Survey

1- 2001 Pontiac Aztek: This was the consensus pick for the worst car of all time.

The 10 worst cars ever sold in America

Americans are buying cars at the fastest pace in years and automakers are bringing out new vehicles that get rave reviews for safety and fuel economy.

Some analysts say the post-recession period may represent a new age for the industry, and that's made us a touch nostalgic for the days when the Detroit Three made more cars than they could sell and overseas companies thought American consumers were suckers for anything with a European name and styling.

In that vein, the Los Angeles Times asked the editors at auto information company Edmunds.com to put together a list of the 10 worst cars ever sold in America. The Times also asked David Champion, senior director of Consumer Reports' automotive test center, to weigh in. And then we gave our online readers a chance to vote on a vehicle to add to the worst 10 list. That vehicle replaces a 1917 Chevrolet that only the folks at Edmunds seem to remember.

Officials say more Utah children have healthy pearly whites compared with five years ago.

Utah kids' teeth getting healthier

SALT LAKE CITY -- Officials say more Utah children have healthy pearly whites compared with five years ago.

Ogden seeking opinions on water charges

OGDEN -- The city is in the midst of a comprehensive study on how much it will charge residents for water, and officials want to hear from the public.

Survey: Morgan teens drinking alcohol at home -- with parents' permission

MORGAN -- The results of a survey revealing where teens are consuming alcohol in this rural community are raising eyebrows and big concerns.

Although the number of respondents is small and officials lack consistent data, a Weber Human Services representative said she is concerned because the survey revealed some of the shocking conditions in which teens illegally drink in Morgan County.

Pew study: Tablet users don’t want to pay for news

NEW YORK — Although tablet owners spend more time consuming news than poking around on Facebook, they’re reluctant to pay for news content.

Study: Davis, Weber coping with the 'new norm' of economy

LAYTON -- With years of revenue losses in the U.S. economy, small and large counties across the country appear to be settling into a "new normal" of revenue, staffing and service delivery, according to a recent national survey.

"Coping with the New Normal: An Economic Status Survey of Counties" is the seventh survey in a series of biannual surveys conducted by the National Association of Counties to capture information about counties struggling with the current fiscal situation.

WFRC prepares transit survey

The 2010 United States Census is finished, but now state transportation officials want a turn.

Utah National Forests conducting visitor use studies

OGDEN - Starting Oct. 1, visitors to the Uinta-Wasatch-Cache and Ashley national forests may see and be contacted by Forest Service employees and contractors surveying forest visitor use.

(KATHLEEN MALONE-VAN DYKE/The Associated Press) Catherine Devine, 22, reads instant messages on her laptop screen at her home in Kings Park, N.Y., Monday, Sept. 26, 2011. Devine had her first brush with an online bully in seventh grade, before she’d even ventured onto the Internet. A new Associated Press-MTV poll of youth in their teens and early 20s finds that most of them _ 56 percent _ have been the target of some type of online taunting, harassment or bullying, a significant increase over just two years ago.

Poll: Young people say online meanness pervasive

WASHINGTON — Catherine Devine had her first brush with an online bully in seventh grade, before she’d even ventured onto the Internet. Someone set up the screen name “devinegirl” and, posing as Catherine, sent her classmates instant messages full of trashy talk and lies. “They were making things up about me, and I was the most innocent 12-year-old ever,” Devine remembers. “I hadn’t even kissed anybody yet.”

(TED RICHARDSON/The Associated Press) A gay rights supporter leaves a sign in the lap of a statue of Andrew Johnson on the lawn of the North Carolina State Capitol after a rally against a state constitutional amendment that would say marriage between a man and a woman is the only domestic legal union in North Carolina, in Raleigh, N.C., on Tuesday, Sept. 13, 2011. The N.C. Senate voted Tuesday to put the marriage issue to a vote in 2012.

AP poll: Divisions persist on legal gay marriage

WASHINGTON — Barbara Von Aspern loves her daughter, “thinks the world” of the person her daughter intends to marry and believes the pair should have the same legal rights as anyone else. It pains her, but Von Aspern is going to skip their wedding. Her daughter, Von Aspern explains, is marrying another woman.

Poll: Americans feel safe, but Congress shouldn't

WASHINGTON — Congress may be in the doghouse with the American public, but the broader government — especially the military — gets high marks for keeping the nation safe and secure, a new poll suggests.

Davis group plans survey on DUI problem

LAYTON -- Davis HELPS plans to address the growing problem of alcohol-related motor vehicle crashes by conducting an online survey to collect opinions about drinking and driving.

airline passengers retrieve their scanned belongings while going through the Transportation Security Administration security checkpoint at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport in Atlanta. We are safer, but not safe enough. In the decade since the 9/11 attacks, the government has taken giant steps to protect the nation from terrorists, spending eye-popping sums to smarten up the federal bureaucracy, hunt down enemies, strengthen airline security, secure U.S. borders, reshape America's image and more. But the effort remains a work in progress, and in some cases a work stalled. The bipartisan 9/11 Commission in 2004 laid out a 585-page road map to create an America that is "safer, stronger, wiser." Many of the commission's recommendations are now reality. But in some cases, results haven't lived up to expectations. And other proposals still are just that, ideas awaiting action. (AP Photo/Erik S. Lesser, File)

Poll: OK to trade some freedoms to fight terrorism

WASHINGTON — Surveillance cameras in public places? Sure. Body scans at airports? Maybe. Snooping in personal email? Not so fast.

Most US Muslims feel targeted by terror policies

WASHINGTON — More than half of Muslim-Americans in a new poll say government anti-terrorism policies single them out for increased surveillance and monitoring, and many report increased cases of name-calling, threats and harassment by airport security, law enforcement officers and others.

When to push back at a poll? When it's a push poll

The caller said he just wanted my opinion, but it was soon apparent he really wanted me to hear a sales pitch from the natural gas industry.

I was getting what is known as a "push poll," which is not a poll. It's an advertisement.

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