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SOUTHLAND MAN REPORTS DRIVEWAY FIND.


Byline: David Bradvica Staff Writer

NORCO Norco, city (1990 pop. 23,302), Riverside co., SE Calif., a suburb of Los Angeles; inc. 1964. Diversified agriculture is being displaced by rapid urban development. Lubricating oils are manufactured. State prisons for men and women are nearby.  - The way David Scherotter sees it, he either touched a piece of history on Friday, or just a very odd-looking piece of wind-blown trash.

The 31-year-old Norco High School teacher believes a burnt hard plastic piece of debris he found in his driveway after coming home from work about 4:45 p.m. Friday may be a piece of the space shuttle space shuttle, reusable U.S. space vehicle. Developed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), it consists of a winged orbiter, two solid-rocket boosters, and an external tank.  Columbia, which disintegrated Feb. 1 while re-entering the atmosphere, killing all seven astronauts on board.

Scherotter reported the piece of debris to the Riverside County Sheriff's Department The Riverside County Sheriff's Department serves the unincorporated areas of Riverside County, California; as well as several incorporated contract cities. History
Unincorporated Areas Served

  • Aguanga
  • Anza
  • Bermuda Dunes
  • Cabazon
, which has placed the debris piece in its evidence locker for safekeeping Safekeeping

The storage of assets or other items of value in a protected area.

Notes:
Individuals may use self-directed methods of safekeeping or the services of a bank or brokerage firm.
 until officials at NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
NASA
 in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Independent U.S.
 come out to claim it, sheriff's spokesman Dennis Gutierrez said late Saturday.

For the moment, no one is sure if the debris was part of the space shuttle. But Scherotter said he noticed a resemblance to a piece of possible shuttle debris that was found earlier in the week more than 100 miles away in Joshua Tree in the San Bernardino County high desert.

``I looked up the other piece on the Internet and I thought, 'This looks similar,''' said Scherotter, who quickly took several digital photos of the debris with a ruler nearby to indicate is size, about two inches by three inches. ``It was burnt looking on the back side and had a charcoal-like residue.''

Sheriff's deputies are withholding judgment on what the debris might or might not be.
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Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Feb 9, 2003
Words:242
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