2015 01 09 cmyk na 04 - the wall street...

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YELLOW ****** FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 2015 ~ VOL. CCLXV NO. 7 WSJ.com HHHH $3.00 DJIA 17907.87 À 323.35 1.8% NASDAQ 4736.19 À 1.8% NIKKEI 17167.10 À 1.7% STOXX 600 342.35 À 2.7% 10-YR. TREAS. g 18/32 , yield 2.016% OIL $48.79 À $0.14 GOLD $1,208.40 g $2.20 EURO $1.1795 YEN 119.66 TODAY IN MANSION An Enclave With Star Power ARENA The Super Bowl of College Football Agence France Presse/Getty Images (Wahlberg) CONTENTS Books................................ D5 Corporate News B2,3,5 Global Finance............ C3 Heard on the Street C8 In the Markets........... C4 Movies......................... D3,4 Opinion..................... A9-11 Sports....................... D1,2,8 Technology................... B4 Theater ........................... D7 U.S. News................. A2-4 Weather Watch........ B6 World News............ A5-7 s Copyright 2015 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved > What’s News i i i World-Wide n One of the suspects in the deadly rampage at a French magazine is believed to have received training from an al Qaeda offshoot in Yemen. A manhunt continued for two alleged gunmen. A1, A6-7 n Several European nations bolstered security measures as the Paris shooting rein- forced fears of gun attacks. A6 n Congress moved closer to a likely approval of the Keystone pipeline as a Senate panel ad- vanced the bill and the House prepared for a Friday vote. A4 n Low gasoline prices are spurring some state and fed- eral officials to call for a gas- tax increase to repair roads. A2 n The Pentagon plans to close a number of military bases in Europe in a bid to save an esti- mated $500 million a year. A5 n Obama proposed offering free community college nation- wide. The plan would require legislation in Congress. A3 n Democratic Sen. Boxer of California said she won’t run for re-election in 2016. A4 n The Senate voted to keep a terrorism-insurance program in place through 2020. A4 n The NFL didn’t see a video of the Rice domestic-violence incident before the tape’s pub- lic release, a probe found. D8 n Sri Lanka’s Rajapaksa, trailing in a presidential vote, pledged a smooth transition of power, a spokesman said. A5 n The U.S. urged Saudi Arabia to rescind its sentencing of an activist that includes the pun- ishment of 1,000 lashes. A5 i i i T rian launched a fight against DuPont to add four directors to the board, setting up one of the biggest-ever bat- tles by an activist investor. A1 n Stocks surged on expecta- tions of continued easy-money policies. The Dow jumped 323.35 to 17907.87, edging into positive territory for 2015. C1 n Borrowers who took out auto loans over the past year are missing payments at the highest level since 2008 amid a rise in subprime car loans. C1 n Natural-gas prices slid to a more than two-year low de- spite frigid weather on expec- tations of ample supplies. C1 n Santander plans to raise up to $8.88 billion by selling new shares amid concern the bank’s capital cushion is too thin. C1 n NHTSA fined Honda $70 million for failing to report po- tential safety problems in vehi- cles for over a decade. B3 n Janus’s chairman said he didn’t know that one broker- age office accounted for most of the cash in Gross’s fund. C2 n Advertisers are paying up to $1 million for 30 seconds of air- time on ESPN’s telecast of the college football title game. B1 n A full report by the Fed’s watchdog sheds more light on stumbles by the New York Fed in the “London whale” case. C3 n Telecom companies are mo- bilizing to challenge any move by the FCC to regulate the In- ternet as a public utility. B1 n Coke is cutting at least 1,600 jobs world-wide in response to sluggish soda sales. B3 Business & Finance PARIS—One of the French- born brothers who allegedly stormed the newsroom of the sa- tirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in the deadly rampage that left 12 dead is believed by U.S. and French intelligence to have re- ceived weapons training from an al Qaeda offshoot in Yemen, U.S. officials said Thursday. The brother, Said Kouachi, was allegedly trained under the auspices of al Qaeda in the Ara- bian Peninsula during 2011, the officials said, but there is so far no evidence the group directed, ordered or monitored the attack. “We know they were in- spired,” another U.S. official said, “but we do not know the extent they were associated with al Qaeda.” French Interior Minister Ber- nard Cazeneuve said Thursday that