STUDIES OF CAMPUS SEX: FOOLISH, GOOD ADVICE See Editorial Page C I - 4c Lit i6Fa uF tii FAIR High-'70 Low-42 Pleasant, sunny, warmer Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVI, No, 16S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1966 SEVEN CENTS Chemical Mind Control Experiments Perf FOUR PAGES ormed EDITOR'S NOTE: The following article has been adapted from one appearing recently in tie nwall Street Journal. -M.E. Eighteen University men here recently volunteered to help test a revolutionary biochemical con- cept-a pill to make people smart- er. The Wall Street Journal ear- lier this week reported that the students took an experimental drug supplied by Abbott Labora- tories and then tried to master a complex memory - and - learning test. The students had to match cor- rectly each of eight keys on a key- board to flashing lights on a panel. The object was to discover by trial and error which key con- trolled which light, and then to remember this on subsequent trials. In the series of experiments, di- rected by University psychologist John Burns, two "control" groups took the same test after receiving an inert sugar pill or dexedrine. Another group of 24 students took an IQ test to see whether the drug could improve their ability to perceive relationships. Results of these trials, and of similar experiments elsewhere, won't be known for perhaps sev- eral months when scientists have completed analyzing their find- ings. The fact that such tests are- being done with human beings, however, points up the optimism of researchers working in a new, highly controversial field with pro- found implications for mankind. These scientists, principally uni- versity biochemists and psychol- ogists here at the University, Cali- fornia, UCLA, MIT, and other re- search centers abroad, are con- vinced they are constructing a new theory about how memory works. Supported by a growing number of laboratory experiments, the scientists locate the key to memory and learning in RNA- ribonucleic acid-in brain cells. Knowledge of how RNA might serve as a storehouse for memory may lead the scientists to the threshold of major discoveries and eventually to chemical manipula- tion of the brain. If the com- pounds being tested now fail, sci- entists believe it will only be a short time before the right pills or potions will be synthesized to enhance memory and mental func- tioning. If experiments are successful the drugs could have widespread ap- plications. "We might be able to slow down the process of senility in the aging or help mentally retard- ed people," says Dr. Alvin J. Glas- ky, a biochemist. "Everyone could benefit from a better memory. We think we'll be able to control memory and learning and thus allow people to achieve the limits of their native, genetic potential." Others, such as psychologist Da- vid Krech at the University of California in Berkeley, feel that the research may lead to a break- through in control of the mind, but wonder if the prospect should be celebrated. "I don't believe that I am be- ing melodramatic in suggesting that our research may carry with it even more serious implications than the awful, in both senses of the word, achievements of the atomic physicists," Krech told a recent scientific meeting. Scientists may soon unravel all the intricacies of chemical changes Evidence for chemical theory, that occur when people learn and particularly involving RNA is remember. University psychologist growing in experiments with lab- James V. McConnell says, "Even- oratory animals. tually, then, we might be able to Some scientists feel there may take 'blank' RNA and synthesize be a more general effect of RNA memories in a test tube. I may upon learning. Experiments indi- be speaking of hundreds of years cate that "untrained" RNA, such from now, but it might be sooner." as that found in yeast, can be Previously, scientists studying fed to animals, and the animals memory have concerned them- will learn faster or remember selves mainly with electronic ac- more. This is sometimes called the tivity in the brain. They talked of nutritive theory of RNA. This is the brain in terms of an electronic the basis for drug research such computer in which memory might as Abbott's testing of magnesium consist of complex arrangements pomoline, trade named Cylert, the of "on and off" switches at the drug given Michigan students. synapses where nerve cell endings Abbott scientists found that Cy- contact one another, such as in a lert could increase brain RNA pro- digital computer. Proof is lacking duction by 35 to 40 per cent by for this theory, and more scien- stimulating an enzyme that con- tists now look to the nucleus of trols RNA. The rats were tested the nerve cell itself for some chem- to see whether doses of the drug ical method of uncoding memory. would help them to learn to avoid more quickly a shock pattern in a cage. Scientists have tried to estab- lish whether RNA from ordinary yeast can be fed to people to en- hance memory. Results from tests at McGill University in Montreal claimed memory improvement in patients approaching senility who were given yeast RNA. Doctors term these studies preliminary and are reluctant to draw any hard- and-fast conclusions from them. Memory