'p Page 6-Sunday, April 20, 1980-The Michigan Daily P"" - .,J The Michigan Daily-Sunday Books , + ,, . 7n f h /' ' .. "1. r Aspoonful of sugar (and $50) makes the medicine go down = .- ..: F Reading for a sense of self By Carol Koletsky THROWING SHADOWS By E. L. Konigsburg Atheneum, 151 pp. A WARENESS OF ONE'S self is something we value quite highly today. We have time for luxuries and relaxation-and we also have time to think about ourselves. There is a special kind of stress on the unique cognitive and emotional behavior of the individual, an accentuation of certain qualities that is utterly new. We also emphasize the need to healthily control one's ego drives so that we can maintain self- respect and live in friendship with all kinds of people. This is a complex challenge which we pose to children. It is one that lasts a lifetime. The concept of understanding oneself appears in all of E. Konigsburg's books. Konigsburg is a mother, wife, chemist, and author of numerous award-winning books for children. Her first published and best-known book was the Newbery medal winner of 1968, From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, that un- forgettable, lovable story about the runaways who seek adventure in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The story reveals the maturing relationship between two siblings. Jennifer, Hecate, MacBeth, William McKinley and Me, Elizabeth, the Newbery Honor win- ner about the secret world in which experiments with flying ointment fail, yet lead to the recognition of friendship, and About the B'Nai Bagels, are other Konigsburg favorites in which this subject matter is constant. Most critics agree that Konigsburg is a "moral writer;" that is, her characters grapple with ethical issues. Her books, though, are non-didactic. They show children the importance of being honest with them- selves and others. They discuss through fable the meaning and challenge of responsibility, relationships between people, and developing self-identity. Many children's authors do not explore these issues; Konigsburg's is important because she does, for isn't that what growing up is all about? In Konigsburg's most recent book, Throwing Shadows, children again are shown able to see how and why they are respon- sible for their actions. They again learn that interac- tion leads to growth and change. And that leads to self- discovery and self-confidence. Carol Koletsky is an Honors concentrator in Chil- dren's Literature and a recent winner of the Uni- versity'sfirst Children's Book Council A ward. Throwing Shadows is a collection of five short vignet- tes about five children: NIed, Ampara, Avery, Phillip, and William. The narratives are written in first person to give the children's viewpoint. The five children have extremely different characters and backgrounds. Yet they all are unaware of their own identities. Konigsburg's approach is unique. She creates several different plots and weaves them together by means of a common theme-for the lessons the children learn are the same. Through experiences with people very dif- ferent from themselves the children learn things about themselves, thereby "throwing shadows" that enable them to see themselves clearly. They learn to under- stand, discover, accept, or change, their own reflec- tions. Through new. insights and perceptions, the children learn that the single most important ingredient for attaining satisfaction in life is a sense of self. Konigsburg's perceptions of the child protagonists are deep and down-to-earth. She thoroughly examines and interprets her characters, so that the reader can see the learning process evolve. Her characters instill in her readers confidence to seek out who they them- selves are, and to be content with themselves and the moral decisions they make. THE COLLECTION begins with Ned's story "On Shark's Tooth Beach." Ned shares his mother's hobby, which is collecting shark's teeth. One day a lonely old man who has nothing better to do but boast about his being former president of a university, takes an interest in the boy's search for shark's teeth. The old mnan claims he knows things he doesn't; he an- tagonizes and competes with Ned. Slowly and subtley, Ned gets sucked into playing games with the old man, trying to outwit him for fun. When Ned finds a prize trophy to take home to his mother, he holds it in view of his elder. Ned sayd, "I thought about his face, and that made me think about mine. If his face was a movie called Jealousy and Greed, I didn't like the words I could put to mine." Not only do the readers get a feel of Ned's love for the ocean in Konigsburg's narrative, they get a satisfying moral resolution. Ned feels compelled to play games and compete until he recognizes his ability to feel pity and compassion for the old man and to control his own egotistic drives. He becomes during the story a person of deep perception and understanding. Ned's and Avery's stories are the best in the collec- tion. In "The Catchee," poor Avery is a little boy who is always the innocent victim of circumstances. It is he who gets caught and blamed for everything that hap- pens. He sees himself as an eternal loser-"I realized that the world is made up of two kinds of people: the catchers and the catchees. I was a catchee," Avery bemoans. His big brother Orville, however, can do anything; he drives through red lights and never gets' caught.Here Konigsburg addresses the problem of the guilty escaping punishment. With Orville's help, though, Avery forms a new self-image: although he has been and may always be a catchee, being one has built character. He has always remained honest and brave, and this knowledge will help him overcome his circumstances. Ampara is an American tour bus guide in Ecuador in "In the Village of the Weavers." She explains her training and duties as a tour guide, and how tourists are ripped off by shrewd foreigners. One of her bus stops is in Antonio's village. Little Antonio sells goods. Both children learn.to share each others' cultures and languages. In fact, they have a very even exchange: Antonio travels on her tour bus, entertaining the tourists and selling them his wares, and Ampara thus becomes a famous and favorite tour guide. In addition to issues such as the importance of polite manners, physical maturity, and Indian superstitions, which Konigsburg carefully weaves into this story, the reader watches Ampara discover Antonio's talents and learn new things about herself. A T THE HOME" IS the story of Phillip, who ac- companies his mother to the old folks home one day. He listens to old Mr. Malin sing Ukranian