25-YEAR-OLD MEMO REVEALS SCHEME: The Michigan Daily-Sunday, January 7, 1979-Page 3 ;C U SEE NEWS {APPE CALL:DNLY Cheating prospers Cheating, once a calculated, fine art of sneakery at the University apparently has gone beyond clever cribbing and has gotten downright outrageous. Students in a political science course last term were shocked to find that a question worth 50 per cent of the final exam was on an obscure piece of reserved reading that no one had done. After a brief moment of initial panic, everyone dove into the test, resigning themselves to trying to bs their way through the question-that is, everyone except one individual who was seen slipping his I.D. card from his jacket into his back pocket, and nonchalantly leaving the auditorium with only 20 minutes left to complete the exam. Ten minutes later, he quietly snuck back into the room, virtually unnoticed and trying to conceal the fact that he was terribly out of breath. He returned to his seat and began to write like crazy, now that he had ap- parently finished that reserve reading he had forgotten to do before the exam. We heard that one chemistry student was even gutsier. He kept his book open during an entire exam, and not surprisingly, the TF refused to accept his paper. "Do you know who I am?" the student protested. "No," replied the TF. "Good," said the student, stashing his exam into the middle of a pile of finished tests. Psychology 171 mass meetings Students enrolled in sections 1-10 of Psychology 171 may attend the mass meetings listed below to register their ranked choices for particular secti,>ns of the course. This information, which states when and where specific instructors would be teaching the course this term, was not available during early registration. Since different teaching fellows operate the course differently and appeal to different students, the Department of Psychology allows students to choose the instructor of their choice where possible. Class co-ordinator Steve Taylor said students will be asked to list several choices (when possible) for the instructor they want during specific meeting times. First choices will be honored if possible, Taylor said. The times of the mass meetings listed below are the same times the individual classes will meet: Monday, January8 8 a.m.: Elaine Carlson 10 a.m.: Mark Evans, Marilyn Johnson, Gary Bass, Steve Taylor, Diane Ahlquist. 1 p.m.: Marilyn Johnson, Norweeta Milburn/Tony Jackson (1 sec- tion), Jerry Katz, Joan Weber, Diane Ahlquist. 3 p.m.: Rochelle Flumenbaum, Joan Weber. 7 p.m.: Sal Lopez, Duffy Wagman. Tuesday, January 9 8 a.m.: Paul Pintrick, Elaine Carlson. 10 a.m.: Mark Evans, Pere Cohen, Sal Lopez, Sandy Colombo, Lynn Bossert.' 1, p.m.: Pete Cohen, Paul Pintrich, Mike Lerner, Tony DaSilva (Pilot Program), Bob Whitehurst, Mike Lerner. 3 p.m.: Bob Whitehurst, Mike Lerner. 7 p.m.: Steve Perry. An additional section has been created specifically- for students enrolled in section 099, which is essentially a waiting section. Some openings in the above listed sections will also be available to students in section 099. These students, as well as any non-enrolled students, should attend a meeting Saturday, January 13 at 1035 Angell Hall. Non-enrolled students may also stop by the Introductory Psychology Building, 544 Thompson St., beginning Monday, January 15. Happenings Sunday FILMS Cinema II-Here Comes Mr. Jordan 7 and 9 p.m., Angell Hall Auditorium A. PERFORMANCES Hillel-Israeli Dance Performing Group, noon, 1429 Hill St. Chamber Orchestra Society-All-Mozart Sunday Tea Concert, 4 p.m., Vandenberg Room, Michigan League. MEETINGS Women's Caucus for the Arts-"Women in the Arts," 2 p.m., Tap- pan Hall. Student United Jewish Appeal-HATIKVAH, open meeting, 4 p.m., Hillel, 1429 Hill St. Monday FILMS Cinema Guild-Short Chaplin and Keaton films, 7 and 9:05 p.m., Old Arch. Auditorium. Ann Arbor Film Co-op-Who Are the Diebolts?, 9:30 p.m., Angell Hall Auditorium A. PERFORMANCES Center for Russian and East European Studies-Yale Russian Chorus, 8 p.m., Pendleton Room, Michigan Union. SPORTS Women's Basketball-Michigan versus the University of Dayton, 7 p.m., Crisler Arena. MEETINGS Panel-Winter rush informational meeting, 6:30 p.m., South Quad Bush Lounge and Stockwell Conference Room 15. MISCELLANEOUS Xanadu Co-op-Scottish Country Dancing (beginners welcome), 7:30 p.m., 1811 Washtenaw. Language lessons for the little Foreign language lessons for elementary school children will resume at the University International Center Monday. The $15 fee for 10 lessons must be paid the first day of class. The schedules are as follows: beginning French, ages 6 to 8, 4:15 to 5 p.m., Mondays and Thursdays; ages 9 to 11, 5:15 to 6 p.m. Mondays and Thursdays; ad- vanced