2014 11 25 cmyk na 04 - the wall street...

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YELLOW ****** TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014 ~ VOL. CCLXIV NO. 125 WSJ.com HHHH $2.00 DJIA 17817.90 À 7.84 0.04% NASDAQ 4754.89 À 0.9% NIKKEI Closed (17357.51) STOXX 600 345.72 À 0.1% 10-YR. TREAS. À 3/32 , yield 2.308% OIL $75.78 g $0.73 GOLD $1,195.50 g $2.00 EURO $1.2442 YEN 118.27 TODAY IN MARKETPLACE The End of Impulse Shopping PERSONAL JOURNAL Easy Does It for Young Athletes CONTENTS Arts in Review.......... D5 CFO Journal................. B6 Corporate News B2,3,5 Global Finance............ C3 Health & Wellness D2,3 Heard on the Street C10 In the Markets....... C6,7 Markets Dashboard C4 Opinion................... A11-13 Sports.............................. D6 U.S. News................. A2-6 Weather Watch........ B6 World News......... A7-10 s Copyright 2014 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved > What’s News i i i World-Wide n A grand jury declined to in- dict a white police officer in the fatal shooting of an unarmed black teen in the St. Louis sub- urb of Ferguson, Mo., a decision that led to renewed unrest. A1 n The Justice Department is conducting its own probe to see if federal civil-rights laws were violated in the killing. A6 n Hagel is stepping down as defense secretary, forced out after the White House and the Pentagon chief couldn’t agree as war flared in the Mideast. A1 n Iran and world powers failed to reach a nuclear agreement and extended talks until the end of June 2015. A1 n The FDA warned against the use of morcellators on most women, likely curtailing the surgical procedure. A1 n Chain restaurants will be required to list calorie counts under new FDA rules. B1 n Tunisia’s presidential vote appeared headed for a runoff after the interim president fared better than expected. A7 n A Swiss museum accepted a trove of artworks bequeathed to it by the son of one of Hit- ler’s main art dealers. A10 n Saudi Arabia linked a deadly attack on a Shiite vil- lage to Islamic State. A8 n Arab attackers stabbed two Jewish seminary students in Jerusalem’s Old City. A8 n Protective suits to treat Ebola are in short supply, with U.S. demand climbing. A7 n An Italian doctor working for an NGO in Sierra Leone tested positive for Ebola. A7 i i i U nited Technologies’ CEO abruptly stepped down after six years at the helm. The company offered no ex- planation for his departure. B1 n Chinese banks may be re- luctant to pass along lower central-bank lending rates for fear of hurting their profits. C1 n A surge in Chinese stocks before Beijing’s rate cut Friday has drawn complaints by in- vestors who suspect leaks. C2 n A Texas woman was cleared in a 2004 crash that killed her fiancé after GM linked the accident to an ig- nition-switch flaw. B2 n Citigroup agreed to pay $15 million to resolve Finra allega- tions that it shared informa- tion selectively with clients. C1 n The EU won’t formally seek more deficit cuts from France and Italy in a preliminary bud- get review, officials said. A10 n BT is in early talks to buy Telefónica’s U.K. mobile busi- ness, O2. Analysts value O2 at roughly $14 billion. B3 n Stocks eked out fresh re- cords as investors cheered looser monetary policy. The Dow rose 7.84 to 17817.90. C7 n San Diego County’s pension fund is seeking a new invest- ment chief amid concerns over an outside firm’s strategy. C1 n Amtrak said that its oper- ating loss has fallen to the lowest level in four decades amid growing ridership. A2 n Amazon has introduced a service in three cities aimed at connecting customers to local service providers. B5 Business & Finance Chuck Hagel is stepping down as defense secretary, forced out after White House officials and the Pentagon chief couldn’t agree as war flared again in the Middle East. Mr. Hagel had been tapped two years ago for the top Penta- gon job with the mandate of overseeing budget cuts and keep- ing the U.S. out of another over- seas war. A top credential was a shared belief with President Ba- rack Obama in limiting the reli- ance on American military power to accomplish foreign policy goals. Four months into an air war against Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria, Messrs. Obama and Hagel agreed “another secre- tary might be better suited to meet those challenges,” said Josh Earnest, the White House press secretary. Mr. Obama could pick a nomi- nee to succeed