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Who we are The Stanford Daily is the independent, student-run newspaper of . The Daily was originally founded as a small pamphlet known as The Daily Palo Alto in 1892 and has been a campus fixture ever since. A non-profit organization since 1973, The Daily strives to serve Stanford and surrounding communities with relevant, unbiased journalism and provides its editorial and business staffs with unparalleled educational opportunities.

Table of contents

PRODUCTS 3

STATISTICS 4

DIGITAL RATES WITH DIMENSIONS 5

PRINT RATES WITH DIMENSIONS 6

TOTAL EXPOSURE PACKAGES 7

MAGAZINE 8

CALENDAR 9

GUIDELINE POLICIES 10

2 456 PANAMA MALL | STANFORD, CA | 94305 | 650.721.5803 | [email protected] THE STANFORD DAILY PUBLISHING CORPORATION n MEDIA KIT 2019-20 Our Products DIGITAL The Daily’s website at StanfordDaily.com is updated 24 hours a day, seven days a week and makes its coverage accessible to not just the Stanford community, but also to alumni and other interested readers across the world. This is complemented by a daily email digest that brings news directly to the inboxes of thousands of readers every morning.

The Stanford Daily MAGAZINE PRINT VOLUME III U ISSUE 3: TECH EDITION U FEBRUARY 15, 2019 The Stanford Daily’s broadsheet newspaper is CS IN CRISIS p. 16 produced and distributed daily during the The Stanford Daily academic year by a dedicated team of student MAGAZINE journalists and support staff. It is provided for VOLUME III U ISSUE I U SEPTEMBER 20, 2018 free to students, staff and faculty on campus.

ARTS & LIFE/4 Today Partly Sunny SHELF-INDULGENCE 84/55 Get a read on your professors Tomorrow Sunny through their literary preferences 75/55 The Stanfordt Daily An Independent Publication WEDNEDSAY www.stanforddaily.com Volume 255 Reframing June 5, 2019 Issue 69 Professor fired after a fraught sexual misconduct mascot Jose Montoya violated code of conduct By JULIA INGRAM A group of those affected by MANAGING EDITOR Montoya’s actions wrote a joint CLAIRE WANG anonymous statement in re- MARRIAGE PACT p. 4 LIGHTROOM p. 14 COMPLACENT VALLEY p. 28 EDITOR IN CHIEF sponse to his termination. “This past March, a large Violations of sexual harass- group of women who have How Stanford led the ment and sexual misconduct worked under Dr. Montoya came were among the reasons for the forward with extensive allega- country in shedding its recent firing of former Stanford tions of sexual misconduct, as- Medical Center professor Jose sault and harassment,” they mascot—and how the first Montoya, according to a former wrote. “The allegations included member of the Myalgic En- multiple instances of Dr. Mon- Native American Tree cephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue toya attempting unsolicited sex- Syndrome (ME/CFS) Initiative ual acts with his female employ- which Montoya previously led. ees, among many other instances historically reclaims a Montoya’s termination comes of harassment and misconduct, on the heels of an investigation and were confirmed in an investi- controversial symbol Courtesy of Stanford Athletics led by an outside attorney and gation.” The advance to their first Super Regional since 2014 with a Game Seven regional win unknown Stanford faculty mem- Montoya first began teaching over Fresno State. The team had to string together three straight wins to escape the Regional round. ber that found him in violation of at Stanford in 1990, though the numerous University conduct timeline of his University con- policies, including those related duct violations remains unclear. p. 4 to sexual harassment, miscon- SURGING AHEAD duct and assault. Please see MONTOYA, page 21 BASEBALL OUTLASTS FRESNO STATE TO ADVANCE UNIVERSITY

