Page 2-Thursday, October 29, 1981-The Michigan Daily 'U' graduate remembers life as 'Moonije' (Continued from Page 1) generally "inquisitive, idealistic, innocent, physically independent, insecure, and identity- seeking," Kemperman said. Pressures at college-final exams, broken romances, freshman loneliness-make students especially vulnerable to these characteristics, he said. "THEY HAD MY trust. They were intelligent, good people," Kemperman said. "Two-thirds of Oakland (California) recruit leaders came from the Univer- sity of Michigan," he added. At the first meeting, the members discussed philosophy and politics but avoided an explanation of the group s actual goals and practices, Kemperman said. "Everyone felt very comfortable, very stimulated," he said. "There was a feeling of comaraderie, of connecting with the people. They were so nice, you didn't question them." A WEEK LATER, Kemperman decided to par- ticipate in a weekend workshop in which leaders preached Moon's Divine Principle and ideology,dbut in a watered-down form. The purpose was not to enlighten potential recruits, but instead to "spread the spirit that could change the world," he said. Kemperman said the zeal and enthusiasm spread, but the physical conditions and emotional overload accounted for his altered state, rather than this new set of beliefs. Recruits were told that time alone is time with Satan. Leaders provided each newcomer with a senior church member, who slept next to them, and went to the bathroom with them, Kemperman said. "THEY WERE really doing a number on you," Kemperman said. "You couldn't take a walk, have any free time, or get any information from competing sources." Kemperman said the members provided him with a "black, distorted picture of the outside world devoid of love. They told me the only place with love is right in the group... in the family." The idealism Kemperman once boasted about was thrown back at him,." "If you're so idealistic, why don't you do anything about it?' " Kemperman said they barked at him. A CONSTANT, high excitement prevailed. Kem- perman compared the experience to an evangelical revival session-complete with singing, dancing, and foot-stomping. "I felt like I had just pulled two college all-nighters, and I was with the most wonderful people I've ever met - this was the most incredible group," he said. Dr. John Clark, a psychiatrist at Harvard Medical School wrote in the Journal of American Medical Association that "through highly programmed behavioral control techniques and in a controlled en- vironment, the subjects' attention is narrowed and focused to the point of becoming a trance." AFTER ANOTHER workshop, Kemperman said he found it difficult to concentrate on his calculus and physics studies. The group members proposed to change the world - how could he possibly turn his back on the opportunity? He said he finally decided the only way to investigate the truth of their allegations was to move into the group home. Kemperman remained enrolled at U. Cal.-Berkley, but,he said, was forced to study with only four hours of sleep each night. His parents continued to send him checks for room and board at the dorm unaware that he gave this money to his new "family." Behind closed doors, the intense displays of affec- tion stopped, he said. "I was told strange beliefs I hadn't been told before, but I wanted to stick around a few weeks before I gave up." AFTER TWO AND a half months, Kemperman wrote in his diary, "My God...It's all beginning to make sense." The pressure and duresshe claimed, had finally stripped his ability to think independently. He accepted the rule that Moon would eventually choose his wife.He willingly dropped out of school at Berkley at the end of his freshman year and traveled through seventeen states, preaching Moon's doc- trines, and raising funds for the church. Kemperman alone raised $120,000 from door-to-door donations. "The money buys real estate, buildings, big publicity campaigns, and allegedly starts new businesses," Kemperman said. "MY PARENTS WERE freaking out," Kemper- man admitted. When his mother, a social worker, and his father, a math professor at University of Rochester in New York, spoke to him, they noticed the absence of his sense of humor, and his loss of in- dividuality. "The only reason I spoke to them was to try to recruit them into the Moonie family." Eventually in a parking lot