Mr. Hagel as soon as next week. Top candidates in- clude Michèle Flournoy, a former undersecretary of defense, and Ashton Carter, a former deputy secretary of defense, with Ms. Flournoy considered the front- runner, officials said. Officials at both the Pentagon and the White House signaled that Mr. Hagel’s departure came amid mutual dissatisfaction over the renewed war in Iraq and the administration’s wider Please turn to page A4 By Julian E. Barnes, Carol E. Lee and Adam Entous Hagel Resigns Under Pressure The top U.S. health regulator warned Monday that a common surgical tool shouldn’t be used on most women during hysterecto- mies, a decision that caps nearly a year of debate and is expected to sharply limit a procedure the agency said can spread hidden cancer. The Food and Drug Adminis- tration used its authority to call for an immediate “black box” warning for laparoscopic power morcellators, the strongest cau- tion the agency issues. Typically, such warnings on product labels undergo a lengthy comment pe- riod before being completed, law- yers for device makers said. “We believe that in the vast majority of women, the procedure should not be performed,” said William Maisel, deputy director for science and chief scientist at the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health. The move strengthens guid- ance the FDA issued in April and draws tight boundaries around use of a device that divided gyne- cologists and alarmed women. Morcellators were being used in thousands of minimally invasive procedures every year to remove growths known as fibroids. While fibroids are benign, they can be hard to distinguish from a dan- gerous form of cancer called uter- ine sarcoma, which can’t be reli- ably detected before surgery. Morcellators, which typically use Please turn to page A5 BY JON KAMP AND JENNIFER LEVITZ FDA Gives Surgical Tool Its Strongest Warning NEW YORK—Every fall, Jay- gopal Seal is handed a most un- enviable task: getting rid of the pungent apricot-like seeds that drop from the ginkgo tree in front of the Upper West Side food store where he works. “It’s not very pleasant,” Mr. Seal said of having to deal with the seeds, which smell some- thing like a mix of vomit and pu- trid cheese. He picks them all up twice a day, once before opening the store, and whenever he can in the afternoon. “You’ve got to grab them before people start stepping on them,” he said. His ordeal usually ends in No- vember, he says, when a group of Chinese-speaking foragers in- evitably shows up one morning to shake the tree down and pick the sidewalk clean. “They say this neighborhood is a real gold mine,” Mr. Seal recalls. Ginkgo seeds smell horrible, and their toxic flesh may cause rashes. But every fall, they are at the center of a citywide scaven- ger hunt. “We eat them,” Wang Tong said as she looked for fallen seeds under several ginkgo trees on Roosevelt Island one late Oc- tober afternoon. Grabbing one off the ground, she gently squeezed its ripe orange flesh to reveal a white, pistachio-sized nut that, once shelled, can be cooked. “They’re great with rice, or in soups,” she said. The taste itself isn’t over- whelming: The nuts pick up the flavor of whatever they are cooked in. But their blandness has a foil in the foul stench that emanates from their fleshy cov- ering, which has earned the tree an unenviable moniker: ginkgo stinko. Ginkgo trees, distinguishable by their fan-shaped leaves, are ubiquitous in cities, thanks in part to their extraordinary resis- tance to diseases, pollution and pretty much everything else. At over 200 million years old, they survived whatever killed the di- nosaurs, and some of them with- stood the atomic bomb blast that struck Hiroshima in 1945. “They leafed out again the Please turn to page A10 BY DAVID MARCELIS In Ginkgo Season, One Man’s Soup Is Another Man’s Stench i i i Cooked Seeds Can Be Tasty, but Many Cry Foul Over Raw Stink Ginkgo seeds VIENNA—World powers failed to reach a nuclear agreement with Iran and extended talks for seven months, exposing deep di- vides between the sides and put- ting the diplomatic effort at risk from domestic discord in the na- tions involved. After negotiators failed Mon- day for the second time this year to meet a deadline for a deal, diplomats said they needed until the end of June 2015 to finalize the terms. They agreed to roll over an interim agreement signed last year that caps some of Iran’s nuclear work in ex- change for an easing of Western economic sanctions. Secretary of State John Kerry lobbied for the extension at the latest round of talks in Vienna, arguing significant progress had been made and a breakdown in negotiations risked further de- stabilizing the Middle East. “The nuclear program in Iran as we negotiate is frozen,” Mr. Kerry told reporters at the end of a week of exhaustive negotiations with his Iranian counterpart, Javad Zarif. “We would be fools to walk away from a situation where the break- out time has already been ex- panded rather than narrowed, and where the world is safer because this program is in place.” The U.S. and its allies suspect Iran’s nuclear work is aimed to- ward producing a weapon, some- thing Tehran has repeatedly de- nied. The extension leaves the pro- cess vulnerable to greater do- mestic opposition in the U.S. Re- publican lawmakers poised to gain control of the U.S. Congress in January quickly challenged the Obama administration’s right to continue its Iran outreach. A number of senators called for the quick imposition of new eco- nomic sanctions on Iran, citing the lack of an agreement despite more than a year of talks. Iranian officials have said Please turn to page A8 BY JAY SOLOMON AND LAURENCE NORMAN World Powers, Iran Fail To Negotiate Nuclear Deal Gerald F. Seib: Changing world shrunk Hagel’s appeal................ A4 GOP calls for policy revamp.. A4 United Technologies CEO’s Hasty Exit NO EXPLANATION: Louis Chenevert is leaving the conglomerate that makes everything from Sikorsky helicopters to Otis elevators. The company didn’t offer a reason for the abrupt retirement. B1 Bloomberg News CLAYTON, Mo.— A grand jury declined to indict a white police officer in the shooting of an un- armed black teenager whose death in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson became a national flash point on race, justice and policing. The decision released on Monday night led to renewed unrest after the region faced weeks of protest that turned vio- lent at times this summer. Police within hours of the decision were using smoke canisters, teargas and non-lethal shotgun rounds to disperse crowds in Ferguson as they reported inci- dents of looting and buildings being set on fire. The grand jury was charged with determining whether a crime occurred when Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson shot 18-year-old Michael Brown in August after an altercation be- tween the two. St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Robert Mc- Culloch said the 12-member panel didn’t find probable cause for five possible charges that ranged from first-degree murder to involuntary manslaughter, af- ter hearing more than 70 hours of testimony from about 60 wit- nesses. “All decisions in the criminal- justice system must be deter- mined by the physical and scien- tific evidence, and the credible testimony corroborated by that evidence. Not in response to public outcry or for political ex- pediency,” Mr. McCulloch said. The shooting of Mr. Brown in August gained national attention as protests spread to other cities and President Barack Obama and Congress weighed in. On Mon- day night, Mr. Obama urged calm. “We need to recognize that the situation in Ferguson speaks to broader challenges that we still face as a nation,” Mr. Obama said. The national debate started over the death of Mr. Brown and, more broadly, the treatment of young, black men by police. It grew to include how police re- sponded to protesters in Fergu- son and the use of surplus mili- tary equipment such as Humvees by local police departments. On Monday, the crowd gathered at the Ferguson police station ini- tially reacted quietly to the grand Please turn to page A6 By Ben Kesling, Mark Peters and Pervaiz Shallwani Officer Not Charged in Killing Grand Jury Declines to Indict Ferguson, Mo., Policeman in Shooting Death of Teen Michael Brown’s mother, Lesley McSpadden, in plaid scarf, with protesters Monday evening after the grand jury’s decision was announced. Larry W. Smith/European Pressphoto Agency Legal fight extends beyond the grand jury’s decision................... A6 C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW329000-6-A00100-1--------XA CL,CN,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,BP,CC,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PA,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO P2JW329000-6-A00100-1--------XA