By DANIEL MARTINEZ- NCAA SUPER REGIONALS KRAMS Inside the Stanford STAFF WRITER UP NEXT: NO. 3 MISSISSIPPI STATE 46-13 In an instant classic, No. 1 seed 6/8 STARKVILLE, MS University Press Stanford baseball (45-12, 22-7 Pac- COVERAGE: ESPN3 12 p.m. PT/LIVE STATS NCAA.COM 12) survived No. 3 seed Fresno unveiled this spring, will repre- BEGINNINGS p. 12 ATHLETE MENTAL HEALTH p. 16 ROAD TRIP p. 22 State (40-16-1, 20-8-1 Mountain Faculty Senate to consider sent the Faculty Senate’s Commit- Issue 1 | 1 West) by a 9-7 score to advance Press restructuring motion tee on Libraries (C-LIB) at their from the NCAA Tournament Re- June 13 meeting in the absence of By ELISE MILLER gionals for the first time since 2014. committee chair and history pro- STAFF WRITER The Cardinal will travel to fessor Jessica Riskin. Stanford they needed to win three games in a “That if necessary game, some- Starkville, Mississippi for a best-of- University Press director Alan row at Sunken Diamond. times it requires that you have a Faculty and community mem- three series with Mississippi State Harvey will give a presentation on “They knew we were here,” said number of heroes,” said Stanford bers are gearing up for the next in- (49-13, 20-10 SEC) in the Super Re- the Press, and the Senate will vote Fresno State head coach Mike head coach David Esquer. “We got stallment of the clash over Stan- gional round. Stanford’s advance- on a C-LIB resolution proposing Batesole. those tonight.” ford University Press. ment did not seem likely after Fres- the establishment of an external It took multiple miraculous per- The most unexpected perform- “It’s a showdown,” said history no State outclassed Stanford on review committee and the involve- formances from the Cardinal to es- ance belonged to sophomore center professor Thomas Mullaney. Saturday, marking the third con- ment of the Faculty Senate in any cape the Bulldogs on consecutive Mullaney, editor of a digital secutive year the Cardinal dropped restructuring of the Press. to the loser’s bracket, meaning nights. Please see SURGING, page 11 Stanford University Press publi- cation, “The Chinese Deathscape” Please see PRESS, page 11 FIVE STRAIGHT FOR ROWING MAGAZINE WOMEN’S LIGHTWEIGHT ROWING WINS IRA TITLE

By HOLDEN FOREMAN DESK EDITOR

As ’s Golden State Warriors pursue their third NBA championship in a The Stanford Daily Magazine was introduced row, an even longer streak was preserved at Gold River, California, where Stanford women’s lightweight rowing won its fifth- straight Intercollegiate Rowing Associa- tion (IRA) team championship on Sunday. Though victory was sealed on Sunday, the Cardinal were dominant all weekend, in 2016 to focus on long-form journalism and as the Varsity Eight and Varsity Four teams finished first in Saturday’s heat races for Sunday’s lane positioning. After a fifth-place finish in Sunday’s Double Grand Final, Stanford made use of its hard-earned lanes by winning both the Varsity Eight and Varsity Four Grand Fi- nals. creative expression. Each magazine is loosely The Varsity Four came in at 7:12.848, finishing well ahead of runner-up Boston University (7:19.504) and third-place Wis- consin (7:25.798). The Varsity Eight Grand Final was closer, but Stanford clinched its IRA team victory with a time of 6:32.825, topping runner-up Princeton (6:37.335) and third-place Boston University focused around one “centerfold” investigative (6:40.462). RICHARD C. ERSTED/isiphotos.com The Stanford women’s lightweight rowing team collected its fifth-straight IRA national title on Sunday. With the victory in Gold River, CA, head Please see ROWING, page 10 coach Kate Bertko has led the Cardinal to consecutive national titles in each of her first three years at the helm of the program. story and also features prose, poetry, photo Follow us facebook.com/stanforddaily @StanfordDaily | @StanfordSports | @TSDArtsAndLife Index I Arts & Life/4 • Sports/6 • Opinions/12 • The Grind/19 Recycle Me galleries, opinions columns and more.

