Oregon
Caraway Homers Twice, Beavers Power Past CSUN To Claim Series – Oregon State University Athletics
Caraway hit a two-run home run in the fifth, then a three-run blast an inning later. He finished the day 3-for-5 with two runs scored and five runs batted in, eclipsing his previous career high of three.
His followed home runs by Jacob Krieg, Aiva Arquette and Gavin Turley as Oregon State (29-7) scored at least one run in each of its first seven turns at bat. The first run came in the first when AJ Singer drove home Arquette on a double down the left field line.
Krieg made it 2-0 on a solo shot in the second, then watched as Arquette homered in the third. CSUN had scored six runs in the second to lead 6-2 and Arquette’s made it a three-run ballgame.
The Matadors went up 7-3 in the third but OSU plated six runs in the fourth to take the lead for good. Two scored on a Levi Jones double that was aided by a CSUN error. Easton Talt singled in Jones, and two batters later, Turley hit his 45th career home run, a three-run blast that pushed him into a tie with Travis Bazzana for the most home runs at Oregon State.
The Beavers eventually pulled out to a 15-8 lead after six, with the team’s offenses slowing down as the Beavers plated one in the seventh and CSUN one apiece in the eighth and ninth. Kellan Oakes struck out the side with the bases loaded in the ninth to close out the win.
AJ Hutcheson earned the win for the Beavers, improving to 2-0 after limting CSUN (8-26) to four hits and three runs in 4 1/3 innings. The loss went to CSUN starter Ryan Halamicek, who allowed 12 hits and 11 runs in five innings. He is 2-4.
Oregon State finished with 17 hits on the day; six different Beavers recorded at least two. The top four batters in the lineup – Talt, Arquette, Turley and Singer – combined to go 9-for-20 with eight RBI and seven runs scored.
Singer and Caraway led the Beavers with three hits apiece.
Next Up
Oregon State and CSUN conclude the series Saturday at Hiegert Field. First pitch is slated for 1 p.m. PT and the game will be live streamed on ESPN+.
Follow Us On Social
For more information on the Oregon State baseball team, follow the club’s official X account at X.com/BeaverBaseball, by Facebook at Facebook.com/OregonStateBaseball, at BeaverBaseball.OSUBeavers.com on BlueSky or on Instagram at Instagram.com/BeaverBaseball.
OUR MISSION
Oregon State Athletics strives to Build Excellent Authentic Visionary Student-Athletes (Go BEAVS).
Oregon
PacifiCorp proposal aims to shield Central Oregon customers from large energy user costs
CENTRAL OREGON (KTVZ) — New rules approved by Oregon regulators aimed at how utilities charge large energy users are expected to have implications beyond Portland General Electric, including for Central Oregon customers served by Pacific Power.
The Oregon Public Utility Commission approved changes allowing Portland General Electric to charge higher rates to large energy users such as data centers. The goal is to ensure those customers pay for the cost of expanding the power grid, rather than shifting those costs onto smaller or household ratepayers.
The move comes after six consecutive years of rate increases for Oregon customers, driven in part by what PGE describes as an unprecedented rise in electricity demand, with data centers as a major factor.
Under the new rules, large energy use facilities must pay 100% of the cost to expand distribution systems needed to serve them. They must also use at least 90% of their contracted power capacity, with requirements for contract lengths and penalties for exceeding usage or exiting early.
The rules define large energy users as facilities capable of drawing more than 20 megawatts of power at a time. A separate category for “very large loads” — those exceeding 100 megawatts — includes a 1 cent per kilowatt-hour surcharge, with funds going toward reducing energy burden for vulnerable customers.
The order also includes a queue system to ensure new large users can only connect when enough zero-emission energy is available to meet demand under House Bill 2021.
While the decision directly applies to PGE, Pacific Power is proposing a similar approach for customers in Central Oregon.
PacifiCorp exclusively sent a statement to KTVZ News, saying utilities have seen a growing number of extremely large new load requests in recent years, requiring significant investments in transmission and generation infrastructure.
The company has filed a proposed tariff with the Oregon Public Utility Commission under House Bill 3546 to create a new rate schedule for “New Large Energy Use Facilities.” Under the proposal, large energy users such as data centers would be required to cover the costs of infrastructure upgrades needed to serve them.
PacifiCorp said the approach would allow the utility to meet the needs of large energy users while continuing to invest in infrastructure and protecting affordability for other customer classes.
PGE has until June 3 to file a new pricing system to implement the order, which would take effect June 10. The utility is also required to begin annual reporting on large energy users starting June 1, 2027.
Oregon
Federal and state agencies urge caution as fire season begins in parts of Oregon
PORTLAND, Ore. (KATU) — The Oregon Department of Forestry is asking Oregonians to be careful when disposing of yard debris this spring.
READ MORE | High pressure brings 48-hour warmup to western Oregon as temps near 90 Tuesday
“There have already been 23 escaped debris burns for a total of 83 acres reported on ODF-protected land in 2026,” the agency said.
The agency said that at this time last year, it had responded to 37 escaped burns.
“More than 70% of wildfires every year in Oregon are human-caused, with escaped debris burns topping the list,” ODF said. “With record-low snowpack and an abnormally warm winter, forecasters are anticipating a hotter and drier summer than usual.”
The Central Oregon District of ODF has already declared the start of fire season.
On May 14, fire restrictions will go into effect for all Bureau of Land Management lands in Oregon and Washington.
“We are increasingly concerned that 2026 could rival the most extreme years on record for heat and dryness in the Pacific Northwest,” said Jeff Fedrizzi, assistant chief of operations for the Pacific Northwest, U.S. Wildland Fire Service. “Every visitor must understand that even one small spark can lead to a costly and destructive fire in these high-impact conditions.”
Officials say the restrictions will help reduce the risk of human-caused fires. BLM officials say anyone who violates the prohibition could be fined up to $100,000 and/or face up to 12 months in prison.
More information on fire season is available on the ODF website.
The Bureau of Land Management website has additional information on fire restrictions and closures.
Oregon
Oregon Lottery Pick 4 results for May 10
The Oregon Lottery offers several draw games for those aiming to win big.
Here’s a look at May 10, 2026, results for each game:
Winning Pick 4 numbers from May 10 drawing
1PM: 8-2-8-4
4PM: 5-1-2-6
7PM: 1-5-9-6
10PM: 8-6-5-1
Check Pick 4 payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
When are the Oregon Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 7:59 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 7:59 p.m. on Tuesday and Friday.
- Pick 4: 1 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. daily.
- Win for Life: 7:30 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
- Megabucks: 7:29 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by an Oregon editor. You can send feedback using this form.
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