Malichkan Centennial Time Capsule

The Malichkan Centennial Time Capsule was a time capsule buried on December 12th 1979 to commemorate the 180th anniversary of Malichkan independence. The capsule was buried in Central Square and a statue of Antun Stamenov marked its burial. The capsule was opened exactly 20 years after its burial; December 12th 1999, at the Bicentennial Bash celebrations.

Contents
20 symbols of "progress" were placed inside a cylinder the size of a plasma TV. The capsule was buried 6 feet underneath a statue of Antun Stamenov, who was the first European to visit what would later become Malichka.
 * A film reel of the 1949 Independence Day Parade
 * Water from Lake Jasper
 * A piece of coral from the Amethyst Reef, preserved in a bottle of seawater
 * Part of the Malichkan flag from the 1900's.
 * Board and pieces of board games like chess and backgammon, which were popular in Malichka during the late 19th century.
 * A poster featuring the Radiosova/Telesova, TV Malichka's logo.
 * A vinyl record playing out the Malichkan national and royal anthems
 * A pine terrarium.
 * Slovene and Chinese traditional clothing.
 * The skis used by Rupert DeWitte at the 1974 Independence Day Parade's show segment, and his ski suit, goggles and mask.
 * A jar of preserved blueberries.
 * Three photographs: one of Lake Jasper, one of Dvoreki and one of the Amethyst Reef.
 * A can of perfectly-preserved tomato mushroom soup.
 * Posters of the 1949 and 1974 Independence Day Parades.
 * Three other VHS tapes: one of a local cartoon, one detailing the life of a typical Malichkan family, and a message from then-King Roko IV.
 * A trim of fur from a fox (Malichka's national animal)
 * Six drawings from 2 local children depicting what life would be like in 1999.
 * A matryoshka (nested doll)
 * The badge of a police officer.
 * A traditional red envelope.