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Monday, May 20
The Indiana Daily Student

Debbie Corcoran stands in her kitchen and talks to her daughter Sydney Reed on Feb. 16 in Martinsville, Indiana. Debbie's house is located on a chemical plume, which is where chemicals have seeped into the soil and evaporated into the air. She doesn't use tap water anymore and thinks it tastes worse than pennies. Instead, she buys gallons and bottles of water in bulk. Ty Vinson

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Debbie Corcoran stands in her kitchen and talks to her daughter Sydney Reed on Feb. 16 in Martinsville, Indiana. Debbie's house is located on a chemical plume, which is where chemicals have seeped into the soil and evaporated into the air. She doesn't use tap water anymore and thinks it tastes worse than pennies. Instead, she buys gallons and bottles of water in bulk.