FREE TYPING! Each hour of editing consultation includes free typing of up to 5 pages. • All subjects • Open 7 days • Call anytime! PRO/EDIT 343-2747 The Dean's Pick of Flicks A five film tent's presents The Wrong Man Tues. Nov. 17 Rm 129, Law School 8:00 p.m. Admission I Rt i Still to come Paths of Glory 11 /24 The Verdict 12/1 CM AT, LSAT, GRE, MCAT Test Your Host! ('Jasses forming now all 345-4420 Visit our new Eugene Center lake a FREE, Diagnostic Exam! KAPLAN The answer to the test question DEATH Continued from Page 1 rail "Wo have witnesses who suw her In mid-flight," he said Birr said the witnesses' ac count* of thn fall worn consls Innl with a fall off thn balcony. Ho said ho didn't believe it was potuiblo sho could have fallon from ono of the PUI windows, which am locatod on the build ing's west side Police saw no indication of possible foul play, Birr said. A nutnlier of students walk ing by tho HJtnn lumad thoir hoods for a glance, only to stop with thoir jaws dropped and exclamations coming from thoir mouths Tho biggest crowd gathered at the 11:20 a m class break, when a number of stu dents stopped to look down into the sunken courtyard at the covered body University seniors Amy Buckhouso and Christina Bai ley said they worn walking lo campus together nearby PLC when the incident occurred They said several others were also there "1 was walking by when someone who was calling emer gency was saying a woman fell from PLC," Buckhouso said "There was a lot of silence The people who were down with her wen; pretty helpless." Bailey said she didn't see the point in going to c lass Monday morning "It's a little bit too disturbing to go sit in class," she said When the incident occurred, senior Matt Burrell said he was standing near where the EMU Food Van normally sits outside of Knight Library "! only caught a glimpse, hut I heard it." he said, "I thought it was construction " Burrell said he also saw un other witness who nearly faint od and Ihen loft the scene "Thorn was a girl who freaked out and took off." ho said "She left as soon as it hap pen od.-' Birr said tho dm eased wom an. who carried* Top brand "roll-your-own" tobacco, may havo boon smoking in tho ninth-floor men's boihroom pri or to her fall He said police smelled a heavy smoke odor upon entering the bathroom, which is located just inside tho balcony door Birr said a member of the University's political science department also said he saw a woman matching the de ceased's description sitting in a chair on the ninth-floor balco ny smoking at 8 a m Police found a multicolored scarf and a pair of dark blue gloves on the balcony and dis covered more of the sumo to bacco and a dark green trendi coat in the bathroom. lil’L) be Ileves the Items may have be longed to the woman. Elaine Greene, the associate dean of students, said counsel ors were present at the site to talk with students who may have been disturbed by the scene. She said further assis tance is available at the Univer sity Counseling Center. the death was the first sui cide on campus since a 1985 incident when a male student awaiting his appointment at the counseling centor jumped three floors to his death from Susan Campbell Hall, said University archivist Keith Richard In May 1970, u 57-year-old dean at the University appar ently jumped to his death from I’LC Leroy Merritt, dean of the School of Llbrarianship, fell from the same balcony. Police urge anyone with in formation relating to Monday's Incident or the woman's identi ty to call 687-5121. CADAVERS Continued from Pige 1 came Irecauso wo wore curious; most of us h«<) never soon ii dead lx>dy Ix’fore The dank smell of preserving chemicals hung In tho air as wr on lured the lab Four black-bagged Ixxfies lay on stainless stool gumeys in tho back of the room Plastic buckets hung underneath the gurneys, hold ing a brown liquid of waste and dissected fat from the bodies Pat Lombardi, our professor, marched over to one of the bodies, zipped open the bag and pulled out a heart it hxikial like a deflated football, which was bow Lombardi i arried it We examiner! It. comparing it to a plas'ic model that looked much more im pressive. I was grateful to Lombardi lor easing us into the cadaver-viewing process I wanted to see |ust a pari of the laxly before 1 look In the whole thing But then the moment came Lombardi motioned us over to ihe gur neys, announcing ibal we were going to see just two of the bodies “That one's getting old and infested," he said, pointing to another black hag "You don't want to look at that one " Ho unzipped Ihe first bag, revealing a hu man form wrapped in damp, brown towels He slowly unwrapped the towels, uncover ing a brownish-purple body that had obvi ously been worked on by analomy students Its skin had Ix-on cut away, showing mus do, bones, tendons and veins all of the same freezer-burned meat color II didn't look like a person, although parts of the body that hadn't boon rut away told Pi* 0K*0 Sludanl* taka a paak at tha innar workings of tha human body in tha cadavar lab locatad in Klamath Hall. mn this thing had once been a man He died when he was about 50 to 70 year* old, Lom bardi gu os sod The other body was u woman about 7S years old She had a large com on the bot tom of one of her brown feet — the one that still had its skin Wisps of gray hair framed her grandmoth erly face, which looked normal when I stood at her feet As 1 moved closer to the other end of the gurney, I saw that the top half of her skull had boon sawed off livery thing inside her head had l>eon removed; only a srmxjlh round cavern like a hollow That one’s getting old and Infested. You don’t want to look at that one.’ — Pat Lombardi. Physiology professor mannequin head wus left. "Did they have names?" a student won dered. Lombardi said the anatomy students usually name their subjects, but ho didn't know what they'd named these. "One year the central theme was (Milli gan's Island." Lombardi said, "There wus the Professor and Ginger ... It depends on who does it. 1 guess.” It was easy to see why the anatomy stu dents would name them like you'd name dolls — they didn't look like humans. Most of my classmates und I were surprised by this, I guess we'd expected something a lit tle more graphic. Lombardi said he'd had the same expecta tions when he was a student. “I thought it would be more bloody, that things would look more real." he said. But the bodies weren't gross the way a horror movie is gross. They were physiolo gy roadmaps lying on stainless steel. Their flesh looked like the flesh of deed animals, which millions of people eat every day. After an hour, 1 peeled off my brown stained gloves and walked calmly into the night. And I thought about becoming a vegetari an. LAW SCHOOL • How do you get in? What do you do when you get there? • What do you do when you get out? by Martha Spence, AtUKialr Dran aullKMUic Indian restaurant in huecnc L*t l" Lmrmeivae c utotacscri!- innruitsuriac L^tsetiaiieoiertsieiisi; c nwi liWiltCI M«>n MM 11-2 30 Sun- Thur* 5-9 p m. In-Sal 5-10 p m You Ju»t jjot lui with the advertising power of tfir Ore({on [hilly KmrnUd. Put tt to work for you ('-all our ml department at 346-3712. .-.Emerald PM: (Ml) MS-3711 7AX: (MJ> 3M Mil PO SOX IIH, CUOEML OR S7SS3