the man, 34 years old, was identified from video footage cap- tured by neighbors during the Wednesday attack. A French na- tional identity card with his name was found in an abandoned get- away car, he said. The ID card led investigators to the court files of his younger brother, Chérif Kouachi. Authorities first focused their attention on Chérif Kouachi, who has a previous terror-related conviction. Said Kouachi has no Please turn to page A6 By David Gauthier-Villars, Noémie Bisserbe and Julian E. Barnes Massacre Suspect Trained In Yemen U.S. Ties Man Wanted in Paris Attack to al Qaeda Europe’s ascendant anti-im- migration and nationalist move- ments tried to capitalize on a deadly attack in Paris this week to trumpet a theme they have pressed for years, but rarely be- fore with this much urgency: a loss of cultural identity. “This bloodshed shows that anyone who ignored or laughed off the concerns about the threat Islamism poses is a fool,” said Alexander Gauland, a leader of Alternative for Germany, an up- start party that wants to limit immigration and take Germany out of the euro. In the past, such rhetoric would be quickly dismissed as the ramblings of the political fringe. But these parties, from France to the Netherlands to the U.K., have been on the march in recent years, fueled by growing public discontent over a sense among many Europeans that their traditional way of life is threatened. Europe’s persistent economic woes and the growing—and oft- resented—influence of the Euro- pean Union in national affairs have provided an opening to these movements, which critics say prey on their citizens’ basest fears. These groups have long targeted Islam, whose growing presence on the continent they say threatens Europe’s cultural mores. The radicalization of a gener- ation of dispossessed Muslims in Middle Eastern wars in Iraq and Syria has only deepened fears, helping these parties to score their best showing ever in May’s European Parliamentary vote. “Western governments have to realize that we are at war,” said Geert Wilders, the leader of the Netherlands’ Party for Free- dom. Europe’s establishment par- ties worry that the attack pro- vides the nationalists more am- munition to sow xenophobia. Those tensions bubbled to the surface in France on Thursday. Marine Le Pen, the French leader of the National Front, the party which finished first in last year’s European elections with 25% of the vote, claimed her party had been excluded from a march of unity with other politi- cal groups on Sunday. “Believe me, this will be a stain on the French political class,” said Ms. Le Pen, who will nevertheless meet with French President Please turn to page A7 BY MATTHEW KARNITSCHNIG AND WILLIAM HOROBIN A Backlash Swells in Europe MIRABEL, Quebec—Just after he became Bombar- dier Inc.’s chief executive in 2008, Pierre Beaudoin bet the future of the company his grandfather founded on a pair of passenger jets rivaling those from the two titans of global aerospace. Bombardier had long produced smaller planes for wealthy individuals, companies and regional airlines. The technologically advanced, more fuel efficient CSeries would be its first jets capable of seating well over 100 passengers, aiming at a slice of the market dominated by Boeing Co. and Airbus Group NV. But more than six years after the CSeries’ first or- ders, Mr. Beaudoin is revamping Bombardier and re- taking control of the project to keep it from becom- ing a multibillion-dollar albatross. In the latest blow, Bombardier said Thursday it was parting ways with its chief commercial-aircraft salesman. A series of missteps have shaken the proj- ect, starting with development problems that de- layed the first model’s planned late-2013 delivery date by as much as two years, and continuing through software-development snags and a major engine failure last May that halted test flights for 100 days. The cost of the CSeries has mushroomed, and the Swedish carrier lined up to be the first operator of CSeries planes declined the role in August—the sec- ond customer to do so. Bombardier said it has se- cured a new launch airline, though it isn’t yet nam- ing it. Meanwhile, Airbus and Boeing, as well as Brazil’s Embraer SA, have sharpened competition in the broader single-aisle market—the industry’s work- horse planes of 100 to 240 seats—that the CSeries must contend with. The other jet makers are upgrad- ing existing models to offer improved fuel effi- ciency—which makes planes cheaper per seat to op- erate—while aggressively discounting