Tag Archives: gathering

Wizards Of The Coast Raids YouTuber’s House To Take Back Magic: The Gathering Cards [Update] – Kotaku Australia

  1. Wizards Of The Coast Raids YouTuber’s House To Take Back Magic: The Gathering Cards [Update] Kotaku Australia
  2. Magic ‘Raid’: Wizards of the Coast and Pinkertons Update Gizmodo
  3. Wizards Of The Coast Has Reportedly Used Pinkertons Multiple Times TheGamer
  4. Card game makers sent private detectives to raid YouTuber’s house after he streamed unreleased version New York Post
  5. Wizards Of The Coast Reportedly Threatens Jail Time Against Player Who Was Accidentally But Legally Sold Upcoming Magic: The Gathering Set Ahead Of Official Street Date Bounding Into Comics
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Wizards of the Coast sends Pinkerton agents after YouTuber who unboxed a leaked Magic: The Gathering card set – Boing Boing

  1. Wizards of the Coast sends Pinkerton agents after YouTuber who unboxed a leaked Magic: The Gathering card set Boing Boing
  2. Magic ‘Raid’ Wasn’t the First Time Wizards of the Coast Hired Pinkertons Gizmodo
  3. Wizards Of The Coast Has Reportedly Used Pinkertons Multiple Times TheGamer
  4. Magic: The Gathering Fan: Pinkertons Threatened Jail Over Cards Kotaku
  5. Wizards Of The Coast Reportedly Threatens Jail Time Against Player Who Was Accidentally But Legally Sold Upcoming Magic: The Gathering Set Ahead Of Official Street Date Bounding Into Comics
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Mayor takes Chicago police leaders to task amid questions on response to latest violent gathering of youths downtown – Chicago Tribune

  1. Mayor takes Chicago police leaders to task amid questions on response to latest violent gathering of youths downtown Chicago Tribune
  2. Disturbing video shows terrified woman attacked by mob during ‘Teen Takeover’ of downtown Chicago Yahoo News
  3. Millennium Park Teen Curfew Will Be Enforced After Youth Gatherings Downtown Turned Violent, Police Say Block Club Chicago
  4. Concerns about next time downtown Chicago crowds become violent after weekend chaos in Loop from hundreds of teens WLS-TV
  5. Next Chicago mayor excuses rioters: Expect more victims of violence New York Post

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Geauga County Drag queen brunch happens without incident amid gathering of protesters and counter-protesters – WKYC.com

  1. Geauga County Drag queen brunch happens without incident amid gathering of protesters and counter-protesters WKYC.com
  2. Ohio man charged for using Molotov cocktails to attack church ahead of planned drag shows CBS News
  3. Drag Story Time at Chesterland church goes smoothly following arson attack, threats and call to cancel News 5 Cleveland WEWS
  4. Protesters, supporters turn out for Geauga drag events WJW FOX 8 News Cleveland
  5. Alliance man charged for vandalizing Geauga County church ahead of drag queen brunch and story hour WKYC Channel 3
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Tell-tale signs of an incipient counteroffensive Updated combat map: While keeping the Russian forces at bay in Bakhmut and Avdiivka, the Ukrainian army is gathering strength for a major reversal — Meduza – Meduza

  1. Tell-tale signs of an incipient counteroffensive Updated combat map: While keeping the Russian forces at bay in Bakhmut and Avdiivka, the Ukrainian army is gathering strength for a major reversal — Meduza Meduza
  2. Harrowing Details of Bloody Bakhmut Battle Revealed by Ex-Ukraine Official Newsweek
  3. Russia’s war in Ukraine: Live updates CNN
  4. Russia’s assault on Bakhmut is losing the limited momentum it had, says UK intel, complicating its best chance at a symbolic victory Yahoo News
  5. Why Putin is casting the Ukraine war as a fight for Russia’s survival The Hill
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Trump supporters begin gathering in NYC with indictment in Stormy Daniels hush money probe possible Wednesday – New York Daily News

  1. Trump supporters begin gathering in NYC with indictment in Stormy Daniels hush money probe possible Wednesday New York Daily News
  2. Trump warns of arrest, calls for protest, but online support is muted USA TODAY
  3. Video of 2020 Trump Tower rally circulates ahead of possible indictment The Associated Press
  4. Trump supporters to rally in Manhattan after former president claims he will be arrested, calls for protest PIX11 New York News
  5. Keller @ Large: Criminal charges could help Trump’s presidential campaign, not hurt it CBS Boston
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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CEOs act with caution at this year’s global gathering

This article first appeared in the Morning Brief. Get the Morning Brief sent directly to your inbox every Monday to Friday by 6:30 a.m. ET. Subscribe

Tuesday, January 24, 2023

Today’s newsletter is by Julie Hyman, anchor and correspondent at Yahoo Finance. Follow Julie on Twitter @juleshyman. Read this and more market news on the go with the Yahoo Finance App.

One of the regular charges leveled at participants of the World Economic Forum in Davos is they talk a big game on climate change… then fly to Zurich on private jets.

The WEF has said it offsets all of that travel by buying carbon credits. Some CEOs have responded by flying commercial, which has a lower carbon footprint.

But the executives and world leaders we spoke to last week did seem increasingly aware of how they’re perceived outside of their bubble in the Swiss Alps, and are making some attempts to address those perceptions.

As my colleague Brian Sozzi wrote in yesterday’s Morning Brief, those attending the World Economic Forum didn’t pay Elon Musk much mind, even though Musk again took shots at the annual gathering.

Ignoring the antagonistic billionaire, however, doesn’t mean the proceedings in Davos haven’t taken on a new air of self-awareness about this annual gathering of the global elite.

“It’s something that people are very conscious of now and becoming more so,” S&P Global CEO Doug Peterson told us in Davos. Peterson said he flies commercial for international travel. The Yahoo Finance team shared a commercial flight with another top U.S. CEO on the way back to the States this weekend.

A view of the Zurich Kloten Airport upon the arrival of the private and VIP planes of the participants within the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting held in Davos, in Zurich, Switzerland on January 17, 2023. (Photo by Michele Crameri/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

But it’s not just internet trolls or climate activists like Greta Thunberg whose voices have risen to the altitude where CEOs reside. Executives told Yahoo Finance are hearing from their home communities and employees they expect corporations to be good partners.

“We live in a world today where our employees want to know us as humans,” Cisco CEO Chuck Robbins said. “Our employees really care about culture. They care about your purpose. In fact, if you look at some of the latest surveys, employees will tell you that salary’s not number one anymore.”

Tech executives, in particular, are acutely aware of the optics of throwing lavish Davos parties while cutting spending at home. Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince decided to tone it down this year, opting not to hold the company’s typical hot-ticket party. (Cloudflare did still sponsor a popular piano bar.)

“It just didn’t seem like the right year to be celebrating,” Prince said. “When we see a lot of companies laying people off, when we see people in the tech industry really struggling, the idea of flying in a big performer, spending a ton of money on a lavish party, didn’t make a bunch of sense.”

Prince seemed to be throwing shade at Microsoft, which reportedly hosted Sting and 50 attendees at a party early in the week before news broke the company was laying off 10,000 people.

Salesforce also held a party whose coveted invites were hard to come by, and which featured a performance by The Pretenders’ frontwoman Chrissie Hynde.

But this party was sandwiched between layoff news earlier this month and the revelation Monday that activists Elliott Management and Jeff Ubben’s Inclusive Capital had taken stakes in the software giant. Investors, too, have noticed the disconnect. And perhaps sense an opening.

These sorts of parties — some of them with putative themes like sustainability — are designed to illustrate that Davos is not a sinister meeting of a dark cabal of global executives, political leaders, and non-governmental organizations, but is a chance for high-flyers to get a lot of facetime with their counterparts in a concentrated period.

This year’s conference also showed, to sometimes awkward effect, that CEOs are trying to straddle a tricky line between business and philanthropy, one challenge of so-called stakeholder capitalism.

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink, who has pushed his enormous money management firm further into ESG investing, has been attacked by activists on both sides for going too far and not going far enough.

“The attacks are now personal,” Fink said during a panel last week.

What does all this Davos self-awareness and sensitivity mean for investors?

Likely more caution and guardedness from companies and their leaders.

With the global economy slowing — and there was lively debate among Davos execs about just how much — expect a bit more tact from Corporate America 2023. And not just on their balance sheets, but managing their public images, too.

