Greece is racing to develop a new bailout plan with Europe that will prevent it from total financial collapse.
Eurozone leaders are holding an emergency meeting in Brussels Tuesday to figure out a new bailout program for Greece, following the weekend referendum rejecting the terms offered by its creditors.
The Labor Department report for June found yet another 430,000 Americans of working age (16 and up) dropped out of the workforce. What ever happened to the old-fashioned American work ethic?
The question in Europe Monday is whether Greece will remain in the European Union.
U.S. employers added 223,000 jobs in June, and the unemployment rate fell to 5.3 percent, a seven-year low. But the rate has dropped because more and more Americans have given up on trying to find a job.
Chick-fil-A is way ahead of all other fast food restaurants for customer satisfaction, a new survey from the American Customer Satisfaction Index revealed.
Greece slipped deeper into a financial abyss after defaulting on a loan from the International Monetary Fund. Now the question is whether Greece will remain in the eurozone. But there may be a ray of hope.
It's summertime and that means millions of Americans cramming in the minivan and criss-crossing around the country on family vacation. But how safe are the roads, and will they be backed up for miles of gridlock?
At least part of Greece's international bailout expires Tuesday, making this crunch time for the cash-strapped country.
Stock markets worldwide took a major hit Monday after Greece moved one step closer to financial chaos, raising concern it could default on its international debt.