Huskies. Cougars In

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Huskies. Cougars In ~------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Huskies. Cougars In Season Final WASHINGTON DAILY U of W Favored in Clas:l STATE By Mike Wilson their opponents and are unscored The Cougars will put the lid on on in their last ten quarters. UNIVERSITY the 1962 football season t his The Husky onslot has been led EVERGREEN weekend when they host the Uni- by Fullback Junior "Ins tan t" Volume LXIX Pullman, Washington, Tuesday, November 20, 1962 versity of Washington Huskies in Coffey. Coffey has all the qual- the traditional cross-state contest ifications to be a member of the Forum Saturday afternoon at Spokane's Husky backfield. He is big, fast Faculty Albi Stadium. and powerful. In his past two As usual the Huskies will go into outings Coffey has piled up 247 the game favored, but don't let yards on 28 carries for better 'Christianity Helps One Face this fool you. The past two than 8 yards per carry. games between these two teams Cougar assistant coach Gerry have been real thrillers with the Okuneff, who has scouted the Huskies pulling them out in the Huskies, says they have improv- The World,' Says Katagiri final minutes. ed 50 percent since the beginning In 1960 the Cougars gained a of the season. "They have more By Jim 'Titton God is involved in the struggle The Rev. Katagiri sounded a 7-0 advantage only to see the good backs than any team in this The Rev. Mineo Katagiri, born of men and nations. Even though warning against restric t i 11 g University of Washington score part of the country," says Okun- in Hawaii of Japanese ances- the manner in which He works Christian values to individual re- late in the fourth quarter and eff. Their line is fast and accur- try, presented an address at Koi- may be hidden, His activity is lationships without regard to cor- complete a two point conversion ate, according to the Cougar as- nonia House Monday to more there. The Gospels hold the an- porate management. ' pass to win the game. sistant coach. than 50 persons at the Fall se- swer." "All of our life seems caught Last year the Cougars got into However strong the Huskies the lead again but the Huskies mester's sixth Faculty Forum. Following his graduation from up in organized groups and cor- are, don't count the C 0 u gar S He is presently serving an ap- the University of Hawaii and porations. Our anxieties and came from behind to gain a 21- short. This is the one big game pointment by the Church of Chicago's Union Theological Sem- frustrations have come to us 17 victory. of the year for Cougar teams. Christ as "campus minister" to inary, the Rev. Katagiri threw through corporate bodies which This year's Huskies team is For this one they should be in those University of Washington his weight behind the forces of impinge on the individual and rated just as strong if not strong- pretty good health. Larry Reis- students who belong to his de- labor in Hawaii. determine the kind of life we er than last year's. In their last big, who wasn't used in the Ida- nomination. "J found that Christianity lead. two games they have shut out (Continued to Page 5) His speech title was the qUES-/ takes the human individual very "Christianity should dea I effec- tion "Is Christianity Unique?", seriously. While "the plantation tively with these problems. It is and he responded by delving into workers were given numbers in- in these struggles that God is the turbulent history of Hawaii stead of names on their i 0 b s, found. He is not indifferent to Weather; Pass Reports as the environment which form- while they were treated as nurn- human hopes. He loves t his ed his own personal response to bars, Christianity reaffirmed the world and it is in the struggle ·.)f Christianity as a convert from worth and dignity of the individ- the world that God reveals Him- Buddhism. He then presented uaL" self. Given For Washington what he considers to be serious Turning to what he considers "As faculty members you pos- problems and challenges for the a major challenge for the church sess the skill and the knowledge As Thanksgiving vacation rapid- church today. today, he said: "The church has 44 degrees, highway bare and wet to interpret the corporate insti- ly approaches and students pre- except compact snow from the The Rev. Katagiri thought that to take the Gospel even more tution for man. We must inter- pare for the trip home, or at least summit to four miles East; Chi- his framework of activity was to seriously about the worth of the pret what God is trying to say to away from the University, nook, 39 degrees, raining, com- be in the practice of law, and individuaL