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Suggested Reading wishing to learn more about UFOs is obtaining informa- tion that can be trusted. A good deal of the most up-to-date and reliable information is published at conferences or in UFO journals with very limited distribution, whereas much of the material that is widely available, whether in supermarket tab- loids, on computer information systems, or in mass-circulation newspapers and magazines, is often of dubious reliability. The following is a list of some of the books, reports, films, and organizations that should be consulted to learn more about crashed saucers and UFOs in general. Ts FIRST STEP, and often the biggest obstacle, for those Books Berlitz, Charles, and Moore, William L., The Roswell Incident. New York: Grosset and Dunlop, 1980. 184 pages. Paperback edition by Berkley Books, 1988 ($3.95). Contains the first interviews with many of the key players of the events in New Mexico, but also includes a good deal of sensationalized, extraneous material. Randle, Kevin, and Donald R. Schmitt. UFO Crash at Roswell, New York: Avon, 1991. 327 pages ($4.95). A considerable effort went into locating new witnesses, but the book, with- out a solid basis, discounts Gerald Anderson, moves the Barney Barnett story to near Corona, and casually dismisses the MJ-12 documents. Weiner, Tim, Blank Check: The Pentagon's Black Budget. New