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Lord Patten aims to ban BBC management’s bonuses and perks

Trust chairman to cut pay of next director general in bid to stop criticism of corporation’s executive salaries The BBC Trust chairman, Lord Patten, said he would ban bonuses and perks for senior management and cut the pay of the next director general to below the £668,300 earned by incumbent Mark Thompson. In his first public speech since becoming chairman, Patten tried to draw a line under a long-running “toxic” row which has seen the corporation frequently criticised for the amount of licence fee payers’ money it spends on its top executives. The peer and former Conservative cabinet minister said on Wednesday the BBC will become the first organisation to publish a “pay multiple so the public can see exactly how the pay of those at the top of the BBC compares to the rest of the organisation.” He went on: “And when the time comes – I hope no time soon – to appoint the next director general, I would expect to adopt the same approach as for other executives and secure the right candidate at a lower multiple.” The move is likely to prove popular with BBC rank and file staff, who feel the issue of top salaries has polluted perception of the corporation. Patten said: “This action on pay is important. Because the BBC must do right by the licence fee payers who pick up the bill and by all the staff that work throughout the organisation at every level.” Addressing the Royal Television Society, Patten said he wants to be more open about how much top executives earn by incorporating economist Will Hutton’s review on public sector pay which said that no executive should receive more than 20 times the salary of the lowest paid. He also promised the number of senior managers at the corporation will be reduced from 3% of the workforce to around 1% by 2015 and their private health insurance will be phased out. The issue of executive pay and bonuses has dogged the BBC for the last few years . To try and stem anger from politicians and BBC staff facing cuts, Thompson has never taken his bonus and since January 2009 all key executives have waived their bonuses and frozen their pay. Earlier this year they also gave up a month’s salary. Separately, in an interview in the New Statesman to be published this weekend, Thompson appeared to suggest the BBC had the issue in hand, noting that “pay has come down significantly.” He went on: “The BBC is trying to straddle the reality of finding people with what the public expects of public-sector pay. You will see more movement in the months to come.” Patten in his remarks made it clear he believed “there is further to go – both in making further reductions and securing public confidence”. He argued the publicly funded BBC “needs to distance itself” from the commercial market, explaining: “Public trust suffers whenever there is evidence of corporate behaviour that doesn’t fit the ideal.” Following criticism about the convoluted BBC complaints procedure in a Lords communications committee report, Patten announced the creation of a chief complaints editor. He also said that, “the trust should be more clearly focused on its role as a strategic governing body” and the BBC “needs to provide a service to digitally literate 20-year-olds just as much to old-fashioned newspaper-reading 70-year-olds.” Patten said he does not want BBC commercial arm BBC Worldwide privatised but says he wants it to “work more closely with other UK broadcasters and producers”. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook . Lord Patten BBC Television industry BBC Trust Radio industry Mark Thompson Tara Conlan guardian.co.uk

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Tour de France 2011: Mark Cavendish powers to Brittany sprint victory

• British rider times final sprint to perfection • Read Barry Glendenning’s live coverage Great Britain’s Mark Cavendish claimed a sensational victory on the fifth stage of the Tour de France on a dramatic day in Brittany. Among the incidents in the 164.5-km stage from Carhaix to Cap Frehel on the Brittany coast, the Slovenian Janez Brajkovic was taken to hospital after crashing out and Nicki Sorensen of Denmark was pulled down by a photographer’s motorbike. Sorensen’s team leader Alberto Contador (Saxo Bank-SunGard) and Team Sky’s Bradley Wiggins were among other fallers, while Tom Boonen (QuickStep) had a heavy tumble on the tarmac and suffered for much of the day. The finale along narrow, undulating roads was always going to be challenging and so it proved, with numerous attacks attempted and foiled as the stage ended in a sprint finish. And, after his HTC-Highroad team-mate Tony Martin led the peloton into the final straight, Cavendish came from well down to accelerate around the peloton, including Team Sky’s Geraint Thomas, to take the 16th Tour stage success of his career. Philippe Gilbert (Omega Pharma-Lotto) who won stage one was second, with José Joaquín Rojas (Movistar) third and Thomas fifth. Provisional fifth stage result 1 Mark Cavendish (GB, HTC – Highroad) 3hr 38min 32sec 2 Philippe Gilbert (Bel, Omega Pharma-Lotto) same time 3 José Joaquín Rojas (Sp, Movistar) 4 Tony Gallopin (Fr, Cofidis) 5 Geraint Thomas (GB, Team Sky) 6 Andre Greipel (Ger, Omega Pharma-Lotto) 7 Sébastien Hinault (Fr, AG2R) 8 William Bonnet (Fr, FDJ) 9 Daniel Oss (It, Liquigas) 10 Thor Hushovd (Nor, Garmin-Cervélo) Provisional overall standings 1 Thor Hushovd (Nor, Garmin-Cervélo) 17hr 36min 57sec 2 Cadel Evans (Aus, BMC Racing) +1″ 3 Fraenk Schleck (Lux, Leopard) +4sec 4 David Millar (GB, Garmin-Cervélo) +8 sec 5 Andreas Kloeden (Ger, RadioShack) +10 sec 6 Bradley Wiggins (GB, Team Sky) 7 Geraint Thomas (GB, Team Sky) +12 sec 8 Edvald Boasson Hagen (Nor, Team Sky) 9 Jakob Fuglsang (Den, Leopard) 10 Andy Schleck (Lux, Leopard) Tour de France 2011 Mark Cavendish Tour de France guardian.co.uk

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Polish man ‘lost’ inside São Paulo airport for 18 days

Robert Wladyslaw Parzelski’s story draws comparisons with Steven Spielberg’s 2004 comedy The Terminal He came from London not Krakozhia and Catherine Zeta-Jones was not waiting for him at customs. But the strange tale of Robert Wladyslaw Parzelski, a 44-year-old Polish man who got “lost” inside São Paulo’s international airport for 18 days, has captivated Brazilian newspaper readers and drawn comparisons with Steven Spielberg’s 2004 comedy The Terminal. In the film Viktor Navorski, a native of the fictitious country Krakozhia, finds himself marooned inside New York’s John F Kennedy international airport after US authorities sever diplomatic ties with his war-torn homeland. Navorski, played by Tom Hanks, enjoys a lengthy but action-packed stay at JFK; sculpting a water fountain, dating an air hostess played by Zeta-Jones and eventually making it to a New York jazz club for a Benny Golson show. The real-life story of Robert Wladyslaw Parzelski, a London-based car electrician, got off to a more mundane start. Parzelski reportedly arrived in São Paulo on 17 June onboard British Airways flight 247. The tourist slipped easily through customs, but without a return flight, a word of Portuguese or a penny to his name, Parzelski decided not to venture outside. Instead, he set up camp on a concrete bench inside São Paulo’s Guarulhos airport and waited, supposedly for a friend who had agreed to meet him there, but never came. Alone and unable to communicate with others – “I’m Poland,” he reportedly told those who inquired about his wellbeing – Parzelski did his best to make himself comfortable. Concerned airport cleaners began caring for “the German”, bringing him daily servings of water, yoghurt and cigarettes. Two empty bottles of vodka and an improvised toilet were located on airport property. Once clean-shaved, Parzelski’s beard began to grow. Several days into his stay, Parzelski’s case was drawn to the attention of the Folha de São Paulo newspaper . Their reporters began investigating. With airport police and officials seemingly uninterested in their Polish guest, the newspaper called on a 70-year-old Polish doctor from São Paulo to get to the bottom of Parzelski’s bizarre story. After a quick chat with the doctor on 30 June – Parzelski’s first conversation in more than 10 days – his story began to emerge. Parzelski was a father of five from Krakow who had moved to London with his family seeking work as a builder. When he lost his job during the economic crisis, a Polish friend in London proposed a trip to Brazil. He accepted. Parzelski was handed a one-way ticket to São Paulo and a mission: to return to London with two telephone sets. Neither the Polish doctor nor the newspaper’s reporters were able to establish why somebody in London had commissioned two Brazilian telephones. The mystery thickened and the Polish consulate in São Paulo was called in. With the case still shrouded in mystery, Parzelski finally left Brazil on Tuesday afternoon, onboard a Swiss Air flight bound for Zurich. From there he would return to London. “Before embarking … [we] spotted Parzelski enjoying a dark ale at a bar inside the departure lounge,” the Folha de São Paulo reported on Wednesday, in presumably its final story about the lost tourist. “Smiling he bade us farewell, with a little wave of the hand.” Brazil Air transport Poland Europe Tom Phillips guardian.co.uk

