Word: republishers
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...child, had driven her to eBay, where she was shocked to find a single used copy selling for $300. "I could buy it for my children, but I couldn't let them hold it," she says. So Morgan founded Purple House Press and set about acquiring the rights to republish out-of-print children's classics, such as the Mad Scientists' Clubseries. Mr. Pine's Purple House was released in the fall of 2000, along with two other books, and by June 2003, the company was doing well enough for her husband to quit his job and for the whole...
...police union; gifts to Colombani for giving media training to a mayor; a pattern of blatantly favoring certain politicians (such as hapless 1995 presidential candidate Edouard Balladur). In June Le Monde agreed not to proceed with libel lawsuits against the authors, who in turn agreed not to republish their book, but the damage was done. The paper's finances may be in worse shape than its reputation. It is carrying debt of at least €110 million, has had losses over the last three years of some €50 million, and has seen circulation drop by 4.66% in the last...
When this decision was discovered, the administration “delayed” the delivery of the issues. Facing pressure from the administration, students agreed to run the letter on the front page and republish the paper—distributing it at the homecoming game that Saturday—on the condition that Hampton create a student-faculty task force to discuss the issue in depth...
...example, if you are a Harvard graduate living in New York, you might want your copy of the New York Times to include Harvard sports information. It would be too costly for the Times to gather all this content itself and thus will rely on purchasing the rights to republish articles from various small sources. This trend has already begun with services like University Wire that allow college newspapers to reprint each other's top stories that are distributed over the Internet...
...with all that, Vidal has been able to write a dozen novels, as well as find the time and energy to rewrite and republish a few of them. He is now into No. 13, a heavily researched historical novel about Aaron Burr, best known for killing Alexander Hamilton in a duel but also the man who dreamed of establishing his own empire in Mexico. Vidal has completed the first draft, doing much of the work at his farmhouse in West Cork, Ireland. (It is an integrated neighborhood: just over the hill, Chicago Mayor Richard Daley is preparing a retirement home...