Walmart will stop selling some ammunition and calls on lawmakers to pass background checks legislation. NRA says actions won’t “make us any safer.”
Author: Charisse Jones, USA TODAY
Labor Day: ATM’s 50th birthday. A look back at how America learned to love cash machines
This Labor Day will mark the 50th anniversary of the ATM in the U.S. It debuted at a Chemical Bank in Long Island on Sept. 2, 1969.
Click, drive, pick up. Target takes drive-up service nationwide
Target customers nationwide will be able to drive to a local store to pick up their online orders as the retailer expands the service.
How to survive a recession if you’re a small business: It may be rocky but it’s possible
Small businessesmay not have the resources of a large corporation, but there are steps they can take to weather a recession. Here are five.
Overstock CEO resigns after speaking of ‘Deep State,’ and investigations of Trump, Clinton
Overstock CEO Patrick Byrne has resigned days after previous letter speaking of the “deep state” and helping investigations of Trump, Clinton
Looking for a job? LinkedIn, others offer interview tools to help you prepare
LinkedIn is helping job seekers, debuting a new feature that enables users to get feedback from their network when preparing for an interview.
Amazon to save merchandise from the trash, donating items instead in a new program
Starting in September, Amazon will kick off a new program that will keep unsold and returned items out of the trash, donating them to charity instead.
Disability not a barrier: At a time of low unemployment, employers tap a new talent pool
Low unemployment, heightened advocacy and a new study make hiring people with disabilities the next front in the effort to diversify the workplace
Walmart not banning gun sales in wake of mass shooting, but some advocates say it should
Walmart is not halting gun sales, though critics are calling on it to do so after 31 people were killed in two mass shootings this weekend.
The New York City blackout was actually bad for the environment
From food that got tossed to refrigerators that needed extra power, here are ways the New York City blackout may have impacted the environment