A laminated poster began to glow as they passed it.
"To Our Farmer Friends," the poster begins, urging restraint among the rural population.
Mr. Cox said that since his posters began appearing early this month, they had generated "a variety of responses."
Then the posters began appearing around town.
However, in 2000, these posters began to be printed again.
The poster, which transit officials said cost a few hundred dollars to print, began appearing Monday on station walls throughout the city.
Leaflets and posters from the effort will begin to be distributed in the refugee camps within weeks, he added.
American flags and blood-drive posters began appearing in storefront windows.
But by late afternoon along the bus line, white posters with black Hebrew letters began to appear on posts and walls announcing funerals.
However, near the end of the war, the posters began expressing military and war themes, including strong Russophobic sentiments.