Capitol times. (Middletown, Pa.) 1982-2013, October 20, 1999, Image 12

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    A. Porn enthusiasts causing trouble at
Capital College in spring 1985. B. Getting
rowdy during the “Rites of Spring” 1983.
C. Meade Heights residents may want to
think twice before drinking the water or
breathing the air, Spring 1985. D. Stoned
students in the swingin’ 70s gather round
the monolith, Fall 1987. E. Guests such as
Nicholas Cage see how long they can
stand in various awkward positions in the
Student Center, Spring 1985.
Pbofo% by Bob Price
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A page from history
a?=*is oeur S'inj’Wiwf !!!«Ltih, was Nit! by students and unwed behind Olmsted I
<u- a ?;Uv» hit p-
PSH FLASHBACK
Heights dump
checked for toxics
8y N«a Myers ■
Preliminary tatting at the
drums recovered from the
Meade Heights waste dump
revealed no legally hazardous
substances, according to Cob
one! Robert Lombard, Assis
tant for Bio-Environmental
Engineering in the Surgeon
General’s Office,
“A chemical is a hazardous
waste maty if it's listed as a
hazardous waste (or! if it
posses!** certain
characteristics. . , such a» ’ea
uaction procedure iovfchy’,
corrosivity or ignitability,”
lombard satd,
lombard said that nine
drums were removed from the
site at the north end of the
Meade Heights path in
December by Roy F, Weston
Associates of Philadelphia,
The drums contained a
sUidgfthfce substance dust the
site inspector from Weston
thought was old crankcase oii,
he explained.
Marian Pzcdsy, the site in
spector, said that all of the
drams were punctured and their
contents trad raised with the
surrounding soil. She
chaiaetvrized the substance as
"like a tar."
Lombard said additional
testing wiii be done to detuf
atine what the substance is.
Results of that and other testing
on water, sediment and soil
samples are expected by
December 30, 1985 -
ftetday said all of the drums,
or their remnants, wete packed
in “overpack drums" and
removed by the Delaware Con
tainer Company, g
sub-contractor.
Maurine Clever, an industrial
hygienist with the University’s
AU <**