French, ages 6 to 8, 4:15 to 5 p.m. Friday; ages 9 to11, 5:15 to 6 p.m. Friday. Beginning German, ages 6 to 8, 4:15 to 5 p.m. Mondays; ages 9 to 11, 5:15 to 6 p.m. Mondays; and advanced German, ages 6 to 12, 5:15 to 6p.m. Mondays. Beginning Portuguese, ages 6 to 8, 4:15 to 5 p.m. Wednesdays; ages 9 tp 11, 5:15 to-6 p.m. Wednesdays. Beginning Spanish, ages 6 to 8, 4:15 to 5 p.m. Tuesdays and Fridays; ages 9 to 11, 4:15 to 5 p.m. Tuesdays and Fridays; advanced Spanish, ages 6 to 12, 5;15 to 6 p.m. Tuesdays. For information and reservations, contact the International Center, 603 E. Madison, at 764-9310. Purse snatcher pursuit Cincinnati Police Officer Paula Brand hoped to catch purse snatchers during the holidays so she went undercover, dressed in an old, tattered coat, carrying a cane and a decrepid purse. Tucked into her purse was a rat who was to jump out and surprise only theif who opened the pocketbook. But apparently her disguise was a bit over- done, because Brand and her rodent were not once accosted. Sgt. Tim Jones said the costume "may have been too ugly." The rat, relieved of active duty, was released by Ms. Brand. CIA planned mind-control killing WASHINGTON (UPI)-The CIA once developed a secret mind-control plan to induce an unwitting foreign official to assassinate one of his country's leaders or, "if necessary," an American of- ficial abroad, newly released documen- ts show. The chilling plan was part of Operation Artichoke, the intelligence agency's 23-year program of ex- perimenting with exotic poisons and drugs for use in mind and behavior con- trol. The three-page, 25-year-old memorandum detailing the assassination plan was obtained by American Citizens for Honesty in Government under a Freedom of In- formation suit. THE CITIZENS group is sponsored by the Church of Scientology, an organization that has been feuding for W years with the FBI, the Internal Revenue Service and a number of other federal agencies over its tax-exempt status. Recent congressional investigations visited (blank) during period 8 January to 18 January 1954. "The purpose of the visit was to give an evaluation of a hypothetical problem, namely: Can an individual of .. it was proposed that the individual could be sur- reptitiously drugged . .. (and) induced to perform the act of attempted assassination at some later date." --From a recently released CIA document have found that the CIA plotted the assassination of Cuban leader Fidel Castro and some other foreign leaders. The CIA says none of the plans was carried out. And it called the mind con- trol plans purely hypothetical. THE NEWLY released, censored memo shows, "The Artichoke team blank descent be made to perform an act of attempted assassination involun- tarily under the influence of Ar- tichoke?" "Essential elements" of the problem were outlined in the memo: "IT WAS proposed that an individual of (blank) descent, approximately 35- years-old, well-educated, proficient in English and well-established socially and politically in the (blank) gover- nment be induced under Artichoke to perform an act, involuntarily, of at- tempted assassination against a prominent (blank) politician or, if necessary, against an American of- ficial." A handwritten footnote indicates the plan was "similated only." "Because the subject is a heavy drinker," it continued, "it was proposed that the individual could be surreptiously drugged through the medium of an alcoholic cocktail at a social party, Artichoke applied and the subject induced to perform the act of attempted assassination at some later date. ". .After the act of attempted assassiantion was performed, it was assumed that the subject would be taken into custody by fhe (blank) government and thereby 'disposed of.' BUT THE Artichoke panel concluded the project could only be used under ''crash conditions" because of these limitations: -"The subject would be an involun- tary and unwitting subject. -"We would have none, or, at most, very limited physical control and custody of the subject. -"Access to the subject is strictly limited to a social engagement among a mixed group of both cleared and un- cleared personnel." The memo added, however, that the Artichoke team would undertake the problem -"in spite of the operational limitations" if there were "crash con- ditions." Asexualization asked for child molesters' PORTLAND, Maine (AP)-Proposed legislation to permit surgical alteration of the sex organs of persons convicted of some child molesting charges is un- der review by the state Attorney General's office. Chinese 'Gang' trial unlikely PEKING (UPI)-The widow of Chairman Mao Tse-tung and the rest of the "Gang of Four" may never be brought to public trial for the crimes at- tributed to them, a Chinese legal