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By Sean Holstege
STAFF WRITER
LIVERMORE --- You had to feel a little sympathy
for the men in orange vests.
For two weeks, city groundskeepers
have poked the turf of Centennial
Park and waved their metal detectors over its surface. They have
dug and filled and, in some cases, re-dug six holes in the ground.
And, still, no time capsule.
On Tuesday, they tried again
to locate the mysterious relic.
About 40 people watched the
latest effort, more Quin typically show tip for a City Council
meeting on a slow night. As local work crews, treasure hunters
and
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history buffs explored the
area around the park's totem pole, passers-by honked, hollered
and hooted from their cars
"We found it. It's under
Donut Wheel," shouted one.
Granada High School was on
lunch break.
"Third time's a charm,"
shouted another.
Actually, no. Neither was
the fourth. Or the fifth. Or the sixth hole.
There was a moment of excitement
when Bob Howard's Depth Plus metal detector started whistling,
buzzing and squeallng like R2-D2.
A 2-foot hole revealed something
solid.
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"It could be a 15-Inch
gas (line). In which case; we'll all meet in heaven," one
worker said.
Searchers did find three pieces
of rusty metal: a loop, a 4-inch-square sheet and a 10-inch bar.
After that, the metal detectors went silent.
Barry Schrader, who convinced
the city to unearth the Centennial Time Capsule, said it's time
to bring in the Navy. A unit stationed in Vallejo helped sheriff's
deputies near Sacramento find unexploded bombs in a rail yard
there last year, using technology similar to ultrasound, explained
Mike Miller, Livermore's Public Works director.
The treasure hunters haven't
gIven up, yet, though.
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"If it's there, we'll
find it," said Jack Isacoff of the Mount Diablo Metal Detecting
Club.
If it's there.
Tuesday night, he planned
to ask the 100-member club to send about a dozen people with
metal detectors to the Livermore park. Isacoff said the club
helps police find lost evidence by fanning out and methodically
scouring an area section by section.
One mystery might have been
cleared up Tuesday. Schrader and others don't actually know what's
in the capsule. A 1974 Herald photo shows volunteers preparing
to fill a canister, which resembles an old milk churn, with a
bumper sticker, a bottle of Livermore wine and some beer mugs.
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