TOKYO (AP) — Honda Motor Co. recorded a better-than-expected 174.6 billion yen profit ($1.7 billion) for the fiscal first quarter, as it gradually recovers from damage caused by a quake in southwestern Japan.
TOKYO (AP) — Honda Motor Co. recorded a better-than-expected 174.6 billion yen profit ($1.7 billion) for the fiscal first quarter, as it gradually recovers from damage caused by a quake in southwestern Japan.
Tokyo-based Honda, which makes the Accord sedan and Asimo robot, kept its full year forecasts unchanged at 390 billion yen ($3.8 billion) in profit, up 13 percent from the previous year.
Among other Japanese automakers, Nissan Motor Co. reported last week a 136.4 billion yen ($30.7 million) profit for the fiscal quarter through June... Читать дальше...
China has caught up with Russia to share the fourth place in terms of its nuclear reactor tally, figures published by the International Atomic Energy Agency indicate.
JASPER, Ind. — Italian artist and architect Guglielmo Botter has been in Jasper this week taking photographs of various buildings and overall landscapes. He likes what he’s seen. “I’m happy to be here because it is a German town,” Botter said Wednesday morning. “My grandmother was German. And we go to Germany, since we live
VINCENNES, Ind. — Outside the Indiana Military Museum, 715 S. Sixth St., on Thursday afternoon, museum volunteers and military history buffs were abuzz with anticipation as they waited for the arrival of yet another unique addition to the facility’s collection. Finally, a day after it was supposed to arrive, they caught their first glimpse of
A building with an asbestos roof in West Perth has gone up in flames on Tuesday afternoon, forcing road closures and the evacuation of nearby businesses.
TOKYO — Godzilla is back in its homeland of Japan after a 12-year absence, still breathing fire and mercilessly stomping everything in its way. The Associated Press noted four ways the new film “Shin Godzilla,” or “New Godzilla,” breaks from its past, and other ways it is reassuringly familiar. It’s now showing in theaters in
At first, a chorus of cheers welcomed Carson City resident Catherine Byrne (pictured), who identified herself as the mother of a U.S. Air Force staff sergeant.