LAS VEGAS, NV, March 03, 2011 (Press-News.org) It takes just 10 new paid members to win your choice of an Apple iPad, a stripper pole and stage, or a trip for two to the annual Vegas swingers takeover. Kasidie.com's "Spring Promotion and Membership Drive" gives a bonus to the recently launched affiliate program.
"We are excited to launch this contest, especially since everyone can win," said Darren Hurst, Kasidie's VP of Affiliate Programs, "and of course the prizes are in addition to the high paying revenue share program so our partners can get these great prizes along with their affiliate payments." Contest details can be found at http://www.kasidie.com/static/springmembershipdrive.html.
How are referrals tracked? Easy! Whenever someone joins we track who brought them to Kasidie in 2 ways: 1. they type the affiliate name in the "referred by" box on the sign up form, and, most commonly, 2. they clicked on a text link or banner you put on your website, blog or in an email.
About Kasidie.com
Created by swingers, www.kasidie.com is a unique social community and dating website devoted to the swinging lifestyle. The site has extensive swinger profiles, hundreds of real party listings, travel postings, and club descriptions catering to the global population of 150 million-plus sexually adventurous, non-monogamous couples, singles and groups.
Media Contact
Scott Purcell, President
Kasidie Entertainment, LLC
(702) 882-2525
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Kasidie.com Launches Spring Promotion for Affiliates to Win an iPad, Stripper Poll and Stage, or Trip to Vegas
Kasidie.com's Spring Promotion a bonus to the recently launched affiliate program. It takes just 10 new paid members to win your choice of a new Apple iPad, a stripper pole and stage, or a trip for two to the annual Vegas swingers takeover.
2011-03-03
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Montana State University team solves mystery of missing sunspots, helps predict space weather
2011-03-03
BOZEMAN, Mont. –- Solar scientists from around the world were puzzled when sunspots recently disappeared for more than two years, but a former Montana State University physics graduate student and two collaborators have solved the mystery.
In the process, they found a way to predict the next lapse in solar activity, which will help people who oversee communication systems or plan long trips into space, said MSU solar physicist Piet Martens.
Dibyendu Nandi, Andres Munoz-Jaramillo and Martens published a paper in the March 3 issue of Nature that they said explained for ...
Potassium levels possible key to racial disparity in Type 2 diabetes
2011-03-03
Lower potassium levels in the blood may help explain why African-Americans are twice as likely to be diagnosed with type 2 diabetes as whites, according to a new study by Johns Hopkins researchers.
The findings, if confirmed, suggest that part of diabetes prevention may someday prove as easy as taking a cheap potassium supplement.
"This research doesn't mean people should run out and start taking potassium supplements," says Hsin-Chieh "Jessica" Yeh, Ph.D., an assistant professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and an author of the study, ...
New study suggests ALS could be caused by a retrovirus
2011-03-03
A retrovirus that inserted itself into the human genome thousands of years ago may be responsible for some cases of the neurodegenerative disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gherig's disease. The finding, made by Johns Hopkins scientists, may eventually give researchers a new way to attack this universally fatal condition.
While roughly 20 percent of ALS cases appear to have a genetic cause, the vast majority of cases appear to arise sporadically, with no known trigger. Research groups searching for a cause of this so-called sporadic form had ...
New advances in genetic studies of Fanconi anemia patients
2011-03-03
An international consortium of researchers led by Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB) genetically characterises almost all Spanish patients and studies the clinical impact of the mutations.
The study describes over 130 pathogenic mutations and the origins and world distribution of some of the most frequent mutations.
The predominant genetic mutation originated in Europe thousands of years ago and later migrated to America. The Canary island of La Palma and Brazil, with a high prevalence of the disease, were two areas in which the mutation spread widely.
A consortium ...
Polishing the apple's popular image as a healthy food
2011-03-03
Scientists are reporting the first evidence that consumption of a healthful antioxidant substance in apples extends the average lifespan of test animals, and does so by 10 percent. The new results, obtained with fruit flies — stand-ins for humans in hundreds of research projects each year — bolster similar findings on apple antioxidants in other animal tests. The study appears in ACS's Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.
Zhen-Yu Chen and colleagues note that damaging substances generated in the body, termed free radicals, cause undesirable changes believed to ...
New growth inhibitors more effective in plants, less toxic to people
2011-03-03
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - A Purdue University scientist and researchers in Japan have produced a new class of improved plant growth regulators that are expected to be less toxic to humans.
Angus Murphy, a professor of horticulture, said the growth inhibitors block the transport of auxin, a plant hormone that, when transported throughout the plant, controls growth processes. Current growth regulators that inhibit auxin transport are inefficient because they also have hormonelike activity or affect other important plant processes. Current growth inhibitors also are often toxic.
Growth ...
Alaric Flower Design's Flower Dresses Were a Huge Hit at NYC Couture Fashion Week
2011-03-03
On February 20th, Alaric Flower Design participated in their first Fashion Week at the Waldorf Astoria. They showcased three concept floral dresses called "The Arrangement Collection" and were very well-received.
Alaric Flower Design's Lena Yelagina and Olga Meshcheryakova are familiar with style, being one of the top florists in Midtown Manhattan for over five years. Their floral designs have been described as stylish, stunning, elegant, and classy: a combination of description often coveted in the fashion world. They presented three ready-to-wear dresses created ...
Blood protein in lung cancer could improve diagnosis and treatment
2011-03-03
Scientists are reporting discovery of a protein in the blood of lung cancer patients that could be used in a test for the disease — difficult to diagnose in its earliest and most treatable stages — and to develop drugs that stop lung cancer from spreading. Their study appears in ACS's Journal of Proteome Research.
In the report, Je-Yoel Cho and colleagues note that lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide. Lung cancer is so deadly because of its tendency to spread — or metastasize — to distant sites in the body, such as the liver or the brain. Early ...
Hair dyeing poised for first major transformation in 150 years
2011-03-03
Technological progress may be fast-paced in many fields, but one mundane area has been almost left in the doldrums for the last 150 years: The basic technology for permanently coloring hair. That's the conclusion of an analysis of almost 500 articles and patents on the chemistry of permanent hair dyeing, which foresees much more innovation in the years ahead, including longer lasting, more-natural-looking dyes and gene therapy to reverse the gray. The article appears in ACS's journal Chemical Reviews.
Robert Christie and Olivier Morel note that hair dye already is a multibillion ...
Does fluoride really fight cavities by 'the skin of the teeth'?
2011-03-03
In a study that the authors describe as lending credence to the idiom, "by the skin of your teeth," scientists are reporting that the protective shield fluoride forms on teeth is up to 100 times thinner than previously believed. It raises questions about how this renowned cavity-fighter really works and could lead to better ways of protecting teeth from decay, the scientists suggest. Their study appears in ACS's journal Langmuir.
Frank Müller and colleagues point out that tooth decay is a major public health problem worldwide. In the United States alone, consumers spend ...
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[Press-News.org] Kasidie.com Launches Spring Promotion for Affiliates to Win an iPad, Stripper Poll and Stage, or Trip to VegasKasidie.com's Spring Promotion a bonus to the recently launched affiliate program. It takes just 10 new paid members to win your choice of a new Apple iPad, a stripper pole and stage, or a trip for two to the annual Vegas swingers takeover.

