

Eighth Page

3 columns x3.34 inches tall

5columns x2 inches tall

2 columns x5 inches tall

Half Page

1 x per year, color or b&w $1,4253 x per year, color or b&w $1,35012 x per year, color or b&w $1,275

Quarter Page

1 x per year, color or b&w $7953 x per year, color or b&w $71512 x per year, color or b&w $650

2 columns x 10 inches tall

3 columns x7 inches tall

1 x per year, color or b&w $4503 x per year, color or b&w $41512 x per year, color or b&w $375

DESIGN SPACE:Design spaces are no bleed, no trim.Ad widths are in columns:• 2 columns = 3.88 inches• 3 columns = 5.92 inches• 4 columns = 7.96 inches• 5 columns = 10 inchesFull page ads should be 10 in. X 15.85 in.to leave room for our page folio at the top.

• Four color ads: CMYK onlyTotal ink density = 250 maximum, 200 DPIMinimum - recommended 300 DPI• For b&w Ads: Grayscale, 200 DPI minimumTID = 280 maximum• Paper type & printing: Cover Sheet is 50# newsprint, inside is 35# at 100 line screen.

Prepress Details

Color & Reproduction

Space Reservation* Completed Ads Due Distribution**

2014 - 2015 Advertis ing Deadlines

August 24

September 19

August 26

September 23

September 5

October 4 (SEASON PREVIEW)October 20

November 24December 19

January 26, 2015February 23

March 23April 20May 22June 22July 20

October 22November 26December 22

January 28, 2015February 25

March 25April 22May 27June 24July 22

November 1December 6

January 3, 2015February 7

March 7April 4May 2June 6July 4

August 1

*

2015 – 2016 Advertising DeadlinesSpace Reservation* Completed Ads Due Distribution**

June 22 June 24 July 4, 2015July 20 July 22 August 1, 2015

August 24 August 26 September 5, 2015September 21 September 23 October 3, 2015 (SEASON PREVIEW)November 20 November 24 December 5, 2015December 18 December 22 January 2 , 2016

January 25 January 27 February 6, 2016February 22 February 24 March 5, 2016

March 21 March 23 April 2, 2016April 25 April 27 May 7, 2016May 23 May 25 June 4, 2016June 20 June 22 July 2, 2016July 25 July 27 August 6, 2016

*Reservations are due by noon on this day **Distributed on the first weekend of the month

ArtsPaper/Around Town Advertising sizes, rates & deadlines (prices shown are per month)

Full Page

5 columns x 15.85 inches tall

5 columns x 8 inches tall

1 x per year, color or b&w $2,7003 x per year, color or b&w $2,55012 x per year, color or b&w $2,400

Eighth Page

3 columns x3.34 inches tall

5columns x2 inches tall

2 columns x5 inches tall

Half Page

1 x per year, color or b&w $1,4253 x per year, color or b&w $1,35012 x per year, color or b&w $1,275

Quarter Page

1 x per year, color or b&w $7953 x per year, color or b&w $71512 x per year, color or b&w $650

2 columns x 10 inches tall

3 columns x7 inches tall

1 x per year, color or b&w $4503 x per year, color or b&w $41512 x per year, color or b&w $375

DESIGN SPACE:Design spaces are no bleed, no trim.Ad widths are in columns:• 2 columns = 3.88 inches• 3 columns = 5.92 inches• 4 columns = 7.96 inches• 5 columns = 10 inchesFull page ads should be 10 in. X 15.85 in.to leave room for our page folio at the top.

• Four color ads: CMYK onlyTotal ink density = 250 maximum, 200 DPIMinimum - recommended 300 DPI• For b&w Ads: Grayscale, 200 DPI minimumTID = 280 maximum• Paper type & printing: Cover Sheet is 50# newsprint, inside is 35# at 100 line screen.

Prepress Details

Color & Reproduction

Space Reservation* Completed Ads Due Distribution**

2014 - 2015 Advertis ing Deadlines

August 24

September 19

August 26

September 23

September 5

October 4 (SEASON PREVIEW)October 20

November 24December 19

January 26, 2015February 23

March 23April 20May 22June 22July 20

October 22November 26December 22

January 28, 2015February 25

March 25April 22May 27June 24July 22

November 1December 6

January 3, 2015February 7

March 7April 4May 2June 6July 4

August 1

*

2015 – 2016 Advertising DeadlinesSpace Reservation* Completed Ads Due Distribution**

June 22 June 24 July 4, 2015July 20 July 22 August 1, 2015

August 24 August 26 September 5, 2015September 21 September 23 October 3, 2015 (SEASON PREVIEW)November 20 November 24 December 5, 2015December 18 December 22 January 2 , 2016

