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As the sun poured over the dingy blue carpeting in The Wall Street Journal’s ninth-floor newsroom, the New York bureau chiefs gathered around the conference table, with the foreign and domestic chiefs listening in on speakerphone. Flanked by his deputies, Marcus Brauchlinatural hair (http://www.naturalwigs2u.com/) was prepared to outline the paper’s latest direction under its new owner, Rupert Murdoch. On the morning of April 7, 2008, Brauchli wore a bespoke suit—as was his custom—from the cut-rate De-Luxe Tailor Shop in Hong Kong, which he had frequented as a correspondent. Slim and attractive—his broad nose and boyish face belying his receding hairline—Brauchli had worked at the paper for human hair wigs (http://www.naturalwigs2u.com/)24 years, the vast majority of his professional life, first as a reporter in Asia, before moving up through its sharp-elbowed editing ranks in New York. Now back in the U.S. with his wife and their two young daughters, he had Remy hair wigs (http://www.naturalwigs2u.com/)settled into the bureaucratic existence he once pretended to disdain. It was almost one year to the day after he had been named managing editor of The Wall Street Journal, the top newsroom post. With eerie symbolic symmetry, the very day of Brauchli’s promotion had coincided with the date of Murdoch’s $5 billion bid for Dow Jones, the Journal’s parent company. An celebrity hair wigs (http://www.naturalwigs2u.com/celebrity-hair-wigs-styles-c-6.html)exceedingly public three-month takeover saga followed, with Murdoch eventually reaching a deal—only after signing an agreement with its previous owner of more than a century, the Bancroft family, to protect the paper’s editorial independence. Shortly after Murdoch’s bid became public, Brauchli confided to a friend, “I work my whole career to get this job, and now I’m working for Murdoch?”