What to Watch Today

Economy

  • 8:30 a.m. ET: Philadelphia Fed Non-Manufacturing Activity, January (-17 during prior month, revised to -12.8)

  • 9:45 a.m. ET: S&P Global U.S. Manufacturing PMI, January Preliminary (46.0 expected, 46.2 during prior month)

  • 9:45 a.m. ET: S&P Global U.S. Services PMI, January Preliminary (45.3 expected, 44.7 during prior month)

  • 9:45 a.m. ET: S&P Global U.S. Composite PMI, January Preliminary (46.4 expected, 45.0 during prior month)

  • 10:00 a.m. ET: Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index, January (-5 expected, 1 during prior month)

  • 10:00 a.m. ET: Richmond Fed Business Conditions, January (-14 during prior month)

Earnings

  • Microsoft Corporation (MSFT), 3M (MMM), Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), Hasbro (HAS), Halliburton (HAL), Lockheed Martin (LMT), Verizon Communications (VZ), Lockheed Martin (LMT), General Electric (GE), The Travelers Companies (TRV), Capital One Financial (COF), Texas Instruments (TXN)

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Germany plans to destroy this village for a coal mine. Thousands are gathering to stop it



CNN
 — 

It’s a stark image in 2023: Police in riot gear flooding a village, pulling people out of houses and tearing down structures to make way for the arrival of excavating machines to access the rich seam of coal beneath the ground.

Since Wednesday, as rain and winds lashed the tiny west German village of Lützerath, police have removed hundreds of activists. Some have been in Lützerath for more than two years, occupying the homes abandoned by former residents after they were evicted, most by 2017, to make way for the mine.

More than 1,000 police officers are involved in the eviction operation. Most of the buildings have now been cleared, but some activists remained in treehouses or huddled in a hole dug into the ground as of Friday, according to Aachen city police.

Protest organizers expect thousands more people to pour into the area on Saturday to demonstrate against its destruction, though they ultimately may not be able to access the village. After the eviction is complete, RWE plans to complete a 1.5-kilometer perimeter fence to snake around Lützerath, sealing off the village’s buildings, streets and sewers before they are demolished.

Still, activists vow to continue to fight for the village.

“We are taking action against this destruction by putting our bodies in the way of the excavator,” said Ronni Zeppelin, from campaign group Lützerath Lebt (Lützerath Lives).

Lützerath, about 20 miles west of Dusseldorf, has long been a climate flashpoint in Germany because of its position on the edge of the open-cast lignite coal mine, Garzweiler II.

The mine sprawls across around 14 square miles (35 square kilometers) in North Rhine Westphalia (NRW) – a huge, jagged gouge in the landscape.

Its slow creep outwards over the years has already swallowed villages where families have lived for generations. It has prompted the destruction of centuries-old buildings and even a wind farm.

RWE has long planned to expand the mine further, in the face of criticism from climate groups. Lignite is the most polluting form of coal, which itself is the most polluting fossil fuel.

As far back as 2013, the German courts ruled the company was able to expand, even at the expense of nearby villages.

Following the Greens’ successes in the 2021 federal elections, some hoped the expansion would be canceled, said David Dresen, part of the climate group Aller Dörfer bleiben (All Villages Stay), who lives in Kuckum, a village that had been slated for destruction.

But in October 2022, the government struck a deal with RWE that saved several villages – including Kuckum – but allowed Lützerath to be demolished to give RWE access to the coal beneath it.

In return, RWE agreed to bring forward its coal phase-out from 2038 to 2030.

The Greens pitch it as a win.

“We were able to save five villages and three farms from being destroyed, spare 500 people a forced resettlement and bring forward the coal phase-out by eight years,” Martin Lechtape, a spokesperson for the North Rhine Westphalia Green Party, said in an email to CNN.

The Greens and RWE also say the expansion will help relieve the energy crisis caused by the war in Ukraine, which has curtailed gas supplies.

It “is not a renaissance of lignite or coal, but only a side-step – helping Germany to cope with the energy crisis,” RWE spokesperson Guido Steffen, told CNN in an email.

Climate groups fiercely oppose the deal. Continuing to burn coal for energy will belch out planet-warming emissions and violate the Paris Climate Agreement’s ambition to limit global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

RWE and the Greens both reject the claim the mine expansion will increase overall emissions, saying European caps mean extra carbon emissions can be offset.

