Murdoch Bid Clears High Hurdle News Corp., Dow Jones make a deal on editorial policy By Marie Morris Posted Jun 26, 2007 2:30 PM CDT Copied Co. have accelerated and the two sides appear closer to reaching an agreement on protecting the editorial independence of The Wall Street Journal, according to news reports Monday, June 25, 2007. (AP Photo/Peter Morgan, file) (Associated Press) A plan to safeguard the Wall Street Journal's editorial independence awaits the approval of the Bancroft family now that Dow Jones and News Corp. have "basically agreed" on an arrangement, a source tells Reuters. The Bancrofts still must approve the deal, which also applies to Dow Jones Newswires and removes a significant obstacle to Rupert Murdoch's $5 billion bid. The Dow Jones board took over control of the negotiations from the Bancrofts last week and agreed on terms with News Corp. late last night (or this morning, according to the Journal). The bid on the table is for $60 a share, and analysts say that the price could drop as low as $30 if Murdoch were to withdraw his offer. Read These Next Ukraine claims world's longest sniper kill. JD Vance is Gavin Newsom's latest online target. Miss Universe contestant dies in freak accident months after wedding. In one day, tragedy for two Carnival Cruise guests. Report an error