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Shooting at Evergreen High School in Colorado leaves 3 students hurt; first responders “not certain how many shooters”

Three students were critically wounded on Wednesday in a shooting at Evergreen High School in the Colorado foothills. So far, it’s not clear who the shooter or shooters are, according to the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office.
CBS
The shooting took place just after noon at the school located at 29300 Buffalo Park Road in Evergreen, which is 28 miles southwest of Denver.
JeffCo emergency communications said there are reports of “an active assailant in the area of Evergreen High School.” St. Anthony’s Hospital in Lakewood said there are three Evergreen High School students at the hospital who suffered gunshot wounds; all are in critical condition.
CBS
It’s still an active scene, and authorities asked those with students at the school not to go directly to the school at this time. Nearby, Wilmot Elementary School was also placed on lockdown just after 1:50 p.m.
Jacki Kelley, the Public Information Officer for the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office, said during a press conference that “We’re not certain how many shooters we have or where that shooter might be. I’m hoping to get more information to you quickly.” The sheriff’s office began receiving numerous calls coming from the school immediately following the shooting, she shared.
Kelley expressed her gratitude for departments from across the Denver metro area that self-deployed to help with the situation. She said multiple teams of law enforcement are in the process of clearing the school room by room. Kelley confirmed that the shooting happened on school grounds and said that, at this time, they believe it took place inside the school.
The school district provided an update around 1:30 p.m. that a reunification center will be located at Bergen Meadow Elementary School, located at 1928 S. Hiwan Dr.
Shortly following the shooting, an Evergreen High School teacher told CBS Colorado that they were on lockdown with some students inside a game room in the school. As of 1:45 p.m., students could be seen exiting the school single file.
Gov. Jared Polis released a statement Wednesday, saying, “I am closely monitoring the situation at Evergreen High School, and am getting live updates. State Troopers are supporting local law enforcement in responding to this situation. Students should be able to attend school safely and without fear across our state and nation. We are all praying for the victims and the entire community.”
This is a developing story; more information will be provided as it becomes available.
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UCLA’s season goes from bad to worse in blowout loss to New Mexico

