Path: utzoo!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!sdd.hp.com!spool.mu.edu!uunet!olivea!oliveb!bunker!wtm From: era@ncar.ucar.edu (Ed Arnold) Newsgroups: misc.handicap Subject: Re: Don't touch that dial! Message-ID: <18006@bunker.UUCP> Date: 8 Mar 91 04:28:04 GMT References: <17845@bunker.UUCP> Sender: wtm@bunker.UUCP Reply-To: era@ncar.ucar.edu (Ed Arnold) Distribution: misc Organization: Scientific Computing Division/NCAR, Boulder, CO Lines: 23 Approved: wtm@bunker.UUCP Index Number: 13852 In article <17845@bunker.UUCP> 34AEJ7D@CMUVM.BITNET (Bill Gorman) writes: |Index Number: 13678 | |Here is an article that might be of interest, particularly to those of |us who make extensive use of computerized adaptive devices. | |W. K. (Bill) Gorman |----------------------------Original message---------------------------- ||>From the Boston Globe, Sat. Feb 9, 1991 (page 21, under the obituaries): ||Study links leukemia to power lines, TVs (Lee Siegel, Asociated Press) Paul Brodeur, who has popularized the possible link between EM fields and cancer, wrote a series of articles on this subject which appeared in _The New Yorker_ magazine within the past few years. It sounds like the USC/EPRI study is a repeat of an original study done by a woman researcher here in Denver, about 1978. Any public library should be able to get the New Yorker series of articles for you. -- era@ncar.ucar.edu