TODAYINPERSONALJOURNAL RxforAsthma:Play...

1
YELLOW ***** TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 2013 ~ VOL. CCLXI NO. 94 WSJ.com HHHH $2.00 leads them to believe there are more bombs in the Boston area, or other would-be plotters. The video and photos pro- vided by federal prosecutors showed the two brothers carry- ing backpacks as they walk onto Boylston Street, the scene of the Please turn to page A6 Justice Department spokes- man Dean Boyd said the govern- ment “will always seek to elicit all the actionable intelligence and information we can from terrorist suspects taken into our custody.” Authorities said Monday that nothing they have learned so far Dzhokhar Tsarnaev coolly dropped off a homemade bomb in the crowd at the Boston Mar- athon and then walked away amid the confusion as another explosive set by his brother det- onated nearby, federal authori- ties alleged Monday in charging the teen with a terrorist act that could carry the death penalty. In a criminal complaint un- sealed in Boston federal court, prosecutors alleged that Mr. Tsarnaev, a 19-year-old college sophomore, detonated a weapon of mass destruction—a home- made bomb—in an attack that killed three and injured more than 200 on April 15. The com- plaint offered new details on the young man’s alleged actions dur- ing the bombing, as well as the chaotic chase days later that ended in a shootout and the death of his 26-year-old older brother, Tamerlan. The younger brother has been communicating with Federal Bu- reau of Investigation interroga- tors, according to a law-enforce- ment official, although the value of his written answers to ques- tions wasn’t immediately clear. Mr. Tsarnaev can’t speak due to a gunshot wound to his throat which may have been self-in- flicted, officials said. Mr. Tsarnaev’s brief legal pro- ceeding was held Monday with a federal judge at the hospital be- cause the suspect’s injuries are so severe. He had also suffered gunshot wounds to the head, legs and hand when captured Friday night, according to an af- fidavit from FBI special agent Daniel Genck. CONTENTS Corporate News B2-4,7 CFO Journal................. B6 Global Finance............ C3 Health & Wellness D1-4 Heard on Street ..... C10 In the Markets........... C4 Leisure & Arts............ D5 Opinion.................. A21-23 Sports.............................. D6 Stock Listings ............ C8 U.S. News................. A2-7 Weather Watch........ B8 World News... A8, 17-19 DJIA 14567.17 À 19.66 0.1% NASDAQ 3233.55 À 0.9% NIKKEI 13568.37 À 1.9% STOXX 600 285.68 À 0.2% 10-YR. TREAS. À 3/32 , yield 1.698% OIL $88.76 À $0.75 GOLD $1,421.00 À $25.70 EURO $1.3067 YEN 99.23 s Copyright 2013 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved Vital Signs The nation’s housing inventory is tight. About 1.9 million existing homes were available for purchase in March, near a 12-year low. The lean supply is thwarting interested buyers and pushing prices higher. Home sales fell 0.6% in March to a seasonally ad- justed annual pace of 4.92 million. The median sale price rose 11.8% from a year earlier to $184,300, the fast- est pace since 2005. A2 Source: National Association of Realtors '09 '10 '11 '12 ’08 ’07 Existing homes for sale, year-over-year change in inventory –30 –20 –10 0 10 20% > B owing to regulators’ concerns about the size of executive pay and its role in risk-taking, seven big fi- nancial firms are scaling back the maximum bonuses awarded to executives who beat their performance targets. A1 n Netflix posted a strong in- crease in streaming-video sub- scribers for the first quarter, sending its shares soaring 24% in after-hours trading. B1 n Stocks edged higher with help from the energy, mate- rials and technology sectors. The Dow industrials rose 19.66 points to 14567.17. C4 n The SEC named Andrew Ceresney to be co-head of enforcement, joining the unit’s acting chief, George Canellos, in sharing the job. C3 n The parent of the CBOE is considering whether to sepa- rate out its regulatory division amid a federal probe over po- tential conflicts of interest. C1 n S&P is mounting an un- usual defense in the civil- fraud lawsuit brought by the Justice Department against the credit-rating firm. C1 n A top EU official said aus- terity has “reached its limits” in Europe, hinting at more leniency for countries to meet their deficit targets. A18 n A preliminary gauge of manufacturing activity in China fell in April, adding to concerns about the world’s second-largest economy. A18 n Airlines were hit with flight delays a day after the FAA started to furlough some air-traffic controllers because of the budget sequester. B3 n Ralph Lauren will pay $1.6 million to resolve U.S. crimi- nal and civil probes over al- leged bribes paid by the man- ager of its Argentine unit. B1 n Wal-Mart plans to base some executive compensation this year on whether the re- tailer successfully overhauls its compliance operations. B8 n A top House Republican won’t allow the CFPB’s chief to testify before his committee, saying Cordray doesn’t legit- imately head the agency. C3 n Caterpillar’s chief defended its mining-equipment strat- egy even as it lowered sales and profit forecasts due to softness in the business. B8 n GlaxoSmithKline will part- ner with venture capitalists in an unusual deal worth up to $495 million to start sev- eral drug-discovery firms. B4 n Canada charged two men for planning a terror attack. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police said the men con- spired to carry out an attack to derail a passenger train in Toronto. The police added the pair—who aren’t Cana- dian citizens—received “guidance” from al Qaeda-re- lated elements in Iran. A8 Investigators believe that the train to be targeted was either bound for or leaving from New York. n Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was charged with an act of terror- ism that could carry the death penalty, as prosecutors alleged the Boston bombing suspect detonated a weapon of mass destruction. A1, A6, A7 n The Senate voted to move ahead with a bill that would effectively end tax-free on- line shopping, overcoming last-minute lobbying. A4 n Obama’s budget proposal would lead to significant tax increases on upper-income Americans and moderate rises on some with less income, a think tank’s study shows. A4 n Cyberattacks could be “as serious as a nuclear bomb,” said a Chinese general who re- jected suggestions that China’s military is behind cyberspying on Western companies. A17 n The TSA postponed its plan to allow passengers to carry small knives onto planes following a public backlash. A3 n Parents in Mexico are setting up their own classes as teachers protest an edu- cation-system revamp. A8 n Weekend visits to a war shrine by Japanese officials set off angry reactions by South Korea and China. A17 n The Supreme Court re- jected a challenge to a law that requires graphic warn- ing labels on cigarettes. A5 n New York City is planning to raise the legal age to buy cigarettes to 21 from 18. n Italian President Giorgio Napolitano was sworn in for a second term and immediately lambasted lawmakers. A18 n Serbia and Kosovo moved toward joining the EU, days after reaching an agreement to normalize relations. A18 n The president of Ger- many’s Bayern Munich soccer club is under investigation for suspected tax evasion. A18 n Died: Richie Havens, 72, folk musician famed for his performance at Woodstock. Business & Finance World-Wide Follow the news all day at WSJ.com Getty Images TODAY IN PERSONAL JOURNAL Rx for Asthma: Play Hard PLUS Could Medicine Relieve Depression in Hours? What’s News– i i i i i i By Devlin Barrett, Pervaiz Shallwani and Evan Perez Fresh Bomb Details Revealed Prosecutors Describe Suspect’s ‘Calm’ Behavior; Charges Could Carry Death Penalty U.S. banks are bowing to regu- lators’ concerns about the size of executive pay and its role in fi- nancial industry risk-taking. Seven large U.S. financial- services firms, including PNC Fi- nancial Services Group, Capital One Financial Corp., and Dis- cover Financial Services Inc., said they are scaling back the maximum bonuses awarded to executives who beat their per- formance targets, according to regulatory filings. Late last year, the Federal Re- serve began contacting banks about their compensation plans, said a person familiar with the phone calls. In regulatory filings, many of the firms cited the Fed as a reason for changes. Since the financial crisis the Fed has urged banks to cap bo- nuses in cases where they could encourage executives to take too much risk. Before the crisis, banks erred by focusing too much on short-term profits and too little on risk when designing bonus plans for employees and executives, according to the Fed. While the moves involve bo- nuses for exceeding internal fi- nancial targets and not basic pay packages, they are the latest hit to Wall Street compensation, which has shriveled in recent years because of smaller bonuses and poor stock performance. A study earlier this year by