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Page 1: 2014 11 25 cmyk NA 04 - The Wall Street Journalonline.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/pageone112514.pdf · central-bank lending ratesfor fear of hurting their profits. C1 n Asurge

YELLOW

* * * * * * TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014 ~ VOL. CCLXIV NO. 125 WSJ.com HHHH $2 .00

DJIA 17817.90 À 7.84 0.04% NASDAQ 4754.89 À 0.9% NIKKEI Closed (17357.51) STOXX600 345.72 À 0.1% 10-YR. TREAS. À 3/32 , yield 2.308% OIL $75.78 g $0.73 GOLD $1,195.50 g $2.00 EURO $1.2442 YEN 118.27

TODAY IN MARKETPLACE

The End of Impulse ShoppingPERSONAL JOURNAL Easy Does It for Young Athletes

CONTENTSArts in Review.......... D5CFO Journal................. B6Corporate News B2,3,5Global Finance............ C3Health & Wellness D2,3Heard on the Street C10

In the Markets....... C6,7Markets Dashboard C4Opinion................... A11-13Sports.............................. D6U.S. News................. A2-6Weather Watch........ B6World News......... A7-10

s Copyright 2014 Dow Jones & Company.All Rights Reserved

>

What’sNews

i i i

World-WidenAgrand jury declined to in-dict a white police officer in thefatal shooting of an unarmedblack teen in the St. Louis sub-urb of Ferguson,Mo., a decisionthat led to renewed unrest.A1n The Justice Department isconducting its own probe tosee if federal civil-rights lawswere violated in the killing. A6nHagel is stepping down asdefense secretary, forced outafter the White House and thePentagon chief couldn’t agreeas war flared in theMideast. A1n Iran and world powersfailed to reach a nuclearagreement and extended talksuntil the end of June 2015. A1n The FDA warned againstthe use of morcellators onmost women, likely curtailingthe surgical procedure. A1n Chain restaurants will berequired to list calorie countsunder new FDA rules. B1n Tunisia’s presidential voteappeared headed for a runoffafter the interim presidentfared better than expected. A7n A Swiss museum accepteda trove of artworks bequeathedto it by the son of one of Hit-ler’s main art dealers. A10n Saudi Arabia linked adeadly attack on a Shiite vil-lage to Islamic State. A8nArab attackers stabbedtwo Jewish seminary studentsin Jerusalem’s Old City. A8n Protective suits to treatEbola are in short supply, withU.S. demand climbing. A7n An Italian doctor workingfor an NGO in Sierra Leonetested positive for Ebola. A7

i i i

United Technologies’ CEOabruptly stepped down

after six years at the helm.The company offered no ex-planation for his departure. B1n Chinese banksmay be re-luctant to pass along lowercentral-bank lending rates forfear of hurting their profits. C1nA surge in Chinese stocksbefore Beijing’s rate cut Fridayhas drawn complaints by in-vestors who suspect leaks. C2n A Texas woman wascleared in a 2004 crash thatkilled her fiancé after GMlinked the accident to an ig-nition-switch flaw. B2nCitigroup agreed to pay $15million to resolve Finra allega-tions that it shared informa-tion selectively with clients. C1nThe EUwon’t formally seekmore deficit cuts from Franceand Italy in a preliminary bud-get review, officials said. A10n BT is in early talks to buyTelefónica’s U.K. mobile busi-ness, O2. Analysts value O2at roughly $14 billion. B3n Stocks eked out fresh re-cords as investors cheeredlooser monetary policy. TheDow rose 7.84 to 17817.90. C7n San Diego County’s pensionfund is seeking a new invest-ment chief amid concerns overan outside firm’s strategy. C1n Amtrak said that its oper-ating loss has fallen to thelowest level in four decadesamid growing ridership. A2n Amazon has introduced aservice in three cities aimedat connecting customers tolocal service providers. B5

Business&Finance

Chuck Hagel is stepping downas defense secretary, forced outafter White House officials andthe Pentagon chief couldn’t agreeas war flared again in the MiddleEast.

Mr. Hagel had been tappedtwo years ago for the top Penta-gon job with the mandate ofoverseeing budget cuts and keep-ing the U.S. out of another over-seas war. A top credential was ashared belief with President Ba-rack Obama in limiting the reli-ance on American military powerto accomplish foreign policygoals.

Four months into an air waragainst Islamic State militants inIraq and Syria, Messrs. Obamaand Hagel agreed “another secre-tary might be better suited tomeet those challenges,” said JoshEarnest, the White House presssecretary.

Mr. Obama could pick a nomi-nee to succeed Mr. Hagel as soonas next week. Top candidates in-clude Michèle Flournoy, a formerundersecretary of defense, andAshton Carter, a former deputysecretary of defense, with Ms.Flournoy considered the front-runner, officials said.

