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Since their creation, Los Alamos National Lab (LANL) and Lawrence Livermore National Lab (LLNL), have been a project of the Department of Energy. Historically, this has allowed for some non-military scientific research to be conducted at the labs and the famous University of California influence.
There is talk now of transfering sponsorship of LANL & LLNL (and Sandia Lab) to the Department of Defense. Check out the full report here:
http://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=bCcrqNq2bxyvTzpk3myQsvj5frHVQ2gQ
What do you all think of this possibility? How do you think it might effect the campaign of UC nuclear-divestment? Could it help or hinder the overall goal of nuclear disarmament?
This is a fascinating new turn – let’s hear some new voices about this question!
Tell your friends about this development and get them to sign our pledge!
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Hi Everyone,
Check out the press release below:
http://www.trivalleycares.org/new/pr23oct08.html
A new Department of Energy plan intends to revive and expand nuclear weapons production at the UC-managed Lawrence Livermore lab. The new plan will cost upwards of $150 billion and does not address pressing safety concerns. The plan also elevates Livermore lab’s role in the national nuclear complex.
The University of California’s role in nuclear weapons development must be scrutinized now more than ever. If we get enough folks to sign the pledge we can help put pressure on the UC and raise public awareness about the UC’s complicity with nuclear bomb production.
Help spread the word about the “No Nukes at the UC” campaign!
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Hi everyone –
Check out the article below about the recent activity in the movement to get the UC to cut ties to their nuclear labs.
It’s the beginning of Fall quarter and the UC is gearing up for another year of lab management – let’s step up our own efforts to get the “No Nukes at the UC” campaign rolling! Now’s a great time to encourage fellow students and alums to take the pledge.
Any other news about UC and the labs? Any outreach ideas to get this campaign out there? Hope to hear from you all soon!
Thanks,
Julia
ATOMIC BOMB SURVIVORS FROM HIROSHIMA, JAPAN SPEAK TO UC REGENTS, MANAGERS OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS
IRVINE, CA – Two survivors of the US atomic bombing from Hiroshima, Japan spoke on Thursday, September 20, 2008 to the University of California Board of Regents, who manage the United States’ two premiere nuclear weapons laboratories at Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore. The survivors, known in Japanese as hibakusha, spoke at the UC Irvine campus during the Regent’s meeting public comment period to speak of their experiences surviving the atomic bomb, and of their friends and family members who did not survive the attack, with the officials in charge of the institution which created that bomb, and to implore the Regents to end management of the nuclear weapons labs, which continue to create new nuclear weapons.
Accompanying the hibakusha were members of the UC Student Department of Energy Laboratory Oversight Committee (DOELOC) a UC student government committee charged with providing information and analysis of the UC-managed nuclear weapons laboratories. The DOELOC had requested prior to the meeting that the Regents make time in their agenda to allow the Hibakusha to give their testimony within a time allotment sufficient to convey the power and importance of their message. The Regents rejected this request, leaving the hibakusha no place else to speak but during the time-restricted public comment period.
The first hibakusha to testify, Junko Kayashige (69), was six years old when the atomic bomb was dropped on her home. She was at the windowsill in her family home with her siblings located 1.5 miles from ground zero, watching the American military plane fly over Hiroshima just before it dropped the atomic bomb. According to her testimony, she next remembers waking up on the ground, her house obliterated, her sister dead, with fires raging in the distance and all around her. A second sister died days later due to radiation sickness. Kayashige described how her own burns eventually healed, but the scars she carried inside from the death of her two sisters and her own poisoning with radiation from the bomb have continued to stay with her. She fought radiation-induced thyroid cancer one decade ago, and has been on daily medication ever since. “Human beings are not born to go to war with each other or to fight on the battle field,” Kayashige expressed to the Regents. “Human beings are born to create a peaceful society together for the betterment of all life on Earth.” Kayashige then urged the Regents to stop managing the primary U.S. nuclear weapons labs at Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore: “I was astounded to learn that the University of California is the manager of the nuclear weapons laboratories. The UC must cease this activity immediately. A University is supposed to teach people how to help society move toward excellence and prosperity. It is not supposed to create weapons of terror.”
Miyako Yano (77) was fourteen years old when the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. She was living 3.5 miles from the hypocenter and had taken a sick day from school. Her school was located half a mile from ground zero, and when the bomb exploded over the center of the city, every one of the children in her class of 100 was murdered – and had the bomb been dropped a day earlier, she would have been among them. Of 7000 students working outside on August 6, 1945, more than 6000 were killed that day by the atomic bomb. “I want to emphasize that nuclear weapons and humanity cannot co-exist,” said Yano.
Kaitlyn Ezell, second year Sociology student at UCSB and member of DOELOC, left the meeting in awe. “Being faced with such tangible and passionate accounts from the hibakusha was extremely moving,” she said. “I think it was pretty obvious to everyone present the role that the University plays in validating and enabling the US nuclear weapons complex.”








