West
University president retires after being reprimanded for caving to demands of anti-Israel protesters
Sonoma State University President Mike Lee is retiring just days after being placed on administrative leave for making concessions to anti-Israel student groups on campus.
As Politico noted, Lee announced his retirement two days after being reprimanded by the university for making the concessions “without the appropriate approvals.” They included telling anti-Israel students he would initiate efforts to divest the university from Israel, among others.
“President Ming-Tung ‘Mike’ Lee has informed me of his decision to retire from his role at Sonoma State University.,” California State University Chancellor Mildred García said in a statement on Thursday.
COLUMBIA PRESIDENT ‘SORRY’ FOR CANCELED COMMENCEMENT AMID ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTS, NOW FACES ‘HARD QUESTIONS’
Sonoma State University President Mike Lee announced his retirement this week after he was placed on administrative leave after agreeing to form a Students for Justice in Palestine advisory council, boycott Israeli universities, and more. (Fox News)
The retiring Sonoma State president was publicly reprimanded after sending out a campus-wide memo on Tuesday detailing several agreements he had already made with anti-Israel groups, including Students for Justice in Palestine, without approval from other school administrators.
These agreements included the creation of a Students for Justice in Palestine advisory council, an academic boycott of Israeli universities, expansion of Palestinian Studies programs at the school, and a demand for a ceasefire in Gaza.
García addressed the memo in a statement, Wednesday, saying that Lee made the concessions “without the appropriate approvals” and that the California State University system’s board is “actively reviewing the matter.”
The chancellor added, “For now, because of this insubordination and the consequences it has brought upon the system, President Lee has been placed on administrative leave because of this insubordination and the consequences it has brought upon the system.”
Following the reprimand, Lee expressed regret for his actions in a follow-up statement, saying, “In my attempt to find agreement with one group of students, I marginalized other members of our student population and community.”
CALIFORNIA MAYORS DUEL ON SOCIAL MEDIA OVER LAW ENFORCEMENT RESPONSE TO UC IRVINE ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTS
Sonoma State University is among the smallest branches of the California University system. (Google Earth)
Lee’s actions also took heat from local lawmakers. Local Bay Area outlet KRON 4 reported that Democrat State Sen. Scott Wiener remarked on the memo, stating, “This is horrific and wrong, my jaw dropped when I read the letter.”
“He is basically blacklisting Israel,” the politician added.
Deputy Vice Chancellor for Academic and Student Affairs and Chief Academic Officer Nathan Evans was appointed as acting president in wake of Lee’s leave.
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In her statement on Lee’s retirement, García added, “I will continue to work with Acting President Nathan Evans and our Board of Trustees leadership during this transitional period. Additional information will be forthcoming.”
Evans provided his own statement upon taking up the role, which read, “We will create spaces and places to process President Lee’s retirement and other recent developments as a community in the coming days and weeks. For now, I encourage all of us to focus on our graduates and their supporters.”
When asked for comment by Fox News Digital, reps for Sonoma State University simply pointed the outlet to García’s initial statement on Lee’s retirement.
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West
Runner fought off mountain lion with stick just weeks before fatal attack on same Colorado trail
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Weeks before a hiker was killed in a suspected mountain lion attack in Colorado, a man was nearly attacked by another big cat on the same trail.
Gary Messina said he was rushed by a mountain lion while running along the same northern Colorado trail on a dark morning in November.
Messina said he threw his phone at the animal while it kept circling behind him and was able to get away after a couple of minutes when he broke a stick off of a log and hit the mountain lion over the head with it.
“I had to fight it off because it was basically trying to maul me,” Messina told The Associated Press. “I was scared for my life, and I wasn’t able to escape. I tried backing up, and it would try to lunge at me.”
OREGON CHILD ATTACKED BY COYOTE DURING GAME OF HIDE-AND-SEEK IN BACKYARD, STATE OFFICIALS SOUND ALARM
A mountain lion at the Wildlife Rescue Center in Alajuela, Costa Rica, Sept. 16, 2024. (Ezequiel Becerra/AFP via Getty Images)
A woman who was found dead on the same trail on New Year’s Day had “wounds consistent with a mountain lion attack,” a Colorado Parks and Wildlife spokeswoman said.
“Around 12:15 this afternoon, hikers on the Crosier Mountain trail in Larimer County observed a mountain lion near a person lying on the ground from about 100 yards away,” Kara Van Hoose said during a news conference Thursday.
After the suspected attack, wildlife officials killed two mountain lions and are searching for a third to determine if the animal had rabies or another disease.
BEAR REMAINS UNDER CALIFORNIA HOME AFTER WEEKS OF FAILED REMOVAL ATTEMPTS
The attack was the first suspected fatal mountain lion mauling in more than 25 years, with the last one occurring in 1999.
This photo provided by Gary Messina shows a mountain lion in the brush between two trees along the Crosier Mountain trail in the Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests near Glen Haven, Colo., Nov 11, 2025. (Gary Messina via AP)
Messina said he reported his incident days later, and officials posted warning signs about mountain lions that were later taken down.
He said he believes the animal that attacked him may have been the same one that killed the New Year’s hiker.
Mountain lion sightings in that area of Rocky Mountains National Park are common, but the animals are rarely aggressive.
The New Year’s Day attack would be the fourth fatal one in North America in the last decade and the 30th since 1868, according to the Mountain Lion Foundation.
“As more people live, work and recreate in areas that overlap wildlife habitat, interactions can increase, not because mountain lions are becoming more aggressive, but because overlap is growing,” the organization’s chief conservation officer, Byron Weckworth, said.
Authorities suspect a lone woman hiker in Colorado was killed in a rare mountain lion attack on New Year’s Day. (AP Digital Embed)
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To avoid risk of an attack, experts tell nature seekers to avoid dawn and dusk, when mountain lions are most active and to travel in groups.