obliteration is also be- ing studied, and present investiga- tions are being headed by Uni- versity Prof. Dr. Bernard W. Agra- noff. Goldfish were trained to swim from one compartment of a tank to another to avoid a shock preceded by a light. Some gold- fish were given antibiotics which interfere with RNA manufacture of protein. If the drugs were given right after a 40 minute training period, the fish remembered nothing three days later. "Undrugged" goldfish retained learning for days and even months. Other scientists are beginning to show how memory enhance- ment might be transferred from one species to another. A UCLA group trained hamsters to do cer- tain tasks, then injected RNA from their brain cells into the stom- achs of rats. The rats showed significant ability to do the same tasks learned by the hamsters. It is, of course, a long way from animal experiments to a -drug use- ful in human beings, though the implications of memory pills and the possibility of ruthless indoc- trination and control over the hu- man mind are already apparent. Duncan Has u, (W Iiraii ta Early Lead NFWS WARE In Oregon aum tU U U W U U E A STRIKE BETWEEN THE Saginaw Valley Carpenters District Council and the Associated General Contractors ended its 22nd day yesterday with no sign of a settlement. Washtenaw County carpenters remained on strike yesterday but did not picket construction sites, allowing bricklayers, who Monday ratified a new contract with the Washtnew County Con- tractors Association, to return to work. Laborers in Washtenaw County are continuing to work with- out a contract. EAST LANSING U P)-A MICHIGAN State University official yesterday said "it would be very unfortunate" if published charges of involvement with the Central Intelligence Agency damaged university research projects in India and throughout the world. The statement followed a New York Times report which said India's leading pro-Communist daily, The Patriot, had suggested that a MSU research project in the central Indian city of Hyder- abad was a cover for the CIA. "There is absolutely no intelligence organization involvement in any Michigan State project either in India or any other place," said Dr. Ralph Smuckler, acting dean of MSU's international programs. "Since the project is aimed at bettering the life of people in India," he added. "It would be extremely unfortunate if it were damaged by such unsubstantiated accusations and sus- picion." NEW YORK (M--ABOUT 300 COLUMBIA University men threatened Sunday night to invade the residence halls of Barnard College, Columbia's women's college affiliate, in a spring panty raid. Police said the men gathered in front of the residence halls along upper Broadway vowing to girls in open windows that they would enter the dormitories. Eight policemen were sent to the scene and the students began to return to their quarters after coaxing by university proctors. Police said most of the students had cleared the area of the residence halls by 3 a.m. PROF. JAMES OLDS of the psychology department at the University has been elected to membership in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Olds is one of 126 Americans who were elected to Fellowship * in America's second oldest learned society, while 24 distinguished persons from abroad were elected to Foreign Honorary Mem- bership. The Fellows were elected at the Academy's 186th annual meeting in Boston. Olds is widely recognized as outstanding in the field of physiological psychology. His discovery of the "reward pleasure" function of electrical brain stimulation has been regarded as one of the most significant findings in psychology, in the past decade. He was awarded the Howard Crosby Warren medal by the Society of Experimental Psychologists in 1962. Hugh [Upsets Burns; In Florida, Cooper Has Kentucky Biel By Tile Associated Press Rep. Robert B. Duncan, cast as the hawk in Oregon's echo of the American debate over Viet Nam, opened an early lead last night in his race to become the Demo- cratic nominee for the Senate. In the feature race of a four- primary night, Duncan led How- ard Morgan, a harsh critic of the American stand in Southeast Asia. Across the country, in Florida, Miami Mayor Robert King High scored a startling upset and wres- tled the Democratic nomination for governor from Gov. Haydon Burns. Kentucky and Oklahoma also chose nominees for Novem- ber. Duncan, twice elected to the House, supported President John- son's Viet Nam policy in a cam- paign which centered on the Asian struggle. The winner will be matched against Republican Gov. Mark O.I Hatfield, whose three challengers in the GOP Senate primary were only names on the ballot. In the Democratic battle, this was the early picture from 179 of Oregon's 2,946 precincts: Duncan 3900. Morgan 1844. Gilbert Meyer 127. Burns, who beat High two years ago, conceded he had lost the Flor- ida rematch - a bitter struggle marked by his charge that the mayor was the candidate for a Negro bloc vote. The governor ledrthe initial pri- mary, but fell short of a major-I ity vote. Kentucky's veteran Republican Sen. John Sherman Cooper won renomination by a vast margin. An old college classmate turned political challenger, former Rep. John Young Brown, won the Dem- ocratic