Many feel betrayed by the Green Party, including people who voted for them.

“It’s such an absurd and catastrophic scenario that Germany, the country where everyone else thinks we have green [policies], is destroying a village to burn coal in the middle of the climate crisis,” said Dresen, who has voted Green in recent elections.

Fabian Huebner, campaigner on energy and coal at Europe Beyond Coal, said: “I think the Greens, faced by very difficult decisions, took the wrong turn and de-prioritized climate policy.”

Germany should accelerate the clean-energy transition instead, he added, including a faster roll out of renewables and energy efficiency measures: “You can’t solve the crisis with the energy source that basically created this crisis.”

Some studies suggest Germany may not even need the extra coal. An August report by international research platform Coal Transitions found that even if coal plants operate at very high capacity until the end of this decade, they already have more coal available than needed from existing supplies.

It’s a deeply uncomfortable moment for the Greens and an unfathomable catastrophe for those who want to save the village.

“The pictures from Lützerath are of course painful, as we have always fought against the continued burning of coal,” said Lechtape, on behalf of the NRW Greens. “We know the importance of Lützerath as a symbol in the climate movement. However, this should not obscure what has been achieved,” he added.

The party’s discomfort may deepen on Saturday when a protest, organized by a coalition of climate groups, is expected to draw thousands of people to Lützerath – including Swedish climate activist, Greta Thunberg.

“It is now up to us to stop the wrecking balls and coal excavators. We will not make this eviction easy,” said Pauline Brünger from the climate group Fridays for Future.

Even if the village is completely evicted before Saturday and access is blocked off, climate groups say the protest will still go ahead.

Dina Hamid, a recently evicted activist with Lützerath Lebt, told CNN, “in the end, it’s not about the village, it’s about the coal staying in the ground and we’re going to fight for that as long as it takes.”

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Republican Jewish Coalition: GOP elites weigh Trump — and the alternatives — at high-profile Vegas gathering



CNN
 — 

Former President Donald Trump is set to address the influential Republican Jewish Coalition on Saturday, days after becoming the first declared GOP candidate of the 2024 presidential campaign.

But the chandeliered ballroom at the opulent Venetian resort hotel in Las Vegas will teem with his rivals – including potential chief nemesis Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis – as some of the party’s most influential donors weigh alternatives to the divisive former president.

Trump still retains a “following” within the party, Mel Sembler, a Florida real-estate developer and GOP donor who sits on the coalition’s board, told CNN this week. But, he said, “I think people are getting tired of his controversies all the time.”

“What concerns me is if he wins the primary and loses the general,” added Sembler, who has not endorsed a 2024 candidate.

The annual leadership conference of prominent Jewish conservatives marks the first major gathering of GOP establishment forces since this month’s midterm letdown for the party, which saw Democrats retain their hold on the Senate and make inroads in state governments around the country.

Republicans did flip the House but will hold a slim majority in January after the “red wave” their party envisioned all year failed to materialize.

Leading Republican figures in Washington and elsewhere are casting blame on Trump for his role in boosting far-right Senate candidates who faltered in the general election – and for continuing to publicly nurse his own grievances about the 2020 election and his ongoing legal troubles. During his campaign kickoff Tuesday, he called himself a “victim” of a federal law enforcement system that he has spent years politicizing.

Trump’s legal difficulties appeared to deepen Friday when Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed a special counsel to oversee the criminal investigations into the retention of national defense information at his Mar-a-Lago resort and parts of the January 6, 2021, insurrection.

Rather than seeing the party unify behind his third presidential bid, Trump faced immediate blowback. Minutes after his announcement, daughter and former senior White House adviser Ivanka Trump distanced herself from her father’s campaign, saying she does “not plan to be involved in politics.”

His announcement also overlapped with a high-profile book tour by his own former vice president – and potential 2024 rival – Mike Pence, who has spent the past several days reminding Americans of Trump’s role in the violent US Capitol riot on January 6, 2021.

Perhaps the biggest blow to Trump’s campaign infrastructure was the swift and public defection of several billionaire GOP donors – including a close ally, Blackstone CEO Steve Schwarzman – who said the country needed leaders “rooted in today and tomorrow, not today and yesterday.”

Others are hedging their bets.