Officials at both the Pentagonand the White House signaledthat Mr. Hagel’s departure cameamid mutual dissatisfactionover the renewed war in Iraqand the administration’s wider

PleaseturntopageA4

By Julian E. Barnes,Carol E. Lee

and Adam Entous

HagelResignsUnderPressure

The top U.S. health regulatorwarned Monday that a commonsurgical tool shouldn’t be used onmost women during hysterecto-mies, a decision that caps nearlya year of debate and is expectedto sharply limit a procedure theagency said can spread hiddencancer.

The Food and Drug Adminis-tration used its authority to callfor an immediate “black box”warning for laparoscopic powermorcellators, the strongest cau-tion the agency issues. Typically,such warnings on product labelsundergo a lengthy comment pe-riod before being completed, law-yers for device makers said.

“We believe that in the vast

majority of women, the procedureshould not be performed,” saidWilliam Maisel, deputy directorfor science and chief scientist atthe FDA’s Center for Devices andRadiological Health.

The move strengthens guid-ance the FDA issued in April anddraws tight boundaries arounduse of a device that divided gyne-cologists and alarmed women.Morcellators were being used inthousands of minimally invasiveprocedures every year to removegrowths known as fibroids. Whilefibroids are benign, they can behard to distinguish from a dan-gerous form of cancer called uter-ine sarcoma, which can’t be reli-ably detected before surgery.Morcellators, which typically use

PleaseturntopageA5

BY JON KAMP AND JENNIFER LEVITZ

FDAGives Surgical ToolIts Strongest WarningNEW YORK—Every fall, Jay-

gopal Seal is handed a most un-enviable task: getting rid of thepungent apricot-like seedsthat drop from the ginkgotree in front of the UpperWest Side food store where heworks.

“It’s not very pleasant,” Mr.Seal said of having to deal withthe seeds, which smell some-thing like a mix of vomit and pu-trid cheese. He picks them all uptwice a day, once before openingthe store, and whenever he canin the afternoon. “You’ve got tograb them before people startstepping on them,” he said.

His ordeal usually ends in No-vember, he says, when a groupof Chinese-speaking foragers in-evitably shows up one morningto shake the tree down and pickthe sidewalk clean. “They say

this neighborhood is a real goldmine,” Mr. Seal recalls.

Ginkgo seeds smell horrible,and their toxic flesh may causerashes. But every fall, they are atthe center of a citywide scaven-ger hunt.

“We eat them,” Wang Tongsaid as she looked for fallenseeds under several ginkgo treeson Roosevelt Island one late Oc-tober afternoon. Grabbing oneoff the ground, she gentlysqueezed its ripe orange flesh to

reveal a white, pistachio-sizednut that, once shelled, can becooked. “They’re great with rice,or in soups,” she said.

The taste itself isn’t over-whelming: The nuts pick up theflavor of whatever they arecooked in. But their blandnesshas a foil in the foul stench thatemanates from their fleshy cov-ering, which has earned the treean unenviable moniker: ginkgostinko.

Ginkgo trees, distinguishableby their fan-shaped leaves, areubiquitous in cities, thanks inpart to their extraordinary resis-tance to diseases, pollution andpretty much everything else. Atover 200 million years old, theysurvived whatever killed the di-nosaurs, and some of them with-stood the atomic bomb blastthat struck Hiroshima in 1945.

“They leafed out again thePleaseturntopageA10

BY DAVID MARCELIS

In Ginkgo Season, One Man’s Soup Is Another Man’s Stenchi i i

Cooked Seeds Can Be Tasty, but Many Cry Foul Over Raw Stink

Ginkgo seeds

VIENNA—World powers failedto reach a nuclear agreementwith Iran and extended talks forseven months, exposing deep di-vides between the sides and put-ting the diplomatic effort at riskfrom domestic discord in the na-tions involved.

After negotiators failed Mon-day for the second time this yearto meet a deadline for a deal,diplomats said they needed untilthe end of June 2015 to finalizethe terms. They agreed to rollover an interim agreementsigned last year that caps someof Iran’s nuclear work in ex-

change for an easing of Westerneconomic sanctions.