sales prices. Combined with other savings for airlines that come from only making incremental changes in their fleets, the moves have eaten into the cost efficiency of Bombardier’s new jets. In an interview, Bombardier’s 52-year-old scion says he is confident the efforts will pay off. A major restructuring announced in July culled an entire Please turn to page A12 BY JON OSTROWER AND PAUL VIEIRA TROUBLED BET Bigger Proves Far From Better For Canadian Jet Maker Aurelien Meunier/Getty Images Kimberly Kilbride is a profes- sional cuddler. For $80 an hour, or up to $400 for an overnight gig, the 33-year- old mother of three dons flannel pajama bottoms, puts away her family pictures and two pit bull mix dogs and invites clients into her bedroom in Highland, N.Y., to snuggle. Once the spooning be- gins, she insists that it stay strictly platonic. The cuddle-for-hire business is taking off—even though the clothes stay on. Thousands of cus- tomers across the country are booking appointments with pro- fessional cuddlers in at least 16 states. The snugglers squeeze, tickle and bearhug clients for a fixed rate. Patrons who booked these services out of mere curios- ity say they have become hooked on their therapeutic benefits. “I am a convert,” says Melissa Duclos-Yourdon, 35, a freelance writer and editor in Vancouver, Wash. She originally hired a cud- dler after hearing about it from members of her book club, think- ing it could provide fodder for an essay. Once cuddled, “I felt trans- formed,” she says. While snuggling businesses have existed for years, interest is accelerating with newer online apps and meet-up services. Plans are under way for a cuddling con- vention. One free app, Cuddlr, launched in September and already has had about 240,000 downloads, accord- ing to Charlie Williams, a founder and developer. The location-based social-media application allows users to find people near them to cuddle with. Between 7,000 and Please turn to page A12 BY STEPHANIE ARMOUR Just Want to Cuddle? Now You Can, for $80 an Hour i i i Professional Snugglers Embrace More Clients; Spooning, Tickling Sessions Kelly Peterson and client DARK NIGHT: Lights on the Eiffel Tower in Paris were turned off for five minutes Thursday in tribute to the victims of this week’s terror attack. Stocks Go Up...Down...Up Again 25 22 Source: WSJ Market Data Group The Wall Street Journal Thursday: 17907.87 323.35 18000 16000 16500 17000 17500 400 –400 –200 –300 0 200 300 100 –100 July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Point change from previous day DJIA daily close Moves of 100 or more points since July up days down days BIG MOVES: Large stock swings have picked up lately, but the Dow’s rally Thursday brings it within 1% of a record. Thursday’s buying came as large investors looked to take advantage of lower prices. C1 Nelson Peltz’s investment firm launched a fight against DuPont Co. to add four directors to the company’s board, setting up one of the biggest battles ever initiated by an activist investor. The showdown follows 18 months of bickering, and pits the competing ideas of Trian Fund Management LP, one of the world’s biggest activist-investment funds, against those of a 212-year- old stalwart of U.S. industry. With a market capitalization of $67.5 billion, DuPont ranks among the largest-ever targets of a proxy fight by an activist investor. The board nominations mark the first such fight in almost a decade for Trian, which prefers to work with companies out of the public eye. Trian owns around 2.7% of Du- Pont’s shares. Late Thursday DuPont said its board would review Trian’s nomi- nees and “make a recommenda- tion that is in the best interest of all shareholders.” The company strongly defended its performance and governance under Chairman and Chief Executive Ellen Kullman and said that, “Despite numerous efforts to engage construc- tively…Trian has chosen this path with the potential to disrupt our Company at a key stage of execu- tion against our plan.” Trian’s four nominees, which Please turn to the next page BY DAVID BENOIT AND JACOB BUNGE Activist’s Bid Sets Stage For Brawl for DuPont Terror Attack in Paris Europe steps up security measures ..................................... A6 Ties suggest resurgent al Qaeda .......................................... A6 Assault tests France’s secular model................................... A7 C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW009000-6-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 P2JW009000-6-A00100-1--------XA

