01998mpc 2200277 a 4500001000800000005001700008008004100025035002400066035002200090040001900112245003700131300001900168545053800187520056100725540006701286555010401353524010701457650001801564690001701582650003001599650001901629650001701648700002501665905002101690998000901711202108019991209120000.0900713i19891993nyu eng d a(CStRLIN)NYCV90A112 a(NIC)notisAKK5430 aNICcNICeappm00aCold fusion archive,f1989-1993. a16.9 cubic ft. bIn March, 1989, researchers at two universities in Utah separately announced that they had created nuclear fusion at room temperatures. The resulting furor generated hundreds of technical, semi-technical, and popularized articles, as well as large amounts of written material. This archive was collected by Dr. Bruce V. Lewenstein, a professor in the Dept. of Communication at Cornell University, Dr. Thomas F. Gieryn of Indiana University, and Dr. William Dougan, and others, with the assistance of the National Science Foundation aThe archive consists of four major types of information: original manuscript and published materials produced by principles in cold fusion; mass media articles about cold fusion, including newspapers, magazines, books, radio broadcasts, and television broadcasts and consisting of original clippings, off-the-air recordings, computer printouts, digital camera cassettes, and transcripts; taped interviews with researchers, research administrators, public information representatives, and journalists involved in cold fusion; and items of material culture. aTaped interviews have individual restrictions. Consult guide.0 aUnpublished guide: "The Cornell Cold Fusion Archive Finding Aid," Bruce V. Lewenstein, Draft, 1993. aCold Fusion Archives, #4451. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library. 0aScience news. 0aCold fusion. 0aCommunication in science. 0aNuclear fusion 0aCold fusion.1 aLewenstein, Bruce V. a19991209120000.0 s9554