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substantial business interests primarily in media, retail and property. The Sunday Times Rich List of 2013 estimated their wealth at 2.35 billion.[3] They have earned a reputation for avoiding publicity, and are often described as reclusive.Sir David's son, Aidan, manages their UK businesses. Their businesses have been accused of tax avoidance, by placing assets under ownership of companies registered abroad and controlled through trusts. Their Press Holdings company owns The Business and The Spectator magazine. Frederick, Sr. died when the brothers were twelve years old, and they left school four years later (in 1950) to work in the accounts department at the General Electric Company before setting up as painters and decorators.[2]In 1955 David married Zoe Newton, a grammar school girl who trained as a ballet dancer, at St John the Baptist Church, Holland Road, Kensington.[6] Despite standing only 4'11" (1.5 metres), Zoe Barclay pursued a modelling career and became the most photographed and highly paid model of her time,[7] appearing on the front of popular magazines such as Picturegoer.[8] She appeared on television and in the Dairy Council advertisements as the "drinka pinta milka day" girl.[9]By the end of the 1950s, the brothers were running Candy Corner, a tobacconists and confectioners on the edge of Kensington. However, in November 1960 the business folded when Frederick and Douglas were made bankrupt at the High Court after their landlord seized the shop because they were in breach of the terms of the lease.[10] A notice in the London Gazette at that time announced the bankruptcies, listing a