Word: adding
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...AIDS Foundation. Instead, some apparently release their sexual energies through masturbation, pornography, and sex by phone. The Advocate classifieds list several numbers that offer a seductive voice on the other end of the wire, payment to be made by credit card. "Horny? Call Your Adonis," says one ad. Sales of gay porn have risen, and video cassette recorders have never been so popular. "The party's over," said one New York gay as he was about to attend a memorial service for yet another casualty. "You just stop having sex. I now make love...
...your child was missing," blared the full-page ad in last week's New York Times, "could you give police an accurate description?" Most parents probably could, but doubt was at the heart of the campaign by Lafayette/Circuit City, a consumer-electronics chain with headquarters in Richmond. As an identification aid against the terrible day when a youngster might disappear, the ad offered a free videotape of any child brought to a Lafayette store in the New York City area, urging parents to "bring your own videotape or [we] will sell you one at cost...
...ad, the first in a campaign that Lafayette intends to run in all its U.S. stores, is the latest manifestation of a new American concern over finding children who vanish. Increasingly, local TV stations carry pictures and descriptions of missing children. Youngsters are now being photographed and fingerprinted in schools and shopping malls from Los Angeles to Washington, D.C. Buses, milk cartons and supermarket bags are used to display photos of missing children...
...bubbling over with ideas but lacked the crucial green card that would permit him to work legally in the U.S. Since no one would ask him for his work permit if he ran the operation, he decided that it was easier to start his own company. A single ad in Byte magazine for Turbo Pascal, a $49.95 program that he designed primarily for computer professionals, triggered sales of $150,000 in the first month...
Since Peluso, 33, became CEO of online travel firm Travelocity in December 2003, her most visible achievement may be its irreverent ad campaign featuring the Roaming Gnomean abducted lawn fixture from North Carolina with a conical red hat. In the real world, despite competition from Expedia and Orbitz , the Sabre subsidiary has also proved unforgettable, posting $4.9 billion in travel bookings for 2004 and $500 million in revenue. Next on her itinerary: Travelocity Europe and two joint ventures, Singapore's Zuji and Japan's Tabini...