nomination just as easily. Preston Moore, once national commander of the American Le- gion, beat former Gov. Roman Gary for the Democratic guber- natorial nomination. State Sen. Dewey Bartlett of Tulsa won the Republican nomination. Pat J. Patterson, a tax attorney from Oklahoma City, captured the Re- publican nomination for the Sen- ate to challenge Democratic Sen., Fred R. Harris in Oklahoma. -Daily-Thoma VOICE JEE TS Laurie Lipson, chairman of Voice political party, the local chapter of Students for "a Democratic Society, presided over an zational meeting last night. Voice decided to host the National Council meeting of SDS in June at the request of the nationa Plans for the summer were also discussed, although no specific plans were formulated. DOCUMENT SENT TO COLLEGES: NSA GIves Bleak Viet Nam---Rep( Students To Get Advisory Board Soon Hatcher Approves Plan, Stresses Need For Communication By SUSAN SCHNEPP A proposal for a Student Ad- visory Board to the President of . . the University met with general approval from President Hatcher and University vice-presidents at a special meeting yesterday after- The administrators and student leaders at the meeting stresssed the need for communication and "meaningful dialogue" between students and the administration, which the proposal would provide by setting up a system of advisory boards to the president and vice- presidents. President Hatcher termed the plan an "exciting idea, and Vice- President for Student Affairs Richard Cutler commented that such a system would provide a means for students to gain an "education about the University as sR. Copi well as in the University." Main Areas of Concern Thepmain areas of concern were the problems of confidence be- organi- tween students and the adminis- il office. tration and continuity of student interest, the relation of the boards to Student Government Council and Graduate Student Council, and the process of member selec- tion. To operate effectively, many of the boards would have to be given access to security information by the administration. If the boards were trusted with privileged in- formation, the problem of to whom te of the the information could be revealed would arise. disclosed There was concern that if the gationPod information could not be given to expens ofSGC or GSC, communication be- tween those student organizations and the advisory boards would be d for the hindered. This situation would a- he Ameri- fect the relationship between the Advisory Board System and SGC five Viet- since the proposal states that the s to visit boards must be responsible to SGC ghout the "as the official representative of reby avoid the University student communi- itors were ty." It was felt that any possibility 11 through, of competition between members ,of the advisory boards and SGC eVietnamese should be avoided. n idea be- Continuity of Interest bances and In relation to the problem of dent lead- continuity of student interest and nvolved in participation, Cutler pointed out ye t tisthat student interest is often a very fickle thing." Administrators, aid he had he said, must be assured that the tact with system will be continued from ganizations year to year and not die out soon "s of urban after it has been established. t, housing Neill Hollenshead, '67, the SGC ervices for member who. along with Marvin Igees from Freedman, '67, submitted the pro- s who have posal to the group, said that stu- ities dents have a greater awareness of the need for continuity than sible ever before and are interested in hoped to building a permanent system. South Viet In the area of member selec- al congress tion, Cutler expressed concern that the intense interest some student iye of the board members might have in the iveo the issues could also result in "a de- n ives hrgree of lack of objectivity." What e I moodives is needed, he said, is a balance of ie m of objectivity and emotion. h, of Bud- Broad Communication ers, and of There was also general agree- se officials ment that the communication nts met in process must not involve only the advisory boards, SGC, and the ad- e following ministration, but must also ex- tend to the rest of the student By The Associated Press civilian population, had created seized control of those cities at A report circulated by the suspicions about United States the outset of the current crisis. National Student Association, the "domination," and had generally The report has been circulated largest American student organi- failed to achieve meaningful goals over the past two weeks to the zation, has predicted that there in economic and social assistance. NSA's 301 affiliated colleges and would be no internal peace inunvriesTh domntwl South Viet Nam until the United The report is a journal of a universities. The document will Buddhist Church assumes an ac- two-week visit to South Viet Nam serve as the basis for a reappraisal tive role in a constitutional gov- last month by Philip Sherburne, of the organization's foreignn enent. NSA president, and two other of- policy platform at its annual con- The leadership or the NSA gave ficers, Malcolm Kovacs and Greg- gress which will be held late in its 1,3 million members a bleak ory Delin. August at the University of its .3 mllio