expert said Saturday. "There has never been a public trial of chieftains who represented a wrong line in the Chinese Communist party," said Chang Chung-lin, a deputy director of the Law Research Institute of the China Academy of Social Sciences. Chang said Mao origianlly established the policy. Mao's wife, Chiang Ching, a former Shanghai movie actress, sought power after her husband died in 1976. But with her associates-Wang Hung-wen, Chang Chun-chao and Yao Yen- yuan-she lost out to China's present leaders, headed by Mao's successor, Hua Kuo-feng. They have been out of public view since, rumored under house' arrest. SPECIAL BEAR CARMICHAEL, Calif. (AP) - Ruth Pearson saw a huge, brown teddy bear on display in a store and fell in love with it. "I really felt we needed it at Inver- ness," she said, referring to a private school she runs here. But the bear was expensive - $300. "Then," she recalled, "my husband and I ran into two fathers of children at our school. They asked what there was to see around these parts. I quickly steered them to the store and told them to look at that marvelous bear and to buy it for the school. Three days later I got a phone call. Bless them. They bought if for us." State Rep. Joyce Lewis, the mother of three grown children, this week filed notice of her intentntointroduce the proposal in the Legislature. Her intent, she said, is to protect children from "adhorrent crimes," and not simply vengeance. "IT'S GOING to be a deterrent in one way," Mrs. Lewis said. "Certainly it will prevent a molester from molesting again.'' Assistant Attorney General Stephen Diamond is reviewing the bill, prefiled Wednesday. He declined to speculate on its constitutionality. Mrs: Lewis, a four-term legislator, said the law "may be considered cruel and unusual punishement," so she has delayed further action pending Diamond's ruling on its legaility. THE BILL CALLS for the "asexualization" of persons convicted of gross sexual misconduct involving children less than 14 years old. Diamond said he had seen old laws referring to "asexualization," but none in recent years. Mrs. Lewis, Brian Blaisdell of the LegislativedResearch Officesand Diamond said they knew of no states where such punishment is currently in force. PUNISHMENT FOR male offenders would involve surgical removal of the nerves within the penis that control a man's ability to have an erection, said Blaisdell. Women would be punished by removal of their ovaries: The removal of the ovaries would not necessarily prevent a woman from having sex, he said. However, a lack of hormones produced by the ovaries would cause the woman's vagina to lose its elasticity, making intercourse painful. Mrs. Lewis said the bill has gotten a mixed response from lawmakers. TH E MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LxxXIX. No.81 Sunday, January 7.1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semnesterrs $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor: $7.00 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Estate taxes avoidable prof. tells realtors Proper planning can now eliminate the need for modest estates to pay any estate tax at all, Prof. Karl Pearson said in an address to the Alabama Realtors Institute, the University announced. "If you die in 1978, the first $134,000 of your estate is now exempt from the federal estate tax," he explained. "If you leave your property to your spouse, one-half or $250,000, whichever is greater, is exempt. The first $100,000 in property you give to your spouse during your lifetime is now exempt from the gift tax. If your lifetime gifts to your spouse are over $200,000, only one-half of this expense is subject to the gift tax. The Office of Financial Aid (2011 SAB) deadline for Spring /Summer Financial Aid Applications is January 12, 1979, The Spring/Summer Guaranteed Student Loan Application deadline is March 2, 1979' It ain't r r----- -. Would Newton gravitate toward Cinci? Like the apple gravitated toward Newton. You see, Newton was the-beneficiary of a bump of enlightenment. Undoubtedly, he would have been amenable to other enlight- ening stimuli as well. For example, the hearty, full-bodied flavor of Cinci. The smooth and easy swallow. The fascinating, long- lasting head. As thousands of others after him, it is virtually a mathematical certainty that he would have said, 'It's too good to gulp. ... but it's easier at Ulrich's. Ulrich's really tries to make book rush less of a hassle. They have people who'll find your books for you. They'll buy your old books. They keep a full stock of all the other supplies you need. And you won't go broke in exchange for the convenience, either. Why not try Ulrich's this year? It could be easier for you. . U A&'~ ~ ~ ~5 - -