New Please turn to the next page BY AARON LUCCHETTI AND JULIE STEINBERG Regulators Get Banks To Rein In Bonus Pay Source: Washington Times/CPAC Straw Poll conducted March 14-16 of 2,930 conference registrants The Wall Street Journal CPAC Snapshot Sen. Rand Paul led among potential 2016 GOP presidential contenders in a March straw poll of conservatives. Top five responses Ky. Senator Rand Paul Fla. Senator Marco Rubio Former Pa. Senator Rick Santorum N.J. Governor Chris Christie Wis. Congressman Paul Ryan 25% 23% 8% 7% 6% Sen. Rand Paul’s big moment lasted nearly 13 hours. To many, that’s how long it took the Republican lawmaker to transform from fringe politician to overnight sensa- tion, in an old-fash- ioned Senate floor filibuster to seek White House safe- guards against us- ing drones to kill Americans. Billed as a spon- taneous gesture, the filibuster was in fact the most successful of several planned actions that be- gan when the eye doctor-turned- senator decided in December to weigh a run for president. In short order, Sen. Paul, of Kentucky, won a first-place finish in a straw poll at the Conserva- tive Political Action Conference, beating Florida Sen. Marco Rubio and New Jersey Gov. Chris Chris- tie in a field of potential 2016 contenders; his new super PAC welcomed a flood of new donors; and he was invited to prestigious speaking engagements in key pri- mary states. Although Sen. Paul says he hasn’t made a decision to run, he isn’t coy about his ambitions to be a national force. “My new no- toriety allows me to talk about ways to make the Republican Please turn to page A20 BY MONICA LANGLEY Rand Paul Tries to Transform A Moment Into a Movement Sit Up Straight, and Other Advice From Big Mother i i i Gadgets Remind You to Exercise, Chew Your Food; Nagging or Nudging? Reto Stamm hasn’t lived with his parents for 12 years. Last fall, he got a digital stand-in. When the webcam on Mr. Stamm’s Mac computer caught him slouching, software called PostureTrack made an audible buzz. When he spent too much time on the couch, a thumb- size gadget tracking his physi- cal activity flashed “ucandoit.” When he failed too often at these goals, or others like go- ing to bed on time and floss- ing, a life-cataloging website called Beeminder fined him $5 or more. “It’s like hard advice from a friend,” says Mr. Stamm, a 37-year-old software devel- oper from Half Moon Bay, Calif. The digital nudges, he says, “kind of run your life.” As inventors insert the Internet into ever more things, they are making a business out of what your mother used to needle you about. Some call it “Big Mother” tech—like George Orwell’s all-knowing Big Brother, but with your best interests at heart. There’s a smart-utensil called the HAPIfork that measures how fast you eat, prodding you to slow down and chew. In a few weeks, a startup called Automatic will roll out a device that plugs into a car’s onboard computer and chirps with what its maker calls “subtle audio cues” when a driver speeds, slams on the brakes or does other things behind the wheel that mother wouldn’t like. Raymond Lancione got a toothbrush in December that pes- ters him about his dental hygiene. His $50 Beam toothbrush wire- Please turn to page A20 Beam Brush BY GEOFFREY A. FOWLER AND SHIRA OVIDE SAYING GOODBYE: Mourners left the funeral of Krystle Campbell, one of the victims of the Boston Marathon bombings, a week after the terrorist attack. Moments of silence were observed around the country. Inside Suspect’s possible link to militants investigated....... A6 Capital Journal: A test of the melting pot ................... A7 Acquaintances recall normal college student .................... A7 THE RIGHT WAY? PART OF A SERIES Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images ]TURN[MISSED[MOMENTS] ]INTO][]MAGIC][ONES.]] The new BlackBerry ® Z10 with Time Shift. Capture the perfect photo every time. See it in action at blackberry.com/z10 Screen image simulated. ©2013 BlackBerry. All rights reserved. BlackBerry® and related trademarks, names and logos are the property of Research In Motion Limited and are registered and/or used in the U.S. and countries around the world. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW113000-5-A00100-10EFFB7178F CL,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NC,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WE BG,BM,CC,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PA,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO P2JW113000-5-A00100-10EFFB7178F

