ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: SATURDAY, November 12, 1994                   TAG: 9411140072
SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL                    PAGE: A1   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
DATELINE: COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO.                                 LENGTH: Medium


MATH! SPONSORED BY ...

COMMERCIALS are confined to TV no longer. There's this school, you see, that didn't have enough money ...

A cash-strapped school district has sold out, selling ad space in halls and gyms and on school buses.

El Paso County's School District 11 is the nation's first to come up with such a plan, using the ad revenue to buy books, lab equipment and other supplies the city can't provide.

``Go for your dreams! Stay in school! - Reilly Buick-GMC Truck'' reads an ad inside Palmer High School's gym. Dozens of other signs are plastered on school hallways, including ads from Pepsi and Shoney's Restaurant.

Students at Fremont Elementary School travel in bright yellow buses painted with the round red spots that sell 7-Up. Burger King ads, designed with the help of students, are painted on other district buses.

Another ad, bought by the Public Service Co. of Colorado, features PSC's Louie the Lightning Bug, a cartoon character that advises children to stay away from electrical lines.

Jay Engeln, Palmer's principal, and a handful of school administrators came up with the idea while plotting ways to raise badly needed funds. The district's 1994-95 fiscal budget of $133 million isn't enough.

The ads first went up in January in all the district's 53 schools. About 50 businesses have bought space.

``We found that one of the things we do have is exposure,'' Engeln said. ``We thought, `We can start marketing our schools.'''

Teacher salaries have been frozen for three years, and voters have not approved a bond issue or tax increase for the district since 1972. The city was strapped by tight budgets and offered little financial help.

The campaign permits ad space on walls, newsletters, district reports, maps, stadium walls and buses. Businesses also can buy space on warm-up jackets for sports teams but not on their uniforms. So far, no space has been sold for the jackets.

Tracy Cooper, district public relations officer, said the advertising has raised about $100,000, and the district's share is $59,000. The ad agency handling the school's account, O'Donnell and Riley, gets the rest.

The campaign is expected to raise an additional $200,000 next year, which would meet the district's goal of $300,000, said Pat Riley, a partner in the agency.

Engeln said only 10 percent of wall space in schools will be used for ads.

``Are we selling out our schools? I don't think so. The hallways are not solid ads from one end to the other,'' he said.

So far, the district has not received any complaints from students or parents, he said.

``I like them,'' said Josh Smith, an 18-year-old Palmer senior. ``It shows that big corporations are interested in helping schools.''

Tobey Cho, 17, also a senior, thinks the ads help link students and businesses.

``It gets kids involved. It lets kids design [artwork] on buses and it shows a lot of teamwork with the community,'' she said.

``The taxpayers who don't have children are all for it. From their point of view, it's a positive and it doesn't affect them economically,'' she said.



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