Tuesday,  April 2, 2013 • Vol. 14--No. 257 • 25 of 33 •  Other Editions

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• The couple was held for hours and the American woman was sexually assaulted aboard a public transport van in the Copacabana beach area.

• 9. 'BUCKWILD' CAST MEMBER'S LAST RIDE
• Shain Gandee was found dead in an SUV, along with his uncle and another man, along a muddy track in West Virginia.

• 10. 'THE THREE BIG HOLIDAYS -- THANKSGIVING, CHRISTMAS AND OPENING DAY'
• Dodgers co-owner Stan Kasten echoes the feelings of many baseball fans who flocked to ballparks across the nation for an enduring rite of spring.

AP News in Brief
North Korea vows to restart facilities at main nuclear complex mothballed in disarmament deal

• SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- North Korea vowed Tuesday to restart a nuclear reactor that can make one bomb's worth of plutonium a year, escalating tensions already raised by near daily warlike threats against the United States and South Korea.
• The North's plutonium reactor was shut down in 2007 as part of international nuclear disarmament talks that have since stalled. The declaration of a resumption of plutonium production -- the most common fuel in nuclear weapons -- and other facilities at the main Nyongbyon nuclear complex will boost fears in Washington and among its allies about North Korea's timetable for building a nuclear-tipped missile that can reach the United States, technology it is not currently believed to have.
• A spokesman for the North's General Department of Atomic Energy said that scientists will begin work at a uranium enrichment plant and a graphite-moderated 5 megawatt reactor, which generates spent fuel rods laced with plutonium and is the core of the Nyongbyon nuclear complex.
• The unidentified spokesman said the measure is part of efforts to resolve the country's acute electricity shortage but also for "bolstering up the nuclear armed force both in quality and quantity," according to a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.
• Pyongyang conducted its third nuclear test in February, prompting a new round of U.N. sanctions that have infuriated its leaders and led to a torrent of threatening

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