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Lawmakers in more than a half-dozen U.S. states are pushing laws to define antisemitism, triggering debates about free speech and bringing complicated world politics into statehouses. Bill supporters say that more than 30 states have adopted the definition in some way over the years. Since the Israel-Hamas war erupted, several states have passed resolutions condemning Hamas and voicing support for Israel. Some protesters gathered in the capitol in Indiana this month before the House unanimously advanced a bill incorporating the definition there. How colleges are acting to prevent or stop antisemitism on campus has become a hot-button issue across the country.
Persons: , Esther Panitch, Brian Kemp, Kenneth Stern, Stern, , Israel, Bill, , Brian Hauss, they're, Fred Deutsch, Lara Freidman, Ruwa, Yaqoub Saadeh Organizations: Democratic, Georgia's, Republican Gov, Holocaust, Alliance, Bard Center, Jewish Voice, Peace, CAIR, Defamation League, Israel, U.S . State Department, American Jewish Committee, U.S . Congress, American Bar Association, ACLU, Rep, Republican, Foundation for Middle East, Georgia State Rep, Eastern Student Association, Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis, Harvard, University of Pennsylvania Locations: statehouses, Israel, Gaza, Georgia, Indiana, South Dakota, New York, Iowa, Virginia, U.S, Palestinian
Nasdaq announced plans to acquire Adenza from PE firm Thoma Bravo. Nasdaq has looked to add new tech solutions to its business under CEO Adena Friedman. The exchange operator announced plans to acquire behind-the-scenes tech provider Adenza in a cash-and-stock deal valued at $10.5 billion. Adenza, owned by private equity firm Thoma Bravo, provides risk management and regulatory tech for banks and brokerages. In the wake of the deal, Nasdaq's solutions business will account for 77% of the company's total revenue.
Persons: Thoma, Adena Friedman, Holden Spaht, Friedman, Freidman, Goldman Sachs, Piper Sandler Organizations: Nasdaq, Thoma Bravo, Wall, JPMorgan, Qatalyst Partners, Barclays, Citi, Evercore, HSBC, Jefferies
NEW YORK, Nov 15 (Reuters) - Donald Trump defeated his niece Mary Trump in a lawsuit where she accused the former U.S. president and two of his siblings of defrauding her out of a multimillion-dollar inheritance. Mary Trump's case had its roots in the 1981 death of her father Fred Trump Jr., Donald Trump's older brother, who left Mary, then 16, a profitable real estate portfolio. Now a 57-year-old psychologist, Mary Trump claimed that her uncles Donald and Robert Trump and aunt Maryanne Trump Barry were supposed to protect her interests but instead "squeezed" her out of tens of millions of dollars. The cases are Mary L. Trump v Donald J. Trump et al, New York State Supreme Court, New York County, No. 654698/2020, and Donald J. Trump v Mary L. Trump et al in the same court, No.
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