It seems like this might be more effective long term and cost less. Big 3 could still file bankruptcy and emerge as as smaller, more efficient competetors. Many new people would be hired by new J...
So my GF is working today and she calls me and tells me she's "expected to sell a credit card by today" she doesn't work cashier so it makes it 200% harder on her when she's ...
You know a place that fills you with depression whenever you go there. Has it affected your work? Additional Details Please give details as why it was depressing?...
Unless you have 10 children to feed or if you own a restaurant, WHY do you need *that* much food? I just don't understand why people think they need things in such excess. Like there is going to ...
I was reading an article this morning http://news.yahoo.com/s/
And I have to wonder do any of you have a bad boss that keeps getting promoted instead of ...
For example, I notice at our local Super Wal Mart only has 4 or 5 checkouts (out of like 30) open on a Saturday, and the cashiers don't seem happy or talkative anymore. They also seem reluctant ...
Last night I got our sale paper and it had a Laptop on sale for around 400 dollars. It stated limited 14 per store *red flag came up this wasn't going to be a good experience* so I said ok.. S...
It stands for "Kresge". The company used to be S.S. Kresge, a chain of discount stores that started in 1899. They started opening superstores under the K-Mart name in the 1960s, and eventually phased out the Kresge name.
Shames
It's the first letter of their largest support group.......... the KKK
El Recio
Kmart is a chain of department stores in the United States. The chain merged with Sears in early 2005, creating the Sears Holdings Corporation. Kmart also exists in Australia and New Zealand as Kmart Australia, although it shares no current relation with the U.S. stores except in name.
Sebastian S. Kresge founded the S. S. Kresge Company, the predecessor of Kmart, in 1899 in Detroit, Michigan. Kresge's first retail establishment, a five-and-ten-cent store, resembled Woolworth's, a chain operated by Frank Woolworth. The store grew into a chain known as S. S. Kresge. It was incorporated in 1912, by which time it operated eighty-five stores.