Lawyers to study Penn State unrest UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (UPI) — The Board of Trustees of Penn State University Thursday night appointed a panel of three prominent state attorneys to hear the cases of students accused of fomenting campus violence and recommended punishment "up to and including expulsion." G. Albert Shoemaker, board chairman who disclosed the decision after a lengthy board meeting in Pittsburgh, said the trust- Patrolman detects SDS tactics during week of KU disturbance A Kansas State Highway Patrol official compared the pattern of violence in Lawrence this week to tactics used by the Weathermen, the activist faction of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). "The tactics that are being used are very much like SDS Weathermen tactics," Colonel William Albott said Thursday. He added that this group "uses fear to gain an open door." Albott said although there was speculation that militant blacks were responsible for the violence, the racial disturbances at Lawrence High School this week could be a diversion. Albott explained that other activist groups could be using the incidents at the high school to avoid suspicion. A Kansas Bureau of Investigation official, Merv Purdy, does not believe there is a Weathermen faction based in Lawrence. "We do have a faction of SDS here, but we don't know if it's Weathermen," Purdy said. He said Abbie Hoffman's remarks April 8 would indicate that no hard-core revolutionaries exist here. In his speech at Allen Field House the night of the student strike, Hoffman criticized KU's radicals as not being revolutionary. Purdy said it would be possible however for Weathermen to come from another area. Committee appointed to select KUMC dean Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. announced the appointment of a Search Committee which will seek a replacement for Dr. George A. Wolf Jr., dean of the School of Medicine and Provest of the University of Kansas Medical Center. The committee consists of Dr. Charles E. Brackett Jr., acting dean of the School of Medicine; Dr. Clifford Gurney, chairman of the department of internal medicine; Dr. Juanita Murphy, representing nursing education; Mr. Russell H. Miller, director of the Med Center, representing hospital administration; Edward J. Walaszek, chairman of the department of pharmacology, representing the basic science departments; Dr. David W. Robinson, representing the senior clinical faculty; Dr. Virginia Tucker, representing the junior clinical faculty; Dr. George E. Med graduates practice Six hundred and forty-two of the physicians in the greater Kansas City area are graduates of the KU Medical Center. KU physician alums number 1,134 in the state of Kansas and 431 in Missouri. ees "had moved as strongly as they could within the legal limits recommended by university counsel." 12 KANSAN Apr. 24 1970 Burket Jr., practicing physician from Kingman; Tim Taylor, graduate student in anatomy; Arthur Douville, 4th year med student; and Dr. Robert Trueworthy, chairman of the house staff committee (residents and interns) and fellow in pediatric cardiology. Appointed to the panel were Robert E. Woodside, a former Superior Court judge and state attorney general; Genevieve Blatt, former state internal affairs secretary, and William T. Coleman Jr., a black lawyer who served on the commission on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. "The panel will serve as a fact-finding body," a university statement said, "and if students are found guilty it will recommend to the university appropriate punishment which may be up to and including expulsion." tion and replaced it with the compromise injunction. Beginning and the End of World War III Are Coming! The Beginning: "Year of the Pig" and The end: "The War Game" See These Two Academy Award Films APRIL 29 - MAY 1 Earlier in the day, militant students at Penn State consented to compromise on a court injunction barring them from seizing control of any building on the sprawling central Pennsylvania campus. The court order was hammered out in a $5\frac{1}{2}$ hour session between the students, university attorneys and Judge R. Paul Campbell of Centre County Court. More than 300 Penn State students crowded the courtroom while the attorneys for both sides met with Campbell. A hearing on the original injunction had been set for mid-morning but the agreement was not announced until that afternoon. The school has endured sporadic violence, including bricks thrown through the windows of the president's home and firebombings, since April 15 when state police were called in to enforce a preliminary injunction against 150 anti-war protesters who occupied the administration building, Old Main. Twenty-nine persons were arrested then and more arrests have been made since. Campbell's original injunction was issued when violence erupted during a campus demonstration April 15. The trustees condemned the recent turmoil; told Eric A. Walker, Penn State president, not to grant amnesty to students who are arrested, and instructed university attorneys to seek a permanent injunction against student occupations of campus buildings. In Bellefonte, Pa., Judge Campbell scheduled a hearing early Friday on a new permanent injunction, based on the compromise wording agreed to by the students and the school. He rescinded the preliminary injunc Since then, at least 37 persons were arrested and 18 state policemen injured, eight of them treated, in incidents of rock throwing, arson, fire-bombings, bomb threats and campus rallies. Address ... 7in