January 25 January 27 February 6, 2016February 22 February 24 March 5, 2016

March 21 March 23 April 2, 2016April 25 April 27 May 7, 2016May 23 May 25 June 4, 2016June 20 June 22 July 2, 2016July 25 July 27 August 6, 2016

*Reservations are due by noon on this day **Distributed on the first weekend of the month

ArtsPaper/Around Town Advertising sizes, rates & deadlines (prices shown are per month)

Full Page

5 columns x 15.85 inches tall

5 columns x 8 inches tall

1 x per year, color or b&w $2,7003 x per year, color or b&w $2,55012 x per year, color or b&w $2,400

Eighth Page

3 columns x3.34 inches tall

5columns x2 inches tall

2 columns x5 inches tall

Half Page

1 x per year, color or b&w $1,4253 x per year, color or b&w $1,35012 x per year, color or b&w $1,275

Quarter Page

1 x per year, color or b&w $7953 x per year, color or b&w $71512 x per year, color or b&w $650

2 columns x 10 inches tall

3 columns x7 inches tall

1 x per year, color or b&w $4503 x per year, color or b&w $41512 x per year, color or b&w $375

DESIGN SPACE:Design spaces are no bleed, no trim.Ad widths are in columns:• 2 columns = 3.88 inches• 3 columns = 5.92 inches• 4 columns = 7.96 inches• 5 columns = 10 inchesFull page ads should be 10 in. X 15.85 in.to leave room for our page folio at the top.

• Four color ads: CMYK onlyTotal ink density = 250 maximum, 200 DPIMinimum - recommended 300 DPI• For b&w Ads: Grayscale, 200 DPI minimumTID = 280 maximum• Paper type & printing: Cover Sheet is 50# newsprint, inside is 35# at 100 line screen.

Prepress Details

Color & Reproduction

Space Reservation* Completed Ads Due Distribution**

2014 - 2015 Advertis ing Deadlines

August 24

September 19

August 26

September 23

September 5

October 4 (SEASON PREVIEW)October 20

November 24December 19

January 26, 2015February 23

March 23April 20May 22June 22July 20

October 22November 26December 22

January 28, 2015February 25

March 25April 22May 27June 24July 22

November 1December 6

January 3, 2015February 7

March 7April 4May 2June 6July 4

August 1

*

2015 – 2016 Advertising DeadlinesSpace Reservation* Completed Ads Due Distribution**

June 22 June 24 July 4, 2015July 20 July 22 August 1, 2015

August 24 August 26 September 5, 2015September 21 September 23 October 3, 2015 (SEASON PREVIEW)November 20 November 24 December 5, 2015December 18 December 22 January 2 , 2016

January 25 January 27 February 6, 2016February 22 February 24 March 5, 2016

March 21 March 23 April 2, 2016April 25 April 27 May 7, 2016May 23 May 25 June 4, 2016June 20 June 22 July 2, 2016July 25 July 27 August 6, 2016

*Reservations are due by noon on this day **Distributed on the first weekend of the month

ArtsPaper/Around Town Advertising sizes, rates & deadlines (prices shown are per month)

Full Page

5 columns x 15.85 inches tall

5 columns x 8 inches tall

1 x per year, color or b&w $2,7003 x per year, color or b&w $2,55012 x per year, color or b&w $2,400

Eighth Page

3 columns x3.34 inches tall

5columns x2 inches tall

2 columns x5 inches tall

Half Page

1 x per year, color or b&w $1,4253 x per year, color or b&w $1,35012 x per year, color or b&w $1,275

Quarter Page

1 x per year, color or b&w $7953 x per year, color or b&w $71512 x per year, color or b&w $650

2 columns x 10 inches tall

3 columns x7 inches tall

1 x per year, color or b&w $4503 x per year, color or b&w $41512 x per year, color or b&w $375

DESIGN SPACE:Design spaces are no bleed, no trim.Ad widths are in columns:• 2 columns = 3.88 inches• 3 columns = 5.92 inches• 4 columns = 7.96 inches• 5 columns = 10 inchesFull page ads should be 10 in. X 15.85 in.to leave room for our page folio at the top.

• Four color ads: CMYK onlyTotal ink density = 250 maximum, 200 DPIMinimum - recommended 300 DPI• For b&w Ads: Grayscale, 200 DPI minimumTID = 280 maximum• Paper type & printing: Cover Sheet is 50# newsprint, inside is 35# at 100 line screen.

