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Salem, Ore. – Gov. Ted Kulongoski and his wife are used to eating the best their bountiful state has to offer: fresh salmon, huckleberries and mushrooms foraged from the Cascade mountains.

This week will be different. They’ll spend just $3 a day each on their meals, $42 in all, to match the amount spent by the average food stamp recipient in Oregon.

“My wife came up to me and said, ‘Either you or the dog is going on a diet. I lost,”‘ Kulongoski quipped while announcing the “food-stamp challenge” recently and inviting others to join.

Kulongoski and his wife, Mary Oberst, are the highest-profile people yet to take part in the challenge, a trend sponsored by religious groups, community activists and food pantries.

The goal is to kindle awareness and empathy.

“It really re-energized me to be so much more conscious of what people are going through,” said Sister Mary Scullion, executive director of a Philadelphia nonprofit that works with the homeless. She did the challenge last year.

The challenge comes at a politically delicate juncture. The Bush administration has proposed several cuts, among them taking away food stamps from about 185,000 people because they receive other government aid.

The Department of Agriculture budget, as proposed, would also eliminate a program that gives boxes of food to nearly half a million seniors each month.

The administration has proposed some changes hailed by food stamp supporters, such as excluding retirement savings from income limits and encouraging recipients to purchase more fresh produce.

Kulongoski, a Democrat, plans to lobby Congress to restore the proposed cuts.

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