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Polish man ‘lost’ inside São Paulo airport for 18 days

Robert Wladyslaw Parzelski’s story draws comparisons with Steven Spielberg’s 2004 comedy The Terminal He came from London not Krakozhia and Catherine Zeta-Jones was not waiting for him at customs. But the strange tale of Robert Wladyslaw Parzelski, a 44-year-old Polish man who got “lost” inside São Paulo’s international airport for 18 days, has captivated Brazilian newspaper readers and drawn comparisons with Steven Spielberg’s 2004 comedy The Terminal. In the film Viktor Navorski, a native of the fictitious country Krakozhia, finds himself marooned inside New York’s John F Kennedy international airport after US authorities sever diplomatic ties with his war-torn homeland. Navorski, played by Tom Hanks, enjoys a lengthy but action-packed stay at JFK; sculpting a water fountain, dating an air hostess played by Zeta-Jones and eventually making it to a New York jazz club for a Benny Golson show. The real-life story of Robert Wladyslaw Parzelski, a London-based car electrician, got off to a more mundane start. Parzelski reportedly arrived in São Paulo on 17 June onboard British Airways flight 247. The tourist slipped easily through customs, but without a return flight, a word of Portuguese or a penny to his name, Parzelski decided not to venture outside. Instead, he set up camp on a concrete bench inside São Paulo’s Guarulhos airport and waited, supposedly for a friend who had agreed to meet him there, but never came. Alone and unable to communicate with others – “I’m Poland,” he reportedly told those who inquired about his wellbeing – Parzelski did his best to make himself comfortable. Concerned airport cleaners began caring for “the German”, bringing him daily servings of water, yoghurt and cigarettes. Two empty bottles of vodka and an improvised toilet were located on airport property. Once clean-shaved, Parzelski’s beard began to grow. Several days into his stay, Parzelski’s case was drawn to the attention of the Folha de São Paulo newspaper . Their reporters began investigating. With airport police and officials seemingly uninterested in their Polish guest, the newspaper called on a 70-year-old Polish doctor from São Paulo to get to the bottom of Parzelski’s bizarre story. After a quick chat with the doctor on 30 June – Parzelski’s first conversation in more than 10 days – his story began to emerge. Parzelski was a father of five from Krakow who had moved to London with his family seeking work as a builder. When he lost his job during the economic crisis, a Polish friend in London proposed a trip to Brazil. He accepted. Parzelski was handed a one-way ticket to São Paulo and a mission: to return to London with two telephone sets. Neither the Polish doctor nor the newspaper’s reporters were able to establish why somebody in London had commissioned two Brazilian telephones. The mystery thickened and the Polish consulate in São Paulo was called in. With the case still shrouded in mystery, Parzelski finally left Brazil on Tuesday afternoon, onboard a Swiss Air flight bound for Zurich. From there he would return to London. “Before embarking … [we] spotted Parzelski enjoying a dark ale at a bar inside the departure lounge,” the Folha de São Paulo reported on Wednesday, in presumably its final story about the lost tourist. “Smiling he bade us farewell, with a little wave of the hand.” Brazil Air transport Poland Europe Tom Phillips guardian.co.uk

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Libyan rebels launch dual offensive

Misrata death toll rises as rebel forces from city and those from stronghold further west begin assault against Gaddafi troops Libyan rebels have launched an apparently co-ordinated two-pronged offensive against pro-Gaddafi

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Outrage as Obedient Wives Club spreads across south-east Asia