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STATISTICS Who We Serve 137 Issues Printed Annually (Monday-Friday) 16,000+ students 2,500 distributed on campus to 2,100+ faculty students staff and alumni. 12,000+ staff members 4 magazines, distributed twice per academic quarter. 221,000+ alumni worldwide 184,000+ local residents

Social Media 400k+ 13,305+ monthly pageviews likes/community 292,000+ monthly unique visitors 11.8k+ 86% followers @StanfordDaily of online readership is from off campus 3k+ followers @StanfordSports

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ALLERGIES p. 10 4 magazines, distributed during high-impact times on SEX p. 30 campus, including New Student Orientation, Big Game Issue 5 | 1 Week, Family Weekend and Admit Weekend.

PUBLICATION DATES Graphic by JACQUELINE LIN /  e Stanford Daily 2019 THE DAILY Issue I September 18 AND THE COURT

Issue II The legacy of Zurcher v. Stanford Daily November 18 By Katie Keller DAVID BOCKIAN/ e Stanford Daily ’         over eight contentious years of legal action, a holding military recruiting events on campus,  e Daily needed to do something to protect in a second  oor hallway in protest and had a eventually succeeded Barringer as EIC, was in creates a nationwide constitutional crushing loss for  e Daily at the Supreme among other issues. its photographers and its relationship with bloody clash with the police o cers who tried the Daily o ce working on an article when the controversy, but that’s exactly what Court, national uproar from journalists and It was certainly a busy time to work at  e protesters.  ey decided to implement a policy to get them to leave. search occurred. happened in 1971, when  e Stanford elected o cials and  nally, Congress’s passage Daily. Clashes between student protesters and that they had seen other local newspapers Covering protests had become a routine part “Palo Alto Police came diving in late at Daily was the plainti in a lawsuit that of the Privacy Protection Act of 1980, which their adversaries — University administration use: Going forward, they would destroy any of the experience of Daily reporters by the time night,” Ho man recalled. “ ey were  ying Ieventually reached the Supreme Court of the prevented such searches from happening in the o cials and the police — were only getting possibly incriminating photos that could be the con ict at Stanford Medical School arose in through [the  les on the desks].  ere was . future without a subpoena. more chaotic and dramatic as time went on, used in court. April 1971. So when they learned of the protest paper everywhere.”  e Daily sued the chief of the Palo Alto  ough surely not as canonical as a Roe v. and  e Daily had the challenge of reporting It was Freivogel’s hope that by publicizing and heard that the police were going to show “[ e police] were extremely thorough,” Police Department, James Zurcher, a er he led Wade or Brown v. Board of Education, Zurcher for the student body as a neutral third party. this policy,  e Daily might regain the trust of up, Daily sta ers were more than ready to Barringer said. “We were kind of shell-shocked.” a search of Daily o ces in an attempt to  nd v. Stanford Daily and the legal questions it raised As the protesters’ clashes with authority student protesters, who wouldn’t have to worry report on the controversy. Barringer and the rest of the leadership team photographic evidence that would assist the continue to challenge constitutional scholars to became more and more contentious, the that Daily photos might be used against them As it turned out, though, the eventual clash at  e Daily knew they would have to take department in prosecuting protesters who had this day, especially given the changing nature of University struggled to hold those students in University disciplinary hearings or even between protestors and the police resulted in an action. clashed with police o cers during a sit-in at the journalism industry. who contributed to violence accountable for criminal proceedings. At the very least, she unusual level of violence. “We looked at each other and said, ‘We need Stanford Hospital.  e case began humbly, with a small group of their actions. hoped that the policy would “make people at “When the police stormed in — and a law professor.  