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1
YELLOW ******* WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9, 2010 ~ VOL. CCLV NO. 133 HHHH $2.00 CONTENTS Corporate News B2,3,6,7 Deals & Deal Makers C3 Heard on the Street C16 International Finance C2 Leisure & Arts............ D5 Opinion.................. A15-17 Property Report C1,6-10 Sports.............................. D6 Stocks in the News C5 Technology Journal B4,5 U.S. News................. A2-8 Weather Watch........ B8 World News... A9-13,18 DJIA 9939.98 À 123.49 1.3% NASDAQ 2170.57 g 0.2% NIKKEI 9537.94 À 0.2% STOXX 50 2338.51 g 1.0% 10–YR TREAS À 4/32 , yield 3.171% OIL $71.99 À $0.55 GOLD $1,244.00 À $4.70 EURO $1.1947 YEN 91.39 s Copyright 2010 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved Vital Signs n The number of unemployed workers per job opening nudged down to 5 in April from 5.4 the prior month, the Labor Department said. The improvement came from a 10.5% increase in job openings, even as the hiring rate was unchanged. That could be a sign that sustained job growth is coming, as employers shift to filling more of those slots in the months ahead. ’04 ’06 ’05 ’07 ’08 ’09 ’10 Number of unemployed workers per available job, seasonally adjusted 0 2 4 6 Source: Labor Department > Do You Know, Offhand, Anyone Who Knows Shorthand? i i i As a Skill Fades, Translators Are in Demand; Ms. Sanders Charges 20.5 Cents a Word RYE, Colo.—The Jefferson County Attorney’s office, 160 miles north of here, handled a humdrum employment case a while ago that had an unusual piece of evidence: a 200-page document handwritten in loops and curls rec- ognizable as some kind of shorthand. “The question was: Who can read this? The answer was: Nobody,” says Deborah Hokanson, a legal assistant in the office. “The papers were in shorthand and I couldn’t find anyone to translate them.” Until she came upon Letha Sanders, who lives in a small house in this flyspeck town with her husband and eight caged fer- rets. In a corner of a bedroom piled with quilting supplies, Ms. Sanders sits in front of two com- puter screens operating “Short- hand Translation Services,” an enterprise she has just gotten up and running on the Web. Her service is to try making sense, in English, of the scrib- blings in shorthand that people send her. American girls and some boys used to make sense of it on their own. They took it in school—or secre- tarial school—and then took letters in offices or transcripts in court. Some went on to keep diaries in shorthand and write shorthand wills. But most schools stopped teaching it, and for today’s untu- tored, shorthand might as well be hieroglyphics. “The wife dies and the hus- band wants to know what’s in those pages—any infidelity,” Ms. Sanders was saying one morn- Please turn to page A14 BY BARRY NEWMAN Letha Sanders S tocks in the U.S. staged a late rally, belying what was otherwise a day of con- tinued anxiety about the world economy. The Dow in- dustrials gained 123.49 points, or 1.3%, to 9939.98. Comex gold futures rose $4.70 to $1,244.00 a troy ounce, a re- cord for the exchange. C1, C12 n EU finance officials pro- nounced the need for more- centralized planning of na- tional budgets, but some took care to draw a line. A10 n Britain’s debt problems returned to the spotlight as Fitch called for bigger aus- terity measures, sending Eu- ropean stocks lower. A10, C2 n A battle over how invest- ment partnerships are taxed is coming to a head as Senate Democrats unveiled a pro- posal to more than double the taxes on fund managers. A1 n The banking industry un- leashed a last-ditch effort to strip new debit-card restric- tions from proposed finan- cial-overhaul legislation. C1 n Switzerland’s lower house rejected a bill to allow the gov- ernment to hand over names of alleged American tax dodgers, jeopardizing a deal between the U.S. and UBS. C2 n Chrysler is preparing a sustained marketing push to energize dealers and recon- nect with consumers follow- ing its reorganization. B1 n GM is recalling over 1.5 million cars and trucks sold globally due to a glitch in the windshield wiper fluid sys- tem that could ignite a fire. B3 n Americans cut back on charitable donations for the second year in a row in 2009 amid continued economic uncertainty. Donations fell 3.6% to $303.75 billion. A2 n Dubai’s Emirates Airline ordered 32 additional Airbus A380s, announcing the $11.5 billion deal in Germany’s cap- ital to ramp up a trade fight with flag carrier Lufthansa. B1 n Star investor Louis Bacon of Moore Capital, who has scored annual gains of about 20% on average over the past two decades, suffered losses of 9.2% in May. C1 n Cerberus has found a way to possibly salvage its in- vestment in real-estate firm LNR, but would have to share ownership with Vornado. C1 