See editorial page Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom IIIUIQ r . OBNOXIOUS See Today for details Yol. LXXXX, No. 55 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, November 8, 1979 Ten Cents Ten Pages Cadavers: The cold, hard facts By ADRIENNE LYONS and BETH ROSENBERG Rich walked into class the first day with only one thought in mind:' finding a good body. Looking down the rows of shiny dissecting tables, however, he expec- ted some stiff competition. The cadaver he finally got resembled a papier- mache figure, far removed from the living human being it once had been. "GROSS (ANATOMY) LAB may be the hardest e urse offered by the University," said Jeff, a third- year dental student, who asked to be identified by first name only.r The type of studies done in .the lab are called "gross," because they are done with the naked eye, explained third-year dental student Pete Drescher. 'The course is not only difficult'in terms of the material covered, but also because of the psychological burden it may place on students. THE CLASS REQUIRES dissection of cadavers, and is mandatory for all medical, dental, physical therapy, and Inteflex students. The first assignement, according to one- student, is skinning the body. Students also must remove organs and identify various parts of the anatomy. Approximately 200 bodies are used each year in the lab and are obtained primarily through a state-wide body-donor program, according to Anatomy Prof. Thomas Oelrich, the program's coordinator for 30 years. Unclaimed bodies from the Detroit area occasionally are used, also. "The privacy of body identification is maintained," said Oelrich. Students are told only the cadaver's age and cause of death. THE BODIES ARE embalmed and kept in a morgue at Medical Science II, said Oelrich, until needed for. dissection. Cadavers are embalmed for long-term preservation, he added. "I give people who donate (their bodies to science) a lot of credit. Bodies get tossed around and there is a high degree of disrespect," said one student who asked. not to be identified. "I would never donate (my body) after seeing what happens," he added. Mooch Youngs, a third-year dental student, agreed. "People have been known to jump rope with various parts of the anatomy," he said, while a skeleton's arm was draped casually around his neck. WATCHING CLASSMATE Jeff "The Mad Ripper" Stachel, dissect a head, Youngs said in some instances cadavers' gold bridgeworks have turned up missing or lost. Students said they are unable to eat chicke6 or ham- burger after class. They also give their cadavers names, such as Alphonso, Zelda, and Barth Gimbel. The scent of embalming ;fluid and formaldehyde engulfs the lab. The cadavers' skin color is brownish and leathery. Facial features are recognizable, but deformed-only a shadow of their former shapes. Bodies lie on tables, blanketed by sheets of plastic. MOST STUDENTS SAID they had to desensitize themselves in order to work on the corpses. "It's the first time many students have been around See THE, Page 7 U.S. envoy-s denied entry into Iran i FINALLY Teddy is ready! From AP, Reuter and UPI BOSTON - Senator Edward Ken- nedy (D-Mass.) formally opened his campaign for the presidency yester- day with a hard-hitting attack on the man whose job he wants, President Carter. Standing beneath a portrait of an- other Massachusetts senator, Daniel Webster, the 47-year-old Kennedy declared his candidacy in historic Faneuil Hall one year before the 1980 election. "I TAKE THE course compelled by events and by my commitment to public life," he said in 'prepared remarks. Kennedy said that before the last presidential election, "We were told that Arericans were honest, loving, good, decent and compassionate. Now, the people are blamed for every national ill and scolded as greedy, wasteful and mired in malaise." "Which is it?" he asked. "Did we change so much in these three years? Or is it because our present leadership does not understand that we are willing, even anxious, to be on the march again?" "FOR MANY months, we have been sinking into crisis," Kennedy said, "yet, we hear no clear sum- mons from the center of power. This country is not prepared to sound retreat. It is ready to advance. It is willing to make a stand. And, so am I."' Kennedy was asked about criticism from the White House that he has been unable to find an issue on which he differs sharply with President Carter. He replied by singling out the Carter ad- ministration efforts to combat in- flation. He said that if he. is elected, it See KENNEDY, page 5 Ar rhioo SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY (D-Mass.) is all smiles as he announces his candidacy in front of eager supporters at a patked Faneuil lall in Boston. WASHINGTON (AP) - Two American emissaries sent to negotiate, the release of some 60 Americans held hostage in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran were stalled in Turkey yesterday when. Iranian leaders refused to let them into the country. Ramsey Clark, a former U.S. attor- ney general, and William Miller, a staff member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, were'reported by the State Department to be waiting in Istanbul for further instruction. State Department spokesman Hod- ding Carter said the two emissaries, carryingd personal message from President Carter to Iranian-leaders, would remain in Turkey indefinitely, "pending clarification" from the Tehran government. TEHRAN RADIO said earlier that revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini would not meet with them. "Should the U.S.A. hand over to Iran the deposed shah - this enemy No. 1 of our nation - and give up espionage against our movement, the way would then be open for talks about certain relations which are in the nation's in- terest," Khomeini was quoted as saying in the radio broadcast, monitored in Kuwait and London. Local DeMs look for leade By JOHN GOYER His staunch liberal record is appealing, but it's his potential as a powerful leader that makes Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) the early, over- whelming favorite of many local Democrats. Many party regulars ignore the attacks of Carter backers who contend that Kennedy's image as a strong leader is due to the "Kennedy mystique." They argue that Kennedy is the only contender capable of lifting the nation out of its "malaise." "KENNEDY