Oregon
Why Oregon receiver Jurrion Dickey changed jersey numbers from 99 to 13
EUGENE — Jurrion Dickey wore No. 13 throughout his high school career. The Oregon receiver, who caught attention for choosing No. 99 as a true freshman, wanted to take the opportunity to wear his old number in college, but used it as a proverbial carrot.
The Ducks redshirt-freshman set goals for his weight, strength and grades to accomplish this offseason before making the jersey change, which is one of two among returning UO players since the spring and five this offseason.
“I had a whole lot of past with No. 13,” Dickey said. “When the opportunity is there I felt like I would feel worse if I didn’t take the opportunity when it was there instead of allowing it just to wash away. I feel like it was my opportunity so I took it.
“I set a standard to be able to obtain No. 13. … To me 13 was a challenge and only for me to get it if I beat my challenge. I’d say I won my challenge up to here.”
Listed at 215 pounds last season, when he was coming off an injury from his senior year in high school, Dickey said he reached his goal of being between 200-205 pounds. He wanted to “push weight,” and claims to have increased some dumbbell lifts from 60 pounds to 110 pounds per arm.
With one catch for seven yards over five games while redshirting last season, the former five-star prospect is expected to see a much bigger role this fall.
Another player changing numbers ahead of fall camp is sophomore defensive tackle A’Mauri Washington, who switches to No. 52 from 58. Traeshon Holden (1 from 5), Nikko Reed (9 from 25) and Dave Iuli (74 from 52) changed numbers during the spring.
The numbers for transfers and freshmen who arrived this summer are: Brandon Johnson (3), Peyton Woodyard (12), Dylan Williams (20), De’Jaun Riggs (21), Ify Obidegwu (25), Devin Brooks (53), Derrick Harmon (55) and Fox Crader (59). Additionally, preferred walk-ons Jalen Saint Paul (24), Jacob Pruitt (35), Kade Caton (40), Brady Bidwell (89) and Tyler Kinsman (94) also arrived this summer.
Preferred walk-ons DJ Beckum, Hunter Roberts, Andrew Walker and Brodie Wright left the program this offseason.
Oregon
Oregon tribes to receive $1 million for food assistance amid SNAP pause
White House says partial SNAP benefits will go forward
The White House is cooperating with a court order and says partial SNAP benefits will go forward despite the government shutdown.
(This story has been updated to include new information.)
Oregon’s nine federally recognized tribes will receive a combined $1 million to combat food instability from delays to Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program disbursements, Gov. Tina Kotek said Nov. 6.
The funding will come from the Oregon Department of Human Service’s Office of Resilience and Emergency Management.
Grant agreements were to be shared with the tribes by Nov. 7.
It was not immediately clear how much of the $1 million each tribe would receive.
“The refusal of the Trump Administration to maintain SNAP benefits during the federal shutdown is creating instability for families and communities that rely on this critical help to buy food,” Kotek said in a statement. “We are moving quickly to ensure that Tribal governments and local partners have the resources they need to meet immediate food security needs.”
Kotek put $5 million toward Oregon’s food banks on Oct. 29 from prior years’ excess Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) funds.
The distributions come as more than 750,000 Oregonians, about 90,000 of whom are residents of Marion and Polk counties, did not receive SNAP benefits beginning Nov. 1.
Food stamps were not distributed due to the federal government shutdown, now the longest in history.
The Trump administration must fund November SNAP benefits by Nov. 7, a judge ordered on Nov. 6. Recipients had been expected to get some of the funds for November this month, potentially up to 65%, after earlier court orders called for benefits be disbursed. When and how those funds would be sent out was unclear.
USA Today reporter Sarah D. Wire contributed to this story.
Anastasia Mason covers state government for the Statesman Journal. Reach her at acmason@statesmanjournal.com or 971-208-5615.
Oregon
At least 280 Oregon immigrants were detained by ICE during October surge, advocates say
Ralph Ambrose Whitefoot often begins his day with an incredible view from the Washington side of the Columbia River in the Fort Rains area. A member of the Yakima Nation, he’s a caterer and a fisher who catches salmon and other fish similar to how his ancestors did thousands of years ago.
Read online: https://www.koin.com/northwest-grown/scaffold-fishing-on-the-columbia-honors-native-american-culture/
Oregon
Oregon guard Jackson Shelstad ‘may’ begin non-contact practice soon
EUGENE — Jackson Shelstad may be able to begin non-contact practice in the coming days.
The Oregon point guard, who broke his hand last month, was officially listed as questionable but did not play in Tuesday’s season opener against Hawaii.
Shelstad, who was not wearing a split while on the bench, visited with doctors earlier Tuesday and got positive feedback.
“Everything looks good,” Oregon coach Dana Altman said. “I think they’re going to talk with his parents and talk with the doctors again. Maybe start doing some non-contact stuff.
“We obviously need him. He runs our stuff. He knows our stuff. I think he can get us organized and we can start running some stuff.”
Oregon committed 21 turnovers, its most since 2013, in the 60-59 win over Hawaii. Wei Lin committed four of those turnovers while starting at point guard in place of Shelstad, who averaged 13.7 points and 2.7 assists in 35 starts last season.
Altman said the Ducks will have to rely on walk-on Drew Carter, who was the only UO player not to commit a turnover against Hawaii, while Shelstad is out.
Oregon hosts Rice on Friday and South Dakota State on Nov. 12 with Oregon State on Nov. 17.
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