BRIGHTON, ENGLAND, April 29, 2011 (Press-News.org) The long-awaited TK Maxx store is nearly ready to open its doors at the Grand Junction Retail Park, Crewe. This new store is set to open on Thursday 28 April at 9am and will feature nearly 20,000 sq ft of famous label fashion, shoes and accessories for men and women plus homewares, kids and toys - all at up to 60% off the RRP.
The first lucky 500 customers through the doors at 9am will be treated to a GBP10 gift card to spend in the new store.
The TK Maxx concept is simple. TK Maxx buyers shop the world all year round working direct with designers and negotiating great deals to bring customers designer and famous brands at a fraction of normal retail prices. With a modern and stylish, but no frills store environment, further savings can be passed on to customers. A typical TK Maxx store stocks an average 50,000 items with daily deliveries bringing up to 10,000 new items to store every week so customers will always find a constantly fresh and exciting mix of top brands and great quality at the lowest prices, every time they visit.
Commenting on the new Crewe store Helen Gunter, spokesperson for TK Maxx says:
"We are very excited to be opening up a new store and bringing Crewe's shoppers savings of up to 60% off the RRP on great brands and labels for the entire family under one roof."
TK Maxx also sell online, offering a wide range of dresses, including maxi dresses, party dresses & summer dresses, all at up to 60% less.
Website: http://www.tkmaxx.com
Get The Labels You Adore For Prices You Love at TK Maxx Crewe
The long-awaited TK Maxx store is nearly ready to open its doors at the Grand Junction Retail Park, Crewe.
2011-04-29
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Study: Cotton swabs prove problematic for ear health
2011-04-29
DETROIT – A study by Henry Ford Hospital shows a direct association between cotton swab use and ruptured eardrum.
The study also shows that in most cases the rupture heals on its own and surgery is only necessary for the most severe cases.
"In the past, many otolaryngologists have wondered if surgery is really necessary to treat a ruptured eardrum. The results of this study show that 97 percent of cases healed on their own within two months, proving that most cases do not require surgery," says Ilaaf Darrat, M.D., an otolaryngologist at Henry Ford Hospital and co-author ...
Louisiana Tech researcher presents on eco-friendly nanotechnology at national conference
2011-04-29
RUSTON, La. – Dr. Yuri Lvov, professor of chemistry and T.C. Pipes endowed chair in micro and nanosystems at Louisiana Tech University, recently led a symposium at the 241st Conference of the American Chemical Society (ACS), discussing his application of a more eco-friendly and cost-effective nano-material that can be used to significantly improve the properties of plastics, paints and other synthetic composites.
The symposium featured Lvov's presentation on the use of clay "nanotubes" – created from dirt and soils found in a number of places on earth – to strengthen ...
Prejudice and the President
2011-04-29
Racial prejudice among some white Americans—even if unintentional—influences their views of President Barack Obama's "Americanism" and their assessment of how well he is performing in office, according to a University of Delaware doctoral student.
The psychology student, Eric Hehman, recently received the national Albert Bandura Graduate Research Award for his paper detailing a research study he conducted on the subject. The article, "Evaluations of Presidential Performance: Race, Prejudice, and Perceptions of Americanism," was published in the March issue of the Journal ...
Headwater - A Taste of Puglia- For Free!
2011-04-29
Firmly tucked away on the spur of Italy's heel, the dramatic coastline of Puglia is one of the country's best-kept secrets. It's a sun-soaked land of rolling vineyards, historic hamlets, colourful fishing villages and wonderfully deserted white beaches stretching as far as the eye can see.
Cycling in Puglia with Headwater allows you to explore at leisure, stopping off as the mood takes you, to enjoy long lazy lunches in pretty white villages or relaxing dips in the clear emerald seas of the Adriatic.
You'll eat well here too. Traditional Puglian cuisine uses the freshest ...
"Married Filing Jointly" is Not Always The Best Option
2011-04-29
"Married Filing Jointly" is Not Always The Best Option
Most tax professionals would agree that "married filing jointly" is generally the most advantageous filing status. Spouses' incomes are combined, deductable expenses are pooled together and there are some benefits that are available only to joint filers.
While a joint return is typically how married couples file, what if you had recently become suspicious of your spouse and the source some of his or her income? What if your spouse had been making millions or even billions from a Ponzi scheme ...
Iowa State chemist designs new polymer structures for use as 'plastic electronics'
2011-04-29
AMES, Iowa – Iowa State University's Malika Jeffries-EL says she's studying doing structure-property studies so she can teach old polymers new tricks.
