12A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 13, 1997 NA IO IW RL Vienna University apologizes for Nazi involvement, plans investigation I U A holy day , VIENNA, Austria (AP) - Vienna University apologized yesterday for its involvement with Nazism and announced a broad investigation into whether the bodies of Holocaust vic- tims were the basis for detailed draw- ings in a highly acclaimed, widely used anatomy book. "As a human being, and as a repre- sentative of the University of Vienna, I am ashamed by the University's culpa- ble involvement in the horrors of Nazism," university Rector Alfred Ebenbauer said. "I regret that relatively little was done in the past 50 years to work through this dark chapter of the University of Vienna, and that working through cer- tain events now is more difficult." The atlas, "Topographical Anatomy of the Human Being," was compiled by Eduard Pernkopf, a leading Nazi who headed the university's medical faculty after Hitler annexed Austria in 1938. Pernkopf served as University Rector from 1943-45. The atlas, first published in the late 1930s, is considered a classic text, high- ly regarded for its detailed anatomical drawings. Ebenbauer's stark apology illustrated the growing movement to strip away the illusion that Austria simply was Hitler's first victim, and to examine Austrians' participation in Nazi crimes. The new inquiry will be conducted by the university, the Jewish communi- ty and a group representing Austrians who resisted Nazism. Initial investiga- tions have found it was unlikely con- centration camp victims were among those depicted in the atlas, the universi- ty said Wednesday. But those probes did find that the university's anatomy department regu- larly received the corpses of those exe- cuted by the Nazis, including Austrian resisters, according to a university statement given to The Associated Press. Wolfgang Neugebauer, a historian who heads the archive documenting Austrian resistance to the Nazis, said his organization knows of at least two Austrians killed by the Nazis whose bodies or body parts were used by the department.. The university's statement said that while the chances are "not very high" that Jews or other victims of the Nazi's race laws were used for research, "it cannot be 100 percent excluded" that body parts from Mauthausen, Austria's Nazi concen- tration camp, were used. The current dean of the medical fac- ulty, Wolfgang Schuetz, apologized that it undertook no research at all into the events of the Nazi era, "which were largely repressed and forgotten, like much else in an era linked also with a unique and tragic exodus of faculty members" - Jews forbidden to teach or study under Nazi race laws. As Ebenbauer noted Wednesday, the new frankness began in 1988, when the 50th anniversary of Hitler's annexation of Austria coincided with the furor sur- rounding then-President Kurt Waldheim and his concealed past as a soldier in the German army in World War II. Best-selling books, a new documen- tary film and touring exhibit have underscored the new interest in re- examining the Nazi era. One book, "Hitler's Vienna," traces how the Austrian capital of the early 20th centu- ry fed and formed the Nazi leader's views. The film, titled in English "East of Eden," reveals that ordinary Austrian soldiers serving in Hitler's army knew of mass executions and witnessed tor- ture and looting on the eastern front - denting the myth that only special units like the dreaded SS perpetrated atroci- ties. , Questions about Pernkopf's anato- my book arose in 1995 when Yad Vashem, the Holocaust museum in Jerusalem, approached Vienna University and Austrian officials, ask- ing whether Holocaust victims were depicted in the atlas. Last fall, physicians pressed the issue in letters published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, ques- tioning whether use of the book was ethically proper. In early editions of the atlas, swastikas and SS lightning-bolt sym- bols are part of some of the artists' sig- natures, according to one of the physi- cians, Dr. Howard Israel of New York's Columbia University. Those Nazi emblems were airbrushed out of later editions, he said. The new probe, expected to take a year, will encompass research in archives in Germany and the United States, university spokesman Bernd Matouschek said. Investigators also will attempt to find people who worked in the University's anatomy department during the Nazi years. Results will be published, and the university will try to ensure that a fore- word is attached to the atlas. Its first two volumes were published between 1937 and '45, the third in '53 and the fourth in '57, two years after Pernkopf's death. 91 0 AP PHOTO Pope John Paul 1i celebrates Ash Wednesday Mass, which officially opens the annual Lenten period, yesterday in the St. Sabine Church in central Rome. The Pope talked of the "purification and sanctification" Lent affords. If you can't take her to Broadway this Clinton clears way for CNN post in Cuba. Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - In a move that the White House believes will help "bring about peaceful democratic change in Cuba," the Clinton administration cleared the way for CNN to open a bureau on the island and gave nine other news organizations permission to do the same - if Havana agrees. The decision effectively waives restrictions imposed under the U.S. trade embargo against Cuba. If all pro- ceeds as planned, CNN next month will open its bureau on the 20th floor of a Havana hotel and become the first American news organization to have a permanent reporter in the Communist nation since 1969. But CNN is the only news organization, so far, that has won Cuban permission to operate there; the other nine await approval by Cuban Dictator Fidel Castro's regime. American reporters have been permitted to take brief trips to Cuba but visas for such travel usually have been restricted, as has movement of the journal- ists once in the country. CNN lobbied heavily for a permanent presence on the island, taking its case direct to Castro; his govern- ment gave its approval in August. But the obstacle of U.S. permission remained. Last week, Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.), chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, wrote to the president urging him to let CNN open its bureau. "I am persuaded that the spotlight of a free press focused on Castro's tropical gulag will only hasten the day when the Cuban people are free of his brutal Communist tyranny," Helms wrote Clinton, urging him to drop the ban on American news organizations opening bureaus in Cuba. Helms argued that a permanent U.S. media pres- ence in Cuba also could provide protection for Cuban dissidents, recording government attempts to repress them for the world to see. Yesterday, White House spokesman Mike McCurry echoed Helms' sentiments: "We in some measure expect that the reporting of truth about the conditions in Cuba would further our policy, which seeks to bring about peaceful democratic change in Cuba." He added that one condition imposed by the United States is that the news organizations "be allowed to operate in an unrestricted environment so that they could freely and impartially report the news." "It's important for us to be there because there's intense interest in the United States and around the world in Cuba," said Eason Jordan, executive vio president of CNN International. Cuba remains one of the few countries that prevents foreign reporters from setting up bureaus, said Thomas Kent, Associated Press international editor. Vietnam had long banned foreign media but now some organizations, including the AP, have been allowed to open bureaus there. The organizations that have applied for U.S. per- mission to open bureaus in Cuba are: CNN, the AP, the Miami Herald, Dow Jones, the Chicago Tribune, the Sun-Sentinel of South Florida, ABC, CBS, Univisi , and the School for Advanced International Studies e Johns Hopkins, which publishes a Cuban newsletter. w U