All Articles
Toyota is recalling more than a million Corolla sedans and Matrix hatchbacks with engines that may stall.
Toyota Motor Corp. said Thursday that the recalls affect vehicles sold in North America from the 2005-2008 model year. Three accidents and one injury have been reported due to the problem.
Federal regulators have been investigating the possibility of stalling engines in the Corolla and Matrix models since December and intensified their probe earlier this week.
One in 10 American households with a mortgage was at risk of foreclosure this summer as the government's efforts to help have had little impact stemming the housing crisis.
About 9.9 percent of homeowners had missed at least one mortgage payment as of June 30, the Mortgage Bankers Association said Thursday.
For people with severe to profound hearing loss.
Struggling with your hearing aids? Learn how cochlear implant users have gained more than just their hearing! Meet cochlear implant users. Attend educational sessions. Meet with surgeons and doctors of audiology.
This Health Fair is sponsored by Cochlear Corporation. Advanced Audiology, Inc. is proud to be one of the contributing affiliates to this program.
Another consequence of the latest salmonella scare: The price of breakfast has jumped.
Since the first salmonella case was reported, buyers have dished out 38 percent more cash for their eggs. The wholesale price of a dozen eggs is up to $1.35 from $0.98 on Aug. 13.
More than half a billion eggs have been affected by the current recall. Food and Drug Administration officials said Monday that there is no evidence a massive outbreak of salmonella in eggs has spread beyond two Iowa farms, though a team of investigators is still trying to figure out what caused it.
Some analysts say a dramatic drop in home sales could have a big impact on the economy for months to come.
Sales of existing homes last month saw their biggest drop in more than 40 years.
In Colorado, sales are down 24 percent. Nationally there are 4 million unsold homes, so sellers are working to beat the competition by offering incentives.
Sellers are throwing in everything from HOA fees to free lawn care and cable. Others renovate just about everything in the home to get the sale.
The Four Seasons Hotel Denver is working to fill about 300 positions before it opens.
On Wednesday, the hotel was hosting a job fair until 6 p.m. About 600 applicants waited in line for the process to begin in the morning, hoping to land their next job.
"I think I have a good chance. I'm going to be confident and hopefully I get in. I think I have a fairly good chance considering I have a degree for it and I'm fresh out of college ... we'll see what happens," one applicant said.
The U.S. Food Safety and Inspection Service says Zemco Industries, is recalling approximately 380,000 pounds of deli meat products that may be contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes.
The agency says the meat was distributed to delicatessens where they were further processed into sandwiches. A number of the delis are operated by Wal-Mart stores.
Wal-Mart said the recall involves Marketside Grab and Go sandwiches, but not individual packages of deli meat.
An iPhone application helped a Dallas man, while visiting relatives hundreds of miles away in suburban Hartford, Conn., watch as two burglars broke into his home.
Vincent Hunter called 911 at the same time his home security system also contacted authorities.
Hunter says "we could see it unfolding."
Hunter says an iCam app, which he bought for less than $5, sent him a text message Friday afternoon alerting him that motion detectors sensed movement in his supposedly empty residence.
Toyota reported a quarterly profit of $2.2 billion, reversing from red ink a year earlier as global car sales recovered and raised its full year earnings forecast.
The world's biggest automaker said Wednesday that revenue for the April-to-June quarter surged 27% to $57.3 billion as car sales jumped in North America, Japan and other parts of Asia including Thailand and Indonesia.
Sales of previously occupied homes plunged last month to the lowest level in 15 years, despite the lowest mortgage rates in decades and bargain prices in many areas.
July's sales fell by more than 27 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.83 million, the National Association of Realtors said Tuesday. It was the largest monthly drop on records dating back to 1968, and sharp declines were recorded in all regions of the country.