Transcript of TODAYINPERSONALJOURNAL RxforAsthma:Play...

Page 1: TODAYINPERSONALJOURNAL RxforAsthma:Play Hardonline.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/pageone0423.pdf · YELL OW ***** TUESDAY,APRIL 23,2013 ~VOL. CCLXI NO.94 WSJ.com HHHH $2.00 leads

YELLOW

* * * * * TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 2013 ~ VOL. CCLXI NO. 94 WSJ.com HHHH $2 .00

leads them to believe there aremore bombs in the Boston area,or other would-be plotters.

The video and photos pro-vided by federal prosecutorsshowed the two brothers carry-ing backpacks as they walk ontoBoylston Street, the scene of the

PleaseturntopageA6

Justice Department spokes-man Dean Boyd said the govern-ment “will always seek to elicitall the actionable intelligenceand information we can fromterrorist suspects taken into ourcustody.”

Authorities said Monday thatnothing they have learned so far

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev coollydropped off a homemade bombin the crowd at the Boston Mar-athon and then walked awayamid the confusion as anotherexplosive set by his brother det-onated nearby, federal authori-ties alleged Monday in chargingthe teen with a terrorist act thatcould carry the death penalty.

In a criminal complaint un-sealed in Boston federal court,prosecutors alleged that Mr.Tsarnaev, a 19-year-old collegesophomore, detonated a weaponof mass destruction—a home-made bomb—in an attack thatkilled three and injured morethan 200 on April 15. The com-plaint offered new details on theyoung man’s alleged actions dur-ing the bombing, as well as thechaotic chase days later thatended in a shootout and thedeath of his 26-year-old olderbrother, Tamerlan.

The younger brother has beencommunicating with Federal Bu-reau of Investigation interroga-tors, according to a law-enforce-ment official, although the valueof his written answers to ques-tions wasn’t immediately clear.Mr. Tsarnaev can’t speak due toa gunshot wound to his throatwhich may have been self-in-flicted, officials said.

Mr. Tsarnaev’s brief legal pro-ceeding was held Monday with afederal judge at the hospital be-cause the suspect’s injuries areso severe. He had also sufferedgunshot wounds to the head,legs and hand when capturedFriday night, according to an af-fidavit from FBI special agentDaniel Genck.

CONTENTSCorporate News B2-4,7CFO Journal................. B6Global Finance............ C3Health & Wellness D1-4Heard on Street..... C10In the Markets........... C4

Leisure & Arts............ D5Opinion.................. A21-23Sports.............................. D6Stock Listings............ C8U.S. News................. A2-7Weather Watch........ B8World News... A8, 17-19

DJIA 14567.17 À 19.66 0.1% NASDAQ 3233.55 À 0.9% NIKKEI 13568.37 À 1.9% STOXX600 285.68 À 0.2% 10-YR. TREAS. À 3/32 , yield 1.698% OIL $88.76 À $0.75 GOLD $1,421.00 À $25.70 EURO $1.3067 YEN 99.23

s Copyright 2013 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved

Vital Signs

The nation’s housinginventory is tight. About1.9 million existing homeswere available for purchasein March, near a 12-yearlow. The lean supply isthwarting interested buyersand pushing prices higher.Home sales fell 0.6% inMarch to a seasonally ad-justed annual pace of 4.92million. The median saleprice rose 11.8% from a yearearlier to $184,300, the fast-est pace since 2005. A2

Source: National Associationof Realtors

'09 '10 '11 '12’08’07

Existing homes for sale,year-over-year change ininventory

–30

–20

–10

0

10

20%

>

Bowing to regulators’concerns about the size

of executive pay and its rolein risk-taking, seven big fi-nancial firms are scaling backthemaximumbonuses awardedto executives who beat theirperformance targets. A1n Netflix posted a strong in-crease in streaming-video sub-scribers for the first quarter,sending its shares soaring24% in after-hours trading. B1n Stocks edged higher withhelp from the energy, mate-rials and technology sectors.The Dow industrials rose19.66 points to 14567.17. C4n The SEC named AndrewCeresney to be co-head ofenforcement, joining theunit’s acting chief, GeorgeCanellos, in sharing the job. C3n The parent of the CBOE isconsidering whether to sepa-rate out its regulatory divisionamid a federal probe over po-tential conflicts of interest. C1n S&P is mounting an un-usual defense in the civil-fraud lawsuit brought by theJustice Department againstthe credit-rating firm. C1n A top EU official said aus-terity has “reached its limits”in Europe, hinting at moreleniency for countries tomeet their deficit targets. A18n A preliminary gauge ofmanufacturing activity inChina fell in April, adding toconcerns about the world’ssecond-largest economy. A18n Airlines were hit withflight delays a day after theFAA started to furlough someair-traffic controllers becauseof the budget sequester. B3nRalph Lauren will pay $1.6million to resolve U.S. crimi-nal and civil probes over al-leged bribes paid by theman-ager of its Argentine unit. B1nWal-Mart plans to basesome executive compensationthis year on whether the re-tailer successfully overhaulsits compliance operations. B8n A top House Republicanwon’t allow the CFPB’s chiefto testify before his committee,saying Cordray doesn’t legit-imately head the agency. C3nCaterpillar’s chief defendedits mining-equipment strat-egy even as it lowered salesand profit forecasts due tosoftness in the business. B8nGlaxoSmithKline will part-ner with venture capitalistsin an unusual deal worth upto $495 million to start sev-eral drug-discovery firms. B4

