Tonight, is it wedding bells for Stephen and Patricia? Hey, huh? Will Angela sort things out with Rob? I love you. I love you, too. And what brings Wayne to Wumbay? I want to see you. Sons and Daughters continues tonight at 7 o'clock, following the 7 national news. I suppose everyone wants to be pretty. Pretty ladies won't marry old, yucky men. There is enormous pressure on young girls to want to be beautiful. My mouth's lopsided. I've got a lopsided smile. And on the pedestal of beauty stands the model. I never thought I had a good body. I still don't. What does it take to be a model? How tough is it? How cutthroat? There are a lot of people that just treat you like a pizza meat. This week, Willisie takes you all the way from the schoolgirl's fantasy. She would like to be a model. To the pros at the top earning thousands a week. People said, uh, what are you here for, dear? You know, the tea or the makeup? And the girls in between try to make it to the big time. Let's take the towel down a little bit. Not just a pretty face. You'll be fascinated by the truth about modeling when Willisie makes Sunday nights special again. Everybody's dreaming it, dreaming it. In this week's new idea, a shock interview about life at the top. Joan Collins as she's never talked before. Doris Grieve's six-month star guide read what's in store for you. This young mom really believes in miracles. A 10,000-mile dash to save her unborn child. Jane Fonda has some special exercises to keep you fit and trim during pregnancy. We ask, will both the Monaco princesses wed later this year? While Margaret Fulton shows you how to make a meal of soup. New idea, the number one weekly bestseller. Very widely read. Being a lab technician, I know how harmful germs and bacteria can be to your family. And being a mom, I want to protect my family. That's why I trust Fiesta. It's the only powder bleach that's antibacterial. A pre-wash soak in Fiesta for 10 minutes is the sure way to kill dangerous germs. Not only is Fiesta the only antibacterial powder bleach, it's a perfectly safe way to whiten and brighten your clothes. What more could a mom want for her family? Tonight, a witness collapses while Tony Benjamin is questioning him. B-11 calls for an immediate investigation, and Tim's is none too pleased. Tony's badge on the line. In Cop Shop, tonight, 8.30, following Tales of the Gold Monkey. The Friday night movie from Seven, the splendor of one of the greatest stories ever told. Mutiny on the Bounty is Ivan's movie classic. This is Doran Blake, Seven Weeks. Yes, Doran is a boy. A very happy little boy it appears, and clearly very impressed with me. Doran is our country's second sperm bank baby, having been born following the artificial insemination of his mother, who is with us. She is Afton Blake, PhD, a clinical psychologist, in practice. She is not married, but clearly subscribes to the thesis which has been offered by, among others, Robert Graham, who is founder of what he calls the Repository for Germinal Choice. I feel like I'm doing a Sunday morning prayer service here. I don't want to disturb this baby. Dr. Graham is also the man who 35 years ago developed the first plastic spectacle of the kind that I am using now. He is, because of that enormous contribution to optics and people who need correct vision, a quite a wealthy man. He's also clearly a man who believes that the intelligence of a child is very much determined by the intelligence of his parents or her parents. And he is underway now with an effort to collect sperm from male donors who are, after scientific review, determined to be exceptionally gifted. That sperm is placed in a vial at minus 196 degrees Fahrenheit, frozen, for indefinite shelf life. On the occasion of the presentation of a mother who was hopeful of receiving one of these sperms for purpose of impregnation, she chooses the sperm according to the information provided her about the sperm donor. She doesn't know the donor's name. She perhaps knows the color of the donor's eyes, the height, the race, and so on. Then she, presumably a person also gifted, gives birth, it is hoped, to an exceptionally gifted child. Dr. Graham feels, among other things, that in recent years we as inhabitants of the planet have apparently gone out of our way to reproduce less than talented people. In any event, it's his belief that the number of gifted, talented people is diminishing on the planet, and this is his attempt to correct it. And that's the end of our show, and thank you all very much. How am I doing? That's a beautiful summary. Am I all right here, Dr. Graham? That's a very accurate summary, Phil. Okay, let's talk about numbers here. This is the world's second sperm bank baby, the first having been born to a woman who turned out to be not quite who she had claimed to be. This is quite a public relations embarrassment for you, I assume. This is a woman who had a background of child abuse and also was a convicted felon. So one of our problems now is that how are you going to figure out who's telling the truth? We can't always. In fact, in life that's sometimes a problem in other situations. But at least we now ask 20 times more bits of information about the individuals than we did when we started. I don't have to tell you that you've created a storm of controversy with this. First of all, it's emotionally and politically offensive to millions of people who see this as a manipulative way to perhaps reproduce one kind of person. It also is unbecomingly close to the whole Nazi approach to the human condition, wherein these people thought we should have an Aryan race and everyone else should be destroyed. How do you respond to those criticisms? Phil, if you look at it from the standpoint of the recipient, the recipient is a lady who with her husband wants a child. But her husband being