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Penn issues second apology for housing remains of MOVE bombing victims
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Princeton University students to hold protest in support of MOVE community -
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Princeton owes the families of the MOVE bombing victims answers
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An online course offered by Princeton University on the platform Coursera called “Real Bones: Adventures in forensic anthropology” has been suspended in the wake of a controversy about how the remains of MOVE bombing victims were handled by two anthropologists who taught at the University of Pennsylvania and Princeton University.
The class was taught by Janet Monge, a curator in the physical anthropology section at the University of Pennsylvania Museum who was also an adjunct professor at Penn and a visiting professor at Princeton.
Alan Mann, who is now a professor emeritus at Princeton, was given the bones by the Philadelphia Medical Examiner’s Office for forensic analysis in 1985. He and Monge were never able to positively identify the remains from the police bombing of the MOVE home in Philadelphia.
University apologizes after losing remains of 2 children killed in Philadelphiaâs 1985 MOVE bombing
Remains of 2 children killed in 1985 MOVE bombing missing By KYW staff | April 27, 2021 at 9:13 AM EDT - Updated April 27 at 9:17 AM
PHILADELPHIA (KYW) - The University of Pennsylvania is apologizing for keeping and then losing track of the remains of two young people killed in the 1985 MOVE bombing.
The University of Pennsylvania has retained external legal counsel to figure out why the Ivy League schoolâs museum for decades held onto the remains.
In a series of statements, the university apologized to the Africa family, the remaining members of a pro-revolutionary organization that was entangled in a heated standoff with police and the city in the 70â²s and 80â²s.