Oregon
Oregon State Softball’s Lici Campbell and Nicole Donahue Earn Preseason All-WCC Nods
The Oregon State Beavers are just a few short days away from beginning their first softball season as a member of the West Coast Conference. The League’s preseason all-conference team selections were released this week, with two Beavers cracking the roster.
Infielder/catcher/utility player Lici Campbell made the list after being the Beavs’ primary offensive powerhouse in 2024. She led the team in slugging percentage (.447), runs batted in (25), home runs (9) and total bases (67) last season. The senior is a veteran leader, the only remaining player from OSU’s 2022 run to the Women’s College World Series.
Junior catcher Nicole Donahue, a transfer from UT Arlington, was also an All-WCC pick after a strong 2024 campaign at her previous school that included 32 hits and batting average of .308.
OSU open the season on Friday, February 7 at Cal Poly’s Mustang Classic with a matchup against Ball State at 11 AM PT.
2025 WCC Softball Preseason Team Position Players
Sam Buckley, Saint Mary’s
Lici Campbell, Oregon State
Mika Chong, LMU
Cairah Curran, Santa Clara
Nicole Donahue, Oregon State
Hannah Ferguson, Saint Mary’s
Hazyl Gray, Santa Clara
Izzy Jamgotchian, LMU
Arianna Jaurequi, LMU
Taylor Johnson, San Diego
Taylor Lane, Saint Mary’s
Olivia Silvestre, Pacific
2025 WCC Softball Preseason Team Pitchers
McKenna Braegelmann, San Diego
Hannah Edwards, Santa Clara
Odhi Vasquez, Saint Mary’s
More Reading Material From Oregon State Beavers On SI
Oregon State Softball Picked Third in WCC Preseason Poll
Oregon State Softball Finalizes 2025 Schedule
State of the Beavs: Beaver Baseball Preparations + The New Pac-12 Agenda
Oregon
Oregon Supreme Court to hear $1B PacificCorp wildfire case
2020 Labor Day wildfire survivor talks blaze’s five-year anniversary
Hear from 2020 wildfire victim Christine Grom as she talks about the results of a class action lawsuit against PacifiCorp.
The Oregon Supreme Court has agreed to hear arguments in the billion dollar class action lawsuit between survivors of four 2020 Labor Day Fires and PacifiCorp.
The state’s high court will hear arguments at 1:30 p.m. on Nov. 3 in Salem, in a case with billions on the line for thousands of victims impacted by one of the worst disasters in state history.
The review represents a win for wildfire survivors, many of whom live in the Santiam Canyon and lost everything in the fires, and who stood to lose billions in jury awards following an April decision by the Oregon Court of Appeals.
How did we get here?
In June 2023, a Multnomah County jury found PacifiCorp at fault for causing the Santiam, Echo Mountain, 242 and South Obenchain fires and liable to a class of roughly 2,000 victims.
In the years since the verdict, juries have awarded more than $1.2 billion to 189 wildfire survivors, over the course of 18 “mini trials” designed to determine awards to fire victims.
On April 8, the Oregon Court of Appeals ruled the 2023 verdict was flawed, writing that instructions to the jury were “prejudicial to PacifiCorp.”
The appeals court reversed and remanded the case, which would have wiped out all awards and previous legal decisions.
Lawyers for the wildfire victims filed an appeal to the Oregon Supreme Court, also in April, and the high court granted certiorari on June 25.
The timeline for Oregon’s high court hearing the case appears swifter than normal, perhaps representing the need to bring some resolution for a case that’s been ongoing for five years.
“The thousands of Oregonians whose homes PacifiCorp burned are grateful that the Oregon Supreme Court will hear their case quickly,” lead council for the wildfire victims said in a statement.
PacifiCorp issued a statement saying they expected the court of appeals decision to be upheld.
“We respect the Oregon Supreme Court’s decision to review the case and will continue to participate fully in the process, presenting our position through the Court’s established briefing schedule,” a statement from PacifiCorp said. “We look forward to the Court’s consideration of the key issues and to the Court affirming the unanimous Oregon Court of Appeals decision.”
What will the court decide?
In reversing the original verdict, the Court of Appeals ruled that a set of instructions given to the jury, in the 2023 case, was in error and prejudicial to PacifiCorp.
The offending instruction, the ruling said, centered on the trial court telling the jury that it could “assume that the evidence at the trial applies to all class members.”
“We conclude … that instruction was legally erroneous, because certain evidence at trial, particularly related to causation, did not necessarily apply to every class member,” the appeals court wrote.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs argued that “the challenged instruction was appropriate” and that the Court of Appeals ruling “rests on a misinterpretation that no party held at trial and no juror adopted,” they wrote in their appeal to the Supreme Court.
In a news release announcing it would take up the case, the Supreme Court said it would examine the jury instructions and ruling by the appeals court.
Zach Urness has been an outdoors reporter in Oregon for 18 years and is host of the Explore Oregon Podcast. He can be reached at zurness@StatesmanJournal.com or 503-399-6801. Find him on X at @ZachsORoutdoors and BlueSky at oregonoutdoors.bsky.social
Oregon
National Weather Service says no tsunami threat after 5.5 quake off Oregon coast
The National Weather Service says there is no tsunami threat following a magnitude 5.5 earthquake off the Oregon coast.
The U.S. Geological Survey says the quake struck at 4:35 a.m. about 175 miles southwest of Eugene, Oregon, at a depth of about 6 miles in the Pacific Ocean.
National Weather Service says no tsunami threat after 5.5 quake off Oregon coast (KVAL/SBG)
The earthquake occurred in the Blanco Fracture Zone, a seismically active area where hundreds of earthquakes occur each year.
There have been no reports of residents along the southern Oregon coast feeling the quake.
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Oregon
Missing, endangered 2-year-old last seen in Portland area
PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) — The Oregon Department of Human Services is asking for help finding a 2-year-old boy who is believed to be in danger.
Armani Andrews disappeared on June 17 and is thought to be with someone in the Portland area, officials said.
He’s about two feet tall with brown hair and brown eyes and African American/mixed race, ODHS said.
Locations around Portland that the child may have frequented include the Rose Haven shelter on Northwest Glisan Street, the Multnomah County Central Library on Southwest 10th Avenue and Southeast Portland between 82nd and 103rd avenues.
People who have any information about Andrews’ whereabouts are asked to call 911.
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