Once scheduled for a Saturday, UCLA’s final nonconference game was quietly pushed up a day last spring to provide a bigger spotlight for the Bruins.
It revealed perhaps the biggest embarrassment of the early college football season.
There’s no other way to spin it for UCLA after a third consecutive loss during what was supposed to be the soft part of the schedule raised a frightening prospect: Will the Bruins win a game this season?
They didn’t look capable of beating a quality high school team after dropping a second consecutive game to a Mountain West Conference opponent.
UCLA’s 35-10 loss to New Mexico on Friday night at the Rose Bowl represented new depths after the Bruins once again looked lost on both sides of the ball.
“It’s pretty low right now,” UCLA coach DeShaun Foster acknowledged after stoically walking off the field and later remaining expressionless when he met with reporters. “I’ve been around this program for a long time and it’s just unfortunate, what’s going on right this moment. Just not executing.”
It appears to be a lot more than that for a team that has been outscored by a combined 108-43 margin this season, a figure that would be even worse had two Lobos drives not ended inside UCLA’s five-yard line on a fumble and a turnover on downs.
UCLA coach Deshaun Foster walks off the field after a 35-10 loss to New Mexico at the Rose Bowl on Friday night.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
Fans started streaming out of the stands midway through the fourth quarter after New Mexico’s Damon Bankston turned a short pass into a 43-yard touchdown, breaking a couple of tackles along the way.
UCLA is not only 0-3 for the first time since 2019, the Bruins have not held a lead this season after falling into another big hole on a night they were 15.5-point favorites. Their defense gave up 6.5 yards per carry and 298 rushing yards against the Lobos (2-1). They were outgained, 450-326, in total yardage. They committed 13 penalties for 116 yards after Foster said reducing penalties would be a priority.
“It blows my mind, you know?” Foster said when asked about his discipline message not getting through to his players. “It blows my mind. It’s something I’ve never been around and we’re going to figure it out.”
A bye week before opening Big Ten play on the road against Northwestern will certainly lead to a long list of questions for Foster after his record fell to 5-10 early in his second season.
Among the possible queries: How does he account for a team that appears as bad on offense as defense after adding star quarterback Nico Iamaleava, the biggest name in the transfer portal? Can he rally his team for one victory during a season in which it might not be favored the rest of the way?
Foster insisted he was still the right coach to lead this team. What makes him feel that way?
“Because I can get these boys to play,” he said.
Does Foster agree with those who have remarked that it appears as if he’s overmatched?
“Nope,” he said. “Not at all.”
Foster said a lack of talent was not the issue after a roster overhaul that required 57 players, including 37 transfers in their first season.
“We have enough,” Foster said. “We just have to execute. It’s coming down to execution.”
What makes him think that after back-to-back losses to opponents from a lesser conference?
“There’s people wide open,” Foster said, “they’re not getting the ball, there’s people not catching the ball, there’s people missing blocks, there’s people not making tackles, people not staying in their gaps.”
The Bruins were staring into the abyss after Bankston (154 yards in 15 carries) ran for a two-yard touchdown that put the Lobos up 21-10 with 10:42 left in the game.
It only got worse from there, after things had tilted in the Bruins’ direction in the third quarter when UCLA forced its first turnover of the season.
With New Mexico facing a fourth and one at the Bruins’ five-yard line, Deshaun Buchanan ran for two yards before having the ball stripped by UCLA safety Key Lawrence. Bruins defensive end Devin Aupiu recovered the fumble to thwart the drive.
The Bruins soon benefited from another Lobos mistake after Will Karoll’s punt was muffed and recovered by Kyle Miller at the UCLA 41.
UCLA wide receiver Mikey Matthews is upended by New Mexico cornerback Jon Johnson (12) and safety Caleb Coleman in the first half Friday at the Rose Bowl.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
UCLA eventually drove for Mateen Bhaghani’s 51-yard field goal that shaved the Bruins’ deficit to 14-10 late in the third quarter, but only after left tackle Garrett DiGiorgio was called for false starts on back-to-back plays.
“We gotta stop shooting ourselves in the foot, man,” Iamaleava said, “and it’s costing us points.”
It was a third consecutive ho-hum performance for Iamaleava, who has now lost as many games as a Bruin as he did in his final season at Tennessee. The quarterback completed 22 of 34 passes for 217 yards to go with one touchdown and one interception on a tipped pass.
In keeping with an early season tradition, UCLA found itself down by multiple scores before posting its first points. After trailing 20-0 against Utah and 23-0 against Nevada Las Vegas, the Bruins fell behind 14-0 against the Lobos after displaying more leaky defense and sputtering offense.
New Mexico hurt UCLA with both the run and the pass, following Scottre Humphrey’s one-yard run with Jack Layne’s eight-yard touchdown pass to tight end Simon Mapa on fourth and two early in the second quarter.
UCLA quarterback Nico Iamaleava runs with the ball during the first half of the Bruins’ loss to New Mexico on Friday.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
Boos could be heard inside the stadium. More embarrassingly, the Big Sky Conference’s official Twitter site responded to a post jokingly saying that UCLA was reportedly exploring a move to its conference by responding, “No thank you.”
Finally mustering a counter thanks in part to a roughing the passer penalty on the Lobos, UCLA finally got on the board when Iamaleava zipped a 12-yard touchdown pass over the middle to Titus Mokiao-Atimalala midway through the second quarter.
The Bruins then mismanaged a final drive before halftime with questionable playcalling and timeout usage. But there was no second-guessing of Foster from his quarterback after the game.
“I totally believe in coach Foster, man,” Iamaleava said. “You know, he gives me self-belief every day I come in the building to go and work. [He] just gives you that want to go out there and practice and practice hard. So, you know, we’re doing him a disservice, not performing for him ‘cause he’s telling us everything we need to hear, he’s telling us everything we need to do, and we’re not executing as players. So it all falls back on the players.”
Ultimately, reminded of his team’s deficiencies across the board, Foster took some responsibility.
“Everything that happens can fall on me,” Foster said. “I’m the head coach, so it can fall on me. We don’t have to try to word things differently or whatnot. I’m the head coach. But what I do know is that eventually this team’s gonna play with discipline. It’s gonna happen. It’s eventually gonna happen.”
The big question facing UCLA and its coach during what figures to be a frustrating fortnight: When?

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College football picks: Predictions against the spread, odds, betting lines for top 25 games in Week 3

The first separation Saturday of the college football season is upon us, as a divide between contenders and pretenders will begin to form. High-profile in-league and nonconference games dot the day, which will culminate with a blockbuster evening slate for the SEC.
In the early window, No. 12 Clemson is traveling to Georgia Tech for a big ACC battle. At the same time, No. 19 Alabama will host Wisconsin as the Crimson Tide enter a must-win spot against a Big Ten opponent. The afternoon slate is highlighted by a showdown between No. 6 Georgia and No. 15 Tennessee and an in-state battle between No. 5 Miami and No. 18 South Florida.
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Among the evening headliners is a showdown between No. 3 LSU and Florida in a matchup that often produces drama. But the headliner of the evening slate may be No. 8 Notre Dame’s showdown with No. 16 Texas A&M. The Fighting Irish were off in Week 2 following a Week 1 loss at Miami and can ill-afford an 0-2 start on their College Football Playoff quest.
On the flip side, if the Aggies can march into South Bend and come away with a marquee victory, it would send the A&M hype machine into overdrive. By night’s end, we’ll have a clearer picture of what the national hierarchy looks like.
All times Eastern
Noon | ESPN fubo (Try for free) This pick is contingent upon King suiting up for Georgia Tech, which seems to be the case as of now. Philo’s a capable backup, but Georgia Tech is going to need King’s edge if it wants to pull off an upset. So far, regardless of who’s playing quarterback, the Yellow Jackets have looked like the better team. They beat Colorado on the road and handled business against an obviously overmatched Gardner-Webb team. Clemson lost at home to LSU and then struggled at home against what should have been an obviously overmatched Troy team. Georgia Tech may not have enough gas to fully pull off the upset, but it will keep it within a field goal. Pick: Georgia Tech +3.5 (-110) — Will Backus
Noon | ABC Fubo (Try for free) Wisconsin’s offense has not looked great in either of its first two games but managed to hit a few big plays in the passing game last week against Middle Tennessee. For some reason I don’t think the Middle Tennessee team that lost to Austin Peay is in the same weight class as Alabama, so it’s hard for me to imagine the Badgers having a lot of fun on offense here unless Alabama turns the ball over frequently. Pick: Alabama -20.5 — Tom Fornelli
USC at Purdue
3:30 p.m. | CBS, CBSSports.com, CBS Sports App, Paramount+ Premium Purdue pulling off the outright upset would be one of the biggest surprises of Week 3, but the rebuilt Boilermakers could have enough to keep this Big Ten opener to a respectable margin. Their path is clear: shorten the game and limit USC’s possessions. Purdue ranks 23rd nationally in called run play percentage (57.0%), while USC’s defense has struggled against the run, sitting tied for 80th in success rate (60.8%). If Purdue controls the tempo on the ground, it can hang around longer than expected. Pick: Purdue +20.5 — Cody Nagel
3:30 p.m. | ABC Fubo (Try for free) Georgia has been inconsistent on offense, but the Bulldogs are demolishing their opponents on defense. Kirby Smart has historically done a solid job locking down Josh Heupel’s offense. Vols quarterback Joey Aguilar will have some moments, but will falter during his first appearance on the big stage. Georgia will pull away at the end, but the under also could be a smart play. Pick: Georgia -3.5 — Shehan Jeyarajah
4:30 p.m. | CW Fubo (Try for free) USF has done great work to set itself up for a College Football Playoff run should the Bulls be able to win the American, but that giant-killer mentality will be put to the test against a Miami team that is an upgrade on both lines of scrimmage. As long as Miami can do a better job of applying pass rush to Byrum Brown and limit the explosive plays that powered each of the last two USF wins, the Hurricanes should be able to defend home turf and win handily. Pick: Miami -17.5 — Chip Patterson
No. 3 LSU vs. Florida
7:30 p.m. | ABC Fubo (Try for free) Florida is limping in after a loss to South Florida, but the defeat was about poor game management, lapses in discipline and substandard execution. The Gators have plenty of talent, and it’s way too soon to put them on quit watch. LSU’s offense is still finding its way and has yet to illustrate the explosive gear that will likely be required to pull away in SEC games. LSU should win, but Florida’s defense can keep it close. Pick: Florida +7.5 — David Cobb
7:30 p.m. | NBC Fubo (Try for free) It’s been 11 years since Texas A&M defeated a ranked team on the road. Avenging a 10-point loss at home to Notre Dame last season with a win Saturday at Notre Dame Stadium sure would be a nice break from the trend. Marcel Reed provides the Aggies’ offense a different dynamic that the Irish did not have to contend against last season, and for as much as Marcel Reed wants to be known for his passing, the key for him is sparking the rushing attack, which means he needs to tuck the ball and run for hard yards. Notre Dame has the better rushing attack with Jeremiyah Love and has a quarterback, CJ Carr, who proved himself a capable runner when needed. The feeling here is that the Irish run the ball more than the 28 times for 93 yards they had against Miami. Pick: Notre Dame Money line -258 — Brandon Marcello
SportsLine’s proven computer model has simulated every Week 3 college football game 10,000 times. Visit SportsLine now to see all the picks, all from the model that is 31-19 since the beginning of last season on top-rated money-line and over/under picks.
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Israel intensifies Gaza City bombardment, forcing families to flee