Those tricks improve the properties of certain organic polymers that mimic the properties of traditional inorganic semiconductors and could make the polymers very useful in organic solar cells, light-emitting diodes and thin-film transistors.
Conductive polymers date back to the late 1970s when researchers Alan Heeger, Alan MacDiarmid and Hideki Shirakawa discovered that plastics, with certain arrangements of atoms, can ...
Stripping a Second Mortgage in a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
2011-04-29
Stripping a Second Mortgage in a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
One of current problems in the real estate market is the number of "underwater" mortgages, where the value of the properly has declined below the outstanding value of the mortgage. Banks have been extraordinarily resistant to the concept of loan modifications, where that modification would lower the principal value of the loan and bring it in line with the market value.
Most people are trapped in these houses, as they cannot sell them for a high enough price to allow them to pay off the mortgage. The ...
A tale of 2 lakes: One gives early warning signal for ecosystem collapse
2011-04-29
Researchers eavesdropping on complex signals from a remote Wisconsin lake have detected what they say is an unmistakable warning--a death knell--of the impending collapse of the lake's aquatic ecosystem.
The finding, reported today in the journal Science by a team of researchers led by Stephen Carpenter, an ecologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (UW-Madison), is the first experimental evidence that radical change in an ecosystem can be detected in advance, possibly in time to prevent ecological catastrophe.
"For a long time, ecologists thought these changes ...
Missouri elk are being reintroduced in the wrong part of the state, MU anthropologist says
2011-04-29
According to prehistoric records, elk roamed the northwestern part of Missouri until 1865. Now, the Missouri Department of Conservation is planning to reintroduce elk, but this time in the southeast part of the state. While a University of Missouri anthropologist believes the reintroduction is good for elk, tourism and the economy, he said the effort may have unintended negative consequences that are difficult to predict.
R. Lee Lyman, the chair of Anthropology in the College of Arts and Science, has studied the history of mammals, conservation biology and wildlife management ...
Teenage Texting: A Roadway Danger
2011-04-29
Teenage Texting: A Roadway Danger
Distracted driving takes a heavy toll on our nation's highways: according to National Highway Traffic Safety Administration data, over 5,000 motorists are killed every year in crashes that involve driver distraction. Texting while driving is an especially dangerous form of distraction, as it involves taking your hands off the wheel, your eyes off the road and your mind off of driving. Teens are not only more likely to text, they are also more inexperienced behind the wheel: drivers under the age of 21 are involved in three times as many ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
From COVID to cancer, new at-home test spots disease with startling accuracy
Now accepting submissions: Special Collection on Cognitive Aging
Young adult literature is not as young as it used to be
Can ChatGPT actually “see” red? New results of Google-funded study are nuanced
Turning quantum bottlenecks into breakthroughs
Cancer-fighting herpes virus shown to be an effective treatment for some advanced melanoma
Eliminating invasive rats may restore the flow of nutrients across food chain networks in Seychelles
World’s first: Lithuanian scientists’ discovery may transform OLED technology and explosives detection
Rice researchers develop superstrong, eco-friendly materials from bacteria
Itani studying translation potential of secure & efficient software updates in industrial internet of things architectures
Elucidating the source process of the 2021 south sandwich islands tsunami earthquake
Zhu studying use of big data in verification of route choice models
Common autoimmune drug may help reverse immunotherapy-induced diabetes, UCLA study finds
Quantum battery device lasts much longer than previous demonstrations
Gamma knife stereotactic radiosurgery for brain metastases from ovarian cancer
Meet the “plastivore” caterpillars that grow fat from eating plastic
Study identifies postoperative delirium as preventable “acute brain failure” with major health and financial implications
Climate change linked to decline in nutritional quality of food
Abdominal fat linked to reduced strength and mobility in adults
Mount Sinai implements Own the Bone® program for fragility fracture patients
Is Earth inside a huge void? 'Sound of the Big Bang' hints at possible solution to Hubble tension
When stem cells feel the squeeze, they start building bone
Revealing Myanmar earthquake as a unique event comprising multiple sub-events, including boomerang-like reverse rupture propagation and supershear rupture
AI helps radiologists spot more lesions in mammograms
Efficient elastic tissues may hold the secrets to Olympic success
Does exercise really improve mental health?
Behind the ballistics of the “explosive” squirting cucumber
Researchers find compound that inhibits cutaneous HPVs
City of Hope Research Spotlight, April/May 2025
The gut microbiota in elderly patients with acute hepatitis E infection
[Press-News.org] Get The Labels You Adore For Prices You Love at TK Maxx CreweThe long-awaited TK Maxx store is nearly ready to open its doors at the Grand Junction Retail Park, Crewe.