Hundreds of faculty and graduate student workers rallied on a sunny Wednesday afternoon outside Columbia University’s only open entrance, protesting the university’s decision hours earlier to send police on campus and arrest more than 100 pro-Palestinian demonstrators. Protesters held signs, including “no cops on campus,” as police entered and exited the campus gates just feet away. Others held signs calling for university President Minouche Shafik to resign. Faculty members said access was heavily restricted, as campus was closed for a second day in the period before finals, open only to students living on campus and essential workers.
The NYPD announced almost 300 arrests had taken place Tuesday at Columbia and City College − hours before Los Angeles police in riot gear swept onto UCLA's campus to break up a violent melee between dueling protesters as opposition to Israel's war in Gaza continued to roll through universities across the nation.
Violence broke out between groups of protesters at UCLA amid clashes over the conflict in Gaza. Protesters were arrested at the University of Wisconsin, while more than 200 people were taken into custody when police responded to protests at Columbia University and nearby City… pic.twitter.com/O6RV6FTwK3
— CBS Evening News (@CBSEveningNews) May 1, 2024
➤PROFESSIONAL AGITATOR HELPS COLUMBIA STUDENTS: Professional protest consultant helps Columbia students . . . A video shows"We’re trying to document them being a- -holes," Lisa Fithian said to the camera person. "You’re right. They are being a - -holes." Fithian is a professional "protest consultant" who has been arrested over 80 times, Laura Ingraham of "The Ingraham Angle" said on her show Tuesday night. Fithian has reportedly participated in protests on climate change, Occupy Wall Street, and now, the Free Palestine movement.
Secy. of State Antony Blinken says the "time is now" for Hamas to accept the high-stakes U.S. brokered ceasefire and hostage deal offered by Israel. @TSoufiBurridge reports from Tel Aviv as the world awaits Hamas' response. https://t.co/Tb1dW4im5m pic.twitter.com/K9EuogNN8p
— World News Tonight (@ABCWorldNews) May 2, 2024
➤BIDEN REMAINS QUIET: While pro-Palestinian protests have exploded at colleges across the nation, President Joe Biden has stayed largely silent about campus unrest that complicates his reelection campaign. Biden has not addressed the protests in a speech. Nor has he given any public remarks on the college protests at Columbia University and elsewhere in more than a week, with the White House instead issuing statements and addressing questions on the protests through spokespeople. The approach underscores the no-win situation Biden faces. Biden has remained a steadfast defender of Israel's war against Hamas, putting him at odds with many young progressive voters in his race against former President Donald Trump.
TAKING CONTROL: Anti-Israel agitators blasted with tear gas at University of South Florida campus as cops attempt to restore law and order. 10 participants were arrested, including one with a gun. https://t.co/RDBOxG0CMQ pic.twitter.com/ZsJSvrju0f
— Fox News (@FoxNews) May 2, 2024
➤ARMED STUDENT NEUTRALIZED: Police shot and killed an armed student outside a Wisconsin middle school Wednesday, sending students fleeing for their lives — including some who escaped on in-line skates. Authorities responded to an “active shooter” situation reported outside Mount Horeb Middle School and “neutralized” a student with a gun, school officials said. No one else was harmed, State Attorney General Josh Kaul said at a press conference Wednesday evening.
Sources tell @ABC News a 14-year-old active shooter with what appeared to be a rifle was killed after a confrontation with officers outside a Wisconsin middle school. @PierreTABC reports. https://t.co/cijbzF3SUy pic.twitter.com/XZdISQTWcs
— World News Tonight (@ABCWorldNews) May 2, 2024
Authorities described the student as a juvenile male but did not provide further identification. It’s not clear how many officers fired their weapons or whether the suspect had shot at them. Hours later, school officials were still working to get students who had been locked down since before noon back with their families. Terrified parents said that their children hid in closets, scared to take out their phones to call or text. One middle schooler said his class fled the school gym on in-line skates.
Brittany Rodriguez, a mother of four, told WMTV her son called her in a panic and said he heard multiple gunshots. “To get a call when you’re at work from your babies crying, saying there’s a shooting going on and we’re scared, and you’re 30 minutes away from them,” Rodriguez said.
➤HIGH INTEREST RATES WON'T GO AWAY ANYTIME SOON: The Fed said that inflation progress has stalled, so it’s extending its wait-and-see posture that could last well into the year. The central bank’s decision to leave the benchmark federal-funds rate in a range between 5.25% and 5.5% was widely anticipated. Chair Jerome Powell said that rate cuts could begin if the labor market weakened unexpectedly. The S&P 500 extended its recent slide after the announcement. Investors expect the Fed to maintain the same stance at its meeting next month.