Among those playing the field is Miriam Adelson, the billionaire widow of Las Vegas casino magnate and RJC benefactor Sheldon Adelson. The Adelsons have donated nearly a half-billion dollars to Republican groups and candidates in the last four election cycles – including tens of millions to boost Trump’s presidential ambitions, federal records show.

Trump in 2018 bestowed the Presidential Medal of Freedom – the nation’s highest civilian honor – on Miriam Adelson, citing her philanthropy.

Despite that relationship, Adelson intends to remain neutral in the GOP presidential primaries, an aide confirmed to CNN this week. Adelson, whose political contributions have slowed some since her husband’s death in January 2021, has indicated that she will financially support the eventual GOP nominee, whether that be Trump or someone else.

RJC executive director Matt Brooks said Trump has won plaudits from coalition members for his stalwart support of Israel during his presidency and unilateral withdrawal from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.

Still, Brooks said, “people are window-shopping right now. There are people who are asking if we need a new direction and a new face.”

Even as Trump prepares to make his pitch to the RJC, his allies and aides have sought to position him as the outsider in the 2024 contest, despite his recent White House occupancy.

“President Trump is running a campaign that represents everyday Americans who love their country,” campaign spokesman Steven Cheung said in a statement to CNN. “There are others who will answer to the political establishment, be beholden to corporations, and drag the United States into more unnecessary wars.”

And his allies note that Trump’s fundraising operation largely relies on a small-dollar donor base, reducing his reliance on the party’s elite and giving him a potential edge over opponents who do not boast the same small-donation game.

He enters the 2024 campaign with more than $100 million in cash reserves across a sprawling network of political committees – although federal law could constrain his ability to fully tap those funds for his campaign.

“He has proven he can raise a lot of money on his own,” Michael Caputo, a former Trump administration official who remains close to the former president, recently told CNN.

Trump is not making the trek to Las Vegas but is scheduled to address the gathering live via satellite Saturday as part of a morning lineup that will feature several other potential rivals for the GOP nomination, including South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, newly reelected New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. Trump’s remote appearance was announced on Thursday, after it became clear that several of his potential 2024 rivals were scheduled to deliver their own remarks.

DeSantis – fresh off the momentum of his double-digit reelection victory in Florida – is slated to address the group Saturday night during its gala dinner.

Trump recently has stepped up attacks on DeSantis, and another potential 2024 challenger, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin.

Two sources familiar with Trump’s thinking said part of the reason he has lashed out is because he believes both governors are actively soliciting support from “his donors.” Trump has told aides and allies that DeSantis especially is trying to pitch himself to deep-pocketed Republicans who helped bankroll Trump’s reelection campaign.

A Republican fundraiser in Florida with knowledge of DeSantis’ political operation said, “Of course he’s talking to those people. They’re fair game and every Republican is going to go after those donors because that’s the smart thing to do, it’s not with the mindset, ‘Let’s screw Trump.’”

The conservative Club for Growth, one of the biggest outside spenders in politics, already has broken with Trump and earlier this week circulated internal polling that suggested DeSantis could mount a serious challenge to the former president in early voting states and Florida, where both reside. The group plowed $2 million into DeSantis’ reelection efforts this election cycle, according to Florida campaign filings.

David McIntosh, the former Indiana congressman who runs the group, declined a CNN interview request through a spokesman.

This week, as the contours of the new GOP majority in the House became clear – DeSantis won praise from national Republicans for injecting himself into congressional map-making this year. In a rare move for a governor, DeSantis pushed state lawmakers to adopt his map, which controversially eliminated two districts represented by Black Democrats and gave the GOP the advantage in as many as 20 of 28 districts.

“That map created four new Republican wins,” said a GOP consultant who has been close to Trump and asked not to be named to speak candidly about the 2024 race. “That’s the practical reality of a conservative governor standing up to his own party and saying. ‘We’re not going to cut deals and do things the old way.’”

DeSantis this week sought to sidestep questions about the growing rivalry with Trump, urging people “to chill out a little bit” – even as he touted his 19-point margin of victory in his reelection. CNN has previously reported that those close to DeSantis believe he does not intend to announce his plans before May.

“The smartest thing DeSantis could do is stay out of the fray for as long as possible,” said the Republican consultant. “Don’t stick your face in the frying pan too early.”