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  • YELLOW

    * * * * * * FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 2015 ~ VOL. CCLXV NO. 7 WSJ.com HHHH $3 .00

    DJIA 17907.87 À 323.35 1.8% NASDAQ 4736.19 À 1.8% NIKKEI 17167.10 À 1.7% STOXX600 342.35 À 2.7% 10-YR. TREAS. g 18/32 , yield 2.016% OIL $48.79 À $0.14 GOLD $1,208.40 g $2.20 EURO $1.1795 YEN 119.66

    TODAY IN MANSION

    An Enclave With Star PowerARENA The Super Bowl of College Football

    AgenceFrance

    Presse/G

    etty

    Images

    (Wahlberg)

    CONTENTSBooks................................ D5Corporate News B2,3,5Global Finance............ C3Heard on the Street C8In the Markets........... C4Movies......................... D3,4

    Opinion..................... A9-11Sports....................... D1,2,8Technology................... B4Theater........................... D7U.S. News................. A2-4Weather Watch........ B6World News............ A5-7

    s Copyright 2015 Dow Jones & Company.All Rights Reserved

    >

    What’sNews

    i i i

    World-WidenOne of the suspects in thedeadly rampage at a Frenchmagazine is believed to havereceived training from an alQaeda offshoot in Yemen. Amanhunt continued for twoalleged gunmen. A1, A6-7n Several European nationsbolstered security measuresas the Paris shooting rein-forced fears of gun attacks. A6nCongress moved closer to alikely approval of the Keystonepipeline as a Senate panel ad-vanced the bill and the Houseprepared for a Friday vote. A4n Low gasoline prices arespurring some state and fed-eral officials to call for a gas-tax increase to repair roads. A2nThe Pentagon plans to closea number of military bases inEurope in a bid to save an esti-mated $500million a year. A5n Obama proposed offeringfree community college nation-wide. The plan would requirelegislation in Congress. A3nDemocratic Sen. Boxer ofCalifornia said she won’t runfor re-election in 2016.A4n The Senate voted to keep aterrorism-insurance programin place through 2020. A4nThe NFL didn’t see a videoof the Rice domestic-violenceincident before the tape’s pub-lic release, a probe found. D8n Sri Lanka’s Rajapaksa,trailing in a presidential vote,pledged a smooth transition ofpower, a spokesman said. A5nThe U.S. urged Saudi Arabiato rescind its sentencing of anactivist that includes the pun-ishment of 1,000 lashes. A5

    i i i

    Trian launched a fightagainst DuPont to add fourdirectors to the board, settingup one of the biggest-ever bat-tles by an activist investor. A1n Stocks surged on expecta-tions of continued easy-moneypolicies. The Dow jumped323.35 to 17907.87, edging intopositive territory for 2015. C1nBorrowers who took outauto loans over the past yearare missing payments at thehighest level since 2008 amid arise in subprime car loans. C1nNatural-gas prices slid to amore than two-year low de-spite frigid weather on expec-tations of ample supplies. C1n Santander plans to raise upto $8.88 billion by selling newshares amid concern the bank’scapital cushion is too thin. C1nNHTSA finedHonda $70million for failing to report po-tential safety problems in vehi-cles for over a decade. B3n Janus’s chairman said hedidn’t know that one broker-age office accounted for mostof the cash in Gross’s fund. C2nAdvertisers are paying up to$1million for 30 seconds of air-time on ESPN’s telecast of thecollege football title game. B1n A full report by the Fed’swatchdog sheds more light onstumbles by the New York Fedin the “London whale” case. C3nTelecom companies aremo-bilizing to challenge anymoveby the FCC to regulate the In-ternet as a public utility. B1nCoke is cutting at least 1,600jobs world-wide in responseto sluggish soda sales. B3

    Business&Finance

    PARIS—One of the French-born brothers who allegedlystormed the newsroom of the sa-tirical magazine Charlie Hebdo inthe deadly rampage that left 12dead is believed by U.S. andFrench intelligence to have re-ceived weapons training from anal Qaeda offshoot in Yemen, U.S.officials said Thursday.

    The brother, Said Kouachi,was allegedly trained under theauspices of al Qaeda in the Ara-bian Peninsula during 2011, theofficials said, but there is so farno evidence the group directed,ordered or monitored the attack.

    “We know they were in-spired,” another U.S. official said,“but we do not know the extentthey were associated with alQaeda.”

    French Interior Minister Ber-nard Cazeneuve said Thursdaythat the man, 34 years old, wasidentified from video footage cap-tured by neighbors during theWednesday attack. A French na-tional identity card with his namewas found in an abandoned get-away car, he said. The ID card ledinvestigators to the court files ofhis younger brother, ChérifKouachi.

