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AdStar.com Signs Agreement with The Village Voice.


Business Editors

MARINA Marina

“a piece of virtue.” [Br. Lit.: Pericles]

See : Virtuousness
 DEL REY Del Rey may refer to:
  • Del Rey, California, a census-designated place in Fresno County, California
  • Del Rey, Los Angeles, California, a small district in the west side of Los Angeles
  • Del Rey (band), an indie rock band
, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec. 20, 2000

Advertise123.com to Power Online Classified Ad Placement Services

for Founding Father of Alternative Weekly Newspapers This is a list of all Alternative weekly newspapers by country. Canada
  • Capital Xtra!, Ottawa, Ontario
  • The Coast, Halifax County, Nova Scotia
  • Echo Weekly, Kitchener, Ontario and surrounding area
  • eye weekly
 

AdStar.com Inc., the leading channel for the placement of print and online classifieds, has signed an agreement to provide online classified ad placement services for The Village Voice.

As part of the agreement, AdStar.com (Nasdaq: ADST ADST Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training (Arlington, Virginia)
ADST Advanced Distributed Simulation Technology
ADST Alexandria University Desalination Studies and Technology Center (Egypt) 
, ADSTW) will create a private label version of its Advertise123.com sales channel to be integrated into www.villagevoice.com.

Regarded as "the founding father" among alternative weekly newspapers, The Village Voice has been in operation since 1955 and has a weekly circulation of more than 235,000. The Voice, owned by Village Voice Media Publications, is a sister publication of Ace Weekly, Cleveland Free Times The Free Times is an alternative weekly newspaper in Cleveland, Ohio. References

1. ^ Cleveland Free Times. Association of Alternative Newsweeklies. Retrieved on 2007-01-15.

External links
  • Home page
, LA Weekly, Minneapolis City Pages, Nashville Scene Nashville Scene is an alternative newsweekly in Nashville, Tennessee. It was founded in 1989, became a part of Village Voice Media in 1999, and later joined the ranks of sixteen other publications after a merger of Village Voice Media with New Times Media early in 2006. , Orange County Weekly and the Seattle Weekly Seattle Weekly is a freely distributed newspaper in Seattle, Washington, United States. It was founded by Darrell Oldham and David Brewster, now publisher of Crosscut, as The Weekly, and its first issue came out on March 31, 1976. .

"During the past year, AdStar.com has signed Advertise123.com service agreements with dozens of daily newspapers," said Leslie Bernhard, president and chief executive officer for AdStar.com. "We are excited to expand into the weeklies' market and to sign an agreement with one of the largest, most widely read weeklies in the nation. The Village Voice is a recognized name in the publishing world, regardless of where you are in the country, and we look forward to helping them broaden the advertising reach through Advertise123.com."

The Voice selected AdStar.com's Advertise123.com service to help extend the newspaper's reach to new advertisers across the Web and generate additional classified advertising revenue. Advertise123.com extends The Voice's exposure to advertisers via national promotion and distribution relationships with leading vertically focused Web sites and business-to-business portals. Advertisers can now place ads directly into the print and online versions of The Village Voice via www.Advertise123.com and a private label site accessible via www.villagevoice.com.

About AdStar.com Inc.

AdStar.com, based in Marina del Rey, Calif., provides classified ad placement services via the Internet and other electronic delivery channels. The company's broad range of services provides advertisers the ability to place ads in a growing number of major metropolitan newspapers, state and regional newspaper networks and leading classified ad Web sites. The company also serves as an application service provider for the classified advertising industry by turning publishers' Web sites into full-service classified ad sales channels for their print and online classified ad sections. In 1999, more than $175 million of classified ads were placed using AdStar.com's products and services.

Beginning in 1986, AdStar.com set the standard for remote ad entry software by giving advertisers the ability to place ads electronically with one or several of the largest newspapers in the United States Newspapers have declined in their influence and penetration into American households over the years. The U.S. does not have a national paper per se, although the influential dailies the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal are sold in most U.S. cities. . In 1999, AdStar.com released Advertise123.com, a Web-based version of its historical business model. Advertise123.com is a one-stop Web portal See portal.  for classified advertising, which allows advertisers to create, schedule and pay for ads for print and online publication in newspapers from the top 100 U.S. markets and leading online destinations. Advertise123.com is made available through distribution and affiliate partnerships with related Web sites, including vertically focused ad Web sites and business-to-business portals.

Forward-Looking Statements forward-looking statement

A projected financial statement based on management expectations. A forward-looking statement involves risks with regard to the accuracy of assumptions underlying the projections.
 

This press release contains forward-looking statements concerning the business and products of the company. Actual results may differ from those projected or implied by such forward-looking statements depending on a number of risks and uncertainties, including, but not limited to the following: development, shipment and market acceptance. Other risks inherent in the business of the company are described in Securities and Exchange Commission filings, including the company prospectus on Form SB-2. The company undertakes no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances CIRCUMSTANCES, evidence. The particulars which accompany a fact.
     2. The facts proved are either possible or impossible, ordinary and probable, or extraordinary and improbable, recent or ancient; they may have happened near us, or afar off; they are public or
 after the date of this release.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Date:Dec 20, 2000
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