n Tesco named its Europe and Asia chief, Philip Clarke, to succeed CEO Terry Leahy in March, a sign the British super- market giant will continue an aggressive global push. B1 n Health-care IT providers Allscripts-Misys and Eclipsys are expected to merge in an all-stock transaction valued at $1.35 billion. B3 n Debt-ridden Central Falls, R.I., has taken the rare step of handing control of its fi- nances to a receiver. C13 n Eleven states held prima- ries in a turbulent campaign. Arkansas Sen. Blanche Lin- coln narrowly won a Demo- cratic runoff, barely avoiding becoming the third senator this year to be defeated by her own party. California voters sent former tech-com- pany chief executives Meg Whitman and Carly Fiorina into the races for governor and Senate. In South Caro- lina, tea-party favorite Nikki Haley survived to advance her bid to become governor, while six-term Rep. Bob Inglis was forced into a runoff. A1, A5 In Nevada, conservative outsider and tea-party pick Sharron Angle won the Re- publican nomination to challenge Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. n Scientists found extremely high levels of oxygen-deplet- ing methane in Gulf waters. Federal researchers acknowl- edged the existence of plumes of underwater oil many miles from the leaking BP well. A8 n The U.N. Security Council is set to pass sanctions against Iran that strengthen the inter- national effort to rein in Teh- ran’s nuclear ambitions. A9 n Three Chinese residents were shot and killed by North Korean border guards dur- ing an apparent smuggling operation, Beijing said. A13 n The FBI said it was probing the shooting by a U.S. border agent that witnesses said killed a 15-year-old Mexican on the Mexican side of the border. A6 n Blagojevich’s trial opened with prosecutors arguing that the former Illinois governor’s debt burden led him to pur- sue corruption schemes. A3 n Federal and state agencies sent investigators to probe an enormous natural-gas blast in Texas that killed one worker and injured several others. A7 n Nearly 140 doctors were sanctioned for allegedly cheating on internal medicine board-certification tests. A6 n Two American troops were killed by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan and a British sol- dier was shot dead on patrol. n Suspected militants at- tacked trucks in Pakistan carry- ing military vehicles for NATO forces in Afghanistan. A13 n Japan’s new prime minister unveiled a cabinet picked to signal a heightened resolve to curb public debt. A13 n Lax infection control is a serious problem at many of the country’s same-day surgery centers, a new study found. A7 n Aviation regulators from the U.S. and Europe clashed over the hazards of flying through low levels of ash. A13 n A Dutch man who was sus- pected in a U.S. teen’s disap- pearance admitted killing a woman in Peru, police said. A13 What’s News– i i i i i i Business & Finance World-Wide Follow the news all day at WSJ.com SOWETO, South Africa—In 1994, the township of Soweto helped midwife a new nation, toppling a white racist regime after years of protests and electing Nelson Mandela as South Africa’s first black president. Today, Soweto is home to upscale shopping malls, tidy row houses and a state-of-the-art sports stadium that will host Friday’s opening of the World Cup. As barriers to government and jobs have fallen and foreign investment has picked BY PETER WONACOTT Soweto Turns Anger on ANC As World Cup Opens, South Africa’s Poor Complain of Neglect up, a black middle class has emerged, a corner- stone of the new South Africa that will be show- cased during the month-long soccer tournament. But prosperity has spread only so far. And 16 years after the end of white minority rule, many here now complain of oppression of a different sort: government neglect. This time, the sing-song marches, angry slo- gans and burning tires are most often directed at the African National Congress, the ruling party of Mr. Mandela and South Africa’s current president, Please turn to page A14 The Ultimate Hotel Room: For $35,000 a Night: A Butler, A Waterfall and a Free Minibar D1 GREATER NEW YORK ‘You Will Not Fear … the Arrow That Flies by Day’ RESCUE AND PROTECT: Staff Sgt. Edward Rosa reads the Bible and extends a cigarette to Pfc. Jorge Rostran Obando, who was stunned by an explosion in Afghanistan’s Arghanab Valley. One comrade was killed and two injured in the blast. Pfc. Rostran asked the sergeant to read Psalm 91, a favorite from his childhood. Ricardo Garcia Vilanova for The Wall Street Journal A three-year battle over how the federal government taxes in- vestment partnerships is coming to a head, after Senate Demo- crats unveiled a proposal that would more than double the taxes on private-equity, hedge- fund and certain real-estate managers. The move