Aircraft Orders Jump, But Boeing 737 Max Grounding Could Trim U.S. Growth The grounding of Boeing's 737 Max aircraft could pinch the economy, some analysts say. But the government reported that aircraft orders were strong enough last month to lift a key indicator. Scott Horsley
'My Whole Life Is On Hold': As Walmart Eliminates Greeters, A Dream In Limbo Justin Kelley was among workers who learned their jobs as greeters would be cut. As the Floridian waited 49 days to hear if he could stay with Walmart, he worried he would have to give up his dream. Alina Selyukh
Microsoft's new climate plan: charge itself for polluting Microsoft's ambitious climate action plan including a $15 carbon fee on itself. Paige Browning
Boeing Officials Say Company Is Taking Financial Hit From Grounding Of 737 MAX Jets Boeing has released a quarterly earnings report that shows revenue and profit taking a hit from the grounding of its 737 MAX planes. Profits fell 13% compared to the same quarter a year ago. Overall revenues fell much less though, only 2%. Daniella Cheslow
Kohl's Will Now Accept Amazon Returns At All Its Stores The reatiler is betting that easy returns will drive foot traffic to its stores. Shares of Kohl's stock spiked with the news. Laurel Wamsley
Boeing Hits Pause On Forecasts As 737 Max Groundings Continue The aircraft manufacturer said its profits fell 13 percent in the first quarter as it works through "this challenging time." The company said the 737 Max crisis has cost it $1 billion so far. Avie Schneider
Billions worth of Boeing planes sit on the tarmac, waiting for the grounding to end The grounding of the 737 MAX cost Boeing a billion dollars in March. Casey Martin
Facebook Recruits Surveillance Hawk to Be Its Top Lawyer Facebook's new top lawyer is tasked with guiding the firm through increasingly treacherous legal woes. She was one of the lawyers responsible for moving the controversial Patriot Act through Congress. Aarti Shahani
Government Expands Air Bag Investigation To Include More Than 12 Million Vehicles A component responsible for detecting a crash and deploying air bags has been malfunctioning due to electrical interference, the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration says. Matthew S. Schwartz
What Happened To U.S. Workers? The share of people aged 25 to 54 in the labor force has fallen in the past couple of decades. What happened? Cardiff Garcia