Thursday, April 16, 2020
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Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
Professor dies after getting COVID-19 By Shelby Anderson anderssk@iu.edu | @ShelbyA04288075
TY VINSON | IDS
Debbie Corcoran and her daughter Sydney Reed sit in their living room Feb. 16 in Martinsville, Indiana. Sydney was diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma, a rare form of bone cancer, in 2015, and her doctors told her it was caused by environmental factors.
On tainted soil Her childhood ended when she was diagnosed with cancer at 14. Her mom has been battling the system she thinks caused it. By Ty Vinson vinsonjo@iu.edu | @ty_vinson_
MARTINSVILLE, Ind. On Thanksgiving of 2015, Debbie Corcoran watched her daughter pull the hair off her scalp in clumps and pile it next to her plate of turkey and mashed potatoes. Debbie got her a trash can. It had only been a few weeks since Debbie’s daughter, Sydney, was diagnosed with Ewing Sarcoma, a rare form of bone cancer in her spine, at age 14. “I think it’s time to shave my head,” Sydney said. Before that Thanksgiving, Sydney’s hair was her everything. It had grown past her shoulders for the first time, stretching down her back in a blonde curtain. It was the hair she inherited from her mom. Debbie told her daughter she’d shave her head with her when it was time. Sydney said it felt like pity, a cancer cliche she finds annoying instead of supportive. When people get cancer, everyone around them shaves their heads. She wanted her mom to keep her hair so she could curl it, braid it, play with it. It seemed unfair to Sydney, having to give up more to the house that may have given her cancer. After dinner, Sydney’s father held the razor over her head in the kitchen. At first, Sydney laughed. She told her dad she wasn’t sure if she was ready. “It’s coming out one way or the other,” he said. He started to shave, and her face contorted. She
didn’t have a mirror, so she had to guess what it looked like. After half of her hair was gone, she reached to touch her head. She screamed. * * * Doctors told Sydney the cancer’s cause was environmental, from issues the city of Martinsville neglected to tell residents about as, for decades, toxic chemicals spread under the earth. Dry cleaners and manufacturing companies in the 1980s improperly disposed of chemicals downtown in landfills and in poorly stored metal drums. The toxic chemical tetrachloroethylene, or PCE, seeped into the groundwater and soil. Martinsville’s water runs from three wells. All wells were tested in the early 2000s, but only the third came back with high levels of PCE. That contamination site, the Pike and Mulberry Street Superfund Site, is the only one currently being remediated by the Environmental Protection Agency. The cleanup is funded by Masterwear Corporations, one of the companies responsible. PCE is widely known as the dry cleaning liquid. If disposed of properly, there is no issue. However, according to the EPA, both short- and long-term exposure to the chemical can cause dangerous side effects in humans and animals, including several types of cancers. As time passed, the PCE under the city evaporated
into the atmosphere, creating a chemical plume contaminating homes, schools and businesses above the earth. Sydney has lived most of her life above the contamination. Her house, as well as the elementary and middle school she attended, sit on a chemical plume site. The city contains four or five sites, meaning many homes could be in the same position, according to information Debbie found independently and with researchers from Purdue University. But no one is sure how many sites there are because they’re hard to map. Sydney’s treatment has cost around $3 million so far. Debbie struggles to cover the 20% they’re responsible for. They can’t afford to move out of the house they believe is poisoning them, or out of the city that once said there were no issues with the water. Debbie said nobody else in the city is taking the contamination as seriously as they should. Despite efforts to rally her neighbors, most have been skeptical. “You gotta die from something,” one told her. * * * Sydney’s symptoms started in eighth grade as extreme pain in her back and knees. A childhood playing softball conditioned her to small aches and pains, but this was different. One night, after a motorcycle ride made the
COURTESY PHOTO
Sydney Reed, 18, poses with a sign stating she's cancer free Sept. 1, 2016. Sydney was diagnosed with Ewing Sarcoma in her spine when she was 14 and was told it was environmentally caused.