Club claims Muslim women could curb prostitution and domestic violence by becoming ‘good whores’ to their husbands A women’s group that aims to teach Muslim wives how to “keep their spouses happy in the bedroom” is taking root in south-east Asia, prompting outrage from Muslims and non-Muslims alike. The Obedient Wives Club (OWC), which has chapters in Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore and intends to open in London and Paris later this year, says it intends to curb various social problems, including prostitution and gambling, by showing Muslim wives how to “be submissive and keep their spouses happy in the bedroom”. This, in turn, would lead to more harmonious marriages and societies, it says. “In Islam, if the husband wants sex and the wife is not in the mood, she has to give in to him,” the Singapore club’s co-founder Darlan Zaini said recently. “If not, the angels will curse her. This is not good for the family.” The OWC, which launched in Jordan this year, opened a branch in Malaysia last month and in Indonesia last week. In Malaysia, it caused a furore when its international vice-president, Rohaya Mohamad, declared that, by becoming a “good whore … to your husband” and serving him “better than a first-class prostitute”, women could help “curb social ills like prostitution, domestic violence, human trafficking and abandoned babies” – all of which she attributed to unfulfilled sexual needs. In Singapore, however, where a hodgepodge mix of ethnic Chinese, Malay and Indian residents actively aim to maintain what the nation’s “founder”, Lee Kuan Yew, has termed “racial harmony”, supporters are hard to come by. “It’ll never work here,” said 43-year-old technician Ramli bin Katyo. “Wives already know what to do to make husbands happy – and husbands, wives. They don’t need classes.” Facebook groups, such as the Say No to the Obedient Wives Club in Singapore coalition, stress that “women are equal to men and we, in Singapore, should keep it that way”. Local rights organisations, such as Aware (the Association of Women for Action and Research), have also expressed dismay at the OWC’s seemingly regressive stance on women’s rights. “What the club signifies is a regression, a moving backwards, in [what] women and other progressive men – Muslim and non-Muslim – are trying to do for gender equality here in Singapore,” said its vice president Halijah Mohamed. A recent gay and lesbian-friendly event called Pink Dot, attended by 10,000-odd supporters – many of them openly gay Muslim men and women dressed in pink hijabs – demonstrated the progressiveness of much of Singaporean society. Even the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore denounced the club’s views as myopic, and said in a statement: “Happiness in a marriage goes beyond receiving sexual fulfilment from one’s wife.” Defending the OWC’s controversial stance, Fauziah Ariffin, the Malaysian chapter’s national director, said: “When we said that husbands should treat their wives like first-class prostitutes, we were not putting wives on the same level with prostitutes.” “We are talking about first-class elite types, not street hooker types … Ordinary prostitutes can only provide good sex, but not love and affection, which only a wife can provide,” she told the Malay Mail. “If we provide our husbands [with] more than a prostitute can give, then he will not go out looking for it.” But the Malaysian women’s minister, Robia Kosai, dismissed the OWC’s views as “nonsense”, and said the club was “not welcome” in the state she represents, Johor, which borders Singapore. “Divorce – and other social ills – won’t stop just because the wife is good in bed,” she said. “Research shows that divorce in Malaysia is primarily due to economic factors, not because a wife hasn’t been ‘obedient’ to her husband.” But with members already numbering some 1,000 worldwide, the OWC – whose umbrella organisation, Global Ikhwan, also started a polygamy group two years ago – aims to launch branches in London, Paris, Rome and Frankfurt in the near future. As for the tenuous future of the OWC in Singapore, the club may very well have to open under a different moniker. “OWC is too controversial,” Zaini was quoted as saying. “We can use a simpler name like ‘Happy Family’ or something.” Singapore Feminism Women Islam guardian.co.uk

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Rupert Murdoch backs Rebekah Brooks over phone-hacking allegations

News Corp founder describes latest News of the World revelations as ‘deplorable and unacceptable’ Rupert Murdoch, the News Corporation founder, on Wednesday took the highly unusual step of issuing an official public statement backing Rebekah Brooks over the phone-hacking scandal engulfing his UK newspaper business. Murdoch described the recent allegations about phone hacking and payments to police officers by the News of the World “deplorable and unacceptable”. “I have made clear that our company must fully and proactively cooperate with the police in all investigations and that is exactly what News International has been doing and will continue to do under Rebekah Brooks’ leadership,” he added. Murdoch also said he has asked Joel Klein, who heads News Corp’s recently created education unit, “to provide important oversight and guidance”. Viet Dinh, a non-executive director, is keeping the News Corp board informed along with Klein, Murdoch said. His statement came after it emerged on Wednesday that News International will claim Brooks, the News of the World publisher’s chief executive, was on holiday when a mobile phone belonging to Milly Dowler was hacked in to in 2002 when she was editing the Sunday tabloid. The Guardian understands that the company has established that Brooks, News of the World editor from May 2000 until January 2003, was on holiday in Italy when the paper ran a story which referred to a message that had been left on the teenager’s phone. The article, which was about a message left by an employment agency on the murdered schoolgirl’s mobile, was published on 14 April 2002. News International also believes Brooks was away in the two weeks following the murder of Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman in Soham. It is thought that mobile phones belonging to the parents of the two girls were targeted in the days following their death. That is likely to focus attention on Andy Coulson, who was Brooks’s deputy at the time, and would normally have edited the paper in her absence. Coulson replaced Brooks as editor in early 2003 and has always maintained that he was unaware of any phone-hacking activity by the News of the World. He resigned in January 2007 after the royal reporter, Clive Goodman, and private investigator Glenn Mulcaire were jailed for intercepting the voicemail messages of members of the royal household, saying he accepted responsibility for what had happened but knew nothing about it. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook . Phone hacking Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Rupert Murdoch Rebekah Brooks News of the World News International James Robinson guardian.co.uk

