Page 4-Friday, July 28, 1978-The Michigan Daily 1 T"% wmichigan DAILY Eighty-eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109 Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 53-S News Phone: 764-0552 Friday, July 28, 1978 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan The test-tube scare T HE MEDIA has senationalized what is basically no more than a useful scientific technique - the test-tube baby process. Skeptics and opponents have charged that the scientists involved are playing God. It has been lumped in a class with such "monster mania" experiments as recombinant DNA research and cloning; it does not belong there. It is possible that the method could be abused, but the process itself is not frightening. The process by which a test-tube baby is produced does not alter genes or create freaks. The perspective mother is first injected with a fertility drug, in order to develop a number of follicles in the ovary ready to release an egg. This in no way dimishes the ability of awoman to have normal menstrual cycles, since at birth a woman has several thousand eggs, and in the course of a normal life-span only releases about 500. The sperm from the would-be father is then collected, and the two eggs are brought together in vitro (outside the woman's body) in a nutrient medium. When an egg is normally fertilized in the fallopian tube of woman, it begins to divide until it reaches a many celled stage called a trophoblast. As it is dividing rapidly, the zygote is also moving down the fallopian tube to the uterus, .where it implants itself to the uterine wall, beginning to exchange nutrients with the mother. With the in vitro fertilization, when the zygote has reached the trophoblast stage it is placed in the mother's uterus by the doctor, where it may become implanted. In essence, the test-tube baby process eliminates the long journey through the fallopian tubes to the uterus. No genetic manipulation is made. The sperm and egg union is totally random, as it is normally. In short, the process - by no means new to the scientific world which has been using it for some time to produce prize cows and for shipping laboratory animals when applied to humans enables a woman who has a blocked fallopiam tube, a case where the egg once released from the ovary cannot get to the uterus because of the abnormal blockage, to achieve pregnancy by in vitro fertilization. The extent to which humans are "playing God" in this situation is the same for any medical process. Injecting polio into a human is certainly not "normal," but no one will argue that the polio vaccine has saved thousands of lives. In fact, with it vitro fertilization there is no tampering of chemicals or hormones than in other treatments found in use medicinally today. So the scare tactics employed by the oppinents and by the media are unwarranted. It will be a gross injustice if these methods succeed in outlawing a simple technique that will enable otherwise infertile 9nt to have children ; 1(4 By D BUCHARE group of fig gaunt victims Dostoevsky n the imposing club in downtt of them - t shouldered, w down his n pressed a han into my hand into the shado "Dear Sir, "We are a g and we write us quit this country whi people are no the wind." The manife visitors he Romanian di the discrep country's libe ternational domestic r repression. OUTSIDE dent Nicho widely adm Moscow, eve remains a m saw Pact. Romania als munist cot diplomatic re But Ceausesc have present ministration Eager t Romania's p ce with econ Ceusescu wa nation status with the U privilege that to countries t rights. For th prevents Rom leaving the co probably the emigrationp Europe. Ceau strict politic equally harsh on Romania's Should Pres cern with hu strategic c American rela prevail in relations? It of only abstr. Washington, Romaniansi sometimes lit death. THE MAN manifesto - P year-old lathe into a park personal orde me with stic legs, the am said. "They long and. Ii trouble. I lose plied for aspas my father ma with his pensir The experit Romanians w system enforc tralized contro internal inte known as the .the Secwitate omanian dissidents: lost in the shuffle onald Kirk from organizing any serious net- creased from $322 million in 1975 from organizing any serious to $492.7 million last year. This ST, Romania - A threat to Ceausescu. year, American economists ures looking like If they try to leave the country, predict, the figure will reach $600 of oppression in a the dissidents again experience million. ovelstood in front of Ceausescu's power. While DOMESTIC WORKERS, military officers' Romanian officials say they however, are considered as im- own Bucharest. One routinely grant passports and portant as trade in Romania. Of- all, a trifle stoop exit visas to anyone who wants ficials note that the population is ith hair streaming them - an impression they are rising by less than 1 per cent a eck - furtively anxious to spread to win most- year, and they complain they do idwritten manifesto favored-nation status- applican- not have the manpower for new and then retreated ts repeatedly have been rejected. industries - or even farms, from ws. "Yes, we have the right at the which the young have migrated the note began. passport, but it is only in the to the cities. As a result, the roup of seven men, papers,"'said Sergiu lomita, 20, government has outlawed abor- you praying to help who was with Negreanu. "When tions, made divorce an arduous country forever, a we apple, we say, 'This is our ordeal and offered bonuses to ere the rights of right.' But they say, 'You haven't mothers with more than two thing but blowing in this right.' We don't know what is children. policy and what is not." The emphasis on economic ex- sto, typical of those THE WHITE House has asked pansion has created a growing re receive from Congress to extend for three discontent among workers. The ssidents, illustrates more years the U.S.