GIVES this country hope, said local Democratic activist Amy Perrone, a founder of a citywide draft Kennedy movement. To University law student Steve Foley, another "draft. Kennedy" founder, Kennedy is "a guy who can get up and inspire people, and lead them." With a Congress divided as it is today, Foley said, "sometimes it seems more important to do something, anything." According to Perrone, whose draft-movement conducted a preliminary survey of student voter at- titudes, students were "three to one" behind Ken- nedy for president. Dissatisfaction With Carter is key to many Ken- nedy backers' support. "Carter has done an awful job," Perrone said. "He is directly responsible for cutting off Medicaid abortion funds to poor women." Perrone said that Carter merely had r In enned given lip service to the Equal Rights Aiendment (ERA), without giving the proposed amendment his active support. The Chappiquiddick incident is "irrelevant," ac- cording to Ken Jakubowski, a Democratic fund raiser and Kennedy supporter. Local Democrat Scott North said he was curren- tly a Kennedy supporter, but he disliked Xennedy'§I sponsorship of a Senate bill that proposes reforms in the nation's criminal code. "A lot of people think it's a really repressive piece of legislation," North said, "and it's really impor- tant, because it's reforming the entire criminal See A2, Page 5 TH E TWO LEFT Washington Tuesday night after conferring with President Carter. Carter told reporters yesterday he hoped the trip would suc- ceed in freeing the hostages. "We pray it will," he said. Students occupying the embassy called Clark and Miller "the filthiest individuals" and their intention of seeing Khomeini "half-baked," accor- ding to a statement on Tehran radio monitored by the BBC. It added: "Have we not said that negotiations are im- possible and that our resolute demand is for the extradition of the traitorous ,shah?"' N The broadcast denied reports Iran had halted oil shipments to the United States but said it would consider doing so if America did not extradite Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlevi, ousted last January in Khomeini's Islamic revolution. A CUTOFF of Iranian oil probably would not trigger gasoline rationing in the United States, presidential press secretary Jody Powell said yesterday. But Powell said the administration. was undertaking an accelerated review . of steps i$ could take to counter anys such shutoff, and said "we are prepared to initiate an appropriate response." See KHOMEINI, Page 2 Dems criticize city administrator search By PATRICIA HAGEN Several Democratic City Council- members claim. they have been denied input into Ann Arbor's city ad- ministrator search as a result of mismanagement and a lack of com- munication. Republican Mayor Louis Belcher, who has directed the search, maintained that the search has been as open as possible, and is running accor- ding to schedule. "The selection process has been in- credibly mishandled," claimed Coun- cilwoman Leslie Morris (D-Second Ward). She contended that the four Democrats on the eleven-member council were not given sufficient access to candidate resumes. The five finalists for the city's top administrative post may have been selecte without input from the Democrats, Morris added. BUT BELCHER said the candidates' names and resumes were available to all Council members as scheduled last Friday. He aded that he had received recommendations or rankings from all the.council members except Ken Latta (D-First Ward) by yesterday after- noon. As of late yesterday afternoon, Latta said he had not seen any of the 20 can- didates' resumes. At Monday night's Council meeting Belcher assured Latta that he would receive copies of the resumes immediately. Latta added, however, he did not discover until'last Friday that the resumes would be made for each Council member. Korn-Ferry International, a person- nel consulting firm based in Los Angeles, narrowed a group of sixty ap- plicants down to 20. Then ' citizens ad- visory group reviewed the 20 can- didates, which were also subject to Council consideration. The Citizens and Council members made recommen- dations or rankings of their top choices See DEMS, Page 7 70 protest KKK actions in, rally on Diag By LORENZO BENET About 70 demonstrators rallied on the Diag yesterday afternoon, to protest the five shooting deaths of anti- Klan demonstrators at a Klu Klux Klan (KKK) rally in Greensboro, North Carolina on Saturday. The protesters chanted, "Jail the killer Klansmen," and "Smash the Nazis and the Klan," as they marched around the Diag carrying pickets bearing similar slogans. IRENE RHINESMITH, a memfber of the rally's sponsor group, the Spartacus Youth League (SYL), demanded that the charges against the anti-Klan See GREENSBORO, Page 10 Daily Photo by LISA UDELSON MORE THAN 70 persons demonstrate on the Diag against Ku Klux Klan violence. Yesterday's protest was spured by the shootings last Saturdav in Greensboro. North Carolina. .,v- - -. T I 3-. fi t at1b spa ', E y \ V r- industry leaders. Execs advise the business aspirants and sneak a preview of upcoming job applicants. [' Safe-keeping The .University's desire for efficiency even extends to its room-numbering system, if Angell Hall is any guide. In one of their dark, little-traveled basement corridors, there is n rnn r nrkri "9nnne" that . . i Acting Rackham dean named The current associate dean of the Graduate School, Eugene Feingold, will serve as acting dean of that school until Acting Vice-President for Academic Affairs Alfred Sussman returns full-time to his Rackham deanship. Feingold's nomination is expected to be approved by the Regents next week, and he will assume the post Nov. 15. Once a new vice-president for academic affairs has taken office, both Feingold and Sussman will return to their regular posts. Feingold has been at the University since 1oMn serving in the Pnlitica l.Sienc e pnartment "and the Center in Palo Alto, Calif. The magnet, one of the largest loads ever moved on public highways, is being transported from the Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago. 0, On the inside Arts previews the PTP-sponsored production "The White Devil" on page 5. . . see Sports for the first in a two- part series on Athletic Director Don Canham. . . an analysis.of the feisty, beleaguered, maverick mayor Dennis Knniesh ie nn the itnrin n no , i I ,I