n Canada charged two menfor planning a terror attack.The Royal Canadian MountedPolice said the men con-spired to carry out an attackto derail a passenger train inToronto. The police addedthe pair—who aren’t Cana-dian citizens—received“guidance” from al Qaeda-re-lated elements in Iran. A8Investigators believe thatthe train to be targetedwas either bound for orleaving from New York.n Dzhokhar Tsarnaev wascharged with an act of terror-ism that could carry the deathpenalty, as prosecutors allegedthe Boston bombing suspectdetonated a weapon of massdestruction. A1, A6, A7n The Senate voted to moveahead with a bill that wouldeffectively end tax-free on-line shopping, overcominglast-minute lobbying. A4n Obama’s budget proposalwould lead to significant taxincreases on upper-incomeAmericans and moderate riseson some with less income, athink tank’s study shows. A4n Cyberattacks could be “asserious as a nuclear bomb,”said a Chinese general who re-jected suggestions that China’smilitary is behind cyberspyingonWestern companies. A17n The TSA postponed itsplan to allow passengers tocarry small knives onto planesfollowing a public backlash. A3n Parents in Mexico aresetting up their own classesas teachers protest an edu-cation-system revamp. A8nWeekend visits to a warshrine by Japanese officialsset off angry reactions bySouth Korea and China. A17n The Supreme Court re-jected a challenge to a lawthat requires graphic warn-ing labels on cigarettes. A5n New York City is planningto raise the legal age to buycigarettes to 21 from 18.n Italian President GiorgioNapolitano was sworn in for asecond term and immediatelylambasted lawmakers. A18n Serbia and Kosovo movedtoward joining the EU, daysafter reaching an agreementto normalize relations. A18n The president of Ger-many’s Bayern Munich soccerclub is under investigation forsuspected tax evasion. A18n Died: Richie Havens, 72,folk musician famed for hisperformance at Woodstock.

Business&Finance World-Wide

Follow the news all day at WSJ.com

Getty

Images

TODAY IN PERSONAL JOURNAL

Rx for Asthma: Play HardPLUS Could Medicine Relieve Depression in Hours?

What’s News–i i i i i i

By Devlin Barrett,Pervaiz Shallwaniand Evan Perez

Fresh Bomb Details RevealedProsecutors Describe Suspect’s ‘Calm’ Behavior; Charges Could Carry Death Penalty

U.S. banks are bowing to regu-lators’ concerns about the size ofexecutive pay and its role in fi-nancial industry risk-taking.

Seven large U.S. financial-services firms, including PNC Fi-nancial Services Group, CapitalOne Financial Corp., and Dis-cover Financial Services Inc.,said they are scaling back themaximum bonuses awarded toexecutives who beat their per-formance targets, according toregulatory filings.

Late last year, the Federal Re-serve began contacting banksabout their compensation plans,said a person familiar with thephone calls. In regulatory filings,many of the firms cited the Fedas a reason for changes.

Since the financial crisis theFed has urged banks to cap bo-nuses in cases where they couldencourage executives to take toomuch risk. Before the crisis,banks erred by focusing toomuch on short-term profits andtoo little on risk when designingbonus plans for employees andexecutives, according to the Fed.

While the moves involve bo-nuses for exceeding internal fi-nancial targets and not basic paypackages, they are the latest hitto Wall Street compensation,which has shriveled in recentyears because of smaller bonusesand poor stock performance. Astudy earlier this year by New

Pleaseturntothenextpage

BY AARON LUCCHETTIAND JULIE STEINBERG

RegulatorsGet BanksTo Rein InBonus Pay

Source: Washington Times/CPAC Straw Pollconducted March 14-16 of 2,930 conferenceregistrants

The Wall Street Journal

CPAC SnapshotSen. Rand Paul led amongpotential 2016 GOP presidentialcontenders in a March strawpoll of conservatives.