is can’t be legal,’” Barringer To Zurcher, his search of  e Daily’s o ces students that decided to challenge an injustice it Gradually, the administration began least think twice about throwing rocks at our our photographer was right behind them said. “If what is in our o ces is essentially open felt wholly necessary to the execution of justice. felt it had faced. But it escalated as the students employing its own photographers to create photographers [during protests].” taking pictures of them storming in — the to becoming evidence in court... we cease to But to Daily sta ers, it felt like an attempt to co- learned that they had just scratched the surface visual records of the demonstrations for “We didn’t want to be an arm of the court, demonstrators went out the other side, viciously be a journalistic organization and become an opt the press into serving as an instrument of of a deeper tension inherent to news-gathering its internal disciplinary procedures.  ese defense or prosecution,” Barringer said. swinging clubs at the police,” Barringer said. information gatherer... for legal proceedings.” the justice system. organizations in democratic societies. photographers were extremely unpopular From Barringer’s point of the view, the policy Along with two dozen demonstrators, 13 According to Barringer, she and her sta During an era in which the relationship among the protesters, and it was o en allowed  e Daily to preserve its tradition of police o cers were reported injured.  e were motivated to take legal action against between citizens and authority was already Era of protest nearly impossible to distinguish them from uncensored reporting. police department wanted to know who was the police department not only to address di cult and occasionally explosive,  e Daily  e protest at Stanford Hospital that set photographers working for news organizations “We [could] write and print whatever seemed responsible, and o cers thought  e Daily the incident at the Daily, but also to protect found itself in a precarious position: caught Zurcher in motion was not an isolated incident; like  e Daily. to best express the news of the day without fear might have some answers. in the middle of this dynamic while trying to the late 1960s and early 1970s saw a high “If you had your eye behind the view nder or favor… without caring what would come maintain journalistic autonomy. concentration of political activity at Stanford, of a camera in a raucous situation, trying to of photographs in which people could be A surprise search What ensued went far beyond a con ict driven by a growing ri between students and focus on the activity, trying to get the lighting identi ed,” she said. According to Barringer, the police knew about “We looked at each other between protesters, police and  e Daily’s authority. right, the focus right and everything else, you’re  e Daily’s policy of destroying potentially photography team:  e incident put the “Starting around [1966] or so, there was a lot not in a position to defend yourself if someone A bloody protest incriminating photos, but that didn’t stop them and said, ‘We need a law First Amendment’s guarantee of freedom of of protest on campus,” said Felicity Barringer says, ‘Don’t take my picture,’” Barringer On April 9, 1971, demonstrators from the from quickly obtaining a search warrant and the press in direct con ict with the Fourth ’72, editor-in-chief (EIC) of  e Daily a explained. “So, at that point, photographers are Black United Front and the Chicano student searching the entire building. In the search, professor. This can’t be Amendment’s provisions that give police the time of Zurcher’s search. “ e Vietnam terribly vulnerable… Being a photographer at organization MEChA held a joint sit-in at they did not  nd any photographs that would legal.’” o cers with probable cause the right to search War was going on, and that was sort of the a demonstration became a loaded occupation.” Stanford Medical School, protesting the  ring bene t legal cases against participants in the for incriminating evidence. undercurrent of everything: the belief that the Margie Freivogel ’71, who preceded Barringer of a black janitor and the denial of tenure for a sit-in. — Felicity Barringer  e controversy assumed the national stage University was supporting an immoral war,” by as EIC, decided with her editorial board that Chicano professor.  ey barricaded themselves Charlie Ho man ’73 MBA ’76, who Editor-in-Chief, Vol. 159 æ Ç 6