is the strongest in- dication yet that financiers will pay higher taxes to help close an expanding U.S. budget gap. Con- gress is taking aim at the per- ceived excesses of the financial- services industry, but the pro- posed changes have implications well beyond Wall Street. The proposed law would tax “carried-interest” income, or the share of profits that fund man- agers receive as part of their compensation. This income is currently taxed at a 15% rate, while the ordinary income by most wage earners is taxed at up to 35%. The new law would raise the tax rate for partnership in- come to an effective 30% in 2011 and 33% in 2013. Those sponsoring the bill say the proposed measure rights a fundamental unfairness in the tax code. Lawmakers say the people running partnerships have been paying capital-gains rates on what were basically wages. Opponents of the bill say it will discourage investments needed to create growth and jobs. Douglas Lowenstein, presi- dent of the Private Equity Coun- cil, an industry trade group, says carried interest is properly rec- ognized as a capital gain because “earning carried interest in- volves taking risks, making long- term investments and exposing yourself to the possibility that you’ll have to return your earn- ings if things don’t work out,” he said. “No one who gets a pay- Please turn to page A2 BY PETER LATTMAN AND LAURA SAUNDERS Showdown on Fund Taxes Arkansas Sen. Blanche Lin- coln pulled out a narrow victory in the Democratic primary against a liberal challenger on a night when voters across the U.S. showed both the power and lim- its of this year’s anti-establish- ment tide. Eleven states held primaries Tuesday, the busiest day so far in a nomination season stretching from February to September in advance of the Nov. 2 general elections. In California, former eBay Inc. Chief Executive Meg Whitman handily won the Re- publican nomination for gover- nor against state Insurance Com- missioner Steve Poizner, the Associated Press reported. Carly Fiorina, former CEO of Hewlett-Packard Co., won Cali- fornia’s GOP primary for Senate, the AP reported. She will face Sen. Barbara Boxer, who won re- nomination Tuesday. In Nevada, Sharron Angle, a conservative insurgent, won an upset victory over more estab- lished Republicans for the right to challenge Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid in November. Ms. Lincoln avoided becom- ing the third senator this year to be defeated by her own party. Labor unions and liberal groups had sought to make an example of Ms. Lincoln for her deviation from liberal positions, putting millions of dollars behind Lt. Gov. Bill Halter’s unsuccessful challenge. Even Ms. Lincoln ran as something of an outsider, saying Please turn to page A5 BY NAFTALI BENDAVID AND VALERIE BAUERLEIN Lincoln Bucks Wave Against Incumbents Campaign 2010 See updates and expanded coverage of primary election results at WSJ.com/Politics. Source: Barron’s “Top 100 Women Financial Advisors,” June 7, 2010. Barron’s is a registered trademark of Dow Jones & Company, L.P. All rights reserved. Factors considered in this ranking include assets under management, revenue produced for the firm and quality of service. Investment performance is not a criterion. Neither Morgan Stanley Smith Barney nor any of their financial advisors pay a fee to Barron’s in exchange for the rating. For more information on ranking methodology, go to http://online.barrons. com/report /top-financial-advisors?mod=BOL_hps_tnav_ranks or contact Barron’s Associate Editor, Matt Barthel, at [email protected]. © 2010 Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC. Member SIPC. Morgan Stanley Private Wealth Management is a division and Graystone Consulting is a business of Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC. 6/10 GP10-01328P-T06/10 Morgan Stanley SMith Barney Martha adam Troy, MI emily Bach Orinda, CA anouchka Balog Laguna Niguel, CA Melissa Campbell Scottsdale, AZ lee Corey Alexandria, VA Mary Deatherage Little Falls, NJ ami Forte Palm Harbor, FL Susan Klar Palo Alto, CA Karen McDonald Palo Alto, CA erna Morgan Mcreynolds Oneonta, NY Kathleen roeser Chicago, IL Kathleen Weber Bellevue, WA PriVate Wealth ManageMent nancy Cooley New York, NY lisa Detanna Beverly Hills, CA Kimberley hatchett New York, NY Susan Kingsolver New York, NY Falisha Mamdani New York, NY Deborah Montaperto New York, NY rebecca rothstein Beverly Hills, CA Stephanie twomey Menlo Park, CA nadine Wong New York, NY grayStone ConSUlting elaina Spilove Philadelphia, PA Outstanding Performance Morgan Stanley Smith Barney congratulates our colleagues named to Barron’s “top 100 Women Financial advisors” C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW1600A6-7-A00100-1--------BP 06/09/2010 EE,NY BP P2JW1600A6-7-A00100-1--------BP

