Carmel, IN (PRWEB) November 23, 2008
Wild Sales, the manufacturer of Tailgate Toss and the leading provider of Licensed Product Tailgating and Outdoor Games, as well as Office/ Home Products, announces their biggest sales event in the history of the company. The company has taken prices down from 20% all the way to 75% in time for the holiday gift season.
“In these tough economic times we realize the consumer is look for a true value. That is way we decided to lower all our prices on our games and Office/Home Products,” said Jack Queally, President of Wild Sales. “We simply want people to get out and play with there family and friends. What better way than to do it than with our Licensed Products. We hope by lowering the prices on our NFL, NCAA, MLB and NASCAR Games that we could attract new customers to our family of products and to those how have purchased from us a way of saying thank you for their loyalty.”
Here is a sample of the savings consumers can realize during the week:
Logo Tailgate Toss (NFL & NCAA)
Tags: Outdoor Games, sales event, Brown, from
Actually no, I have my own business. I do not accept any government programs, I despise having to be dependent on others I’d rather starve.
I agree 100%. Those small conference teams deserve a shot at playing a real opponent. It fair that a team wins its conference, and then its only NCAA game is against some team like "Arkansas Pine-Bluff".. The biggest appeal of the NCAA tourney is the Cinderella stories, so I understand why the NCAA is doing this. The play-in games would get far bigger ratings if they had at-large teams. I think they are losing out on money, as well as their fans, by doing this.
You forgot to say what you are trying to do (in JavaScript?)
Continuation:
It will be easier to get a JavaScript calendar plug-in (Google), they come with options limiting date range and similar.
If for some reason you have to use drop downs then I suggest you create Date object (see
and use it to enable/disable and validate your selected dates…
Indeed. I have never even looked at the rules. Never watched anyone play. Just reaped the benefits of the wild sales phenomenon, as a tiny bit of the profits trickled into our world of cardboard superheroes.
Mostly I worry for my friends. Quite a few of them made their living from writing about the game and organizing Yu-Gi-Oh tournaments.
My prayers go in their direction today.
Yep, despite obvious similarities in the medium, a lot of animation has made for poor comic books. I remember buying a Roadrunner comic around 1966 and thinking, “This has got to be great!” It turned out to be terrible. For Roadrunner talked. Probably necessary, but nonetheless. And he had a couple nieces and nephews, as well.
An early lesson that licensed products always great.