Many of Trump’s potential 2024 rivals spoke at the conference in Las Vegas, offering post-midterm assessments and making their pitch for how the party should move forward.

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, an early ally of Trump, issued a long and passionate indictment of the former president on Saturday, casting Trump as a cancer on the Republican Party and the sole responsible figure for its recent election losses.

“We keep losing and losing and losing,” Christie said. “The reason we’re losing is because Donald Trump has put himself before everybody else.”

Christie slammed Trump for recruiting candidates under the singular qualification that they deny the results of the 2020 election.

“That’s not what this party stands for,” the former governor said. “It’s not what it should stand for in the future, and we’ve got to stop it now.”

Christie pointed to midterm GOP defeats in the battleground states of Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin, and warned that without a resurgence in those states – especially in the suburbs – Republicans held no hope of winning back the White House in 2024.

Echoing those fears, New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu said that “candidate quality matters,” while adding, “I got a great policy for the Republican Party: Let’s stop supporting crazy, unelectable candidates in our primaries and start getting behind winners that can close the deal in November.”

Sununu was initially courted to run for US Senate, but ultimately decided to run for reelection. The GOP nominee, retired Brig. Gen. Don Bolduc, who has pushed falsehoods about the 2020 election, went on to lose to Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan earlier this month.

Meanwhile, Florida Sen. Rick Scott, who headed the Senate GOP’s campaign arm this election cycle, said Republicans’ midterm hopes for a “red wave” did not materialize because the party focused too much on “how bad the Democrats are” and did not offer voters its own policy vision.

“The current strategy of most Republicans in Washington is to only be against the crazy Democrats – and they’re crazy – and never outline any plan what we are for and what we will do. That is a mistake,” the senator said.

Scott’s comments come days after his failed bid to oust Mitch McConnell as the party’s Senate leader.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who unsuccessfully ran for president against Trump in 2016, urged the GOP to try to broaden its appeal outside the party’s base.

“We spend far too much time preaching to the choir; talking to the same 2.6 million people watching Fox News every night,” Cruz said.

Cruz also said he had spoken at Senate Republicans’ leadership election this week to urge the party to take a harder line against Democratic policies.

“Republicans in the Senate don’t fight,” he said Saturday.

Cruz said he urged GOP leaders to “pick two or three or four things that matter and say, ‘We believe in it.’”

Outgoing Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan took a hard stance against the former president Friday night, saying in Las Vegas that the Republican Party was “desperately in need of a course correction.”

“Trump was saying that we’d be winning so much we get tired of winning. Well, I’m sick and tired of our party losing. And after this election last week, I’m even more sick and tired than I was before,” Hogan said.

“Look, this is the third election in a row that we lost and should have won. I say three strikes and you’re out. If you repeatedly lose to a really bad team, it’s time for new leadership,” he added.

This story has been updated with more information.

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Multiple people shot outside of AUC library after Clark Atlanta homecoming gathering – WSB-TV Channel 2

ATLANTA — According to Atlanta police, an overnight shooting at a Clark Atlanta University homecoming gathering left four people injured.

Police said the shooting happened around 12:30 a.m. as students were gathered outside of the Woodruff Library on James P. Bradley Drive for Homecoming weekend.

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Three men were shot and taken to the hospital. They are in stable condition. A fourth unknown victim left the scene, refusing treatment, according to police.

Police confirmed on Sunday morning that one of the victims is a student.

Channel 2′s Justin Carter says a crime alert from the university revealed three students and one young adult who does not attend the school were shot.

The shots were fired from a vehicle going west on Parsons Street.

The crime alert to students from the university reads as followed:

The following is a message from the CAU Notification System

Please click here to acknowledge receipt of this message

On October 16, 2022 at approximately 12:29 am Clark Atlanta University Department of Public Safety Officers responded to a shots fired incident.

The preliminary investigation revealed, three students and one young adult who does not attend school in the AUC, while on the property of the Woodruff Library suffered injuries from shots fired from a vehicle traveling West on Parsons Street.

All victims involved are being treated for their injuries.

The Atlanta Police Department also responded to the scene and is investigating the incident.

The safety of our students is our top priority. CAU Public Safety and Atlanta Police Departments have increased officer patrols in the area and the incident remains under investigation.

—  CAU Notification System

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There is no word on a suspect at this time.

Clark Atlanta University is still investigating the shooting.

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