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Page 1: g 10–YRTREAS What’sNews– ShowdownonFundTaxesonline.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/Ricardo_Garcia_Photo.pdf · to a head, after Senate Demo-crats unveiled a proposal that

YELLOW

* * * * * * * WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9, 2010 ~ VOL. CCLV NO. 133 H H H H $ 2 .0 0

CONTENTSCorporate News B2,3,6,7Deals & Deal Makers C3Heard on the Street C16International Finance C2Leisure & Arts............ D5Opinion.................. A15-17

Property Report C1,6-10Sports.............................. D6Stocks in the News C5Technology Journal B4,5U.S. News................. A2-8Weather Watch........ B8World News... A9-13,18

DJIA 9939.98 À 123.49 1.3% NASDAQ 2170.57 g 0.2% NIKKEI 9537.94 À 0.2% STOXX 50 2338.51 g 1.0% 10–YR TREAS À 4/32 , yield 3.171% OIL $71.99 À $0.55 GOLD $1,244.00 À $4.70 EURO $1.1947 YEN 91.39

s Copyright 2010 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved

Vital Signs

n The number ofunemployed workers perjob opening nudged down to5 in April from 5.4 the priormonth, the LaborDepartment said. Theimprovement came from a10.5% increase in jobopenings, even as the hiringrate was unchanged. Thatcould be a sign thatsustained job growth iscoming, as employers shiftto filling more of those slotsin the months ahead.

’04 ’06’05 ’07 ’08 ’09 ’10

Number of unemployedworkers per available job,seasonally adjusted

0

2

4

6

Source: Labor Department

>

Do You Know, Offhand,Anyone Who Knows Shorthand?

i i i

As a Skill Fades, Translators Are in Demand;Ms. Sanders Charges 20.5 Cents a Word

RYE, Colo.—The JeffersonCounty Attorney’s office, 160miles north of here, handled ahumdrum employmentcase a while ago thathad an unusual piece ofevidence: a 200-pagedocument handwrittenin loops and curls rec-ognizable as some kindof shorthand.

“The question was:Who can read this? Theanswer was: Nobody,”says Deborah Hokanson,a legal assistant in theoffice. “The paperswere in shorthand and I couldn’tfind anyone to translate them.”

Until she came upon LethaSanders, who lives in a smallhouse in this flyspeck town withher husband and eight caged fer-rets. In a corner of a bedroompiled with quilting supplies, Ms.Sanders sits in front of two com-

puter screens operating “Short-hand Translation Services,” anenterprise she has just gotten upand running on the Web. Herservice is to try making sense, in

English, of the scrib-blings in shorthandthat people send her.

