Word: reprints
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Archie solicited reissue rights from Harper & Bros., the publishing firm that started Harper's Weekly in 1857. Harper agreed, and last December Archie sent the first reprint issue to some 1,000 libraries, schools, historians and antiquarians willing to pay the subscription rate of $12 a year...
...length book he wrote on the part-time author, part-time serviceman plan was as a humorous description of life at sea, put together in such a way that each chapter is a complete unit, and therefore much more attractive to the eye of a magazine publisher hunting for reprint possibilities. Lederer describes this approach to writing as a concession to the trade's "economic perils...
...special committee, appointed by President Pusey, has recommended five possible methods of obtaining the new books, ranging from a reprint of the current hymnal (printed in 1926) to adoption of a denominational...
...merits of my current novel, The Chapman Report, is your privilege. However, this novel was a total personal creative effort, seriously approached. Your statement that the book was hatched by Victor Weybright of Signet is an absolute lie. The book was partially written when Weybright offered to buy future reprint rights, in advance, sight unseen. Neither he nor anyone else had anything to do with the book or saw a word of it until it was completed...
...column is syndicated even more widely than Horace Sutton's, insists on paying his own hotel bills-but demands a 25% commercial discount in the U.S. A CAB ruling prohibits airlines from letting newsmen fly free on scheduled flights, but some travel editors evade the ruling by selling "reprint rights" of their articles to the airlines for the price of the fare-plus a few extra dollars to make the transaction look better. The airlines sometimes exercise the reprint rights in their house organs, especially if the writer has made lavish and approving mention of the host carrier. Travel...