songs, and tapes the life story of Mrs. Ilona, an Hungarian woman who made a dramatic escape from the Nazis, and Russians. Mrs. Ilona is proud of herself and her fascinating story. She finds the other old folks boring, just like the colors beige and gray. Phillip learns about what it means to grow old, and, by meeting other patients, learns that all old folks have interesting stories to tell. He teaches Mrs. Ilona not to stereotype old people as boring, but to listen to them. She agrees to take over his job tape-recording the patients. In this way, the patients can share with each other, and build a tape library in the home. Mrs. Ilona's story is at times slow and a little repetitious, though a good general history of World War II foi£hildren. The lesson of the young and the old--and& old an"a old-learning to share, and the self-realizal ,*at both Phillip and Mrs. Ilona achieve, make the stry meaningful. "With Bert and Ray," the final story, is both William's and his mother's search for sense of self. Books to 8 By Sara Anspach T SOUNDS LIKE THE job you've been waiting for. The hours are good, the workplace is spotless, an they usually pay in cash. Depen- ding on the job, the wage can vary from $15 an hour to $6 a minute. Either way it's not too bad. You really don't have to do anything. They aren't the least bit interested in your mind. It's your body, or some part of it, that they're after. You might be asked to donatea small piece of skin from your hip. Or maybe they'll give you a new drug to test, or stick a catheter in your heart. The risk is minimal and if it hurts, well, you're being reimbursed... No amount of convincing, though, will make most of us rush out and sign up to be a paid volunteer for one of the cam- pus research experiments waiting for potentialrsubjects. No matter how much we abuse our own bodies, most of us are very wary about what we let others do to them. Those fortunate few who can overcome this uneasiness have a profitable part time profession they can fall back on in an emergency. Few participate often enough to get rich, although there are stories of enter- prising entrepreneurs who work their way through medical school loaning their bodies to researchers. Both researchers and subjects show disdain for the term "guinea pig." "It's so . .. so derogatory," says an LSA senior who has participated in several medical experiments. Second year medical student Karen Wilson has a better suggestion for a name: "We're scientific prostitutes," she says. It's an apt description. Though some show an interest in the experiment, Sara A nspach covers the Regents for the Daily. some come as a favor to the researcher and some arrive with an air of altruism, the overwhelming majority are there for the money. There aren't any other legal ways to make so much money in so little time. And many of the par- ticipants really are desperate for money, at least the first time they volunteer. Once the guard is down and they find out, as many do, that it is not as terrible as they thought it would be, they may choose to participate more of- ten "for fun." Engineering junior Mark Pressprich was "destitute" last summer when he noticed an advertisement on a bulletin board in University Hospital where he worked as,.a patient sitter. The notice wanted volunteers for a digestion ex- periment. It didn't sound too bad, and the total pay would be $150. "I was down in the bucks,", he says. "When you need money you'll do just about anything." Pressprich attended three sessions of about four hours each. He swallowed a tube that went from his mouth to his small intestine so food could bypass his stomach in an experiment to test the ef- fect certain enzymes have on food. It wasn't a comfortable experience, but he's philosophical: "A hundred and fif- ty bucks is pretty good money for a tube in your mouth." And besides, he adds, the hospital fed him several free din- ners, which were greatly appreciated at the time. MONG THOSE WHO do this sort of thing often, there are very A ew who will do in- mnately any old type of ex- periment just because the price is right. Those who are familiar with the market can name certain tests they would never participate in.Fortunately for the researchers, the standards of would-be subjects vary somewhat ar- bitrarily and widely advertised ex- periments seldom lack for participants. "I've got funny priorities," says medical student Wilson. "There's an experiment where you. sell a small swatch of skin for $60 and I wouldn't do that, yet I'll allow them to put a tube in my heart." She's referring to a series of "cardiac catherization" hypertension experiments she participated in last summer. During this series a catheter was inserted into the right atrium of Wilson's heart through a vein in her y' arm. Her blood pressure was measured "people us: while she lay on a tilted table, drugged known to hav and wearing a knee-length water vest. Before ev "I never completely lost consciousness, must sign a but my blood pressure went pretty low she or he is at times," she notes nonchalantly. She and discon: says she was "somewhat uncomfor- periment. table," but that the $250 she earned was mal"-or I "the best money I've ever made." minimal ris The skin donation Wilson refuses to emergency do is actually one of the more 'popular' mediate car experiments-in spite of the fact that each donation leaves a small scar. A UT ' participant is given a shot of wro: Novocaine, and a small bit of skin is stud scraped from the buttocks or hip, the rea name r area is bandaged and the donor walks participate away with $60 in cash. An overly eager periment for student reportedly donated skin about was inserted 15 times. Max Dehn, an LSA Ea sophomore, donated skin last year. "It felt like I tripped and fell and scraped my hip, only I was saved the pain of falling by the novocaine," he says. "I wouldn't do it again unless I needed the money, but for $60 you can live with the Medical students have an edge over . , other volunteers, and they often check out drugs beforehand that are going to be used in an experiment to determine if they are "safe." Greg Goyert, a second year medical student, says he checked out the consequences of taking a drug by consulting with a friend in pharmacology before he participated in a certain experiment. "When you're N using drugs, it's prudent to be wary," he advises. Wilson also won't par- ticipate in an experiment that uses drugs she considers dangerous. She says, for example, that she would not volunteer for a research project that involves a certain drug used to induce amnesia in surgical patients, because .. , ,