American girls andsome boys used tomake sense of it ontheir own. They took itin school—or secre-tarial school—and thentook letters in officesor transcripts in court.Some went on to keepdiaries in shorthandand write shorthand

wills. But most schools stoppedteaching it, and for today’s untu-tored, shorthand might as wellbe hieroglyphics.

“The wife dies and the hus-band wants to know what’s inthose pages—any infidelity,” Ms.Sanders was saying one morn-

Please turn to page A14

BY BARRY NEWMAN

Letha Sanders

Stocks in the U.S. stageda late rally, belying what

was otherwise a day of con-tinued anxiety about theworld economy. The Dow in-dustrials gained 123.49 points,or 1.3%, to 9939.98. Comexgold futures rose $4.70 to$1,244.00 a troy ounce, a re-cord for the exchange. C1, C12

n EU finance officials pro-nounced the need for more-centralized planning of na-tional budgets, but sometook care to draw a line. A10n Britain’s debt problemsreturned to the spotlight asFitch called for bigger aus-terity measures, sending Eu-ropean stocks lower. A10, C2

n A battle over how invest-ment partnerships are taxedis coming to a head as SenateDemocrats unveiled a pro-posal to more than double thetaxes on fund managers. A1

n The banking industry un-leashed a last-ditch effort tostrip new debit-card restric-tions from proposed finan-cial-overhaul legislation. C1

n Switzerland’s lower houserejected a bill to allow the gov-ernment to hand over namesof alleged American taxdodgers, jeopardizing a dealbetween the U.S. and UBS. C2

n Chrysler is preparing asustained marketing push toenergize dealers and recon-nect with consumers follow-ing its reorganization. B1

n GM is recalling over 1.5million cars and trucks soldglobally due to a glitch in thewindshield wiper fluid sys-tem that could ignite a fire. B3

n Americans cut back oncharitable donations for thesecond year in a row in 2009amid continued economicuncertainty. Donations fell3.6% to $303.75 billion. A2

n Dubai’s Emirates Airlineordered 32 additional AirbusA380s, announcing the $11.5billion deal in Germany’s cap-ital to ramp up a trade fightwith flag carrier Lufthansa. B1

n Star investor Louis Baconof Moore Capital, who hasscored annual gains of about20% on average over thepast two decades, sufferedlosses of 9.2% in May. C1

n Cerberus has found a wayto possibly salvage its in-vestment in real-estate firmLNR, but would have to shareownership with Vornado. C1

n Tesco named its Europeand Asia chief, Philip Clarke,to succeed CEO Terry Leahy inMarch, a sign the British super-market giant will continuean aggressive global push. B1

n Health-care IT providersAllscripts-Misys and Eclipsysare expected to merge in anall-stock transaction valuedat $1.35 billion. B3

n Debt-ridden Central Falls,R.I., has taken the rare stepof handing control of its fi-nances to a receiver. C13

n Eleven states held prima-ries in a turbulent campaign.Arkansas Sen. Blanche Lin-coln narrowly won a Demo-cratic runoff, barely avoidingbecoming the third senatorthis year to be defeated byher own party. Californiavoters sent former tech-com-pany chief executives MegWhitman and Carly Fiorinainto the races for governorand Senate. In South Caro-lina, tea-party favorite NikkiHaley survived to advance herbid to become governor, whilesix-term Rep. Bob Inglis wasforced into a runoff. A1, A5

In Nevada, conservativeoutsider and tea-party pickSharron Angle won the Re-publican nomination tochallenge Senate MajorityLeader Harry Reid.

