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Show Page 2 The PARSON December 1, 1965 HdlaiJoDDcaO Smile, They Deserve It Rabbi Relkin Here Today Within the last four months Westminster College has seen a phenomena in the making. From approximately 30 football players, a team has emerged. Under the direction of Coach George Seiffert and assistant coaches Mike Hunter and Tony Polychronis, Westminster has produced a football team to cheer for. Hard work and a fighting spirit have characterized the Parsons throughout the season. It was this attitude that finally shaped the team into an effective unit and paid off royally as they finished the season with winning games. The Parsons not only built a team but attracted a great deal of interest in Westminster College. With an increased enrollment, more public interest and an even better season on the horizon for Westminster College, the Parson football team has proved its worth. For the first time in four months you may see a football player smile. Smile back, he deserves it. T. F. Rabbi Stanley Letter to the Editor Dear Editor: The resolution passed by SGAC favoring the administrations policy in Viet Nam doesnt imply the backing of the students at Westminster. A copy of it will be sent to President Johnson. I agree with you that a poll should be taken on campus to see if a majority of students favor our national policy. The Young Republicans will soon be taking such a poll in the form of a petition which will also be sent to Washington. This really isnt a Repbulican project. It is rather intended to be an American project in favor of a policy which stands for Freedom first and in repudiation of the Peace at any Price doctrine of the extreme left-wiminority which has been so boistrous lately. ng Parsons Get Invito Four Westminster students have been invited to attend the Governors Conference on Education which is being held in the Hotel Utah today. Joe Ford, Karen Tiezen, Larry Gilson, and John Pavich are among collegiants from all over Utah assembled to hear educators brought from universities across the country. Topics to be discussed will range from Financing Education to the Public Interest in the Curriculum Today and Tomorrow. I would like to urge all interested students to sign this forthcoming petition. Lets exhibit that the vast majority of us here at Westminster favor a policy that stands strongly for freedom and against Communist aggression and any policy of unrealistic pacifism. Dick Paff THE PARSON Editor Business Manager Feature Editor Sports Editor Photography Art Editor Correspondence Secretary Music Editor Toni Franzolino Kim Gregory Marilyn Pierson Allan Burkhalter Allan Austin, Bernd Beutenmuller, Bill Kittel Tom Dawson Elayne Williams Katie McBride T. Relkin A special convocation is called for 9:50 a.m., today, to hear Rabbi Stanley T. Relkin of Temple Bnai Israel, Salt Lake City, speak about What Christians and Jews Have In Common. Rabbi Relkin firmly believes in education as the only effective way to increase not only our knowledge of the world we live in, but also our appreciation of each other in the human environment. He feels that the present day is the best time of all to be alive, because this is a time of social changes. There has never been a better or a deeper need for understanding and communication between all of us as neighbors and as individuals. Rabbi Relkin is a graduate of New York City College, and was ordained rabbi at Hebrew Union Col lege -- Jewish Institute of Religion in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1962. In 1959 he was the first student selected to serve the cause of Liberal Judaism in England. He ministered at the Liberal Synagogue of London and preached in similar synagogues throughout Great Britain and Ireland. Later he served congregations along the Atlantic Coast and in the midwest before becoming the spiritual leader of the congregation in Salt Lake City. The Rabbi comes to us under the auspices of the JewishChautauquaSociety, an organization which is devoted to better understanding of Jews and Judaism through our educational institutions. far-reachi- ng I was proudly modeling my first shift for my husband and asked which way he liked it with belt, or without. he said. It breaks the With, |