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Hangry Solution: The Answer to Your Hunger Problem

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    Established in October 2020, Hangry Solution, a food truck in Lebanon, Oregon is one of the few food trucks in the town. Forming a type of subculture in the small town, the food truck business is an important part of the community.  A customer places an order on a cloudy Friday, December 3, shortly after Hangry Solution opens.      Hangry Solution, founded by Marcie Lindley and Ronda Bennett, former manager and server, respectively, of former Lebanon restaurant Bigfoot Cave, launched this location after it shut down due to the pandemic. They decided to open this location because they needed income and Marcie knows how to cook, something she described as coming naturally for her; so they turned to opening a food truck. The food truck stays in one location in the parking lot of the River Center on South Santiam Highway in Lebanon, but occasionally parks in different locations for catering to events. Marcie Lindley poses in front of the Hangry Solution trailer with Tammy Hines and Aly

It's What I Do: A Photographer's Life of Love and War - Review

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     It’s What I Do: A Photographer’s Life of Love and War is a spectacular book by photojournalist Lynsey Addario. I would describe this book as a page-turner. It’s a cliche term that appears as if I am exaggerating the quality of the storytelling; but it really was a great book that had me wanting to read the next chapter, paragraph, and sentence.       One story that I stayed up late to read is about Addario’s trip with her friend and fellow photographer, Elizabeth Rubin, to the Korengal Valley in eastern Afghanistan where the battle was taking place. Rubin was three months pregnant and going into an insanely dangerous warzone. The story was incredibly compelling, interesting, intense, and entertaining. Lynsey’s telling of the story perfectly captures her emotions and throws them onto the reader. The Korengal Valley experienced 70 percent of the bombs dropped in Afghanistan. Rubin was three months pregnant and had to hide that fact. Addario had to lie for her friend as well so that

Martin Parr: A Satirical View of the World

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     Martin Parr, born in Epsom, England in 1952, is a photojournalist known for his lighthearted, sometimes satirical, photos. Martin's grandfather, George Parr, a layman photographer, motivated Martin to become a photographer after noticing that he was interested in photography as well. Parr attended Manchester Polytechnic from 1970 to 1973, where he studied photography. After graduating, he worked at Manchester Council for three months before beginning his first exhibition, Home Sweet Home.    This photo is from his photobook The Last Resort , a collection of photographs from 1983-1985, and his first work in color. After seeing the impact that was made by photographers using color in the U.S. Martin decided that he would start shooting in color, as well. Martin is known for the loud colors in his photos.      A few of his works are displayed in T he Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, and the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin. None of

My Hometown - Lebanon

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A sign welcoming visitors to Lebanon near the corner of Main St. and Wheeler St. on a cloudy morning, Wednesday, November 10. Lebanon, incorporated in 1878, sits near the northeast corner of Linn County. Brenda Bateman, a prep cook for Hangry Solution, a food truck in the parking lot of Gametime Sportsbar & Grill on South Santiam Highway in Lebanon, prepares chicken tortilla soup on Thursday morning, November 11. Her favorite aspect of her job is being able to meet new people. She has been with the company since April 2021. Jordan White enjoys his day off from school on Thursday, November 11, by going on a walk through Lebanon on Division Way. White, an 18 year-old in his senior year at Sweet Home High School, is from Salem but moved to Lebanon where he attended his final year of middle school and spent his first three years of high school.  

LBCC Campus Photos

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              Fall is in full swing which means that rainy days are here, people are enjoying pumpkin spice lattes, and leaves shift into varying hues of red, orange, and yellow. Though, the colors of the leaves might be beautiful, unfortunately, most of them sink to the earth and somebody has to clean them up. Cody Taylor, age 24, rakes piles of leaves in the LBCC courtyard, late Friday morning,  November  5. This is his second day as a groundskeeper for Linn-Benton.  Cody is one of three groundskeepers on the Albany campus. In his free time, Cody enjoys hiking, fishing, and going on walks with his 5-year old son. He loves hiking with his girlfriend in Grants Pass, near Sisters.                                                                                                    The Roadrunners volleyball team forms a line before their game against the Clackamas Cougars begins on Wednesday, November 3, in Albany. The Roadrunner players are waiting for the starting lineup to be announced.

Kinley Sizemore - Mechanic

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  Kinley Sizemore poses with used tires on the afternoon of October 21 at Walmart on South Santiam Highway in south Lebanon. He has worked as a service technician at Walmart for eleven months. He has worked with cars for twenty years; he attributes his knowledge to his father who was a mechanic. There is no such thing as a typical day for Kinley. He could be incredibly busy one day and slow the next. He works three opening and two closing shifts each week with a weekend on Monday and Tuesday. He enjoys his job because he gets to know people and does what he loves, working on vehicles. He spends his free time fixing up cars and hanging out with his kids. Kinley Sizemore

Photojournalism Week 4

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  Nancy Fast replaces a gas nozzle on a Friday afternoon. She has worked for Chevron for four years. Nancy has worked at this location, at the corner of Division Way and South Santiam Highway in Lebanon, for three weeks. She is the manager of this gas station. She enjoys all aspects of her job: doing paperwork, pumping gas, interacting with customers, and building rapport with her employees. In her free time, she hangs out with her family. Brittany Nassar prepares a cup of hot cocoa on Oct. 22. She is the owner of Mugs Coffee House on Main Street in Lebanon. She started working for Mugs Coffee in late 2019 and became the owner shortly after the pandemic began. She enjoys her job because she gets to serve people with the best she can give and make people happy. When Brittany isn't working, she does craft projects and helps build a modern aesthetic for Lebanon.