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...finished last year with about 50,000. The subscription rate listed on its website is $36. (Subscribe now and save $84 on the cover price!) And only 3% of its copies were newsstand sales, so it's not like that was a big business anyway. Sandow Media Corp., which bought Worth last year, also publishes Luxe (high-end design), True Beauty (high-end cosmetics) and Watch Journal (high-end wristwear). So the company probably feels it has a good read on the pulse of the prosperous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The $20 Magazine: Worth's Odd Recession Strategy | 4/21/2009 | See Source »

...Harvard,” in September 2006 to publish articles about the school’s alumni and campus events. The acquisition contradicts earlier reports about the magazine’s future. Last month, WWD.com reported that the magazine was on the verge of being bought out by Sandow Media, a company whose publications, such as the money magazine Worth, generally target wealthy audiences. Tom Allon, the chief executive of Manhattan Media, said that his company intends to “continue building on the direction that the magazine has been taking.” “It?...

Author: By Michael J Ding, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Atlantic Media Sells 02138 | 5/13/2008 | See Source »

...independent Harvard alumni magazine, is on the verge of being sold by the Atlantic Media Company to Sandow Media, according to WWD.com. The deal is still in negotiation, and the terms of the sale have not yet been reported. The Atlantic Media Company launched 02138, a bi-monthly publication billed as the “Vanity Fair of Harvard,” in September 2006 and has owned it since then. The magazine was founded by Bom S. Kim ’00, who serves as its current president, and Daniel M. Loss ’00 to report...

Author: By Brian S. Chen, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Harvard Alumni Mag Set To Change Hands | 4/13/2008 | See Source »

...particularly notable because opera is, in many places, a dying art. Long-established houses like Milan's La Scala, Berlin's Deutsche Oper and even New York City's Met struggle to fill seats. The reasons for opera's slow decline are legion. Classical music critic and consultant Greg Sandow points to governments' dwindling support of the arts, a paucity of singers with the ability to perform the standard repertoire, and above all, audiences that look elsewhere for entertainment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Valencia's Big Bet | 2/6/2007 | See Source »

...people living there during the mid-70s emptied about 20 cases of long-necked beer bottles per week, according to Sandow. There was "lots of dope. One time, we had so many plants in the windows that the Cambridge cops called the Harvard cops and told them to make us get the plants out of the window," Sandow said...

Author: By A. LOUISE Oliver, | Title: A Harvard Reunion, Co-Op Style | 6/6/1988 | See Source »

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