Meet LBCC Baseball Coach Andy Peterson Next to Andy Peterson’s desk in his LBCC baseball office sits the 2022 NWAC championship bracket board, when they won it all, to remind his players of what all their hard work is for. Coach Peterson came to LBCC in 2017 as an assistant baseball coach. He became the head coach after the 2018 season, when then head coach Ryan Gipson was hired as an assistant for the Oregon State baseball team. Peterson led the Roadrunners to the NWAC championship in 2022. They came up short in the 2023 tournament, winning the first game but losing the next two games and were eliminated. Looking to return to championship form, Peterson said, “This year’s LBCC team is strong at every position and has great chemistry.” Sophomore right-fielder Jordan Hockett agreed with his coach: “The team is solid all around, we’re deep at all positions” Sophomore closer Brodrick Stanaway added. “The pitching staff is deep and solid.” “They have been kicking our buts in practice,” s
Photo courtesy of LBCC You can call me Dio. That was how LBCC writing instructor Dio Morales introduced herself on the first day of her Creative Writing-Nonfiction class. She had students move the tables into a semi-circle so they could all see each other as they got to know who else was signed up to take this class. The students were slow to speak, but she kept prompting them with questions. Soon one person started talking. Then another, then they were all talking. So, here they were in week eight and she had a hard time getting them to stop talking. That is the effect Professor Morales had on her class. Tell a little bit about yourself and how you got started writing creatively? I've been a full-time faculty here at LBCC for five years now. I'm a creative non-fiction writer in my spare time and I write personal essays. I had my first essay collection published in 2018 and it was very exciting to get that in print and it was a finalist for the Oregon Book Award, which was
Evette Sherlock This is Evette, looking happy after loading the Embroidery to make another run of six garments for a customer. She does the Digitizing of the logos of the customers businesses or organizations so the machines knows which color of thread and the stitch pattern to recreate whatever logo to perfection. She been working for Shirt Circuit on Ninth St. in Corvallis, Oregon for over twenty years. I known Evette since we were little kids when we were neighbors on Powell St. back in the early Seventies. I also worked for Shirt Circuit for twenty-five years until my stroke back in 2018. Evette is an Indigenous American descendent of a daughter of Chieftain. She always has a smile on her face and makes people feel welcome whenever she is helping customers when they come in the store or call on the phone. I am proud to call her a friend. See what I mean about havi
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