use: Daniel Romero Munoz, who led the team that identified Mengele's remains in 1985, saw an opportunity to put them to use, according to Guelph Mercury. Several months ago, the head of the Department of Legal Medicine at the University of S o Paulo's Medical School obtained permission to use them in his forensic medical courses. Dr. Today, his students are now learning their trade studying Mengele's bones and connecting them to the life story of the man called the Angel of Death. Mengele died nearly four decades ago when he drowned off the coast of the state of S o Paulo. The bones will be helpful to teach how to examine the remains of an individual and then match that information with data in documents related to the person, Munoz said recently, flanked by students.
(www.immigrantscanada.com). As
reported in the news.
Tagged under use, students topics.
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