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http://slate.msn.com/seed/entries/01-02-07_100331.asp

The "Genius Babies," and How They Grew

Help Slate tell the story of the Nobel Prize sperm
bank.

By David Plotz

Posted Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2001, at 4:00 p.m. PT

Twenty years ago, on an outbuilding of his Southern California
estate, tycoon Robert K. Graham began a most remarkable
project: the Repository for Germinal Choice, a sperm bank for
Nobel Prize winners. Part altruism, part social engineering, part
science experiment, the repository was supposed to help reverse
the genetic decay Graham saw all around him by preserving and
multiplying the best genes of his generation. By the time Graham's
repository closed in 1999, his genius sperm had been responsible
for more than 200 children.

What happened to them? This is the beginning of a journalistic
experiment to find out, an experiment that—as I explain
below—needs your assistance. (Also click here to read Slate
editor Michael Kinsley's introduction to the project.)

Robert K. Graham was a eugenicist. He was a pessimist about
humanity's future. And he was a can-do, self-made
multimillionaire. Those qualities fused to inspire the Repository for
Germinal Choice. Graham, who made his fortune by inventing
shatterproof eyeglasses, feared mankind was in danger because
natural selection had stopped working on human beings. He
explained his views in a muscular 1971 book, The Future of
Man. Over millenniums, nature's brutality had strengthened the
human gene pool, allowing the strong and smart to reproduce,
while killing the weak before they could. But once man mastered
his natural environment, Graham argued, he jumped the
evolutionary track. Better living conditions allowed "retrograde
humans" to reproduce. In modern America, thanks to
cradle-to-grave social welfare programs, these incompetents and
imbeciles were swamping the intelligent. This dysgenic crisis
would surely bring communism and the regression of mankind. All
that could save us, Graham warned, was "intelligent selection":
Our best specimens must have more children. Hence the
Repository for Germinal Choice.

Graham intended the repository to be a prototype for genius
sperm banks all over the country, producing "creative, intelligent
people who otherwise might not be born." The children would be
future intellectuals, scientists, and leaders and, Graham predicted
in a giddy moment, "may stimulate [humanity's] ascent to a new
level of being."

So, in the late 1970s, Graham persuaded several Nobel Prize
winners in science—either three or five, depending on who's
talking—to give him their sperm. Later he recruited dozens of
younger scientists for his bank. Graham advertised for mothers in
a Mensa magazine. Women had to be married to infertile men,
well-educated, and financially comfortable. Soon he had a waiting
list. He mailed out a catalog that advertised men such as "Mr.
Fuschia," an Olympic gold medallist—"Tall, dark, handsome,
bright, a successful businessman and author"; and "Mr.
Grey-White … ruggedly handsome, outgoing, and positive, a
university professor, expert marksman who enjoys the classics."
(The repository revolutionized the sperm bank industry
by—oddly for such an avowedly elitist institution—democratizing
it: It took donor choice away from doctors and gave it to
mothers. Instead of settling for a doctor's paltry offerings, mothers
could be demanding customers, requiring as much [or more]
accomplishment from a vial of sperm as from her flesh-and-blood
husband.)

When the Los Angeles Times publicized the repository in 1980,
a furor erupted. Eugenic ideas like Graham's had been
mainstream in the United States for the first half of the 20th
century. (Graham had even borrowed the idea of a Nobel sperm
bank from a scheme proposed by respected Nobelist Hermann
Muller in the '30s.) But by the time Graham opened the
repository, eugenics had been utterly tarnished by Nazism. It was
considered at best elitist, at worst racist and genocidal.

Graham was pilloried and mocked, accused of trying to create a
"master race." Critics dubbed it the "Superbaby" program and
compared it to Nazi eugenics practices. Ethicists denounced it as
a cold, utilitarian approach toward children and an alarming step
toward "designer babies." Only one of Graham's Nobel donors,
transistor inventor William Shockley, would admit to having
contributed sperm. That did not help matters. Shockley's views
on race, genes, and intelligence had made him a national pariah,
and his association with the repository confirmed suspicion that it
was a dastardly racist plot. Demonstrators picketed Graham's
Escondido estate. He hired security guards to protect the sperm.

The media's attention soon wandered, Graham stopped talking to
the press, and the repository sank from sight. But the babies
started arriving. The first birth was heralded in the National
Enquirer in early 1982. Soon "genius babies" were being born at
a rapid clip. By the time Graham died at age 90 in 1997, the
repository claimed 229 offspring, all over the United States and in
half a dozen countries. None of the children, despite the bank's
reputation, were fathered by Nobel Prize winners: Early on
Graham decided Nobelists were too old to be effective donors
and relied on his younger scientists.

