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Publishers Tell of Disputes With Apple on E-Book Prices

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Promoter Ignored Ill Singer, Jackson Family Lawyers Say

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Helen Hanft, Master of Camp Way Off Broadway, Dies at 79

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Martin Arnold, Former Journalist at New York Times, Dies at 84

Martin Arnold, Former Times Journalist, Dies at 84

Martin Arnold interviewed Senator Robert F. Kennedy on Mount Kennedy in the Yukon Territory of Canada in 1965.

Martin Arnold, a former reporter, editor and columnist for The New York Times whose assignments took him to the invasion of the Dominican Republic, the mountains of the Yukon, the capital of 1960s hippie culture and the corridors of the publishing world, died on Tuesday at his home in Manhattan. He was 84.



Olbermann to Return to TV, Anchoring Postseason Baseball

Olbermann to Return to TV, Anchoring Postseason Baseball

Keith Olbermann â€" the sports anchor, not the political news one â€" is returning to television.

Keith Olbermann will host coverage of the baseball playoffs for Turner Sports in the fall.

Turner Sports announced on Wednesday that it had reached a deal with Mr. Olbermann to host its studio coverage of postseason Major League Baseball in the fall.

That means Mr. Olbermann will be on the air for the Turner channel TBS for much of October. TBS has the rights to the two wild-card playoff games in each league, and all four of the division series, as well as the National League Championship Series. (The World Series will again be broadcast on the Fox network.)

The news was first reported by The Hollywood Reporter.

Mr. Olbermann has a long background in sports, including a recent stint on NBC as a host of its studio introduction to “Sunday Night Football.” It was his work as an anchor on ESPN’s “SportsCenter” in the 1990s that introduced him to many television viewers.

But he became best known for his tenure as the host of the MSNBC program “Countdown,” which at one point was the highest-rated cable news show not on the Fox News Channel. His eight-year run at that network ended in acrimony, as have many of Mr. Olbermann’s previous assignments on television. Most recently, he was the main anchor for the Current TV network, which fired him only a year after he had joined. Both sides sued, and in March they came to a settlement whose terms were not disclosed.

Mr. Olbermann has retained a deep interest in sports, especially baseball. He was a longtime fan of the Yankees, though he recently declared on Twitter that he no longer roots for the team.



Rebekah Brooks Denies Hacking Charges

Top Murdoch Executive Denies Hacking Charges

LONDON â€" Rebekah Brooks, the former chief executive of Rupert Murdoch’s newspaper outpost here, appeared in court on Wednesday and denied five counts relating to the phone hacking scandal that forced the closure of one of the country’s biggest tabloid newspapers and sent shock waves through the press, the police and the political establishment.

Speaking in a firm voice at Southwark Crown Court in London, Ms. Brooks, 45, answered “not guilty” to charges including conspiracies to hack phones, to commit misconduct in public office and to pervert the course of justice.

Her appearance along with other former members of Mr. Murdoch’s News International, a subsidiary of the giant News Corp., which is based in New York, signaled the latest chapter in an unfolding drama that reached an initial climax in July, 2011, when Mr. Murdoch shuttered The News of the World Sunday tabloid after accusations that its reporters hacked into the voice mail of a kidnapped teenager, Milly Dowler, who was later found murdered.

Ms. Brooks, a former editor of both The News of the World and The Sun, a top-selling tabloid daily newspaper, was accused of conspiracy to hack phones between 2000 and 2006 and conspiracy to “commit misconduct in public office” between 2004 and 2012.

She denied one count of seeking to pervert the course of justice relating to accusations that she and her personal assistant, Cheryl Carter, sought to spirit material away from police investigators in July, 2011.

Ms. Brooks, her husband Charlie and three employees of New International were also accused of trying to hide documents, computers and other electronic equipment from the police. All six people accused of perverting the course of justice entered pleas of not guilty on Wednesday, British news reports said.

Separately, Clive Goodman, the former royal reporter of The News of the World, denied charges on Wednesday of conspiracy to commit misconduct in public office.

All the defendants were freed on bail pending their trials expected later this year.

The scandal at News International inspired an array of investigations into charges that went beyond phone hacking to cover suspected bribery of police officers and other public officials and computer hacking. The police and Parliament launched a series of inquiries and a separate panel chaired by a senior judge, Lord Justice Sir Brian Leveson, urged that press regulation in Britain be enshrined in law to prevent a recurrence of the scandal.

In the course of the inquiries, Mr. Murdoch’s companies made a series of substantial payouts to scores of people in public life who said their privacy had been invaded.