News Corp. Stock Pummeled as Brooks Arrested
RESIGNED: Chief executive of News International Rebekah Brooks is seen attending the Wimbledon Tennis Championships earlier this month in London. Brooks has resigned from her post at the News Corp. subsidiary.
Rebekah Brooks, chief executive of News International and one of News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch’s most trusted advisers, was arrested in the United Kingdom. Brooks had resigned from her post last Friday, after shares of News Corp. declined almost 7.2 percent last week on the Nasdaq Stock Exchange in New York. On Saturday, James Murdoch, Rupert’s son, and News International took out full page advertisements in U.K.’s leading newspapers to apologize to the public at large. Also last Friday evening, Les Hinton, who currently leads Dow Jones, publisher of the Wall Street Journal, resigned. Hinton, another one of Murdoch’s confidants, was head of News International from 1995 to 2007, and was its chief executive when the recent News of the World hacking scandal occurred in 2002. According to the Wall Street Journal, which is owned by News Corp., Brooks has not been charged by U.K. authorities.
Southwest, AirTran Unions Have Labor Agreement
Pilot unions representing Southwest Airlines Co. and AirTran Holdings Inc. this weekend reached an accord on a combined pilot seniority list, which determines the pay and level of pilots as the two companies work to integrate. Southwest acquired the Orlando, Fla.-based AirTran in May for $1 billion, creating one of the biggest low-cost carriers in the United States. “The unions and company negotiating teams have accomplished a task that is rare in this industry, developing an integrated seniority list and transition plan for our pilots outside of arbitration," said Mike Van de Ven, Southwest Airlines executive vice president and chief operating officer said in a statement on Saturday. The seniority list, which has in the past been contentious during airline mergers, determines pilots’ pay, benefits, and route assignments.



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