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Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp: Stories You Won’t Hear On Fox News

Click here to view this media Hypothetical question: If a major news media outlet hacked people’s cell phones to get dirt on them and in the process caused family members of serial killer’s victims to think their loved one was alive, would that be a major news story? If that story expanded to include possibly thousands of people — celebrity, politician, and private citizen alike — would that be news? If not, it should be. And across the sea, it is. In March, 2002, 13-year old Milly Dowler disappeared while walking home from school. While she was still missing, News Corp’s News of the World operatives allegedly hacked into her cell phone and deleted messages, causing her parents and the police to believe she was still alive. How sick is that? Via The Guardian : The Guardian investigation has shown that, within a very short time of Milly vanishing, News of the World journalists reacted by engaging in what was standard practice in their newsroom: they hired private investigators to get them a story. Their first step was simple, albeit illegal. Paperwork seen by the Guardian reveals that they paid a Hampshire private investigator, Steve Whittamore, to obtain home addresses and, where necessary, ex-directory phone numbers for any families called Dowler in the Walton area. The three addresses Whittamore found could be obtained lawfully on the electoral register. The two ex-directory numbers, however, were “blagged” illegally from British Telecom’s confidential records by one of Whittamore’s associates, John Gunning, who works from a base in Wiltshire. One of the ex-directory numbers was attributed by Whittamore to Milly’s family home. Then, with the help of its own full-time private investigator, Glenn Mulcaire, the News of the World started illegally intercepting mobile phone messages. Scotland Yard is now investigating evidence that the paper hacked directly into the voicemail of the missing girl’s own phone. As her friends and parents called and left messages imploring Milly to get in touch with them, the News of the World was listening and recording their every private word. But the journalists at the News of the World then encountered a problem. Milly’s voicemail box filled up and would accept no more messages. Apparently thirsty for more information from more voicemails, the paper intervened – and deleted the messages that had been left in the first few days after her disappearance. According to one source, this had a devastating effect: when her friends and family called again and discovered that her voicemail had been cleared, they concluded that this must have been done by Milly herself and, therefore, that she must still be alive. But she was not. The interference created false hope and extra agony for those who were misled by it. What’s truly shocking is that the editor of News of the World at that time was Rebekah Brooks (nee Wade), who is now the chief executive for News Corp. in the UK. New York Times reports : If Mr. Lewis’s accusations about hacking during the Dowler case prove accurate, it would mean either that Ms. Brooks had no idea how the paper she edited was obtaining information about the Dowler family for its articles, or that she knew about the hacking and allowed it. Ms. Brooks, in her memo, did not deny the allegations, but said she had had no knowledge of phone hacking on her watch. “I hope that you all realize it is inconceivable that I knew or worse, sanctioned these appalling allegations,” she added. Amid a broader police investigation, the News of the World has admitted that it intercepted mobile phone messages in some cases that occurred after Ms. Brooks’s editorship, and has paid damages to the actress Sienna Miller and others. Numerous other people who say that their phones were hacked are suing the paper. How convenient. How exactly did the private investigator’s bills get paid? Despite her efforts at plausible deniability, everyone already knows her right-hand man, Andy Coulson , likely had full knowledge of what was going on. The scandal has already claimed the job of one former high-ranking News Corporation official, Andy Coulson, who was Ms. Brooks’ deputy at the News of the World in 2002 and who later moved into the top editor’s role. Mr. Coulson resigned from that post in 2007 after a reporter at the News