n Scientists found extremelyhigh levels of oxygen-deplet-ing methane in Gulf waters.Federal researchers acknowl-edged the existence of plumesof underwater oil many milesfrom the leaking BP well. A8

n The U.N. Security Councilis set to pass sanctions againstIran that strengthen the inter-national effort to rein in Teh-ran’s nuclear ambitions. A9

n Three Chinese residentswere shot and killed by NorthKorean border guards dur-ing an apparent smugglingoperation, Beijing said. A13

n The FBI said it was probingthe shooting by a U.S. borderagent that witnesses said killeda 15-year-old Mexican on theMexican side of the border. A6

n Blagojevich’s trial openedwith prosecutors arguing thatthe former Illinois governor’sdebt burden led him to pur-sue corruption schemes. A3

n Federal and state agenciessent investigators to probe anenormous natural-gas blast inTexas that killed one workerand injured several others. A7

n Nearly 140 doctors weresanctioned for allegedlycheating on internal medicineboard-certification tests. A6

n Two American troops werekilled by a roadside bomb inAfghanistan and a British sol-dier was shot dead on patrol.n Suspected militants at-tacked trucks in Pakistan carry-ing military vehicles for NATOforces in Afghanistan. A13

n Japan’s new prime ministerunveiled a cabinet picked tosignal a heightened resolveto curb public debt. A13

n Lax infection control is aserious problem at many of thecountry’s same-day surgerycenters, a new study found. A7

n Aviation regulators fromthe U.S. and Europe clashedover the hazards of flyingthrough low levels of ash. A13

n A Dutch man who was sus-pected in a U.S. teen’s disap-pearance admitted killing awoman in Peru, police said. A13

What’s News–i i i i i i

Business & Finance World-Wide

Follow the news all day at WSJ.com

SOWETO, South Africa—In 1994, the townshipof Soweto helped midwife a new nation, topplinga white racist regime after years of protests andelecting Nelson Mandela as South Africa’s firstblack president.

Today, Soweto is home to upscale shoppingmalls, tidy row houses and a state-of-the-artsports stadium that will host Friday’s opening ofthe World Cup. As barriers to government andjobs have fallen and foreign investment has picked

BY PETER WONACOTT

Soweto Turns Anger on ANCAs World Cup Opens, South Africa’s Poor Complain of Neglect

up, a black middle class has emerged, a corner-stone of the new South Africa that will be show-cased during the month-long soccer tournament.

But prosperity has spread only so far. And 16years after the end of white minority rule, manyhere now complain of oppression of a differentsort: government neglect.

This time, the sing-song marches, angry slo-gans and burning tires are most often directed atthe African National Congress, the ruling party ofMr. Mandela and South Africa’s current president,

Please turn to page A14

TheUltimate Hotel Room:For $35,000 aNight: A Butler,AWaterfall and a FreeMinibar D1

GREATERNEW YORK

‘You Will Not Fear … the Arrow That Flies by Day’

RESCUE AND PROTECT: Staff Sgt. Edward Rosa reads the Bible and extends a cigarette to Pfc. JorgeRostran Obando, who was stunned by an explosion in Afghanistan’s Arghanab Valley. One comrade was killedand two injured in the blast. Pfc. Rostran asked the sergeant to read Psalm 91, a favorite from his childhood.

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A three-year battle over howthe federal government taxes in-vestment partnerships is comingto a head, after Senate Demo-crats unveiled a proposal thatwould more than double thetaxes on private-equity, hedge-fund and certain real-estatemanagers.

The move is the strongest in-dication yet that financiers will

pay higher taxes to help close anexpanding U.S. budget gap. Con-gress is taking aim at the per-ceived excesses of the financial-services industry, but the pro-posed changes have implicationswell beyond Wall Street.

The proposed law would tax“carried-interest” income, or theshare of profits that fund man-agers receive as part of theircompensation. This income iscurrently taxed at a 15% rate,while the ordinary income by

most wage earners is taxed at upto 35%. The new law would raisethe tax rate for partnership in-come to an effective 30% in 2011and 33% in 2013.

