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Jacobsen, a contributing editor the Los Angeles Times magazine, told NPR that said she knows people will be skeptical. "But I absolutely believe the veracity of my source, and I believe it was important that I put his information out there because it is the tip of a very big iceberg," Jacobsen said. Julie Schuster, executive director of the International UFO Museum and Research Center in Roswell, told the Albuquerque Journal she hasn't read the book. But any new theories fuel public interest, and that's terrific, she said. "Every time something new comes out, it piques somebody's curiosity somewhere, and the come to Roswell, and they come to the museum," Schuster said. ___ Information from: The Santa Fe New Mexican,
http://www.sfnewmexican.com/
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