Prepress Details

Color & Reproduction

Space Reservation* Completed Ads Due Distribution**

2014 - 2015 Advertis ing Deadlines

August 24

September 19

August 26

September 23

September 5

October 4 (SEASON PREVIEW)October 20

November 24December 19

January 26, 2015February 23

March 23April 20May 22June 22July 20

October 22November 26December 22

January 28, 2015February 25

March 25April 22May 27June 24July 22

November 1December 6

January 3, 2015February 7

March 7April 4May 2June 6July 4

August 1

*

2015 – 2016 Advertising DeadlinesSpace Reservation* Completed Ads Due Distribution**

June 22 June 24 July 4, 2015July 20 July 22 August 1, 2015

August 24 August 26 September 5, 2015September 21 September 23 October 3, 2015 (SEASON PREVIEW)November 20 November 24 December 5, 2015December 18 December 22 January 2 , 2016

January 25 January 27 February 6, 2016February 22 February 24 March 5, 2016

March 21 March 23 April 2, 2016April 25 April 27 May 7, 2016May 23 May 25 June 4, 2016June 20 June 22 July 2, 2016July 25 July 27 August 6, 2016

*Reservations are due by noon on this day **Distributed on the first weekend of the month

ArtsPaper/Around Town Advertising sizes, rates & deadlines (prices shown are per month)

Full Page

5 columns x 15.85 inches tall

5 columns x 8 inches tall

1 x per year, color or b&w $2,7003 x per year, color or b&w $2,55012 x per year, color or b&w $2,400

Eighth Page

3 columns x3.34 inches tall

5columns x2 inches tall

2 columns x5 inches tall

Half Page

1 x per year, color or b&w $1,4253 x per year, color or b&w $1,35012 x per year, color or b&w $1,275

Quarter Page

1 x per year, color or b&w $7953 x per year, color or b&w $71512 x per year, color or b&w $650

2 columns x 10 inches tall

3 columns x7 inches tall

1 x per year, color or b&w $4503 x per year, color or b&w $41512 x per year, color or b&w $375

DESIGN SPACE:Design spaces are no bleed, no trim.Ad widths are in columns:• 2 columns = 3.88 inches• 3 columns = 5.92 inches• 4 columns = 7.96 inches• 5 columns = 10 inchesFull page ads should be 10 in. X 15.85 in.to leave room for our page folio at the top.

• Four color ads: CMYK onlyTotal ink density = 250 maximum, 200 DPIMinimum - recommended 300 DPI• For b&w Ads: Grayscale, 200 DPI minimumTID = 280 maximum• Paper type & printing: Cover Sheet is 50# newsprint, inside is 35# at 100 line screen.

Prepress Details

Color & Reproduction

Space Reservation* Completed Ads Due Distribution**

2014 - 2015 Advertis ing Deadlines

August 24

September 19

August 26

September 23

September 5

October 4 (SEASON PREVIEW)October 20

November 24December 19

January 26, 2015February 23

March 23April 20May 22June 22July 20

October 22November 26December 22

January 28, 2015February 25

March 25April 22May 27June 24July 22

November 1December 6

January 3, 2015February 7

March 7April 4May 2June 6July 4

August 1

*

2015 – 2016 Advertising DeadlinesSpace Reservation* Completed Ads Due Distribution**

June 22 June 24 July 4, 2015July 20 July 22 August 1, 2015

August 24 August 26 September 5, 2015September 21 September 23 October 3, 2015 (SEASON PREVIEW)November 20 November 24 December 5, 2015December 18 December 22 January 2 , 2016

January 25 January 27 February 6, 2016February 22 February 24 March 5, 2016

March 21 March 23 April 2, 2016April 25 April 27 May 7, 2016May 23 May 25 June 4, 2016June 20 June 22 July 2, 2016July 25 July 27 August 6, 2016

*Reservations are due by noon on this day **Distributed on the first weekend of the month

Full Page:Color: 10” wide x 15.85” deep business rate: $2,400family/school grade rate: $2,000

Half Page:Color: 10” wide x 8” deep business rate: $1,300family/school grade rate: $1,100

Quarter Page:Color: 5.92” wide x 7.5” deep or 7.96” wide x 10” deepbusiness rate: $750family/school grade rate: $695

Eighth PageColor: 3.88” wide x 5” deep or 5.92” wide x 3.34” deepbusiness rate: $390family/school grade rate: $300

Half page - Commercial

Quarter page - family

Eighth page - classroom

Eighth page - family

Deadline: Friday, October 31, 2015Publication Date: February, 2016 in the Coastal Staras well as distribution at the Gala in December, 2015

For more information:call Chris Bellard 561-901-7717

or email her [email protected]

a special section by:

January, 2016

Monday, November 16, 2015