Images (3)
Document
| id |
id
75722853
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 3June 5th,1928.
Dr. Herman Schlundt,
University of Missouri,
Room 110 New Chemistry Bldg.,
Columbia, Mo.
Dear Dr. Schlundt:
It is my privilege to advise you that the cases of
the five complainants suing us for injuries claimed during their employment
by us, have been zettled out of court. The essential points of the settle-
ment are as follows:
Each girl is bo receive $10,000 cash plus an annual
pension of $600.00 such pension to be paid as long as the complainant is
suffering from the result of her employment by us.
A Board consisting of three (3) medical men, one to be
appointed by the plaintiffs, one by ourselves and the third selected by the
other two, is to pass upon the conditions of the girls and judge whether
or not they are suffering at this time as a result of their employment.
No one who has been in any way connected with the present litigation is
subject to appointment on this Board, and those who are appointed must have
had experience with radium. We feel that such a Board will be able to handle
the situation from an unbiased standpoint, and that eventually the truth
regarding this situation will be put before the public.
We feel at the present that these suits have been built
almost exclusively upon public sentiment by the unscrupulous methods of
their attorney Raymond H. Berry. It is surprising that a man of lir.Berry's
caliber can do when he sets about it. The oposition unfortunately became
interested in this proposition through the solicitation of Dr. Sochocky,
and their cases have been built upon the foundations laid by him. It is our
belief that Dr. Sochocky has been the guiding factor in indicating at the
outset that there was a hazard connected in this work, and unfortunately his
reason for doing do was not based on any légitinate purpose. Fortunately for
him he became associated with such a man as Martland, who had no reason to
believe that his purposes were other than the best, and was therefore, led
along through the path which Dr. Sochocky indicated. Dr. Martland and others
have operated in the best of faith, but unfortunately in our opinion have
operated upon preverted facts and misinformation.
We are only too glad to recomize what may be considered
legitimate cases, but we do not believe that any one of the five are such.
It is possible that the Freyer case may have bs one time contained a small
amount of radio-active material, but she has at this time completely eliminated
same, and her chance for recovery under peoper medical attention is probably
good.
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to