Page 8B--Friday, September 8, 1978-The Michigan Daily ANTI-TRUST TRAUMA Money WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP)-Never' mind the squadrons of discreet and ef- ficieit secretaries, the lavish lunches, and the stratospheric salaries. Wall Street lawyers have paid for all these: pleasures and more with work and' worry that seem to consume their every; working hour. And never have attorneys working for industry had to work harder than, they have in the biggest case ever tried in U.S. history: the International Business Machines Corp. (IBM) anti- trust saga." FILED JAN. 17, 1969, the federal suit wound through volumes of pre-trial wrangling even before it reached trial in 1975. It goes back into court next week, after the judge's vacation. With the defense having barely begun its presentation, anticipated appeals are expected to last until the middle of the next decade. Furthermore, the federal suit has sparked a string of so far unsuccessful suits by private companies like , ulcers for IBM lawyers Memorex and Telex. The IBM case means working from dawn until late at night, often buried in, and by, boring detail. It means six- and seven-day weeks. unhappy wives and disconsolate children. It means dinner plans made and missed, tennis, rackets bought but never used. Why do 20 or more lawyers at a time work so hard? The answer is that these young lawyers are on the make in the fastest game in town-one of New York's most prestigious firms, where success is a partnership with a six- figure salary, where legal advice runs to $250 an hour. IBM-WHOSE own legal staff is headed by former U.S. Attorny General Nicholas Katzenbach-retained Cravath, Swaine & Moore at a cost of ;perhaps $10 million a year to fight the charges that it had monopolized the computer industry. Does all that money mean happy lawyers trodding the thick carpets behind those closed doors? "There's a sense of pushing paper, spinning wheels," complains a former Cravath lawyer who, like the others, would not be named. "There's a sort of creeping dissatisfaction with yourself personally for enduring instead of standing up and saying, 'Enough's enough.'" ADDS ANOTHER: "There's a con- stant straining between an obligation to your family and the obligation to make it in the big time. It brings out the ugliest sort of competition, people cut- ting each other's throats. "Your entire life, every waking hour basically, all of those competitive fac- tors are intensified.'All of the negative things that occur at the major law firms occur to the Nth degree on the INM case." Indeed, the IBM litigation differs from other cases by its duration, and the result is that the normal, say, six- month crunch of a big trial becomes a hever-ending crush intensified by am- bition. "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 There appears to be no little controversy regarding Capital Punishment. To any concerned about settling it according to God'sjudgements instead of man's precepts they are invited to consider the following. To all others it is suggested that you do not read the rest of this article, but skip it. It will probably only offend you and cause you to "rage against The Lord and His Anointed, their Bands and Cords" set to res- train evil, and further this rage will offend God and "augment His fierce wrath" against our rebellion. "And surely your blood of your lives I will require; at the hand of every beast will I require it, and at the hand of every man's brother will I require the blood of man. WHOSO SHEDDETH MAN'S BLOOD, BY MAN SHALL HIS BLOOD BE SHED; FOR IN THE IMAGE OF GOD MADE HE MAN." Genesis 9:5, 6. "He that smiteth a man, so that he die, shall be surely put to death.-If a man come presumptuously upon his neighbor, to slay him with guile; thou shalt take him from mine altar, that he may die." Exodus 21:12-14. Twenty-five verses previous to this passage is The Sixth Commandment: "Thou shalt not kill." "Whoso killeth any person, the murderer shall be put to death by the mouth of witnesses... Moreover ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of a murderer, which is guilty of death. ...So ye shall not pollute the land wherein ye are; FOR BLOOD IT DEFILETH THE LAND: AND THE LAND CAN- NOT BE CLEASED OF THE BLOOD SHED THEREIN, BUT BY THE BLOOD OF HIM THAT SHED IT." Numbers 35:30- 33. The 26th chapter of Leviticus and the 28th of Deuteronomy have just about the same messages of wonderful promises of blessing to the obedient, and indeed, terrible and horrible curses pronounced upon the disobedient. Familiarity with these two chapters will promote the "Fear of The Lord" in your heart, or else probably cause you to "rage against The God of The Bible" as you have never yet done-Christ said to one Church: "I would thou wert cold or hot!" Speaking of putting to death the rebellious son, in both of these chapters there is the foretelling of crazed men and women killing and eating their own infants because of terrible famine sent upon them by God for their disobedience to His Laws! Those familiar with The Word of God know that these things were experienced by the Jews, as well as another almost unspeakable judgement when their enemies "ripped up the women with child!" The Apostle Paul said: "Knowing the terror of The Lord, we persuade men!" Would it not be wise for us to persuade ourselves and one another to "FearThe Lord and keep His Commandments, which is the whole duty of man." Thus saith The Lord, Because thou hast let go out of thy hand a man whom I appointed to utter destruction, therefore, thy life shall go for his life, and thy people for his people." It is not the Christians' business to debate The Laws of God Almighty, The King of Kings, The Lord of Lords, but to obey and proclaim them. I t is also their duty to withstand the heathen who do not believe in "The God of The Bible" but also to pray for and strive to convert them: "to turn them from darkness unto light, and from the power of Satan unto God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins, and inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith that is in Christ Jesus." "THERE'S COMPETITION to work longer hours because some people think the longer hours you work, the more chance you have of making partner-I mean, that's what everyone wants," says a senior associate who puts in six days and at least 60 or 65 hours a week. "There is an amazing number of amazingly ambitious people here and competitive people here. At this firm, the stakes are higher, the pressure is higher and the competition is greater than most other places. They keep reaching for the end of the rainbow." Cravath traditonally has meant the end of one rainbow for law graduates, who are lured by its prestige and stan- dard-setting salaries. On the IBM case, they are said to get $38,000 to $45,000 a year, almost twice the pay of their government opponents. THAT, HOWEVER, is not all. When the firm was defending IBM in Phoenix six years ago, whole families joined the lawyers at a resort one summer, all expenses paid. The following year in Tulsa, Okla., the firm rentedmost of an apartment building to put them up. They also, get an annual bonus estimated at $5,000 to $10,000; a rent- free summer house, ostensibly to cut down travel time to Cravath's outpost close to IBM's headquarters in nearby Armonk; free use of a rental car; and occasional free vacations. "THE BONUSES are nice," notes a long-time associate who says he's been happy at the firm, "but you don't make the sacrifices you have to make to stay on the case merely for the money. Your immediate reaction after you look at the bonus check is that it's not enough." Despite all the benefits, therefore, Cravath seems afflicted with high tur- nover and a good number of broken homes among lawyers working on the IBM case. As to whether it all pays off in ex- perience or promotion, a number of lawyers who have been on the case' dif- fer. But the lawyers agree that hope for advancement is the reason for sticking it out. Only a few of the newer litigation par- tners among the handful promoted each year has not had experience on the case. It's also true that the young associates who endure its punishing hours longer than a -minimum two years say they do so partly to curry the favor of Thomas Barr, the partner in charge of the case. "After a while, my career aspirations began to gel with the progress of the case," a former associate relates. Best friend AP Photo A Los Angeles fireman takes on the role of rescuer during flooding of the Lo Angeles River earlier this week. First year students have higher scores (Continued from Page 1) semester. The University's stable enrollment figures are not reflected by national statistics. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) stated that college enrollment is expected to reach a new national high this fall and probably will experience moderate an- nual increases through the early 1980s. Public and private colleges will enroll a total of 11.6 million students this year, a three percent million in, 1977, statistics. increase from 11. according to HE P. O. 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