memers blek -Illinois. account of political unrest and the prospects of the Southeast Asian war. It scored the United States for continuing to support the military junta. The 4,250 word document also urged that American policies, no matter how well intentioned, had hopelessly alienated most of the The authors of the report saidj they had conferred with scores of The association, considered the student representatives-many of most moderate of the major stu- whom had never before been ac- dent organizations, in the past' cessible to American visitors. has been mildly critical of the These ranged from the moderate Administration's policies in Viet Saigon Students' Union to Revo- Nam. Last year's congress called lutionary Student Struggle units for an immediate end to the in Da Nang and Hue that had just bombings in North Viet Nam. NO PROTESTS, PLACARDS, OR SIT-INS: Berkeley Academic Revolution Liberalizes Outlook Sherburne, a gradua University of Oregon, yesterday that the dele, made the trip at theE the State Department. The department pai transportation to help t can organization select namese student leader college campuses throu United States and thei suspicions that the vis officially sponsored. The proposed visit fe however, when South I authorities vetoed the cause of present disturt because some of the stu ers were too directly i political action to leas time. Instead, Sherburne sa established direct con Vietnamese student org to begin joint progran: community developmen relocation, and health s the thousands of refu the war-torn rural area: sought shelter in the ci Another Trip Pos Sherburne said he make another trip to Nam before the annu to update his report, The report is reflect Vietnamese student opi than polemical in tons a gloomy picture of th South Viet Nam's yout dhist and Catholic lead American and Vietname whom the three studer Saigon. The report makes th o erac .r By ROBERT MOORE Special To The Daily BERKELEY, Calif. - There is another academic revolution tak- ing place here, this time without protests, placards, or Mario Savio. The faculty and administration of the University of California at Berkeley seem to be carefully re- constructing the university along the lines of liberal educational philosophies. Right now, Berkeley's Academic Senate, a faculty representative body, is patiently arguing through 42 recommendations widely hailed in academic circles as partial re- medies to the many ills of a large although in two cases, with serious modification from their original forms in the report-one has been defeated, and one other has been returned to the faculty committee for "clarification." This 10-1-1 record for the Mus- catine Report is viewed as a hope- ful omen of what is ahead for this 27,000-man "multiversity." Approved Recommendations The 10 recommendations from the Muscatine Report approved so far would fall roughly into these categories: Student Grading Options: Pro- cedure to allow students in good standing to take, for credit, one flfl1,na r .nimrl - n,. n n. PA..A'. "halfway" degree, for students who have fulfilled all doctoral re- quirements except their disserta- tion. Preferred Grading: Procedure to allow comprehensive grading at the end of two and three quarter courses. Admissions: Recommendations for h i gh school recruitment; thorough screening of applicants; and flexible admission standards (changing the minimum high school grade average to 2.8 instead of 3.0.) The only recommendation to be defeated (47-42) of the 12 pro- posed was one which would have Academic Senate, and the vague' wording of the original report. Entrenched conservatism and academic tradition are, as expect- ed, the chief obstacle. Most of the power of the conservatives is cen- tered in the history and chemistry departments, for some reason. The most common conservative argu- ments have been: -"This is all too drastic, or sudden, or untested;" -"This is going to contradict all of our policies; we don't have the machinery to do it;" and -"This is going to penalize the good, hardworking student who wants to get good grades." the Muscatine Report. The report mentions specific policies but did not explain or diagram adminis- tration of these, and many of the policy revisions have turned out to be more comprehensive than the report-writers o r i g i n a 11 y thought. The Senate has been pondering realistic implementa- tions of the more general policies, and in some cases has not found any solution. Some reforms may be practically unworkable. One recommendation which the Senate has found to be particularly difficult has been the new pre-doctorate degree. A reso- lution was accepted by the Senate, hut it had two important weak- fied-from the resolution, leaving the degree unnamed. One observer remarked on how important the title will be to the new degree: "No matter how good the new de- gree will be, if the Grad Council decided to call it 'Dullard of Arts' it will be useless. Political and Practical These same problems--the po- litical and the practical-are ex- pected for the 30 recommenda- tions remaining. Six more are on the Senate agenda before Summer recess as part of meetings held May 17 and scheduled for May 25. Among thebimportant recom- mendations being considered in : I I -I