During an encounter, experts suggest maintaining eye contact with the animal, trying to appear as large as possible, slowly backing away without turning your back on the animal and not running.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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San Francisco, CA
What is next for San Francisco 49ers and who to root for Week 18
With a loss against the Seattle Seahawks, the San Francisco 49ers officially lost the one seed and a chance at a bye week. They will be playing next week, but it’s not quite determined who they will play and when. A few games on Sunday will determine this.
Who the San Francisco 49ers will play in the Wild Card Round
The 49ers will either be the five or six seed. They will be the five if the Los Angeles Rams lose to the Arizona Cardinals. However, if the Rams beat the Cardinals, the 49ers will be the sixth seed in the NFC.
A few notable starters, such as Davante Adams and Kevin Dotso,n will be out, but Matthew Stafford is going to play, and he is competing for the MVP. Arizona has not won a game in a few months their front office would like to lose for draft pick purposes and they are heavy underdogs in this game.
The most likely outcome is that the Rams will be the fifth seed and they will get to face the NFC South winner. Meanwhile, the Bears will take on one of the Philadelphia Eagles or Chicago Bears. While the 49ers beat the Bears and lost to the Bucs, most fans would rather see the Bucs, so the 49ers will be rooting for the Cardinals, even if that is unlikely.
Chicago plays the Detroit Lions, and if they win, they will get the two-seed. That would mean that the Philadelphia Eagles will host the 49ers in the Wild Card Round. If the Bears lose and the Eagles win, the 49ers would head to Chicago to take on the Bears.
Then, if the Bears and Eagles lose, the 49ers would head to Philadelphia. Philadelphia is taking on the Washington Commanders, and they have not won in about as long as the Cardinals. They are also looking at starting Josh Johnson again this week, which should ensure one more loss.
So, with the Rams and Eagles being near locks to win, it will come down to the Bears. The Lions are not bottom dwellers like the other two, and we know Dan Campbell will play to beat the Bears.
Detroit is not quite a playoff team, but they can compete with any playoff team, so they could end up giving Chicago a run for their money. 49ers fans are going to want Detroit to show up and play well. While it is not easy to beat a team twice, with the second being in their home, they would like to avoid the Eagles, who have a defense that can compare to Seattle. We saw what happened against that type of defense.
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Denver, CO
Grading The Week: From Bo Nix’s dog days to Mackenzie Blackwood and Nikola Jokic, Denver sports’ 2026 off to rocky start
The Lumberyard is breaking boards already?
The Colorado Avalanche is becoming the Colorado Ambulanche. The Nuggets’ center options went from Nikola Jokic and Jonas Valanciunas to the 1-2 punch of DeRon Holmes II and Zeke Nnaji.
Hang on. Hang on. Wasn’t 2026 supposed to be “Denver’s Year?”
At least, that’s what the Grading The Week (GTW) crew told each other at the annual holiday soiree a fortnight ago, just before we sent everybody home for Christmas.
Well after the last eight days or so, Team GTW thinks it might be wise now for the Broncos to double Bo Nix’s security. (Just don’t bring any guard dogs.)
Because if it wasn’t for bad luck, to paraphrase the late, great bluesman Albert King, Front Range sports fans wouldn’t have no luck at all.
Blackwood to the IR — D.
This past Friday, the Avs took a break from wiping the ice with the rest of the NHL to place goaltender Mackenzie Blackwood, the younger half of its “Lumberyard” pairing of netminders, on injured reserve with a lower body injury.
You want lousy timing? Blackwood’s absence piles it on with several layers of awful.
For one, the Thunder Bay native finished December on a heater — posting an 8-1-0 record, a 2.13 Goals Against Average and a save rate of 92.3%.
For another, Colorado is in the teeth of one of the tougher road trips of the season, with visits to division leading Carolina on tap for Saturday, followed by a matinee Sunday at Florida to cap off a night game-into-day-game back-to-back, capped off by a Tuesday evening visit to Tampa Bay.
For yet another, Blackwood only faced 13 shots on New Year’s Eve, his last start, during a 6-1 Avs win over St. Louis at Ball Arena.
Scott Wedgewood (17-1-4, 2.13 GAA, .919 save percentage as of early Saturday) has been more than good enough to shoulder the load in net, granted. But you also don’t want to overload a 33-year-old goalie who’s having a career year in his eighth full season in the NHL. Wedgewood, largely a “1B” netminder since ’15-16, had already logged 24 starts this season going into the weekend. His career high for starts is 32 and his season average has been 20 per year. Depending on the severity of Blackwood’s injury, Wedgewood, at least in the short term, is going to have to ramp up the quantity to match his quality.
In isolation, it’s a lousy way to open 2026. Add in the freak knee injury Nuggets icon Jokic suffered this past Monday night in Miami and Valanciunas’ calf strain two days later in Toronto, you wonder what Denverites did to anger the sporting gods. Or if we’re getting payback for October-December being so absolutely glorious ’round these parts.
Regardless, let’s put a pin in those multiple-championship-parades-in-one-year plans — at least until Nix and the Broncos get to Santa Clara next month in one piece.
CSU women’s hoops rolling — A.
May whatever karma that’s haunting Ball Arena spare the good folks up in FoCo. The CSU Rams’ women’s basketball team finished the December part of its ’25-26 slate with a flourish on Dec. 31, stomping Grand Canyon in Phoenix 61-47 and improving to 12-2 overall, 3-0 in Mountain West play. CSU has won 12 straight away games dating back to last season. The Rams get a two-game homestand against Fresno State (Saturday) and New Mexico (Wednesday) before returning to the road on Jan. 10 (at Boise State) and Jan. 14 (at Air Force).
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