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On March 18, 1937, nearly 300 people died when the New London Consolidated School exploded in East Texas a school so wealthy from oil money that it had marble floors, yet they tapped into an unregulated gas line to save $300 a month. The tragedy reveals the complex calculations we still make between economic efficiency and human safety and why the lessons we learned weren't quite the ones we needed.
By Richard G BackusOn March 18, 1937, nearly 300 people died when the New London Consolidated School exploded in East Texas a school so wealthy from oil money that it had marble floors, yet they tapped into an unregulated gas line to save $300 a month. The tragedy reveals the complex calculations we still make between economic efficiency and human safety and why the lessons we learned weren't quite the ones we needed.