Monday, February 26,1968 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 5 UPI Briefs English clergyman shares Mass WACO, Tex.For the first time since the Protestant Reformation in the 16th century,a clergyman of the Church of England here shared Mass with a Roman Catholic priest.The historic joint celebration of Mass occurred at Waco's St. Louis Catholic Church Sunday as Canon Bryan Green of the Church of England delivered the sermon at the 9:30 a.m. service. Nervous-system researcher dies CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—Dr. Stanley Cobb, 80, a pioneer in research into diseases of the nervous system died at his home Sunday after a long illness. The neurologist and psychiatrist retired in 1954 after serving for 35 years on the Harvard University medical faculty. Cobb, a Brookline native, concentrated his research on epilepsy and circulation of the blood in the brain and was the first to show in an area of the brain that is being used there is an increase in circulation. Air Force officers to be tried again CAIRO—Four Air Force officers court martialed on charges of responsibility for last year's defeat by Israel in the Mid East war will be tried again, a government spokesman said today. War Minister Gen. Mohamed Fawzi said the verdicts of the court martials would not be accepted, and all four would be retried. The verdicts had touched off demonstrations during the weekend in Cairo. Oklahoma boy shot in robbery OKLAHOMA CITY—A Shamrock, Tex., teenaged service station attendant working his way through school was shot to death here Sunday during an apparent armed robbery. The victim was identified as Robert Harm Smith, 19. Police arrested three suspects. The men were traveling in a car bearing Indiana license plates. Two were booked on a charge of murder. The third was being held for questioning after he claimed to have been a hitch-hiker picked up shortly before the car was stopped. Dogs, tanks chase VC guerrillas SAIGON—Allied troops today smashed a Viet Cong battalion shelling Saigon's Tan Son Nhut warbase, flushing the guerrillas out with tracker dogs and running them down with tanks. At least 52 of the estimated 400 Viet Cong were killed according to first reports from the battlefield. The guerrillas' rockets and mortars had harassed for a week. The hounds chased one guerrilla band into a thicket where helicopter gunships and napalm attacks killed at least 20. Shriver may run against Dirksen The political future of war on poverty chief R. Sargent Shriver goes on the line today when Illinois' Democratic slate-makers meet for the last time to determine who will carry the party's banner against Senate Republican Leader Everett Dirksen this fall. At the same time, GOP strategists were assessing New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's statement that he would accept his party's presidential nomination if drafted at the Republican Convention in August. WHERE TO DRAW THE LINE ON CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE Open Forum 7:30 Forum Room Tuesday, February 27 PROF. CALDER PICKETT ASST. PROF. HERMAN LWAN PROF. ALBERT BURSTAHLER JOHN TOLAND Newspaper strike settled SAN FRANCISCO—(UPI)—The longest newspaper strike in San Francisco history ended officially in its 52nd day Sunday when members of 15 unions approved a "completely different" three-year pact with publishers. The settlement, affecting all unions, extends from March 1 to March 1, 1971. It calls for a $10 a week increase the first and second years, and a $12 increase the third year. More than 3,000 employees of the Morning Chronicle and Evening Examiner had been idled by the strike since Jan. 5. Mechanical workers at the papers began immediately to prepare presses. A spokesman for The pact also provides a common expiration date for all union contracts and bars union strikes and management lockouts on economic issues during duration of the agreement. the jointly owned San Francisco Newspaper Printing Co. said the papers would reappear with Wednesday editions. The settlement resulted in gains for a number of the unions. The Mailers Union, whose members earned $143.75 before the strike, won in addition to the pay raise a provision maintaining the same number of jobs when the printing company moves to a new plant with automated facilities. The Photoengravers Union won a fourth week of vacation after five years instead of twelve. The strike settlement was announced at a news conference in the office of Mayor Joseph L. The American Newspaper Guild won wage increases slightly higher than the $10-10-12 agreement, with top minimum for journeymen reporters going to $240.75 in 1971. Alioto shortly after the 15th union, the Mailers, approved its contract 213-10. The strike began Jan. 5 after pickets from the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner set up "informational" outside the Chronicle and Examiner offices. Employes of the two San Francisco papers and the printing company refused to cross the lines. A few hours later the Mailers, who had been working without a contract for 10 months, went on strike against the printing company. When You're in Doubt—Try It Out, Kansan Classifieds. BELL SYSTEM Recruiting Team On Campus Wednesday, February 28,1968 Representing American Telephone & Telegraph, Long Lines Department Bachelor's and Master's candidates - Electrical Mechanical, Civil, Mathematics, and Physics candidates with broad interests in economic and management problems. Locations: Mid-West states initially. Bell Laboratories Research and Development - B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. candidates. Emphasizing E.E., M.E., Physics, Engineering Mechanics and Mathematical Sciences. Opportunities for graduate study. Locations: New Jersey, Illinois and elsewhere in eastern half of U.S. Sandia Corporation Master's Degree in Mathematics, Electrical and Mechanical Engineering. Bachelor's candidates of outstanding scholarship in Engineering considered for technical development program. Locations: Albuquerque, New Mexico; Livermore, California. Southwestern Bell Technical students, particularly those seeking management and administrative assignments E.E.; M.E.; E.P.; C.E.; Math-Physics. Locations: Kansas and the Mid-West. Western Electric All Engineering disciplines needed to fill Technical Engineering positions in design, product, systems, military research and management training. Locations: Southwest—Mid-West—Eastern and Northern States. Sign Interview Schedule in Engineering Office AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER