European Stars and Stripes (Newspaper) - November 7, 1958, Darmstadt, Hesse Friday november 7, 1958 the stars and stripes Pago 7 Job of proving criminal Case often Falls to pathologist by Francis x. Brennan Chicago up Day is Neverdone for the forensic pathologist. For on him Falls the Burden of often proving the innocence or guilt of persons tangled in a web of crime a time consuming and some times unrewarding task. Not a detail must escape the trained Eye of the pathologist in his Pursuit of fact in a homicide investigation. There s Little Chance to turn Back and if there should be the pathologist often can be frustrated by earlier destruction or loss of can t Burn your Bridges be Hind you said or. Angelo pathologist must be certain to document All his findings and be prepared for any new twist in his can mean Long tedious hours just seeking the right equip ment before you begin your Lapi of St. Mary s and St. Mar Garet s hospitals in Kansas City,mo., conducted a seminar on Hom Icide investigations at the joint an Nual meeting of the College of american pathologists and the american society of clinical pathologists. The seminar attended by 34 pathologists was held in Chicago . Archaeologist finds if Icaria Corinth relics Chicago up archaeologist Oscar Broneer of the University of Chicago reports his expedition in Greece made two significant archaeological discoveries a strange Hole in the ground and an ancient , Field director of the expedition near Corinth said he found the Wall during a stroll with his son John. It turned out to be a fabled fortification from the 13thcentury, ., at the end of the Bronze Hole More than 15 feet in diameter Cut in Rock to an in indians fear sellout in . Hogansburg . Up traditional chiefs of the Mohawk indians have charged that elected tribal representatives intend to sell out reservation lands Border ing the St. Lawrence Seaway to state backed interests. Turtle clan chief Alex Gray of the St. Regis reservation Here said our position today is very similar to that of the Tuscarora at the indians fear development of the St. Lawrence River will cause them to lose their lands. The mohawks have been waging a running fight with the state Over income taxes. The new conflict developed when several indians were told by elected chiefs of the tribe to move from the Reserva Tion. State devised system the elective chiefs As contrasted to the hereditary Long House chiefs were set up under a state devised system. The order for the indians to move was the latest step in a Power fight Between the two systems. Most of the indians Are reported to recognize the tradition Al clan chiefs. Gray said the mohawks Felt that industries and commercial enter Prises backed by the state woul attempt to buy or acquire Reser vation land bordering the Seaway earlier the traditional chiefs sent word to All other tribes of the six nations to appoint a delegation to carry charges of aggression bythe state of new York to the United maternity Ward stay unnerves Bachelor Montgomery Ala. Up Walter Graham a Bachelor has been released from the Matern Ify Ward. Never again he said. F it All began when doctors Tol Graham his Teeth were in a bad Way and said 21 of them would have to come out. They said Graham should have the extrac turns performed in the Hospital. The Hospital was crowded. And since the Only thing available was a room in the maternity Sec Tion that a where Graham had to spend three Days. People laughed he said. My mail got sent up to mrs. Gra Ham and the receptionist and mail clerk downstairs did t know i was mule unti i walked out when i walked Down the Cor Ridor i heard giggles. And i really got some wanted a Buddhist priest Cnown depth dated from the 6th r 5th centuries It contained lottery Bronze figurines and , Broneer said shedding Lew Light on an ancient mystery Broneer said the Wall was found near a canal cutting across the corinthian isthmus. Noticing a few boulders in a shapeless pattern Broneer said he and his son Tor away the undergrowth and layers Earth to find the Wall which apparently was erected to Stop an in Vasion from the its construction Broneer Aid the Wall probably was built by the Achaean rulers of the Peloponnesus in their Effort to Stem he tide of hostile incursions. The episodes figure in greek Mythol Wall May have been effective or 100 years Broneer said but the aggressor finally broke through in what is known historically As the Dorian invasion. Thrown in pit Broneer 63, a native of Sweden said the site of the Hole also Washe location of the pan hellenic Isthmian games held every two years for nearly 1,000 years through reek and roman civilizations. A mystery cult entered its activities on the site and the athletic events were part of the ritual he said. The cult he added probably was popular with the poor and was led by priests and priestesses with the Climax of the ritual usually the Slaughter of Young Bullock tossed into flaming pits. Much of the paraphernalia used Ivy the practitioners was crude Broneer said. But Broneer found in the deep Stone pit some exquisite tiny figures of horses and a por poise and other Small tokens of Bronze and Gold that apparently were gifts to the University of Chicago has sponsored Broneer s efforts i Greece since 1952. His discoveries have included the Temple of pose Idon who also is known As Nep tune and the Temple of Palaimo a boy god of the classical Gree period. Texas u. To build Oil Well memorial Austin Tex. Up the University of Texas is building a per manent Campus memorial to an Oil Well the Santa Rita no. 1. This is the Well that blew in May 28, 1923, on land owned by the University in West Texas in no considered an oilman s graveyard the oilmen who leased Minera rights to the land called the Wel the Santa Rita after the Saint of the impossible. But their Success provided the University with the first Revenue to a fund that now totals about $300 million. These two students from Thailand song Koon Attah kor loft26, and Roluna sushi Sumneng 24, Are intent on getting married at the University of Buffalo in new York but so far they Haven t been Able to find a Buddhist priest to conduct the ceremony. The couple who met four years ago want to marry in the . To avoid the fuss of in elaborate wedding in Thailand. United press International photo Success Story reversed research has 2 sides often expensive Flop Charlotte. N. C. A when research succeeds you May get an atomic bomb a Moon rocket a Salk vaccine. But it does t always succeed said Charles h. Rutledge of the Dupont co., which spends about$50 million a year on research. In a speech Here Rutledge showed the other Side of the Ledger. His examples dealt with a scientists who liked to play the horses and a pile of Kapok. Nylon is one third the weight of steel. In horse racing officials weigh the bridle Saddle and other equipment but not the shoes. Ergo the scientist reduced a horse Wear ing Nylon shoes would have an advantage of one length per Furlong Over a horse wearing the Metal scientist produced the Nylon horseshoes but the idea flopped because blacksmiths did t like them. They Are not exactly re search chemists said Rutledge and did t think much of the world War ii started a frantic Washington official decided that there was going to be a Short age of Kapok a floating fiber used in life preservers. The government asked Dupont to develop a substitute. The company s researchers came up with Bubble fill a Cross be tween cellophane and Rayon. Then said Rutledge somebody discovered mountains of Kapok stored in this country. With Bubble fill More expensive than Kapok Dupont was stuck with a stockpile of its development. Not All was lost however the Bubble fill wound up in toys that float in a Bathtub. Mrs. For cites Russ school Aims new London Conn. Up mrs. Franklin d. Roosevelt says the . Should t Fly into a Tan Trum Over r s i a s education system. Speaking before a capacity Audi ence of 1,300 at Connecticut col lege new London the former ambassador to the United nation said both countries educate for two different reasons. She said russian youth is educated under compulsion to must other disciplined and to do things without question. Our country she said educates to give citizens a Choice in the Type of vocation or Field in which they wish to follow. Where pathology has figured prominently in numerous slayings particularly in the past three years inthe slaying of seven youths in the area. It s no help to the pathologist when lie s sought on a Case where evidence has been disturbed. He Seldom gels a perfect Case How Ever. The biggest thing said Lapi is the failure of the Man doing the investigation not. To recognize some important fact. Quite innocent most of tie time it s quite in Nocent. People move bodies or death weapons he said. First the person who finds the bodies might fool for a pulse and. In soloing move i lie a doctor called May open or remove clothing to Check for a heart heat or injury. There s also the problem of a Well trained pathologist not being available immediately so a Coroner has to Call in any but Lapi warned that the further a Man is away from being an expert the less proficient the forensic pathologist differ fro Hospital pathologists Lapi said in that the forensic pathologist is interested in every scrap of information that the body the Hospital pathologist he said seek just the cause of death. Difficult cases Lapi admitted however there Are difficult cases where no find ing of death can be include death by acute alcoholism epilepsy and Many kinds of Poison. During the seminar pathologists viewed pertinent fads of five cases and were required to determine their course of investigation and whether the accused was innocent or guilty. In one Case handled by or. Rus sell Fisher chief medical examiner for Maryland a youth was charged with manslaughter in the Rifle death of his companion while target shooting. Entered backward investigation by revealed the Bullet had Richo cycled and entered the victim s body Back Ward. A tuft of cloth fiber was found on the rear of the Bullet along Wilh impressions of fabric from the youth s trousers. But even a pathologist can be wrong. Though not often. Before the answer was revealed half of the class Felt the suspect was guilty of manslaughter theother half believed he was inno cent. The suspect Fisher disclosed was acquitted of the charge on the basis of evidence produced by pathologists. Artificial Bone May help fight deafness Washington up govern ment scientists Are working on an artificial mastoid Bone they plan to use in tests to help restore the hearing of some deaf persons. The Commerce department announced that physicists at the National Bureau of standards Here already have made an artificial , the department said they Are designing an artificial mastoid the spongy Bone behind the human ear. The Man made mastoid will nol look like the real thing or actually be inserted in anyone s head the department explained. But it will be designed to operate exactly like a real mastoid and will be used in the Laboratory to test instruments for diagnosing deafness. The artificial ear is used to Check instruments that test the extent of deafness by piping sounds directly into the ear. The synthetic mastoid will be used for checking devices that select degrees of hear ing loss by sending sound vibrations through the Bones of the head. The artificial mastoid will Aid inthe perfection of instruments that will Tell doctors when a person s deafness might be cured by an operation. Germany honors professor in . Atlanta a. Special the West German government has honoured or. Franklin h. Littell professor of Church history at Emory University Here for his efforts in behalf of German Ameri can . Karl Scho Chach German Consul at Atlanta bestowed West Germany s High Coss of Merit on Littell for his work toward a Betler understanding and a closer relationship Between the German and american was a member of the religious affairs staff of the .high commission for Germany in 1949-51, and was senior protestant adviser in 1951.he became senior representative in Europe of the Franz Liebe foundation of St. Paul minn., in 1953, directing a program designed to further political science and civil education through Grants for research. He also was a member of the Fulbright commission for Ger Many in 1954-58
