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| [00:17.11]Have you ever thought about what you would save from today to show to people in the future? [00:24.19]Some people are thinking about it. [00:27.35]They are involved in a project to save objects in a container that is not to be opened until New Year's Day,1,000 years from now. [00:38.79]The container is a times capsule. [00:42.61]Time capsules are special devices built to protect papers and other objects usually for one hundred years. [00:52.09]The purpose is to help people in the future understand what was important when the time capsule was closed. [01:00.26]The idea for this time capsule came from people at The New York Times newspaper. [01:09.02]So it is called the "Times Capsule". [01:13.38]The papers and objects to be put in it are to help people in the year 3,000 understand about life in the world today. [01:23.36]First, a container was needed to keep the materials safe. [01:29.29]So the newspaper invited forty-eight architects and designers from around the world to take part in a design competition. [01:39.11]An architect from Spain, Santiago Calatrava, won. [01:44.25]His winning design is a shiny steel container. [01:50.34]It has one-and-one-half cubic meters of space inside. [01:55.80]It is shaped like a flower with eight separate parts. [02:01.47]Mister Calatrava says he wanted the container to be beautiful, yet create a feeling of mystery. [02:09.83]Some of the things that will be placed in the Times Capsule have been chosen. [02:16.46]They are being shown along with the Times Capsule at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City. [02:26.18]Among the objects are: Six magazines published by the New York Times, which describe the last 1,000 years. [02:36.71]A recording of the sounds of life in New York City made at 9:09 in the morning of the ninth day of the ninth month of 1999. [02:49.14]Pictures taken of what some people in New York were doing at that same time. [02:54.89]A small container of fresh water from a river in Brazil. [03:00.51]An American military medal. [03:03.90]A ceremonial chair from Zimbabwe. [03:06.93]A Beanie Baby doll popular with collectors. [03:10.69]Marlboro cigarettes. [03:13.65]Other things will be chosen to represent life at the present time. [03:18.90]Visitors to the museum can use two computers to enter their own suggestions. [03:25.58]The objects chosen by a Special committee will be placed in the capsule before it is closed in April. [03:33.92]Then the large steel container will be moved to its permanent home, outside the entrance of the Natural History museum. [03:43.69]Although the Times Capsule is not to be opened for 1,000 years, it should not be forgotten. [03:52.52]A guard will be paid to watch over it and remind people of why it is important. |
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