Those sponsoring the bill saythe proposed measure rights afundamental unfairness in thetax code. Lawmakers say thepeople running partnershipshave been paying capital-gainsrates on what were basicallywages. Opponents of the bill sayit will discourage investments

needed to create growth andjobs. Douglas Lowenstein, presi-dent of the Private Equity Coun-cil, an industry trade group, sayscarried interest is properly rec-ognized as a capital gain because“earning carried interest in-volves taking risks, making long-term investments and exposingyourself to the possibility thatyou’ll have to return your earn-ings if things don’t work out,” hesaid. “No one who gets a pay-

Please turn to page A2

BY PETER LATTMANAND LAURA SAUNDERS

Showdown on Fund Taxes

Arkansas Sen. Blanche Lin-coln pulled out a narrow victoryin the Democratic primaryagainst a liberal challenger on anight when voters across the U.S.showed both the power and lim-its of this year’s anti-establish-ment tide.

Eleven states held primariesTuesday, the busiest day so far ina nomination season stretchingfrom February to September inadvance of the Nov. 2 generalelections. In California, formereBay Inc. Chief Executive MegWhitman handily won the Re-publican nomination for gover-nor against state Insurance Com-missioner Steve Poizner, theAssociated Press reported.

Carly Fiorina, former CEO ofHewlett-Packard Co., won Cali-fornia’s GOP primary for Senate,the AP reported. She will faceSen. Barbara Boxer, who won re-nomination Tuesday.

In Nevada, Sharron Angle, aconservative insurgent, won anupset victory over more estab-lished Republicans for the rightto challenge Senate MajorityLeader Harry Reid in November.

Ms. Lincoln avoided becom-ing the third senator this year tobe defeated by her own party.Labor unions and liberal groupshad sought to make an exampleof Ms. Lincoln for her deviationfrom liberal positions, puttingmillions of dollars behind Lt.Gov. Bill Halter’s unsuccessfulchallenge.

Even Ms. Lincoln ran assomething of an outsider, saying

Please turn to page A5

BY NAFTALI BENDAVIDAND VALERIE BAUERLEIN

LincolnBucksWaveAgainstIncumbents

Campaign 2010See updates and expandedcoverage of primary electionresults at WSJ.com/Politics.

Source: Barron’s “Top 100 Women Financial Advisors,” June 7, 2010. Barron’s is a registered trademarkof Dow Jones & Company, L.P. All rights reserved. Factors considered in this ranking include assets undermanagement, revenue produced for the firm and quality of service. Investment performance is not acriterion. Neither Morgan Stanley Smith Barney nor any of their financial advisors pay a fee to Barron’sin exchange for the rating. For more information on ranking methodology, go to http://online.barrons.com/report /top-financial-advisors?mod=BOL_hps_tnav_ranks or contact Barron’s Associate Editor,Matt Barthel, at [email protected].©2010Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC. MemberSIPC. Morgan Stanley Private Wealth Management is a division and Graystone Consulting is abusiness of Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC. 6/10 GP10-01328P-T06/10

Morgan StanleySMith Barney

Martha adamTroy, MI

emily BachOrinda, CA

anouchka BalogLaguna Niguel, CA

Melissa CampbellScottsdale, AZ

lee CoreyAlexandria, VA

Mary DeatherageLittle Falls, NJ

ami FortePalm Harbor, FL

Susan KlarPalo Alto, CA

Karen McDonaldPalo Alto, CA

erna Morgan McreynoldsOneonta, NY

Kathleen roeserChicago, IL

Kathleen WeberBellevue, WA

PriVate WealthManageMent

nancy CooleyNew York, NY

lisa DetannaBeverly Hills, CA

Kimberley hatchettNew York, NY

Susan KingsolverNew York, NY

Falisha MamdaniNew York, NY

Deborah MontapertoNew York, NY

rebecca rothsteinBeverly Hills, CA

Stephanie twomeyMenlo Park, CA

nadine WongNew York, NY

grayStoneConSUlting

elaina SpilovePhiladelphia, PA

Outstanding PerformanceMorgan Stanley Smith Barney congratulates our colleaguesnamed to Barron’s “top 100 Women Financial advisors”

C M Y K CompositeCompositeMAGENTA CYAN BLACK

P2JW1600A6-7-A00100-1--------BP 06/09/2010 EE,NYBP

P2JW1600A6-7-A00100-1--------BP