Robert Ettinger: 'Why should not everyone be frozen to await later resue by our own people?' Frozen In Time Robert Ettinger refuses to believe in mortality. He is convinced that if frozen today, man will one day live again. ELIZABETH KAPLAN Features Editor hea Chaloff Ettin- ger had no in- tention of being buried when she died. Instead, she was slowly cooled to freezing tempera- tures. The blood was drained from her body and replaced with a protective solution. Then she was loaded into a cryostat, a white, dome- shaped structure filled with liquid nitrogen. Now she waits. It may take 50 or 100 or 200 years. But one day science will be able to revive Rhea Et- tinger and others like her who rest quietly in cryostats throughout the world, accor- ding to her son, Robert C.W. Ettinger, the father of cryonics. Ettinger, who lives in Oak Park, practices freezing R bodies in the hope they will be resuscitated in the future. His book The Prospect of Im- mortality, which launched the cryonics movement, was published in 1962. On Saturday, Ettinger will present his case in the first Cyronics Science Court at the Southfield Civic Center, where a panel will debate the legitimacy of crynonics. obert Ettinger was a nice Jewish boy who liked to read. In the 1930s, he came across "The Jameson Satellite" by Neil Jones. The short story details the adventures of Professor Jameson, who has his corpse sent into orbit where he believes it will remain forever at freezing temperatures. Millions of years later, mechanical men with organic brains who rule the earth discover Jameson's corpse. They revive and repair his R brain and give him a.-new, mechanical body. "It was instantly obvious to me that the author had miss- ed the main point of his own idea!" Ettinger writes in The Prospect of Immortality. "If immortality is achievable through the ministrations of advanced aliens repairing a frozen human corpse, then why should not everyone be frozen to await later rescue by our own people?" Ettinger pursued his in- terest while maintaining a career as a physics and mathematics teacher at Wayne State University and Highland Park Community College. And the more he studied, the more he became convinced that reviving and repairing "slightly dead" -- individuals dead only briefly — is possible. His book, and other subse- quent publications, are replete with the studies Et- tinger found so compelling and help prove, he says, the validity of freezing corpses — a state called cryonic suspen- sion — for future repair. He cites a report by a Lon- don researcher who suc- cessfully revived golden hamsters after they were half frozen. In another case, em- bryo chicken hearts treated with glycerol solution and cooled to minus 190 degrees Centigrade continued beating after being thawed. "Year by year and almost day by day scientific research strengthens our case," Et- tinger says. "The belief that death is complete and irrever- sible is not true. We're learn- ing how to reverse it every day." The evidence is overwhelm- ing, Ettinger says. It is more difficult for most people to ac- cept that they do not have to die, he says. "What keeps people away is not logic or money but tradi- tion and inertia," he says. "Take the case of someone very wealthy. Even if he thought he had one chance in a million, wouldn't he set aside $30,000 for the possibility that he might be young and healthy again? "The problem is that we've adapted ourselves to the idea Ettinger operates a cryostat. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS .,.71