infertile can't do the job. So they turn to us. Those are the people we serve. And since we can provide the sperm that will make that woman a mother, we try to collect the finest sperm available, the brightest fathers, the brightest males with no serious hereditary defects. The system of preservation enables us to go to donors anyplace in the world and preserve their sperm and offer it to a woman anyplace in the world. And since the child will have to spend his life with the genes that he gets from his father as well as those from his mother, why not give him the best genes we can give him? I don't see anything Hitlerian in that. Yeah, but you certainly may. Let me establish. This is Paul Smith, who has not recently escaped from the operating room. He wishes to retain his anonymity because of the work he does. He is a research officer for the Repository for Germinal Choice. He is the man who solicits candidates for sperm donorship. He goes about the country, I assume, to campuses and other places where you're likely to meet gifted males. And I assume you approach them and your pitch is a little bit more complicated than how about donating some sperm. You know, I mean, I don't think that's not quite the way you'd open the conversation, I trust. Well, I introduce myself, tell him I'm from the Repository for Germinal Choice, and I'd like to tell him something about our program in the hope that he might consider becoming a donor. Right. How do you know who to approach? Well, at the outset, we went for Nobel laureates, but we've broadened our fields now. This is partly because we find that there's enormous talent in certain other fields which aren't covered by the Nobel Prize. One, for example, is mathematics. The number of talented men in mathematics far exceeds that number of men in those areas of physics which are covered by the Nobel Prize. I see. So mathematics attracts some of the most able talent, and those who go to the top in it are remarkable. And finding achievers in math would be rather easy, wouldn't it? There is a very prestigious award which has the same status as the Nobel Prize in science, but I also depend heavily on what... Excuse me. I'm just going to upstage you here for a second. Mr. Star. Hello, baby. I know. I know, honey. You're such a good baby. This child is a star. All right. I think we get it, and because it's so complicated, let's see how much information we can share here before we give this audience time. Let me just clear up one possible misconception. You mentioned earlier, like the possible resemblance between us and Hitler, one of the things you mentioned was Aryan. Now when our applicants are accepted, we send them our catalog, and that gives as much information about each donor as possible without revealing his identity. And in fact, our most popular donor, far from being Aryan, is Jewish. It is also true that some of your patients, Dr. Blake, are Jewish, and many of them have great misgivings about what you've done here. How would you characterize their statements to you, their expression of their own feelings? Well, I think because of some of the prejudices and misunderstandings about what the sperm bank is doing, which certainly is understandable, that they have been distressed. You keep using words like good genes, finest sperm. The problem with that is it suggests that there is inferior sperm, and that opens the door to some people concluding that perhaps whole groups of people have inferior sperm, and I don't have to tell you about the consequence of that kind of thesis. When Genetis speaks about good genes, what he means is genes which adapt the organism to the environment it's going to find itself in. For example, genes, a dairy breeder by good genes, he means those genes which promote high milk output, high butter fat content, longevity, whereas when we're talking about humans, what I mean by good genes is those genes which promote the qualities which we most want in humans, both those qualities for health and happiness and those qualities which are most uniquely human. And if it works in veterinary medicine, you're saying why can't it work among us so-called smarter humans? The same genetic laws apply to the fruit fly and the human alike. I don't have to tell you that you have gigantic minds in the field of genetics, behavior, biochemistry, biology, and evolution who will tell you that the gift of the offspring has much more to do, if not exclusively to do, as some hold, with nurture rather than nature, and that if you want to ensure a gifted or achieving child, the best way to do it is to raise it in a loving, positive, supportive way. What are your feelings about that? Well, we think that's entirely accurate, but also part of the individual's net result is his inheritance. Now, we can't do much part in the environment in which the child is raised. We can give them as good a start as human skill knows how to do. How many sperm donors do you have? How many sperm have you got frozen on the shelf? Different collection. About a dozen different donors. In fact, the amount varies, one of our donors, we do 700 most of the time, even though he's very popular, he's also very productive. Would you accept a sperm from a black male? This past week, I tried very hard to persuade the most gifted black male to become a donor, and he was friendly but declined the invitation. If a male donates a sperm to you, does he know if his sperm has been chosen by a recipient? In the past, it was my practice to tell them, but I may not do that so often in the future because there's a tendency for them to read about the baby and the mother in the press. Mind you, the vast majority of our recipients choose not to go public, but we don't try to encourage them one way or the other. If I tell a donor that one of his admirers in Chicago is expecting a baby...