    Authorities first focused theirattention on Chérif Kouachi, whohas a previous terror-relatedconviction. Said Kouachi has no

    PleaseturntopageA6

    By DavidGauthier-Villars,Noémie Bisserbe

    and Julian E. Barnes

    MassacreSuspectTrainedIn YemenU.S. Ties ManWanted in ParisAttack to al Qaeda

    Europe’s ascendant anti-im-migration and nationalist move-ments tried to capitalize on adeadly attack in Paris this weekto trumpet a theme they havepressed for years, but rarely be-fore with this much urgency: aloss of cultural identity.

    “This bloodshed shows thatanyone who ignored or laughedoff the concerns about the threatIslamism poses is a fool,” saidAlexander Gauland, a leader ofAlternative for Germany, an up-start party that wants to limitimmigration and take Germanyout of the euro.

    In the past, such rhetoricwould be quickly dismissed as

    the ramblings of the politicalfringe. But these parties, fromFrance to the Netherlands to theU.K., have been on the march inrecent years, fueled by growingpublic discontent over a senseamong many Europeans thattheir traditional way of life isthreatened.

    Europe’s persistent economicwoes and the growing—and oft-resented—influence of the Euro-pean Union in national affairshave provided an opening tothese movements, which critics

    say prey on their citizens’ basestfears. These groups have longtargeted Islam, whose growingpresence on the continent theysay threatens Europe’s culturalmores.

    The radicalization of a gener-ation of dispossessed Muslims inMiddle Eastern wars in Iraq andSyria has only deepened fears,helping these parties to scoretheir best showing ever in May’sEuropean Parliamentary vote.

    “Western governments haveto realize that we are at war,”

    said Geert Wilders, the leader ofthe Netherlands’ Party for Free-dom.

    Europe’s establishment par-ties worry that the attack pro-vides the nationalists more am-munition to sow xenophobia.Those tensions bubbled to thesurface in France on Thursday.

    Marine Le Pen, the Frenchleader of the National Front, theparty which finished first in lastyear’s European elections with25% of the vote, claimed herparty had been excluded from amarch of unity with other politi-cal groups on Sunday. “Believeme, this will be a stain on theFrench political class,” said Ms.Le Pen, who will neverthelessmeet with French President

    PleaseturntopageA7

    BY MATTHEW KARNITSCHNIGAND WILLIAM HOROBIN

    A Backlash Swells in Europe

    MIRABEL, Quebec—Just after he became Bombar-dier Inc.’s chief executive in 2008, Pierre Beaudoinbet the future of the company his grandfatherfounded on a pair of passenger jets rivaling thosefrom the two titans of global aerospace.

    Bombardier had long produced smaller planes forwealthy individuals, companies and regional airlines.The technologically advanced, more fuel efficientCSeries would be its first jets capable of seating wellover 100 passengers, aiming at a slice of the marketdominated by Boeing Co. and Airbus Group NV.

    But more than six years after the CSeries’ first or-ders, Mr. Beaudoin is revamping Bombardier and re-taking control of the project to keep it from becom-ing a multibillion-dollar albatross.

    In the latest blow, Bombardier said Thursday itwas parting ways with its chief commercial-aircraftsalesman. A series of missteps have shaken the proj-ect, starting with development problems that de-layed the first model’s planned late-2013 deliverydate by as much as two years, and continuingthrough software-development snags and a major

    engine failure last May that halted test flights for100 days.

    The cost of the CSeries has mushroomed, and theSwedish carrier lined up to be the first operator ofCSeries planes declined the role in August—the sec-ond customer to do so. Bombardier said it has se-cured a new launch airline, though it isn’t yet nam-ing it.

    Meanwhile, Airbus and Boeing, as well as Brazil’sEmbraer SA, have sharpened competition in thebroader single-aisle market—the industry’s work-horse planes of 100 to 240 seats—that the CSeriesmust contend with. The other jet makers are upgrad-ing existing models to offer improved fuel effi-ciency—which makes planes cheaper per seat to op-erate—while aggressively discounting sales prices.

    Combined with other savings for airlines thatcome from only making incremental changes in theirfleets, the moves have eaten into the cost efficiencyof Bombardier’s new jets.

