Sentence examples for solicit subscriptions from inspiring English sources

Exact(7)

In 1905, a drive to solicit subscriptions to a forthcoming publication to be called Fads and Fancies of Representative Americans, was put on.

Philips and Hearst teamed up last year, without Netflix, for a promotion that eliminated, from the September issues of four magazines, those cards that solicit subscriptions.

The Times has not struck any deals with Apple yet, making it too soon to say whether the newspaper would charge for the app or solicit subscriptions on the iPad.

During his trip through the free states west of New York to solicit subscriptions for the North Star, the newspaper that he and Frederick Douglass published, Martin Delany regularly corresponded with Douglass.

"It was a great deal, and it solved a huge problem for early broadcasters, who, unlike theaters, couldn't charge admission, and who, unlike magazines and newspapers, couldn't solicit subscriptions," the authors note, adding, "This same unwritten, unspoken contract would form the economic template for television and, more recently, the Internet".

Particularly if you don't have to solicit subscriptions and print it and distribute it with the post office going crazy and, you know, the distribution costs going crazy and paper prices.

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Similar(53)

"Do they want to use that space to promote magazine subscriptions?" Ziff-Davis has been soliciting subscriptions off of the Internet since 1996, Mr. Sutton said, when subscriptions to the company's Yahoo!

An outfit called Quarterlies, Inc., is trying to give poets & other unhearalded writers a break by soliciting subscriptions en masse to a batch of small circulating magazines - The Beloit Poetry Journal, Film Culture, Botteghe Oscure, Perspective, Perspectives USA, & 25 others that "reflect the very highest literary standards".

Talk story about the Reader's Digest's problem with the return of 4% of the letters it sent out, each one containing 2 pennies, which was a gimmick in a campaign to solicit new subscriptions.

The New Yorker, February 8 , 1958P. 24 Talk story about the Reader's Digest's problem with the return of 4% of the letters it sent out, each one containing 2 pennies, which was a gimmick in a campaign to solicit new subscriptions.

By Faith McNulty and Brendan Gill The New Yorker, February 8 , 1958P. 24 Talk story about the Reader's Digest's problem with the return of 4% of the letters it sent out, each one containing 2 pennies, which was a gimmick in a campaign to solicit new subscriptions.

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