Interesting... I cannot find it mentioned on the 60-Minutes website, but I
also cannot find any future program schedule.. only this week's or past.
Also, the cnbc.com link looks to be legit in that it is dated 2012.  The
program is slated to air next Tuesday which would not surprise me as LENR/CF
is getting more and more press, and also the latest LENR conference at W&M,
and Dr.Duncan's talk there... it certainly wouldn't surprise me if a
reporter attended that conference and the reporter was impressed by the
presentations, which triggered this update by the 60-Min crew.
-mark 

-----Original Message-----
From: Roarty, Francis X [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, July 11, 2012 11:57 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:60 Minutes Coverage on July 17th

 Yes - we heard that title about a year or 2 ago .. I think this is old old
info or a re-airing of same.
Fran

-----Original Message-----
From: Chemical Engineer [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, July 11, 2012 2:50 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:60 Minutes Coverage on July 17th

Sorry,

Thought I included the link.  Not sure about the dates...

http://www.cnbc.com/id/40795923/


On Wed, Jul 11, 2012 at 2:12 PM, OrionWorks - Steven V Johnson
<[email protected]> wrote:
> From CE
>
>> SCIENTIFIC BREAKTHROUGHS - Tuesday, July 17th 9p | 12a ET Cold Fusion 
>> Is Hot Again A report on cold fusion - nuclear energy like that which 
>> powers the sun, but made at room temperatures on a tabletop, which in 
>> 1989, was presented as a revolutionary new source of energy that 
>> promised to be cheap, limitless and clean but was quickly dismissed 
>> as junk science.
>> Today, scientists believe that cold fusion, now most often called low 
>> temperature fusion or a nuclear effect, could lead to monumental 
>> breakthroughs in energy production.
>>
>> The Collider
>> A report on the Large Hadron Collider, a massive scientific 
>> instrument located 300 feet underground the border between 
>> Switzerland and France. It has taken twenty years and $8 billion to 
>> build. With it, physicists hope to discover sub-atomic particles so 
>> tiny that they've never before detected, particles they think will 
>> explain how the universe has organized itself into so many different
entities.
>
> The heading, "60 Minutes", confuses me.
>
> July 17 is a Tuesday... not Sunday.
>
> Can you supply link(s) to where this information was retrieved from?
>
> Googlilng the information hasn't been particularly helpful. Shoot!
> OTOH, your post is already Googable, as an archived vortex-l post.
> This is getting a bit circuitious.
>
> Thanks!
>
> --
> Regards
> Steven Vincent Johnson
> www.OrionWorks.com
> www.zazzle.com/orionworks
>

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