Rushdi AbualoufGaza correspondent and
Dearbail Jordan

Israeli forces have stepped up their assault on Gaza City with a wave of heavy air strikes, marking a sharp escalation from previous military operations.
Unlike earlier phases of the war, the current offensive has relied heavily on aerial bombardments, with entire apartment blocks and large concrete structures reduced to rubble.
The intensification of strikes in recent days has triggered a surge in civilian displacement.
Israel has warned all residents of Gaza City to leave immediately in anticipation of a huge ground offensive.
On Sunday, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) said about 250,000 people had left the city and moved south. It also said it had destroyed a high-rise building that it said had been used “to advance and execute terrorist attacks” against its troops.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the city is Hamas’s last major stronghold. But the plan to occupy Gaza City has brought international criticism.
The UN has warned an intensification of the offensive on an area where a famine has already been declared will push civilians into an “even deeper catastrophe”. Gaza City is the largest urban centre in the territory and a historic heart of Palestinian political and social life.
Residents say the Israeli military has been targeting schools and makeshift shelters, often issuing warnings only moments before bombardments.
Many families have been forced to flee in darkness toward western Gaza.
“We escaped certain death, my husband, our three children and I,” said Saly Tafeesh, a mother sheltering in the city. “My brother died in my arms after being shot by a quadcopter drone. We ran in the dark to the west of Gaza.”
The Israeli military has told residents to evacuate to the south of the territory – but many families say they cannot afford the journey, which costs up to $1,100 (£800). Hamas, meanwhile, has intensified its calls for residents to stay put and resist leaving the city.
Rubein Khaled, a father-of-nine preparing to move south, expressed frustration.
“The Hamas preacher at Friday prayers accused anyone leaving Gaza City of being a coward running from the battlefield,” he said.
“But why doesn’t he tell Hamas leaders to surrender and release the Israeli hostages so this war can stop? We don’t want to leave either, but we have no choice.”
Israeli forces have not yet reached some eastern neighbourhoods that have remained largely intact since earlier raids in January, but the current campaign suggests they may now be seeking to dismantle entire districts.

Meanwhile, a Qatari foreign ministry spokesman strongly criticised Israel’s prime minister in an interview with the BBC following this week’s Israeli strike on Hamas officials in the Qatari capital Doha.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Majed Al-Ansari told the BBC that the international community had “to deal with a Netanyahu problem”.
“He is not somebody who is listening to anybody right now, who is listening to any reason, and we have to collectively stop him in his tracks,” the official said.
He argued the strike in Doha showed the Israeli leader “never intended to sign any peace deal” to end the war in Gaza and instead “believes he can re-shape the Middle East in his own image”.
Five of the group’s members and a Qatari security officer were killed in Tuesday’s strike – though the Palestinian armed group claimed no senior leaders had been killed. Hamas members had been in Doha to discuss the latest US proposal for a ceasefire in Gaza.
Israel has faced widespread condemnation, including at the UN Security Council. Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel targeted the “terrorist masterminds” behind the 7 October 2023 Hamas attack on Israel.
Qatar’s Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani earlier said that Qatar did not get advance warning of the strike, only receiving a call from a US official 10 minutes after the attack had started.
On Friday, al-Thani had dinner with US President Donald Trump and his envoy Steve Witkoff in New York, having earlier met Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the White House.
Rubio is travelling to Israel this weekend in a show of solidarity with Israel ahead of a UN meeting later this month at which France and the UK are expected to formally recognise a Palestinian state.

On Sunday, the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza said the bodies of 47 people killed by the Israeli military had arrived at its hospitals over the previous day.
Since UN-backed global food security experts confirmed a famine in Gaza City on 22 August, the ministry has reported that at least 142 people have died from starvation and malnutrition across the territory. Israel has said it is expanding its efforts to facilitate aid deliveries and has disputed the health ministry’s figures on malnutrition-related deaths.
The Israeli military launched its campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
At least 64,803 people have been killed in Israeli attacks in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s health ministry.
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