of the World was convicted of charges in connection with the scandal. Mr. Coulson later went on to serve as Mr. Cameron’s media adviser, but stepped down in January, following allegations from former journalists at the paper — denied by Mr. Coulson — that he was aware of the phone hacking. As a side note, News Corp.’s Sun is covering the scandal in its typically even-handed fashion — on page 2, toward the bottom, as a little tiny news blurb. Readers, think about the smear job News Corp is doing on David Brock and Media Matters right now. Think about the racism and conservative tropes they put out day after day after day. Then look at what’s being exposed in the UK right now and ask yourself whether this organization is anything other than a group of criminal thugs out to destroy their perceived ‘enemies’ wherever they can while making a buck or two in the process. Advertisers in the UK are taking notice. Ford has pulled all advertising from News of the World; T-Mobile and other companies are considering doing the same. This isn’t happening in a vacuum. Read this 2006 Frontline transcript for an idea of how Rupert Murdoch thinks, works, operates. GRAHAM KING: There was nobody about on Saturday morning except I bumped into Rupert wandering along the corridor and he said, “Hey, come here.” So we went into the board room and he said, “I think we’re going to buy a newspaper in England” and, of course, when he said The News of the World, I nearly fell on the floor. You’re talking about the biggest-selling newspaper in the world– it was then selling over six million copies a Sunday– unassailable corporately, safe in the hands of a family. What was he talking about? KEN AULETTA: Sir William Carr was the chairman and largest shareholder of The News of the World. His family had run the paper since 1891. But in 1969, the family was threatened by a corporate raider with a reptilian reputation. GRAHAM KING: They’d had a bid in from Robert Maxwell, at the time, which they didn’t like and didn’t want and rejected. But the pressure was to find some kind of white knight to come and rescue The News of the World from the hands of the evil Robert Maxwell. KEN AULETTA: Murdoch flew to London to meet at this restaurant with members of the Carr family. With the charm he can turn on and off like a light switch, he seduced them, telling the family, ” I’ll help you beat Robert Maxwell. We’ll run the company together. Sir William can stay on as chairman. All I want is 40 percent of the stock and the job of managing director.” THOMAS KIERNAN: It came down to a battle between Maxwell and Murdoch at a special shareholders meeting to decide who– which of the two would be the buyer. Murdoch’s bankers and lawyers arranged for the shareholders meeting to be packed with friendly shareholders of the Carr family and all the shareholders were told in advance that the Carr family wanted Murdoch rather than Maxwell to win the battle. KEN AULETTA: Although Maxwell was offering to pay a higher price, the vote went overwhelmingly for Murdoch. Robert Maxwell had been outflanked and perhaps for the last time the establishment would view Rupert Murdoch as a savior. RUPERT MURDOCH: We will be the largest shareholder. Together with the Carr family, it would certainly be more than 50 percent. INTERVIEWER: Was buying The News of the World your own idea or was it suggested from someone else? RUPERT MURDOCH: Entirely my own idea. INTERVIEWER: And what is your motive, to help the Carr family or to expand your newspaper chain? RUPERT MURDOCH: To expand my newspaper chain. KEN AULETTA: Six months after the merger, Murdoch reneged on his gentlemen’s agreement with the Carrs. Despite a pledge not to seek majority control, he did. Murdoch says he had no choice. The Carrs were inept and he had to protect shareholders. The Carrs were outraged and called Murdoch a liar and the charge that his word was counterfeit would shadow him the rest of his career. Ruthless. Disingenuous. Selfish. Slave to the almighty dollar. Read the rest of that segment about News of the World, where he turns gossip and innuendo into news. No matter how far Murdoch tries to run from Roger Ailes, Rebekah Brooks, and his other henchmen, there can be no denying the fact that what happens in Murdoch’s news is Murdoch’s doing. I guarantee you there will be more to come on this story, and it will expose Rupert Murdoch’s criminal empire for what it is. RICO statutes, anyone?

