The guy holding the Unicorn American Flag With Tie Dye Glasses For 4th Of July T-Shirt Furthermore, I will do this stick in the picture? That’s the HR director giving the onboarding presentation to the new cleaning staff. They have high expectations for their staff, or else… You should look into the Burke and Hare Murders. Due to a lack of cadavers for educational/research purposes in the UK, these guys would murder vulnerable people, who essentially wouldn’t be missed, and then basically sell the bodies to Medical schools and professors. This eventually led to the introduction of the Human Anatomy act in 1832, which set out ethical and legislative guidelines for body donation. Really interesting stuff, I had to do a section of my dissertation on it. I’ve seen this in person! It’s located in the museum at A.T. Still University in Kirksville, MO. The university is an osteopathic medicine school and they’re quite proud of their preserved nervous system Me too! If I remember correctly, there are like 3 fully dissected human nervous systems in the world and all or most of them came from A.T. Still. Or maybe that is just something they say on the tour.
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I saw that when I was in highschool and figured it was common at medical schools. Reddit told me that I had actually seen something hyper rare “According to Joanne Murray, historian and director of the Unicorn American Flag With Tie Dye Glasses For 4th Of July T-Shirt Furthermore, I will do this College of Medicine’s Legacy Center, the story goes that Harriet suffered from tuberculosis and, just before she died at age 35, she willed her body to Dr. Weaver and requested it be used to benefit science. We presume that she saw and knew the kind of work he was doing and maybe they had conversations,” Murray says. “So, she decided to leave her body to him. I don’t know that she had any idea how he would use it.” Edit: I’m skimming through this Atlas Obscura article alleging that the subject is actually completely unknown, and that the name Harriet was only attached to the model years later when someone bothered to care. It seems like it comes down purely to the word of Dr. Weaver as to who she even was and whether she consented.