➤DRAMA QUEEN MTG AFTER JOHNSON: Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene said she would call a vote next week to oust House Speaker Mike Johnson. The Georgia Republican and her allies have accused the GOP leader of betraying his conservative values by relying on Democrats to help pass important bills. Many Republicans object to her actions, which began a month ago with a motion to vacate. Greene acknowledged that she is unlikely to succeed in removing Johnson from the post, which requires a majority vote in the House, but said the move would force lawmakers to go on the record. Johnson has said that he doesn’t plan to resign and is doing the best he can given the party’s historically small majority. Democrats are poised to side with Johnson, unlike last year, when they voted alongside eight GOP rebels to oust then-Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R., Calif.).
Florida now stands among 12 other states in the region with total or near-total abortion bans following the enactment of a 6-week abortion ban on Wednesday. In Arizona, legislators voted to repeal a ban on nearly all abortions that dated back to the Civil War era. pic.twitter.com/cwZfeAe3yP
— CBS Evening News (@CBSEveningNews) May 1, 2024
➤ARIZONA REPEALS BAN ON ABORTIONS: The Arizona Senate voted to repeal the state’s ban on virtually all abortions. Several Republicans joined with Democrats, in the hopes of reversing a significant political liability for Republicans ahead of the November elections: The state Supreme Court last month ruled to revive a 160-year-old, near-total ban on the procedure. Last week, the state House also voted to repeal the ban; Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs has said she will sign the legislation.
➤BIDEN NOMINATION LINKED TO HAMAS: Biden nominee donated to candidates linked to Hamas . . . An attorney nominated by President Joe Biden to a lifetime appointment on the federal judiciary donated to at least two Democratic state political candidates who led groups linked to Hamas, the Washington Examiner has found. Adeel Mangi, who faces an uphill battle to confirmation in the Senate due to lawmakers raising concerns over his ties to an anti-Israel think tank and other left-wing groups, contributed to the since-failed campaigns of Tahanie Aboushi, who ran in 2021 for Manhattan district attorney, and Zead Ramadan, a 2013 New York City Council hopeful.
➤BIDEN USING POT TO LURE YOUNG VOTERS: President seeks to lure youth vote with pot . . . President Biden’s push to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous drug is the latest in a series of administrative policy moves that anxious Democrats hope will bolster his re-election standing with young voters. Biden is contending with concerns from young voters over his support for Israel since the Oct. 7 Hamas-led assault on the country that left about 1,200 people dead—most of them civilians—according to Israeli authorities. Hamas and other Palestinian factions took more than 240 hostages.
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS REFUSE TO COMPETE: Girls who refused to compete against transgender athlete sue after being pulled from meet . . . Four West Virginia middle-school girls who forfeited rather than compete against a male-born transgender athlete have sued their school district, saying they were punished by being excluded from the following track-and-field meet. The lawsuit filed by the Lincoln Middle School students via their parents said the principal and coach barred the girls who engaged in the silent protest at the April 18 track meet from participating in the next competition held April 27. Five girls sent a message about the participation of transgender athlete Becky Pepper-Jackson, a Bridgeport Middle School student, by entering the shot-put circle when their names were called, then exiting without making a throw.
⚾TWINS WIN 10TH STRAIGHT: Jose Miranda and Willi Castro had three hits apiece and Alex Kirilloff homered as the Minnesota Twins defeated the host Chicago White Sox 10-5 on Wednesday afternoon, extending their winning streak to 10 games. Minnesota has earned seven victories against the White Sox in its current tear. The latest three in Chicago all required comebacks. Tommy Pham homered, doubled and drove in two runs, and Robbie Grossman doubled twice to keep Chicago afloat before bullpen woes took a toll. The Twins scored six runs in the seventh inning or later.
This double play ends the game and the @Cubs hang on for the 1-0 win! pic.twitter.com/Kv6Wa88Tu3
— MLB (@MLB) May 2, 2024
⚾MLB SCORES
- Yankees 2 Orioles 0
- Phillies 2 Angels 1
- Brewers 7 Rays 1
- Dodgers 8 D-Backs 0
- Guardians 3 Astros 2
- Nationals ` Rangers 0
- Red Sox 6 Giants 2
- Cubs 1 Mets 0
- Marlins 4 Rockies 1
- Padres 6 Reds 2
- Braves 5 Mariners 2
- Athletics 4 Pirates 0
- Royals 6 Blue Jays 1
- Twins 10 White sox 5
- Tigers 4 Cardinals 1
🏀NBA SCORES
- Mavericks 123 Clippers 93
- Celtics 118 Heat 84
🏒NHL SCORES
- Oilers 4 Kings 3
- Stars 3 Golden Knights 2
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