Tuesday, May 21 2013 10:27 AM EDT2013-05-21 14:27:40 GMT
It expands a program that provided $7,500 total to go toward tuition at state colleges or vocational schools. Now the scholarships are increased to $7,500 for each year of college.
It expands a program that provided $7,500 total to go toward tuition at state colleges or vocational schools. Now the scholarships are increased to $7,500 for each year of college.
Tuesday, May 21 2013 10:24 AM EDT2013-05-21 14:24:29 GMT
West Virginia State Police confirmed that 21-year-old Austin Marcum, a driver, died at the scene.
West Virginia State Police confirmed that 21-year-old Austin Marcum, a driver, died at the scene.
(AP) - J.C. Penney Company Inc. shares jumped Tuesday after the retailer's CEO said it would bring back some of the big discounts it ditched last year in a bid to woo back shoppers.
THE SPARK: J.C. Penney will begin adding back this week some of the sales it eliminated last year in hopes of luring shoppers who were turned off when the discounts disappeared. The struggling retailer also plans to add price tags or signs for more than half of its merchandise to show customers how much they're saving by shopping at its stores.
THE BIG PICTURE: The reversal comes on the eve of the one-year anniversary of its original vow to almost completely get rid of the sales that Americans covet but that cut into a store's profits. The idea was to offer everyday low prices that customers could count on.
J.C. Penney's sales and stock price sank after it moved away from its traditional methods. It also increased the criticism of its new CEO, former Apple Inc. executive Ron Johnson.
Analyst have hailed Johnson's other moves, such as revamping its stores, adding better brands and putting stores within stores. The pricing strategy, which was a key part of Johnson's plan to reinvent the department store chain, simply hadn't sat well with most.
The company's difficulties are clear in its financial results. In the first nine months of its current fiscal year, Penney lost $433 million, or $1.98 per share, compared with a loss of $65 million, or 30 cents per share, a year earlier. Total sales dropped 23.1 percent to $9.1 billion.