Notre Dame bringing students back to campus 2 weeks early
The condensed semester schedule aims to prevent students from bringing pathogens to campus after being exposed while away during their fall and Thanksgiving breaks.
Calvin Klein, Tommy Hilfiger reopen 180 stores in North America, keep fitting rooms closed
New store protocols include required customer and employee masks, reduced store occupancy, six-foot social-distancing rules, increased cleaning measures, closed fitting rooms and 90-day return policies.
US homebuilding starts fall sharply in April
Data for March was revised up to show homebuilding declining to a pace of 1.276 million units instead of dropping to 1.216 million units as previously reported.
New company to make coronavirus drugs in US after Trump awards contract
The Trump administration is awarding a 4-year contract to a pharmaceutical company to make COVID-19 drugs in the U.S.
Over 4M Americans skip mortgage payments as coronavirus hammers finances
The crisis has triggered the worst economic catastrophe in the U.S. since the Great Depression.
The new airline travel: Fewer flights, more layovers, rules for bathrooms
As coronavirus lockdowns lift, carriers and airports desperate for passengers are rolling out safety protocols.
Walmart sees 'unprecedented demand' as coronavirus prompts consumer stockpiling
Walmart reported better-than-expected earnings and profit amid unprecedented demand during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Coronavirus data sharing with law enforcement sparks concern
Public health officials in at least two-thirds of U.S. states are sharing the addresses of people who have the coronavirus with first responders.
Delta will add flights to keep planes no more than 60% full as demand rises: sources
Delta Air Lines Inc will keep planes no more than 60% full through at least July, adding more flights to its schedule than demand would usually justify.
Home Depot hit with $850M coronavirus-related charge
Home Depot's first-quarter profit slid 11 percent during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
What is a gap year?
The question of whether a student should take a gap year has become more common as students grapple with the financial impacts of COVID-19.
CARES Act expands small business access to less expensive, quicker bankruptcy option
Here’s what you need to know about Chapter 11’s new subchapter V.
Trump threatens permanent freeze of WHO funding, review of US membership
The President slammed the WHO in a letter posted to Twitter late Monday night.
Stock futures pause following rally on vaccine hopes and economies reopening
Powell and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin are scheduled to testify to Congress about measures taken to support the economy
Moderna taps red hot stock demand with $1.34B offering
Gross proceeds of $1.34 billion topped the company's target
Landry's CEO Tilman Fertitta asks Trump to set aside PPP money for large restaurant chains
During President Trump's White House meeting with restaurant industry executives, Landry's CEO Tilman Fertitta urged the president to offer more help through the Paycheck Protection Program to large restaurant chains
Fed's Powell to testify to Congress about tools used to support the economy
Powell and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin are scheduled to appear before the Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs committee
Mark Cuban calls for Depression-era federal jobs program to revive US economy
The only way to cauterize the unemployment blood bath Cuban said, is for the federal government to intervene as it did during the Great Depression.
Toyota vehicles debut online as virus postpones auto show
When Toyota introduced two new vehicles Monday, its executives didn't brag about them from an elaborate stage inside a convention center.
Restaurants raise prices as coronavirus forces meat shortage
As the coronavirus pandemic has led to meat shortages across the country in recent weeks, some restaurants are raising their meat prices to prevent shutting down for good.



