Top five responses

Ky. Senator Rand Paul

Fla. Senator Marco Rubio

Former Pa. Senator Rick Santorum

N.J. Governor Chris Christie

Wis. Congressman Paul Ryan

25%

23%

8%

7%

6%

Sen. Rand Paul’s big momentlasted nearly 13 hours.

To many, that’s how long ittook the Republican lawmaker to

transform fromfringe politician toovernight sensa-tion, in an old-fash-ioned Senate floorfilibuster to seekWhite House safe-guards against us-ing drones to killAmericans.

Billed as a spon-taneous gesture, the filibusterwas in fact the most successful ofseveral planned actions that be-gan when the eye doctor-turned-

senator decided in December toweigh a run for president.

In short order, Sen. Paul, ofKentucky, won a first-place finishin a straw poll at the Conserva-tive Political Action Conference,beating Florida Sen. Marco Rubioand New Jersey Gov. Chris Chris-tie in a field of potential 2016contenders; his new super PACwelcomed a flood of new donors;and he was invited to prestigiousspeaking engagements in key pri-mary states.

Although Sen. Paul says hehasn’t made a decision to run, heisn’t coy about his ambitions tobe a national force. “My new no-toriety allows me to talk aboutways to make the Republican

PleaseturntopageA20

BY MONICA LANGLEY

Rand Paul Tries to TransformAMoment Into a Movement

Sit Up Straight, and Other Advice From Big Motheri i i

Gadgets RemindYou to Exercise, ChewYour Food; Nagging or Nudging?

Reto Stamm hasn’t livedwith his parents for 12 years.Last fall, he got a digitalstand-in.

When the webcam on Mr.Stamm’s Mac computer caughthim slouching, software calledPostureTrack made an audiblebuzz. When he spent too muchtime on the couch, a thumb-size gadget tracking his physi-cal activity flashed “ucandoit.”When he failed too often atthese goals, or others like go-ing to bed on time and floss-

ing, a life-cataloging websitecalled Beeminder fined him$5 or more.

“It’s like hard advice froma friend,” says Mr. Stamm, a37-year-old software devel-oper from Half Moon Bay,Calif. The digital nudges, hesays, “kind of run your life.”

As inventors insert theInternet into ever morethings, they are making abusiness out of what yourmother used to needle youabout. Some call it “BigMother” tech—like GeorgeOrwell’s all-knowing BigBrother, but with your best

interests at heart.There’s a smart-utensil called

the HAPIfork that measures howfast you eat, prodding you to slowdown and chew. In a few weeks, astartup called Automatic will rollout a device that plugs into acar’s onboard computer andchirps with what its maker calls“subtle audio cues” when a driverspeeds, slams on the brakes ordoes other things behind thewheel that mother wouldn’t like.

Raymond Lancione got atoothbrush in December that pes-ters him about his dental hygiene.His $50 Beam toothbrush wire-

PleaseturntopageA20BeamBrush

BY GEOFFREY A. FOWLERAND SHIRA OVIDE

SAYING GOODBYE: Mourners left the funeral of Krystle Campbell, one of the victims of the Boston Marathonbombings, a week after the terrorist attack. Moments of silence were observed around the country.

Inside Suspect’s possible link to

militants investigated....... A6 Capital Journal: A test of

the melting pot ................... A7 Acquaintances recall normal

college student.................... A7

THERIGHTWAY?PART OFA SERIES

Kevork

Djansezian/Getty

Images

]TURN[MISSED[MOMENTS]]INTO][]MAGIC][ONES.]]The new BlackBerry® Z10 with Time Shift. Capture the perfect photo every time.See it in action at blackberry.com/z10

Screen image simulated. ©2013 BlackBerry. All rights reserved. BlackBerry® and related trademarks, names and logos are the property of Research In Motion Limited and are registered and/or used in the U.S. andcountries around the world. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

CM Y K CompositeCompositeMAGENTA CYAN BLACK

P2JW113000-5-A00100-10EFFB7178F CL,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NC,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WEBG,BM,CC,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PA,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO

P2JW113000-5-A00100-10EFFB7178F