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Univ: LLUSCO GUTIERREZ GISELA ESTHER

It was published in the Miami yesterday 1500 workers

The great pIramids of Giza

Dr. Joseph Davidovits


chemist

secret
observación scholars
workforce
credited

amazing strand

mixture
inturn state
crashed ocuner beings
actually statement hiding
balloon indeed Because of
bodies several likely
Roswell sheriff
Captain Marcell
People from several contries
Human beings
Alien beings
Other planets
aliens
aliens
That incident dates back to the morning of July 8 of that year. The United States woke up to a
surreal news story that grabbed some headlines in its newspapers. "Military captures flying saucer
on ranch near Roswell," read the front page of the Roswell Daily Record that morning. From that
day on, that lonely and somewhat dull little town ceased to be the dairy capital of the Southwest
and became known as one of the most mysterious places in the country.

The alleged interplanetary encounter had occurred a few days before the media scandal. On July
2, "Farmer William Brazel was walking over grassy pastures to his flock of sheep. A summer storm
had swept across the desert the night before. Suddenly, an unfamiliar sight caught his attention:
on the ground lay metal debris," describes the article Roswell's Mysteries Are Life's Mysteries
published in The New York Times in 2017, on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the case.

Brazel reported the event to the police. Authorities inspected the find. Days later, the U.S. Army
assured that, in fact, the Roswell UFO was a weather balloon. "These releases disproving the
spacecraft theory quickly blocked the case and from then on Roswell was forgotten for many
years. In the early 1980s, some retired military personnel revived the mystery," Sierra says.

There was a renewed interest in the mystery. The television series Project UFO: UFO Investigation
(1978-1979), a sort of precursor to The X-Files, popularized the concept of Project Blue Book, as
the U.S. Army calls Air Force studies of UFOs to determine if they pose a threat to national
security. Among these reports (and the series) is the Roswell report.
In the 1990s, other disclosers went back to Air Force reports to shed light on the true nature of the
alleged Roswell UFO. The important thing, they said, was not the Blue Book but Project Mogul:
"That project attempted to detect (by means of balloons capable of reaching great heights) Soviet
nuclear weapons," wrote science popularizer Carl Sagan in The World and Its Demons (Planeta,
1995).

For some believers in the UFO phenomenon, the Roswell case will never cease to be indisputable
proof that we have had contact with extraterrestrials.

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