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| Detroit Free Press, October 2, 1955 (enlarge) |
What turned an ideal suburban neighborhood into a funeral parlor of
cancer cases? Nothing, according to Wayne County officials and the
Michigan Cancer Foundation, though the Freep does sneak a statistic into
one article that states that cancers of unknown origins were 70% higher
in men in both the Gloria Acres subdivision and Wayne itself. Which
they considered a statistical anomaly and discounted it quoting that a
300% increase would be cause for alarm. Supposed contamination from the
nearby Eloise site was rarely brought into the conversation. Nor was William Murdock's successful lawsuit from 1898 which accused the Superintendents of the Poor of contaminating the Rouge River.
cancer cases? Nothing, according to Wayne County officials and the
Michigan Cancer Foundation, though the Freep does sneak a statistic into
one article that states that cancers of unknown origins were 70% higher
in men in both the Gloria Acres subdivision and Wayne itself. Which
they considered a statistical anomaly and discounted it quoting that a
300% increase would be cause for alarm. Supposed contamination from the
nearby Eloise site was rarely brought into the conversation. Nor was William Murdock's successful lawsuit from 1898 which accused the Superintendents of the Poor of contaminating the Rouge River.
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| Detroit Free Press, December 29, 1983 (enlarge) |
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| Detroit Free Press, February 11, 1984 (enlarge) |
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| Detroit Free Press, July 9, 1984 |








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