-Romania government puts a third of its ancy between the trade agreement signed by national income back into in- ral reputation in he Ceausescu and President Ford in dustrial development without in- affairs and the 1975. President Carter also has creasing wages or offering low- requested another one-year priced consumer goods to the waiver of the amendment to the masses. Per capita income ROMANIA, Presi- U.S. Trade Act that makes free estimates range from $1,200 to ae .Ceausescu is emigration policies a $2,000 a year. The result is that fired for defying requirement for most-favored- Romanians, like Russians, are n though Romania nation status. forever waiting in line for such ember of the War- "Failure to extend the waiver commodities as coffee and bread. Under (his rule, authority would remove the They have to pay bribes for o is th only com- major incentive to encourage luxury items or even high-quality untry with full Romania to be more forthcoming necessities, such as bicycles or lations with Israel. on emigration," Carter said in his washing machines. u's internal policies message to Congress last June. Said one experienced ed the Carter ad- But Carter's waiver request diplomatic observer, "People are with a dilemma, represents a compromise bet- getting less satisfied with to consolidate ween Romanian hopes for per- nationalism. You have a olitical independen- manent most-favored-nation revolution of rising expectations. omic development, status and attacks by The educated people look tothe nts most-favored- Ceausescu's critics who charge West, while the inadequacy of in trade relations that the country does not qualify nationalism is affecting larger iited States - a because it violates human rights. and larger classes. They keep by law is to go oly Romania, Hungary and Poland asking, 'Aren't we sacrificing too hat respect humasn are the only East bloc nations much?" e same reason, he with most-favored-nation status, It is the same question that anian wirkers from entitling them to the same tariffs dissidents applying for passports untry under what is and quotas applicable to non- raise. For all the obstacles, the most stringent anti- Communist countries. Western government has granted policy in Eastern diplomats report, however, that passports or exit visas to get rid sescu also imposes Romania hinders emigration of potential leaders of revolt at al discipline and more severely than any other home. economic austerity member of the Warsaw Pact ex- YET MANY more Romanians 21.7 million people. cept the Soviet Union. - whether student, architect, ident Carter's con- " T li11 r engineer, factory worker or man rights or the "WE GET PEOPLEcaing or writer - are subjected to official onsiderations of comat ah ever daemsai. harsh restrictions unless they itions with Moscow "Tloy ta stern eba have personal contacts in the US.-Romanian "They think somehow we can power structure: "The top night be a question help them, but there's not much party official for the university act significance in we can do.", told meI would have to sleep with but for many So far, President Carters him to get a passport for study it is a matter, proach seems to have achieved abroad," said a woman teaching eraly, f lie 'little for human rights in ara, adawmntahn teraly, of life and Romania.rInternal regimentation at a provincial school. "He said who presented the remains strong, and while the rno gil could leave if she 'etre Negreanu, 27- number of Romanians operator - led me emigrating to the United States and recounted his increased from 300 to 1,200 a year (Donald Kirk is a veteran al. "The police beat after the first U.S.-Romanian foreign correspondent who s on the feet, the trade agreement was signed, it has written for many ns. the head," he has not increased since 1976. A eia esaes n sy my hairis too Emigration of Romanian Jews make too much was cut from more than 4,000 to cluding the Washington Star my job when I ap- only 1,300 annually. and The Chicago Tribune. His sport, and they say Diplomats attribute the reporting has won the George y have a problem contrasting figures to Ro- Polk MemorialA ward, several n." maniaa economic need to hold Oesa ence is typical of onto as many of its people as it Overseas Press Club awards to attempt to defy a can while building trade relations and an Edward R. Murrow ed by highly cen- with the United States. That Fellowship at the Council of A and an elaborate trade - mainly U.S. agricultural Foreign Relations in New Nigence network products and raw materials for York. He wrote this story for Securitate. Fear of Romanian crude oil, gasoline and slteeps .Romanians.-mnfauotad' oducts - in the Pacific News Service.