...I change at Menards. It's a nice '70-D with the obverse well struck by a good di in solid AU-50. There is a very shallow inclusion near the date cased by a scrap of paper or plastic. The reverse is a wreck it is poorly struck by a worn die so much detail is missing. It could have come from a BU roll but more likely someone saved it because of the strike through and it just ended up in circulation. The coin has no value in the current market but it is quite unique. Odd how "rare" means nothing any longer because of a 515 million mintage.
I would bombard these forums with questions if I wasn't such a retard with a camera and could take decent coin pictures.
There's nothing remarkable or photoworthy about the coin except its very existence and the technologically inept owner. I'm accustomed to seeing boring, dull, and heavily scarred old coins. Not things that have escaped entropy or collections.