Gov. Spencer Cox also proclaimed it Vietnam War Veterans Day in Utah, noting that nearly 28,000 Utahns left their homes to serve, and an estimated 45,000 Vietnam veterans live in the state.
To counter claims of fraud and market manipulation made by the short-seller Hindenburg Research, based in America, Gautam Adani has hired one of the most expensive law firms in the country.
The Financial Times reported that the lawyers for the Adani Group at the Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas company contacted Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen and Katz.
To counter claims of fraud and market manipulation made by the short-seller Hindenburg Research, based in America, Gautam Adani has appointed one of the most expensive legal firm.
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She Gave Up Her Baby for Adoption, Then Fought to Find Him
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Author’s introduction: Months after giving birth to her firstborn son as an unmarried teenager in 1961, Margaret Erle Katz became one of an estimated three million young women in the decades after World War II and before Roe v. Wade who was forced—by her family; by society; and even New York State law, which until 1971 criminalized premarital sex—to surrender her firstborn son into an adoption system designed to keep the identities of birth families, adoptees, and adoptive families a secret. Margaret, the 17-year-old daughter of Jewish refugees in Manhattan, did all she could to maintain custody of her son. She pushed aside the shaming admonitions of her parents, maternity home officials, and social workers, who told her she would “forget”
Renee Ghert-Zand is a reporter and feature writer for The Times of Israel.
Stephen Mark Erle (later David Rosenberg) at age six months in 1962. His birth mother Margaret Erle was coerced into signing away her parental rights. This photo was taken during the first of just two meetings Margaret and the baby's father birth father George Katz were allowed with him while in foster care prior to his adoption. (Courtesy of Margaret Erle Katz)
George Katz and Margaret Erle, when Margaret was six months pregnant and about to be sent to the Lakeview Home for Unwed Jewish Mothers on Staten Island, 1961. (Courtesy of Margaret Erle Katz)
Margaret Erle, the 16-year-old daughter of refugees from Nazi Germany, fell in love with George Katz, 17, the son of two Viennese Holocaust survivors in Upper Manhattan in 1960.
At the time, there was little birth control, no sex education, and abortion, of course, was illegal. Like more than 3 million other young unwed women in America, Margaret got pregnant. Her family pressured her into seclusion at Lakeview, a maternity home on Staten Island run by Louise Wise Services, the go-to adoption agency of the era for Jewish families. New York State back then required that the religion of a birth mother had to match that of the prospective adoptive parents.