The Class System at Dow Jones how class system favors Dow Jones By Peter Fearon Posted May 3, 2007 4:30 PM CDT Copied Co., publisher of The Wall Street Journal, said Tuesday, May 1, 2007 it has received an unsolicited bid from Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. to buy the company for $60 per share, or $5 billion. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, file) (Associated Press) See 5 more photos In rejecting Rupert Murdoch's offer for Dow Jones, the Bancroft family provides a textbook example of the case for—and against—dual class shares for media companies. With their shares carrying ten times the voting power of publicly traded shares, the family has the power to spurn a suitor it deems a poor match for the country's premiere financial newspaper. That may be good for the public, if not for owners of the publicly traded stock, MarketWatch observes. And there's a limit to how much they'll take before mutiny ensues. Just ask people over at the New York Times Co., where shareholders have recently escalated efforts to loosen the Sulzberger family's grip on the company. Read These Next Trump offers a solution to end the government shutdown. Kid Rock has added the R-word to the list of slurs he still uses. Poster freed after a month in jail over Trump meme. Man wakes from coma, says girlfriend crashed car on purpose. See 5 more photos Report an error