In the beginning Graham intended the repository to be an
experiment and showpiece. He tacked pictures of the children to
his office walls. He had parents agree to answer periodic surveys
about their children. But he came to learn that his clients did not
necessarily share his fascination with eugenic theories. When he
mailed a survey in the early '90s, most of the parents ignored it.

So when the repository finally shut in 1999, it left behind a
mystery. Except for two families that have discussed their
(wonderful) kids publicly, the repository is a blank. No one
seems to know what has happened to its children, its parents, its
donors.

Why shouldn't we leave it alone? Why should we want to know
any more about it? Partly because it's a fascinating riddle—did it
live up to its grand promise?—but also because the repository is
not simply a peculiar historical footnote. We are entering a new
age of eugenics. Cloning is months away, not decades. It is a
guide to the future. Scientists will soon be manipulating embryonic
genes, knocking out diseases, adding immunity, good looks, who
knows what. Building better babies will soon become a science.
Eugenics will be chic again (though surely not by that name). As
reproductive law scholar Lori Andrews puts it, "private eugenics"
has replaced public eugenics. Almost no one subscribes to
Graham's civic interest in improving the American "germplasm."
But it has been replaced by a very widespread consumer interest:
How can I improve my own child?

As this new-genics arrives, it poses ethical questions that give
hives to parents, doctors, and lawyers. And the new-genics raises
questions about our expectations for our children that will keep
child psychologists busy for decades.

The repository and its children matter because they preview this
world to come. Graham promised parents smarter, better children
than they could have naturally. He used the best science of his
time (sperm storage and artificial insemination) to preserve and
replicate what he saw as the most valuable genes in the world.
New-genics will try to do much the same thing—though more
precisely, more microscopically, more scientifically.

The repository families—mothers, fathers, children, and even
donors—offer the only human testimony about whether the
promise that technology makes better children can be fulfilled.
The repository families can tell us how the scientific theory
translates into lived human experience. The children can teach
about the burdens and joys of genetic expectations. What kinds
of demands do their parents place on them? Do they feel extra
pressure to achieve because of their genes? Do they want to
know about their genetic fathers?

Mothers and fathers can explain how such children alter parental
expectations. Do they hold their kids to higher standards than
they would have otherwise? Do they tell their children about their
parentage? Why or why not? How does the genetic link to an
anonymous donor change the relationship between parents and
children?

The repository's parents, children, and donors have lessons for
the parents and scientists who are grappling with the same
questions now that they have grappled with over the last 20
years. It would be wonderful to hear from them—without
interfering with their understandable desire for privacy.

Over the next months, Slate asks you to help us try to tell the
story of the Repository for Germinal Choice and to find out what
happened to its parents, children, and donors. This will be a
journalistic experiment in two ways. First, it will unfold before
you. As Slate editor Michael Kinsley explains in this "Slate Fare"
column, I will write the story as I report it. It will be transparent
journalism. As I learn more—or fail to—you will find out here. (In
addition to learning about the participants, I will write about how
the repository worked, why the sperm donors' offspring rights'
movement is growing, what has happened to American eugenics,
and how the repository changed the sperm-bank industry.)

The second part of the experiment is even more important. We
hope to harness the collaborative power of the Web to make it
succeed. I want you to be my sources and guides on this story.
So we invite anyone connected with the repository—parents,
children, donors, and employees, their friends and families,
anyone else—to contact Slate by e-mailing me at
[EMAIL PROTECTED], calling me at (202) 862-4889, or mailing me at
Slate, 1150 17th St. NW, 10th Floor, Washington, D.C.,
20036.

A Critical Note About PRIVACY

The Repository for Germinal Choice, like almost all sperm
banks, relied on a veil of privacy. Donors remained
anonymous. So did clients. Only Graham and his employees
knew who they were. Slate does NOT want to pierce that
veil. We respect that privacy. We do NOT want to publish
names or identifying characteristics or family secrets. We are
only interested in hearing the stories of the repository, in
learning about your experience and how it changed you. You
have an important story—one that could educate and help
others in a similar situation. No one needs to know your
name for you to tell that story here.

We hope to publish your own accounts of your experiences,
interviews with you, any other method that can convey your story.
We will also maintain what we hope will be a vigorous discussion
forum about the repository and the ethics of fertility science in
"The Fray."

Please contact me at [EMAIL PROTECTED] with any questions or
comments. And please feel free to e-mail this article to a friend,
listserv, bbs, or Web site that might be interested.

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