    In an interview, Bombardier’s 52-year-old scionsays he is confident the efforts will pay off. A majorrestructuring announced in July culled an entire

    PleaseturntopageA12

    BY JONOSTROWER AND PAUL VIEIRA

    TROUBLED BET

    Bigger Proves Far From BetterFor Canadian Jet Maker

    AurelienMeunier/G

    etty

    Images

    Kimberly Kilbride is a profes-sional cuddler.

    For $80 an hour, or up to $400for an overnight gig, the 33-year-old mother of three dons flannelpajama bottoms, puts away herfamily pictures and two pit bullmix dogs and invites clients intoher bedroom in Highland, N.Y., tosnuggle. Once the spooning be-gins, she insists that it staystrictly platonic.

    The cuddle-for-hire business istaking off—even though theclothes stay on. Thousands of cus-tomers across the country arebooking appointments with pro-fessional cuddlers in at least 16

    states. The snugglers squeeze,tickle and bearhug clients for afixed rate. Patrons who bookedthese services out of mere curios-ity say they have become hookedon their therapeutic benefits.

    “I am a convert,” says MelissaDuclos-Yourdon, 35, a freelancewriter and editor in Vancouver,Wash. She originally hired a cud-

    dler after hearing about it frommembers of her book club, think-ing it could provide fodder for anessay. Once cuddled, “I felt trans-formed,” she says.

    While snuggling businesseshave existed for years, interest isaccelerating with newer onlineapps and meet-up services. Plansare under way for a cuddling con-vention.

    One free app, Cuddlr, launchedin September and already has hadabout 240,000 downloads, accord-ing to Charlie Williams, a founderand developer. The location-basedsocial-media application allowsusers to find people near them tocuddle with. Between 7,000 and

    PleaseturntopageA12

    BY STEPHANIE ARMOUR

    Just Want to Cuddle? Now You Can, for $80 an Houri i i

    Professional Snugglers EmbraceMoreClients; Spooning, Tickling Sessions

    Kelly Peterson and client

    DARK NIGHT: Lights on the Eiffel Tower in Paris were turned off for five minutes Thursday in tribute to the victims of this week’s terror attack.

    Stocks Go Up...Down...Up Again

    25

    22

    Source: WSJ Market Data Group The Wall Street Journal

    Thursday:17907.87

    323.35

    18000

    16000

    16500

    17000

    17500

    400

    –400

    –200

    –300

    0

    200

    300

    100

    –100

    July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan.

    Point change from previous day

    DJIA daily close

    Moves of100 or morepoints sinceJuly

    up days

    down days

    BIG MOVES: Large stock swings have picked up lately, but the Dow’srally Thursday brings it within 1% of a record. Thursday’s buying cameas large investors looked to take advantage of lower prices. C1

    Nelson Peltz’s investment firmlaunched a fight against DuPontCo. to add four directors to thecompany’s board, setting up one ofthe biggest battles ever initiatedby an activist investor.

    The showdown follows 18months of bickering, and pits thecompeting ideas of Trian FundManagement LP, one of theworld’s biggest activist-investmentfunds, against those of a 212-year-old stalwart of U.S. industry.

    With a market capitalization of$67.5 billion, DuPont ranks amongthe largest-ever targets of a proxyfight by an activist investor. Theboard nominations mark the first

    such fight in almost a decade forTrian, which prefers to work withcompanies out of the public eye.Trian owns around 2.7% of Du-Pont’s shares.

    Late Thursday DuPont said itsboard would review Trian’s nomi-nees and “make a recommenda-tion that is in the best interest ofall shareholders.” The companystrongly defended its performanceand governance under Chairmanand Chief Executive Ellen Kullmanand said that, “Despite numerousefforts to engage construc-tively…Trian has chosen this pathwith the potential to disrupt ourCompany at a key stage of execu-tion against our plan.”

    Trian’s four nominees, whichPleaseturntothenextpage

    BY DAVID BENOITAND JACOB BUNGE

    Activist’s Bid Sets StageFor Brawl for DuPont

    Terror Attack in Paris Europe steps up security measures..................................... A6 Ties suggest resurgent al Qaeda.......................................... A6 Assault tests France’s secular model................................... A7

    CM Y K CompositeCompositeMAGENTA CYAN BLACK

    P2JW009000-6-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

    P2JW009000-6-A00100-1--------XA