What is the alienated he individual through the corpo- thoughts turn to road and weath- pact snow and slush from the he took as his hero Clarence Dar- man saying to God, to the ration. " er conditions. church? summit to four miles West; White, row. The famous lawyer had un- "I have discovered the unique- The U.S. Weather Bureau in successfully, but bravely, at- "My intern assistant from the 38 degrees, raining, highway bare theological seminary in Chicago ness of Christianity in its power Seattle has forecast cloudy and and wet, open to two-way traffic; tempted to defend a native Ha- to help me confront a troubled windy weather with occasional waiian against the sugar planta- had a positive approach. He used Stevens, 42 degrees, raining, high- to spend hours in the coffee world with some semblance of rain through Tuesday for both way bare and wet. tion lawyers in a legal dispute, passion and concern. It has help· houses along university row, lis- Eastern and Western Washington. and the young Katagiri wanted ed me to mourn with the alien- the Palouse area has been exper- desperately to follow in Darrow's tening to the students (I call them the 'night people'), listen- ated and has given me the cour- iencing are the "tail" effects of footsteps. age to seek involvement with the stronger winds being felt on the Easterbrook But in 1935 he was sent as a ing to their incessant questions world." coast. The gusts, ranging from delegate to the First World Con- as they tried so desperately to find some meaning for their life 30 to 55 miles an hour are expect- ference of Christian Youth in ed for the Eastern part of the Found Guilty Amsterdam. As he saw the evi- through talking with others. dence of Christian love and fel- "Too often the church has been Freshmen to Get state, with higher winds predicted Paul Easterbrook, charged for the coastal regions. lowship making inroads to long telling people how to be human with third degree assault Oct. 10, established national rivalries and without understanding the depths Mid Grades Today White Pass highway between was found guilty by a six-man hatreds at the conference, he be- of human alienation. Neither has Chehalis and Yakima was closed jury Nov. 13, and sentenced to Upperclassmen may feel a lit- came convinced that "J e sus it bothered to discover the causes near the summit for about an three days in jail plus court costs Christ was the Power that could of alienation in contemporary cul- tle neglected as freshmen dig hour and a hali Monday because of $25, by Justice Court Judge into their mail boxes and pull reconcile men to men, nation to ture. Now, the church needs des- of high winds, falling rocks and Richard Loucks. out mid-semester grades today. nation; that Christianity was perately to listen and study so downed trees, the Associated Easterbrook, who was charged capable of reconciling the brok- that alienated man may be help- Only freshmen will rec e i v e Press reported Monday. Later re- with the alleged beating of Glenn en and alien relations of men." ed to discover meaning for his mid-semester reports due to the ports indicated that the debris Askwig Oct. 7 in Neill Hall 128, ThE' young man felt released life in the context of his exis- new policy recommended by the had been cleared from the road was released on $175 bail Oct. from his "bondage to bitterness," renee." faculty resident staff last Spring and the pass reopened. 10. The charges against Easter- deciding that he, too, could be a God wants to reccncile man to and adopted by the administra- The State Highways Dep't. re- brook were filed by County Pros- reconciling agent, a servant to Himself, he continued, and man tion. ported, as of 11:35 a.m., yester- ecuting Attorney Don McMaanis men. in this reconciliation finds within According to Claude Simpson, day, conditions on all mountain after Askwig was taken to the "As a junior at the University himself his own humanity. registrar, mid-semester grades passes as follows: hospital with head, ear and groin injuries, according to WSU Po-. of Hawaii I joined the church, "It is through His grace that will also be mailed to parents if Snoqualmie, 47 degrees raining giving up the' study of law for reconciliation takes place and it the freshmen are under 21 years highway bare and wet; 'Blewett: lic€' Chief Ernest Schrenk. the study of Christianity. I is His participation in the hum- of age. No upperclassman will Defense attorney Albert Schau- learned that Christianity takes an struggle which brings good receive reports of his mid grades, ble and Prosecuting Atto r n e v the world very seriously, that out of human evil." Simpson added.
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