in Ohio, while raising funds for the organization, Kemperman was kidnap- ped by his parents. He resisted the deprogramming process that followed - a counseling method that its advocates claim enables cult members to think independently again. When deprogrammers tried to rationalize with him, "I just zoned out," Kempermanexplained. HIS PARENTS immediately sentehim to Swope's Carriage House rehabilitation center in New Ham- pshire. There, in a summer camp setting that was conducive to solitary thinking and relaxing, Swope spoke to Kemperman patiently. He convinced him that he would not "spiritually die" if he left Moon's church. The counselors contradicted Moon's philosophy, without denying the possibility that a loving God may actually exist. "I realized, my God, I could have been involved in a counterfeit organization all those years," Kemper- man said. Kemperman said the restoration of his active and self-controlled mind took five months of anguish and examination. After speaking with a former cult member, "I finally broke down and cried. All fear and guilt and controls fell away," he said. Kemperman said he plans to apply to law school in a year. Until then, he will travel for a year to promote his book. Black representative hired IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Abortion decision.challenged KALAMAZOO- A children's rights group said yesterday it will file a for- mal complaint against the judge who refused to allow an 11-year-old rape victim to have an abortion. The complaint, to be filed with the state Judicial Tenure Commission, con- tends that Kalamazoo County Juvenile Judge Donald Halstead was in- capable of impartially hearing the case and should have disqualified him- self. "This judge has strong feelings about abortion and should have removed himself from this case," said Phyllis Marsh, head of Children's Help in Legal Defense, the group filing the complaint. "We feel. . . his decision to oppose an abortion for this 11-year-old child reflected his own personal feelings toward the issue of abortion." Atlanta mayor-elect Young says victory not a racial one ATLANTA- Mayor-elect Andrew Young, fresh from a decisive victory in a runoff where the voting was largely along racial lines, went to the streets to thank supporters yesterday and said he hoped the city was not polarized. Young, 49, a black who rose to prominence with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in the civil rights movement and later served as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, was up at dawn to shake hands with sleepy workers at a rapid transit station. The former U.N. ambassador polled a 55 percent vote majority in the runoff against State Rep. Sidney Marcus, a liberal contractor whose own support closely mirrored the city's rolls of white registered voters. He told reporters, "I would hope that most of the polarization and the hostility was in the press and it really does not exist in this city nearly to the extent we thought it does." OPEC meets today; may decide new oil prices GENEVA, Switzerland- The world oil cartel, convening its second meeting in two months today, is expected to fix base crude oil prices that analysts say would slightly increase the cost of fuel and heating oil in the United States. "The way is paved to reach the target," said Iraq's Tayeh Abdul Karim, one of 13 Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries ministers arriving for the special pricing session. "We are very near to each other, so nothing can prevent us from reaching a unified price." Several OPEC sources said the ministers, who adjourned a meeting here in August without agreeing on a unified price strcture, will this time go along with the $34-per-barrel base price pushed by Saudi Arabia. The current OPEC base price, set in December 1980, is $36 a barrel. Black Liberation Army member suspect in Brink's ambush NEW YORK- A reputed Black Liberation Army member wanted in last April's shooting of two policemen in Queens has been identified as a par- ticipant in the shootout that followed the ambush of a Brink's armored car, sources said yesterday. A witness has picked out the photograph of BLA member Anthony Laborde on two occasions, the sources said. One source close to the investigation said the witness identified Laborde as being involved in the shootout at suburban Nyack after a gang shot up a Brink's armored car and made off with $1.6 million in nearby Nanuet on Oct. 20. Two police officers were killed in the Nyack gunbattle following the ar- mored car heist that left a Brink's guard dead. The money was recovered. Vol. XCII, No.43 Thursday, October 29, 1981 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International. Pacific News Service. Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate, News room: (313) 764-0552. 76-DAILY. Sports desk. 764-0562. Circulation, 764-0558, Classified advertising 6 6 0 i Wednesdays & Thursdays 8:00 pm to Closing SEER Y PRICEI PIZZA 25% OFFI ON WED. ENJOY YOUR FAVORITE OLD TIME MOVIES ... Laurel & Hardy The 3 Stooges Charlie Chaplin W. C. Fields Buster Keaton On Thur. come dance to Rock n' Roll of the 50's & 60's. THURSDAY IS LADIES NIGHT 114 East Washington Downtown Ann Arbor 665-3231 (Continued from Page 1) staff member to conduct research and data analysis on minority students. Moorehead also said the University's problems retaining black students in- fluenced the decision to hire a black representative. Before the position was filled, studen- ts told Moorehead that they wanted to be part of the search committee to hire a new representative. Moorehead told the students that the position would be posted and both MSS staff and student representatives would have a chance to recommend three of the-applicants for the job. Moorehead said he would review all the ap- plications and make the final decision. ABORTION CARE " No Age Limit " Completely Confidential " Local Anesthesia " Tranquilizers * Birth Control-VD 0 Board Certified M.D.'s 0 Blue Cross/Medicaid 0 Immediate Appts. 526-3600 (Near Eastland) THE POSITION was posted and 14 people applied for the job. At the beginning of the month the three MSS staff members reviewed the ap- plications and narrowed the field to two applicants. One of the final candidates chose a job elsewhere, and Moorehead hired the other candidate, Al Watson. Students were upset when they lear- ned Moorehead had hired a represen- tative without student input. Moorehead said he hired Watson without student input because a fun- ctional review of the department is coming up next month and he wanted to have a black representative before the review. ONCE A PERSON is hired for a position, it is impossible to legally reopen the;,search committee, so most concerned students say they plan to work with Watson. "I've spoken to Al Watson about the manner in which he was appointed and he said he understood our frustrations," said Valerie Mims, minority affairs coordinator for the Michigan Student Assembly. "We've discussed some of our plans to work together and I'm hoping that our joint efforts will address black student problems in academic and carer coun- seling, financial aid, and so on." Watson's position combines the duties of black representative and director of Trotter House. Moorehead said he hired Watson because he was qualified in data analysis. "We're fortunte to get him," he added. Mims said the lack of student input in the decision to hire Watson is indicative of a University-wide problem. "The fact that administrators are slow to recognize and serve the needs of minority students is a University-wide problem and until the central ad- ministration takes some major steps to generate effective and well-coordinated programs, we'll continue to lose studen- ts," she said. 0 'U' project may show all matter will disintegrate (Continued from Page 1), protons. BANDwO.RAMA SATURDAY, Oct. 31 8 p.m. Hill Auditorium Featuring: SYMPHONY BAND THE FRIARS CONCERT BAND JAZZ BAND MICHIGAN MARCHING BAND Tickets:~$2, $4, $5 at Hill Box Office Oct. 26-30-9 a. m.-4 p.m. To test this prediction, researchers from the University and six other schools and laboratories are filling a plastic-lined vat 2,000 feet under ground with 10,000 tons of highly purified water. The reservoir, located in a salt mine east of Cleveland, Ohio, will be lined with 2,048 photomultiplier tubes which can detect extremely small amounts of light. WHEN A PROTON decays it will release a coneshaped light, called Cerenkov light, that will travel through the highly transparent water and be detected by the photomultiplier tubes. Cosmic rays can cause a similar light, but the earth above the un- derground vat should block most cosmic rays. A small particle called a neutrino can also cause flashes, but computers programmed to analyze data