pain worse, she woke up screaming. Debbie took her to the emergency room at IU Health Bloomington, where a doctor told her the joints connecting her spine to her hips were inflamed. She was sent home without a test or blood work and told to take Motrin. She’d go through a bottle of Motrin a month. In class, she would ask her teachers to be excused so she could pop open the bottle she kept in her locker. Two months later, Sydney had an MRI at an Indianapolis clinic. Lying on a hard surface for the MRI was excruciating. She wailed the whole hourlong drive home, feeling every bump in the road cut into her spine. She didn’t lay completely flat for
two months, even to sleep. She’d sit up on the L of the couch at her mom’s, surrounded by pillows, watching “The Walking Dead.” After doctors noticed a mass on her spine, Sydney went back for another MRI. This time, the technicians put pillows in the machine to make her more comfortable. When her doctor lifted her off the table, she bit into his shoulder from the pain. Sydney’s dog, Mikey, had arthritis. She made quesadillas to share with him on Halloween 2015. It felt right — they were in pain together, so might as well share a meal. When she bent down to feed him, her back got tense. She went to lay down on the SEE SYDNEY, PAGE 3
City accelerates infrastructure projects By Joey Bowling jobowl@iu.edu | @joeybowling8
Various road-improvement and infrastructure projects in Bloomington have started during Gov. Eric Holcomb’s stay-athome order, which is scheduled to last until April 20. The city's goal is to have the projects finished by the time IU and Monroe County Community School Corporation return to their regular academic schedules, according to a city press release. City of Bloomington spokesperson Yaël Ksander said the city is accelerating these projects during the pandemic so they are as nondisruptive as possible to residents. The contractors and construction crews are following Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention protocols, such as spacing out construction workers and providing masks. “When business resumes as normal and students come back to Bloomington, we can enjoy these enhancements and not have had to suffer through all these closures during a really busy time,” Ksander said. The Kirkwood Avenue Maintenance Project began around April 1, replacing deteriorating brick sidewalks at each intersection and installing removable barriers for use during street fairs and festivals. During the project, vehicles can’t drive through areas of the road under construction, such as the intersections of Dunn, Lincoln and Walnut, according to the press
CARL COTE | IDS
A crosswalk construction sign is pictured April 8 at Kirkwood and Indiana avenues. Various roadimprovement and infrastructure projects in Bloomington have started during Gov. Eric Holcomb’s stay-at-home order, which is scheduled to last until April 20.
release. Construction is expected to be fully completed by the end of July. The School Zone Enhancements Project is the second project aimed to be completed quicker than planned, installing signs
IU chemistry professor Dennis Peters died Tuesday from complications of COVID-19, according to the chemistry graduate program’s Facebook page. IU spokesperson Chuck Carney confirmed Peters' death. Peters contracted the virus while in the hospital recovering from a fall he took over spring break, according to the graduate program's Facebook page. He was 82. The chemistry graduate program posted on Facebook and Twitter about Peters' importance to the department and how appreciated he was. Many people left comments saying how much they will miss him. “His passion for his students was contagious,” one of Peters' former teaching assistants, Jonathan Meyers, wrote in a Facebook comment. Peters was born in Los Angeles, according to his research group website. He earned his bachelor’s degree at the California Institute of Technology in 1958. He began working as an instructor for IU in 1962 after receiving his Ph.D. in analytical chemistry from Harvard University. He has filled various roles in IU’s chemistry department, including associate chair, graduate adviser, director of General Chemistry, coordinator of Undergraduate Studies and advisor for graduate students in the Master of Arts for Teachers Program. He has won 11 IU teaching awards and is coauthor of five textbooks on analytical chemistry. In 2006, Peters was recognized for 50 years of membership to the American Chemical Society. In 2007, he was elected as a Fellow of the Electrochemical Society.
and flashing beacons in school zones throughout the city. The signs and beacons will alert drivers to slow their speed. The beacons will go off for a short time before and after school near ar-
eas where students have to cross the street. The project is expected to be completed before the start of the 2020-21 school year, according to the press release.
COURTESY OF INDIANA UNIVERSITY
Chemistry professor Dennis Peters poses for a headshot. Peters died Tuesday.
IU senior advances to ‘Jeopardy!’ finals By Claudia Gonzalez-Diaz clabgonz@iu.edu | @clabgonz
IU senior Tyler Combs won $32,800 in the first semifinal round of the "Jeopardy!" 2020 College Championship on Monday and will advance to the final rounds Thursday and Friday. Combs will compete against the winners of the two semifinal rounds on Tuesday and Wednesday. The three finalists will start with $0 for each day of the final round, and the scores accumulated from both days will determine the winner. Combs competed against University of Florida sophomore Kayla Kalhor and Northwestern University freshman Beni Keown in the semifinal round. Before Final Jeopardy!, Combs had $16,400. The clue for the round was: “This word for a concept in Eastern religions comes from Latin roots for ‘made in flesh’ and ‘again.’” Combs, who wagered all of his money on the question, correctly answered: “What is reincarnation?!” Combs and Kalhor answered correctly, boosting them to first and second place. Keown, leading most of the show, ended in third place.