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SEPTEMBER 2019 FEBRUARY PUBLICATION SMTWTH FS SMTWTH FS CALENDAR 23456 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 13 10 11 12 13 14 2019-20 16 17 18 19 20 17 18 19 20 21 23 24 25 26 27 24 25 26 27 28 Special Issues 30 Sept 18 NSO Issue MARCH OCTOBER Sept 18 NSO Magazine #1 SMTWTH FS SMTWTH FS Sept 23 2 3 4 5 6 Back to School 1 2 3 4 9 10 11 12 13 Oct 25 Reunion Homecoming 7 8 9 10 11 16 17 18 19 20 Nov 18 Big Game Week Magazine #2 14 15 16 17 18 23 24 25 26 27 Nov 22 Big Game Issue 21 22 23 24 25 30 31 Dec 4 End of Fall (Dead week) 28 29 30 31 Jan 6 Winter Back to School APRIL NOVEMBER SMTWTH FS Feb 28 Family Weekend SMTWTH FS 1 2 3 March 11 1 End of Winter 6 7 8 9 10 4 5 6 7 8 April 24 Admit Weekend 13 14 15 16 17 11 12 13 14 15 June 3 End of Spring 20 21 22 23 24 18 19 20 21 22 June 12 Commencement 27 28 29 30 25 26 27 28 29 30 Football Home Game Dates DECEMBER MAY SMTWTH FS Aug 31 NORTHWESTERN SMTWTH FS 23456 1 Sept 21 OREGON 9 10 11 12 13 4 5 6 7 8 Oct 5 WASHINGTON 16 17 18 19 20 11 12 13 14 15 Oct 17 UCLA (THU) 23 24 25 26 27 18 19 20 21 22 Oct 26 ARIZONA 30 31 25 26 27 28 29 Nov 23 CALIFORNIA JANUARY 2020 JUNE Nov 30 NOTRE DAME SMTWTH FS SMTWTH FS 123 12345 Standard Special Football Issues Issues Issues 6 7 8 9 10 8910 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 29 30

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ADVERTISING ACCEPTABILITY GUIDELINES misleading or inaccurate (whether intentional or unin- (APRIL 2018 REVISION) tentional) claims, statements or illustrations (see pg. 2) • Advertisements that do not comply with, or advertise All advertisements will be reviewed and approved by The products or ideas that do not comply with, applicable Daily’s advertising department upon submission. The federal, state and local laws and regulations Stanford Daily reserves the right to reject part or all of any advertisement at its sole discretion for any reason or for The Stanford Daily does not have any institutional policy no reason. Any advertisement having the appearance of against advocacy, opinion or political advertising if such editorial material may be identified as “Paid Advertising” submissions adhere to the standards outlined above (see at The Daily’s sole discretion in order to make clear the pg. 3). distinction between The Daily’s editorial content and its paid advertising. Advertisements that mimic The Stanford Daily’s style or content With that in mind, The Daily also takes seriously its role as The Stanford Daily strives to maintain a clear delineation a forum for ideas and discussion from a wide range of between its editorial content and its paid advertising. Any viewpoints, and we understand that paid advertising can advertisement or illustration whose independent affilia- serve as an important medium for the communication of tion may not be immediately clear to readers — whether ideas. In general, we will not decline advertisements un- intentional or unintentional — will not be accepted. less we feel that there is a compelling reason to do so, and we will strive to communicate those reasons to any af- The use of column widths, typefaces, subheads, photo- fected advertisers. graphs, captions or other elements generally associated with The Stanford Daily’s print and digital content in a The producer of an advertisement, along with the respec- manner that may mislead readers is not permitted. tive advertisers, advertising agencies and other contribu- tors, jointly and severally assume responsibility for all In borderline cases, The Stanford Daily reserves the right content of that advertisement and for any claims made to label any advertisement with the words “PAID ADVER- against The Stanford Daily relating to the publication of said TISEMENT,” but if we deem that the advertisement could advertisement, and agree to indemnify and hold The Stan- be misleading even with the incorporation of such a label, ford Daily harmless from all costs, expenses, liabilities and it will generally not be accepted. damages resulting from publication of the advertisement.

