Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
5. Enter Free Gas Sweepstakes. Google “gas sweepstakes” and you’ll find more than 13 million results. Some are local contests, like Circle K’s “Win Fuel for a Year” contest for South ...
Rob Johnson held his second annual free gas giveaway on his birthday, Jan. 21. Giving away free gasoline has become a yearly event for Rob Johnson, a community activist and Des Moines pastor.
The first 100 customers to show up at the store at 2061 Rufe Snow Drive will get up to 20 gallons of free gas. The giveaway starts at 8 a.m. and will last until 9 a.m. or the 100th customer is served.
A sweepstakes parlor (or sweepstakes café) is an establishment that gives away chances to win prizes with the purchase of a product or service, typically internet access or telephone cards. They began to appear in the Southern United States some time around 2005, and quickly proliferated. [ 1 ]
In Hadsell's era, there was an activity known as "contesting", in which people would dedicate their time and efforts towards winning sweepstakes, where winners are chosen at random among those who have entered and the usual strategy was to submit as many entries as possible, and consumer skill contests, in which prizes were won by submitting some kind of writing extolling a particular product ...
The popularity of the term "sweepstakes" may derive from the Irish Sweepstakes, which were very popular from the 1930s to the 1980s. There is a tradition of office sweepstakes (known as office pools in the U.S.), which are usually based on major sporting events such as the Grand National and the World Cup. Entrants pay an equal stake for each ...
For the Thanksgiving holiday weekend, gas stations on the east and west coasts temporarily offered free fuel to some drivers. A station in Massachusetts gave away 50,000 gallons before the holiday ...
The gas is supplied by BP free of charge. Azerbaijan received over 1 billion cubic meters of gas from these fields in the 1st quarter of 2009. Current recovery comes to nearly 27 million cubic meters of casing head gas a day. A portion of gas is routed to national gas transportation system of Azerbaijan.