Secretary of State John Kerrylobbied for the extension at thelatest round of talks in Vienna,arguing significant progress hadbeen made and a breakdown innegotiations risked further de-stabilizing the Middle East.

“The nuclear program in Iran aswe negotiate is frozen,”Mr. Kerrytold reporters at the end of a weekof exhaustive negotiations with hisIranian counterpart, Javad Zarif.“We would be fools to walk awayfrom a situation where the break-out time has already been ex-panded rather than narrowed, andwhere the world is safer becausethis program is in place.”

The U.S. and its allies suspectIran’s nuclear work is aimed to-ward producing a weapon, some-thing Tehran has repeatedly de-nied.

The extension leaves the pro-cess vulnerable to greater do-mestic opposition in the U.S. Re-publican lawmakers poised togain control of the U.S. Congressin January quickly challengedthe Obama administration’s rightto continue its Iran outreach. Anumber of senators called forthe quick imposition of new eco-nomic sanctions on Iran, citingthe lack of an agreement despitemore than a year of talks.

Iranian officials have saidPleaseturntopageA8

BY JAY SOLOMONAND LAURENCE NORMAN

World Powers, Iran FailTo Negotiate Nuclear Deal

Gerald F. Seib: Changing worldshrunk Hagel’s appeal................ A4

GOP calls for policy revamp.. A4

United Technologies CEO’s Hasty Exit

NO EXPLANATION: Louis Chenevert is leaving the conglomerate thatmakes everything from Sikorsky helicopters to Otis elevators. Thecompany didn’t offer a reason for the abrupt retirement. B1

Bloomberg

New

s

CLAYTON, Mo.— A grand jurydeclined to indict a white policeofficer in the shooting of an un-armed black teenager whosedeath in the St. Louis suburb ofFerguson became a nationalflash point on race, justice andpolicing.

The decision released onMonday night led to renewedunrest after the region facedweeks of protest that turned vio-lent at times this summer. Policewithin hours of the decision

were using smoke canisters,teargas and non-lethal shotgunrounds to disperse crowds inFerguson as they reported inci-dents of looting and buildingsbeing set on fire.

The grand jury was chargedwith determining whether acrime occurred when Fergusonpolice officer Darren Wilson shot18-year-old Michael Brown inAugust after an altercation be-tween the two. St. Louis CountyProsecuting Attorney Robert Mc-Culloch said the 12-memberpanel didn’t find probable causefor five possible charges thatranged from first-degree murderto involuntary manslaughter, af-

ter hearing more than 70 hoursof testimony from about 60 wit-nesses.

“All decisions in the criminal-justice system must be deter-mined by the physical and scien-tific evidence, and the credibletestimony corroborated by thatevidence. Not in response topublic outcry or for political ex-pediency,” Mr. McCulloch said.

The shooting of Mr. Brown inAugust gained national attentionas protests spread to other citiesand President Barack Obama andCongress weighed in. On Mon-day night, Mr. Obama urgedcalm. “We need to recognizethat the situation in Ferguson

speaks to broader challengesthat we still face as a nation,”Mr. Obama said.

The national debate startedover the death of Mr. Brown and,more broadly, the treatment ofyoung, black men by police. Itgrew to include how police re-sponded to protesters in Fergu-son and the use of surplus mili-tary equipment such as Humveesby local police departments.

OnMonday, the crowd gatheredat the Ferguson police station ini-tially reacted quietly to the grand

PleaseturntopageA6

By Ben Kesling,Mark Peters

and Pervaiz Shallwani

Officer Not Charged inKillingGrand Jury Declines to Indict Ferguson, Mo., Policeman in Shooting Death of Teen

Michael Brown’s mother, Lesley McSpadden, in plaid scarf, with protesters Monday evening after the grand jury’s decision was announced.

LarryW.S

mith/Eu

ropean

Presspho

toAgency

Legal fight extends beyond thegrand jury’s decision................... A6

CM Y K CompositeCompositeMAGENTA CYAN BLACK

P2JW329000-6-A00100-1--------XA CL,CN,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NC,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WEBG,BM,BP,CC,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PA,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO

P2JW329000-6-A00100-1--------XA