Advertisements that contain inappropriate content The Stanford Daily will not publish: The Stanford Daily does not accept vulgar language in its • Advertisements that mimic The Stanford Daily’s style or advertisements. This includes profanity, indecent or lewd content (see pg. 2) language and slurs associated with an individual or a • Advertisements without the sponsor’s name or branding group on the basis of race, religion, sex, sexual prefer- • Advertisements whose contents may tend to incite vio- ence, national origin or other personal grounds. On rare lence (see pg. 3) occasions, exceptions may be made for quotes or if the • Advertisements that may be obscene or libelous (see pg. 3) use of the language is vital for the context of the adver- • Advertisements that may cast aspersions on individuals tisement. These will be handled on a case-by-case basis. or groups on the basis of race, sex, sexual preference, national origin, age, physical disability or other invidious Illustrations or descriptions of graphic violence or sexuality grounds (see pg. 3) are not permitted. • Advertisements that are gratuitously offensive on reli- gious, racial, ethnic or other grounds relating to personal Advertisements that contain fraudulent, deceptive, mis- or group identity (see pg. 3) leading or inaccurate claims • Advertisements that contain inappropriate content (graphic violence, language, sexuality, etc.) (see pg. 2) The confidence of readers in a publication depends upon • Advertisements that contain fraudulent, deceptive, its credibility and integrity, both in its editorial content and

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in any paid advertising that may be associated with the claims are acceptable; those that overly editorialize and publication. As such, The Stanford Daily will make every make unnecessary generalizations, attacks, accusations or effort to prohibit commercial messages that are fraudu- comparisons that may be deemed to be in poor taste are lent, deceptive, misleading or inaccurate. not acceptable.

With that in mind, while we cannot exhaustively vouch for We do not accept advertisements that promote illegal ac- or verify every purported statement of fact in advertise- tivities or actions, and do not accept advertisements that ments, we reserve the right to require documentation may be libelous or legally actionable. We do not accept from advertisers in support of purported factual claims advertising that accuses an entire country, race, religion or when it is deemed necessary. ethnic group as being guilty of a crime. We do not accept advertising that trivializes or denies great human tragedies Advocacy/Opinion/Political advertising like the Holocaust, the World Trade Center Attacks or the Armenian Genocide. In keeping with the spirit of freedom of speech and free- dom of the press, The Stanford Daily maintains an obliga- Advertisements that include names, photographs or other tion to open its advertising space to individuals and attributions of individuals as signatories that state or imply organizations representing all points of view. The Stanford endorsement of the viewpoints entailed in the advertise- Daily thus does not prohibit paid advertising or messaging ment must be accompanied by a signed release wherein in which groups or individuals comment on public, contro- the sponsors certify that no individual’s attribution has versial or political issues, regardless of our editorial posi- been included in the advertisement without their consent. tion on any such subject. Advertising in The Stanford Daily is not screened with relation to, and does not represent Advocacy or opinions advertisements must include the the views of, the publication, its editorial staff, its editorial sponsor’s name, branding (if applicable), and some board, its opinions columnists, its op-ed contributors, or of method for direct content (mailing address, phone num- Stanford University. ber, and/or email address). Political advertisements advo- cating the election or defeat of candidates for public We do not, however, accept such advertising that include office must include an attribution to the individual or com- attacks of a personal nature, comment on private disputes, mittee paying for the advertisement, and indicate whether or are gratuitously offensive on racial, religious or ethnic the advertisement has been authorized by the candidate’s grounds. Arguments primarily based in verifiably factual authorized committee.

