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  1. Between 1978 and the early 1990s, UFO researchers such as Stanton T. Friedman, William Moore, and the team of Kevin D. Randle and Donald R. Schmitt interviewed many people who claimed to have had a connection with the events at Roswell in 1947, generating competing and conflicting accounts.

    • Flying Saucer

      An alleged flying saucer seen over Passaic, New Jersey in...

    • Glenn Dennis

      Glenn Dennis (March 24, 1925 – April 28, 2015) was a founder...

  2. Notes about 1979 Topps. Two PSA Gem Mint 10 #116 Smith rookie cards sold for $20,852 and $19,567 in 2012. A PSA Gem Mint 10 #650 Rose sold for $5,100 in 2013. A PSA Gem Mint 10 #55 Stargell sold for $2,190 in 2013. A PSA Gem Mint 10 #116 Smith sold for $33,460 in 2016. Two PSA Gem Mint 10 #116 Smith cards sold for $36,000 and $38,976 each in 2017.

  3. 1979 Topps card list & price guide. Ungraded & graded values for all '79 Topps Baseball Cards. Click on any card to see more graded card prices, historic prices, and past sales. Prices are updated daily based upon 1979 Topps listings that sold on eBay and our marketplace. Read our methodology .

    • Here Are The Agreed-Upon Facts About The Roswell crash.
    • The Government Changed Its Story About The Roswell ‘Saucer’—A Few times.
    • Was Roswell’s ‘UFO’ from The USSR?

    Sometime between mid-June and early July 1947, rancher W.W. “Mac” Brazel found the wreckage on his sizable property in Lincoln County, New Mexico, approximately 75 miles north of Roswell. Several “flying disc” and “flying saucer” stories had already appeared in the national press that summer, leading Brazel to believe the wreckage—which included ru...

    The following day, the Roswell Daily Record ran a storyabout the crash and the RAAF’s astonishing claim. But U.S. Army officials quickly reversed themselves on the “flying saucer” claim, stating that the found debris was actually from a weather balloon, releasing photographs of Major Marcel posing with pieces of the supposed weather balloon debris ...

    Another questionable theory—advanced by the book Area 51: An Uncensored History of America’s Top Secret Military Base—states that the crashed flying vehicle was neither extraterrestrial nor the work of U.S. spies. Rather, it was an unconventional plan to induce widespread American panic, implemented by Soviet strongman Joseph Stalin. An unnamed sou...

    • 5 min
  4. On July 8, 1947, a headline in the local paper in Roswell, New Mexico ignited 70 years of "flying saucer" sightings. NASM

  5. Nov 9, 2009 · Print Page. The Roswell UFO incident took place in the summer of 1947, when a rancher discovered unidentifiable debris in his sheep pasture outside Roswell, New Mexico. Officials from the local ...

  6. Oct 20, 2016 · In this 2011 Ask an Expert talk, Dr. Roger Launius explores the 1947 Roswell Incident, an event that entangled the United States Army in UFO conspiracy theories that persist to this day.

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