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						AcknowledgmentsCenter, the Archives of the Humboldt University, the 
						Archives of the Max Planck Society, and the State 
						Prussian Library in Berlin; the State Archives in 
						Hamburg; the Federal Archives in Koblenz and Potsdam; 
						the German Museum, the Institute for Contemporary 
						History, and the Max Planck Institute for Physics and 
						Astrophysics in Munich; and the National Archives and 
						Records Services in Washington, D.C, Special thanks go 
						to Helmut Drubba for sending me a great deal of valuable 
						information.
 I received financial support for my research from the 
						Alexander Humboldt Foundation, the Berlin Program of the 
						Social Science Research Council, and Union College. 
						Ulrich Albrecht, Andreas Heinemann-Gruder, and the Free 
						University welcomed me as a guest in Berlin, as did 
						Baudouin Jurdant, Josiane Olff-Nathan, and the rest of 
						GERSULP at the University of Strasbourg. Perhaps most 
						important is the support I have always received from the 
						History Department at Union College.
 My colleague Monika Renneberg and I have recently edited 
						a collection of essays on science, technology, and 
						National Socialism.1
 
						I cannot improve on 
						the dedication we used in that book, so I would like to 
						repeat it here.This book is dedicated to all those critical voices who 
						have tried to illuminate this ambivalent chapter of 
						history, but were unappreciated, ignored, and 
						discouraged.
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