should be able to distinguish between the neutrino flashes and proton decay, according to the researchers. WATER WAS chosen as the source of protons because it is cheap and tran- sparent, van der Velde said. "Ten thousand tons of anything is expen- sive-except water," he said. Filling the two-and-a-half-million gallon reservoir is expected to begin about November 1 and will take roughly five weeks. Van der Velde said the researchers expect results after six months. Van der Velde, Dan Sinclair,, and Larry Sulak are three major in- vestigators of about a dozen from the University's physics department. Researchers from the University of California at Irvine and Brookhaven National Laboratory are also playing major roles in the experiment, of- ficially named the IMB Proton Decay Project. IN ADDITION, the California In- stitute of Technology, Cleveland State University, University College London, and the University of Hawaii are collaborating on the project. Most of the funds for the $4 million project have come from the Depar- tment of Energy. Both the University of Michigan and the University of Califor- nia at Irvine have contributed ad- ditional money. "They (the univer- sities) have gone out on a limb for us," van der Velde said. 76.4-0557, Display advertising. 764.0554, Billing 764.0550. Editor in chief ...................SARA ANSPACH Managing Editor..............-. JULIE ENGEBRECHT University Editor............. .. LORENZO 8ENET News Editor ........................ DAVID MEYER Opinion Page Editors . , ......... CHARLES THOMSON KEVIN TOTTIS Sports Editor ................... MARK MIHANOVIC Associate Sports Editors............GREG DeGULIS MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOOREHOUSE DREW SHARP Chief Photographer .............. PAUL ENGSTROM. PHOTOGRAPHERS- Jackie Bell, Kim Hill, Deborah Lewis, Mike Lucas. Brian Mosck. ARTISTS: Robert LenceJonathri, Stewart, Richard Walk.Norm Christiansen. ARTS STAFF: Jane Carl, Mark Dighton, Michael Huget, Adam Knee, Pom Kramer, Gail Negbour NEWS STAFF: John Adam, Beth Allen, Julie Barth, Carol Chaltron. Andrew Chapman. Lisa Crumrine, Debi Davis. Ann Marie Fazio, Pam Fickinger. Denise Franklin. Joyce Frieden, Mark Gindin, Julie Hinds, Steve Hook, Kathy Hoover, Mindy Layne, Jennifer Mil. ler, Don Oberrotman, Janet Roe. David Spok, Fannie Weinstein. Barry Witt. SPORTS STAFF: Barb Barker, Jesse Borkin, Tom Ben- tley. Randy Berger, Mark Borowski, Joe Chapelle, Martha Crall, Jim Dworman, Larry Freed, Chuck Har- twig, Matt Henehan, Chuck Jaffe, John Kerr, Dog Levy, Jim Lombard, Larry Mishkin, Dan Newman, Ron Pollack, Jeff Quicksilver, Steve Schaumberger, Sarah Sherber, Kenny Shore, James ThompsonKent Wolley, Chris Wilson, Bob Woinowski. BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager...............RANDI CIGELNIK Sales Manager.................BARB FORSLUND Operations Manager.............. SUSANNE KELLY Display Manager ...........MARY ANN MISIEWICZ Classifieds Manager............DENISE SULLIVAN Finance Manager ............... MICHAEL YORICK Assistant Disolav Manager.........NANCY JOSLIN Nationals Manager............SUSAN RABUSHKA Circulation Manager ................. KIM WOODS Sales Coordinator........... E.ANDREW PETERSEN BUSINESS STAFF: Liz Altman, Hope Barron, Lindsay Bray, Joe Brodo, Alexander DePillis, Aida Eisenstadt, Susan Epps, Wendy Fox. Sandy Frcka, Pomelo Gould, Kathryn Hendrick. Anthony Interronte, Indre Luitkus. Beth Kovinsky, Barbaro Miner. Caryn Notisse, Felice Oper, Jodi Pollock, Michael Savitt, Michael Seltzer. Karen Silverstein, Sam Slaughter. Adrienne Strombi, Nancy Thompson. Jeffrey Voigt. eaturing a FASHION PHENOMENON Thursday,October 29,9:00 pm at SECOND CHANCE 516 E. Liberty St., Ann Arbor HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL MBA PROGRAM An Admissions Representative from Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration will be on campus November 5 to meet with students interested in the two-year MBA Program PUBLICATION SCHEDULE 1981 SM T F S SM T W T F S S M T W T F S S M T W T F S SEPEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER 612 3 1 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 l101112 4 6 7 8 9 10 8 1011121314 6 8 9 101112 13 1516 17 18 19 11 13 14 15 16 17 15 17 18 19 2021 2930un 25J2 28 29 30 31 _______ -___ 2 223 24 25 26 184920 2122 2324 22 24 25 0620 5 2-292l393 1982 JANUARY FEBRUARY MARCH APRIL 0 0l