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The daily accepts to 300ppi @ 100% error except to the extent that the error (a) mate- Visa, MasterCard, American Express and checks Bitmap images image resolution set to rially interferes with the purpose of Advertiser in as forms of advance payment. Advertisers will 600ppi @ 100% placing the advertisement, and (b) is brought to be charged a $20 fee for each check returned Extra channels beyond CMYK must be the attention of the account executive within five for insufficient funds. In the event that an error deleted (5) business days of the advertisement’s publica- or omission occurs as outlined in “Limitation of tion. A recurring error shall not be regarded as ma- Liability”, discounts and adjustments to bills TIFF files should be saved with LZW terial where Advertiser fails to object following the will be based on the percentage the error de- compression turned on first instance of the error. The Daily’s liability, if any, tracts from the effectiveness of the total adver- Illustrator, InDesign, Canvas, or Corel files is limited to the purchase price of the first incorrect tising message, as determined by the Advertising must be exported as TIFF files and should advertisement only. The Daily is not responsible Manager. meet all of the image and resolution stan- for incorrect copy submitted by Advertiser. dards mentioned above. The Stanford Daily (10) Non-Compliance Enforcement does not accept PDFs with RGB or Indexed (5) Content If Advertiser places fewer than the minimum color images, page layout files, PNG or GIF The Daily will not publish any advertisement amount of advertisements and/or column-inches files for submission. whose contents may tend to incite violence, may contracted by June 30 of the indicated year, Ad- be obscene or libelous, or may cast aspersions vertiser will be notified and billed for the remain- Web Artwork Submission on individuals or groups on the basis of race, ing ads at the full contract rate. Reasonable All art must be sent via email to: sex, sexual preference, national origin, age, attorney’s fees and court costs shall be awarded [email protected]. physical disability, or other invidious grounds. to the prevailing party in any legal dispute arising The Daily accepts JPEG files. The Daily reserves the right to reject any ad- out of or relating to the terms and conditions of vertisement at its sole discretion for any reason this contract. Any legal dispute shall be brought or no reason. Any advertisement having the only in the Superior Court for the county of Santa appearance of editorial material may be iden- Clara, California. This contract is governed by Cal- The Fine Print tified as “Paid Advertising” at The Daily’s sole ifornia law (other than its choice of law principles). (1) Advertising Placement discretion. The Stanford Daily Publishing Corporation (“The (11) Severability; No Waiver Daily”) will guarantee placement of advertising for (6) Digital Fulfillment If any provision of this contract is held invalid or advertisements placed on page 2, page 3 and the The Daily will make every effort to fulfill purchased unenforceable, such holding shall not affect the back page of the Stanford Daily provided that impressions and will extend a campaign until ful- remainder of this contract. The failure of either placement will be guaranteed to Advertiser on a fillment. However, in the case of an unfulfilled party to enforce at any time any provision or first come first serve basis only on these pages for campaign with a time-sensitive end date where term of this contract, or in any right in respect a surcharge equal to 10% of the total cost of the extension is not preferable, we may offer a make- thereof, shall not be a waiver of such provision, advertisement placed. The Daily will honor all good only at the discretion of the Advertising term or right or in any way affect the validity of other page/section requests to the extent possi- Manager. this contract. ble on a first come first serve basis. The Daily will not guarantee placement for advertisements ex- (7) Defense and Indemnification (12) Sole and Exclusive Contract cept as stated above and/or under the discretion The tender of advertising shall constitute an un- This is the sole and exclusive contract between of the Advertising Manager. dertaking by Advertiser to defend and indemnify Advertiser and The Daily establishing bulk adver- The Daily and its officers, directors, agents, and em- tising rates and terms for bulk advertising in the (2) Deadlines ployees against any and all liability, loss or expense, Stanford Daily newspaper during the term of the The deadline to reserve advertising space, includ- including attorney’s fees and court costs, arising from contract. This contract cannot be modified except ing artwork submission, is 5 p.m. on the third busi- any and all claims for libel, copyright infringement, by written and endorsed amendment thereto. ness day prior to the date of publication for or any other claim resulting from publication of Ad- Paragraphs 3, 5, 8, 9, 10 and 11 shall survive the advertisements in the print newspaper, and 5 p.m. vertiser’s advertisement for The Daily. termination or cancellation of this contract.

12 456 PANAMA MALL | STANFORD, CA | 94305 | 650.721.5803 | [email protected] THE STANFORD DAILY PUBLISHING CORPORATION n MEDIA KIT 2019-20

We appreciate your business and look forward to working with you The Stanford Daily Publishing Corporation

456 PANAMA MALL | STANFORD, CA | 94305 | 650.721.5803 | [email protected] 13