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Casey Anthony Trial: Anger At The Courthouse

Orlando, Fla. — Inside the courtroom, there was jubilation today for Casey Anthony and her defense team. Not only did they manage to avoid a first-degree murder conviction, they also dodged the possibility of a death sentence. However, outside on the courthouse steps, there was a lot of outrage and frustration at the verdict. “It is not justice. I cannot believe this. How did an injustice like this happen? It is terrible, terrible,” Scott Corfee of Orlando, who sat in court when the verdict was announced, told The Huffington Post. Randall Weeks, a resident of Miami who drove to the courthouse to hear the verdict, agreed. “This is the biggest outrage since the O.J. Simpson trial,” Weeks said. “How could they be so blind? Where is justice? Who will pay for her daughter’s death?” Anthony, 25, was found not guilty of killing her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee, today. She was also found not guilty of aggravated child abuse and aggravated manslaughter of a child. But she was convicted on charges of misleading law enforcement. As news of the verdict spread, angered onlookers swarmed the front of the courthouse. The group began shouting in unison, “We want justice” and chanted, “Justice for Caylee.” WATCH: (STORY CONTINUES BELOW VIDEO) if(typeof AOLVP_cfg===’undefined’)AOLVP_cfg=[];AOLVP_cfg.push({id:’AOLVP_1039486274001′,’codever’:0.1, ‘autoload’:true, ‘autoplay’:false, ‘playerid’:’61371448001′, ‘videoid’:’1039486274001′, ‘width’:580, ‘height’:326, ‘stillurl’:’http://pdl.stream.aol.com/pdlext/aol/brightcove/aolmaster/1612833736/1612833736_1039516940001_vs-1039501590001.jpg?pubId=1612833736′, ‘playertype’:’inline’,’videotitle’:’Title’,’videodesc’:’Description’}); A dozen or so sheriff’s deputies emerged from inside the courthouse and forced the angry crowd back. Officers put up caution tape and stood guard, blocking the courthouse doors. For a brief time, the media was stuck between the protesters and the police, unable to move until the area was secure. “I am a firm believer in karma. Maybe justice did not get her, but karma will,” Corfee said. A much more peaceful gathering was being held concurrently on Suburban Drive in Orlando, where Caylee’s remains were found in December 2008. For the second day in a row, hundreds of people made their way into the woods to pay their respects. “This is the only way I know how to grieve,” said a neighbor of the Anthonys who did not wish to be identified. “We’ll never see little Caylee again. Only the Anthonys know where she has been laid to rest. We have no grave to visit, so what else can we do but come here to pay our respects?” Casey Anthony will be back in court Thursday for sentencing on four misdemeanor counts of lying to police. Each count carries a maximum sentence of one year in county jail. The judge has the option of sentencing Anthony consecutively or concurrently. Anthony will receive credit for time served in jail since her 2008 arrest, meaning she could walk free. While Thursday’s outcome is yet to be seen, Weeks and others the Huffington Post spoke with said they will be back on Thursday morning to get their views across regarding Anthony’s sentencing. “You bet your ass we’ll be back,” Weeks’ friend, Jay Henderson, said. “We’ll all be back to have our voices heard.” Several in the crowd cheered in agreement as he spoke.

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JD Salinger letters refer to unpublished ‘manuscripts’

Newly released letters by the Catcher in the Rye author indicate he continued to write after 1965 New indications that JD Salinger did indeed leave behind a collection of unpublished manuscripts are given in a freshly unearthed correspondence from the author. According to the New York Times, the author of The Catcher in the Rye – who published nothing between the 1965 appearance of his novella Hapworth 16, 1924 and his death in 2010 – referred to “my manuscripts” in a 1982 letter to his old friend E Michael Mitchell. A letter to Mitchell in 1994 saw Salinger mention again that he was continuing to write. “I work on,” he wrote. “Same old hours, pretty much.” The three newly discovered letters to the late Mitchell, who created the dust jacket for the first edition of The Catcher in the Rye, were found by his girlfriend, Ruth E Linke. She has now sold them to the Morgan Library and Museum where 11 other letters from Salinger to his friend also reside . Among other things, they see the author writing of how he had to try hard “not to gag” while attending a graduation ceremony. “I’ve been going to graduations, and there isn’t much that I find more pretentious or irksome than the sight of ‘faculty’ and graduates in their academic get-ups,” he wrote in June 1982. A trip to Europe in 1994 warranted a description of Kafka’s Prague house as “a tourist trap”, and a complaint about the impossibility of finding “a decent, huge green salad” in European cities. The letters, reported the New York Times, are full of “regular-guy” comments from Salinger: he refers to his friend as “Buddyroo” and himself as “moron that I am”. Finding it hard to hear, the author writes that he needs subtitles when watching television – unless he is watching The Thirty-Nine Steps, which “I probably know by heart”. “Would that captions went with people’s foreheads,” he muses. A 1995 postcard, meanwhile, “can be described as an ode to cats”, said the New York Times, with Salinger writing “sometimes I can’t remember what I saw in Dogs for so many years.” JD Salinger Fiction Alison Flood guardian.co.uk

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