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"The New York Times" – Online Deal

$36 for a 12-Week Subscription to the Sunday Edition of "The New York Times"

$26
Buy
Sold Out
Tue Mar 15 03:59:59 UTC 2011
Value
$90
Discount
71%
You Save
$64
  • T460x279

Highlights

  • Convenient home delivery
  • Winner of 104 Pulitzer Prizes
  • Enhanced coverage every Sunday

The Fine Print

  • Expires May 15, 2011
  • Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as a gift. Limit 1 per order. Must activate subscription by 5/15/11, subscription expires 12 weeks from activation date. New subscribers only. Not valid for renewals. Tax and shipping included.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

A newspaper consistently provides the most reliable answers to questions such as "Who is my mayor?" and "What's that fiery ball in the sky, and what does it want from me?" Get informed with today's Groupon: for $36, you get a 12-week subscription to the Sunday edition of The New York Times (up to a $90 value, depending on location). Home delivery of The New York Times includes access to the Replica Edition, and subscribers get discounts at the online store.

Since 1851, The New York Times has scoured the earth to inform its inhabitants with up-to-date, compelling stories, collecting a total of 104 Pulitzer Prizes in the process. Flip through sections such as the front page, which provides global and national coverage and a host of Sunday-exclusive reading material. Sunday Styles illuminates fashion trends, nightlife, and weddings, and the Travel section quenches adventure thirst and eases destination famine. T Magazine—overseen by Sally Singer, formerly the fashion news and features editor at Vogue—reports on the latest trends and developments in the world of fashion.

Though The New York Times offers a discounted price of $45 for 12 weeks of Sunday delivery in some areas, this Groupon still represents the best deal available.

Reviews

More than 1,157,125 Facebookers like The New York Times.

"The New York Times"

Since 1851, The New York Times has scoured the earth to inform its inhabitants with up-to-date, compelling stories, collecting a total of 108 Pulitzer Prizes in the process. The publication's iconic front page regularly features riveting photojournalism set alongside global and national stories scribed by reporters not from Krypton. SundayStyles illuminates fashion trends, nightlife, and weddings, and the Travel section quenches adventure thirst and eases destination famine. The Digital Subscription package invites uninhibited access to NYTimes.com and the NYTimes app for smartphones.

Groupon Says

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The Groupon Guide to: Archaeology

Archaeology is the science of digging up dirt to find morsels of broken ceramics and delicious bones to make history soup. Here’s a guide to executing an archaeological dig:

• Any location can be an archaeological site if you dig deep enough. Sift through your neighbor’s trash to find a wealth of information about how humans survive and where the catalogs go after you circle everything you want and leave them on your neighbor's doorstep.

• Digging for bones used to be outsourced to dogs, but ever since they embarrassed us at the dog park, humans have done our own digging. Be sure to bring a shovel, a trowel, and an insatiable need to destroy an earthworm's habitat.

• Archaeologists collect human bones to remind us that everyone in the past was a spooky skeleton until humans evolved to have flesh in the late 1950s and souls in the early 1990s.

• When an archaeologist finds a pottery fragment, he must also find the other fragments of the jar it came from and reassemble them, or risk being the only archaeologist who has never drunk mead from an ancient jar.

• Use carbon dating to find out how old fossils are. Carbon dating is a process in which scientists take fossilized carbon on a date and ask it questions about the 1970s to find out if it is old enough to remember that time period.

• If you can't find any fossils, make some of your own by putting a lizard in a tray of wet clay.

What year did humans evolve flesh?

"The New York Times"

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