Friday, October 31, 2014

1987 Poster!

 
American Peace Test: Stop Nuclear Testing: Demonstration
1987
17 in HIGH x 11 in WIDE
(43.18 cm HIGH x 27.94 cm WIDE)
All Of Us Or None Archive. Fractional and promised gift of The Rossman Family.
2010.54.1335

Bottom edge has yellow text: "The American Peace Test P.O. Box 26725 Las Vegas, Nevada 89126 (702) 636-7780" and a small logo of people for hte American Peace Test. Yellow box in right corner has a black stamp for Livermore Action Group with address.

Poster is printed on yellow paper and has a background of a black a Joshua Tree silhouetted against an orange and yellow sky. Behind the Joshua tree is a yellow sun that is about to set. The poster reads, "American peace Test/ Stop nuclear testing/ January 26-27. 1987/ Nevada test Site and Washington D.C./ demonstration and non-violent Civil disobedience."
http://collections.museumca.org/?q=collection-item/2010541335 

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Interview with David Buer, 2008

Interview with David Buer can be found here:  http://digital.library.unlv.edu/objects/nts/1177 

Table of Contents
1 - Introduction: family background, birth (San Antonio, TX), raised with sense of social justice, sympathy toward the antiwar movement, education
3 - Beginning of spiritual journey: travel to California and back to St. Louis (1975), becomes active in Roman Catholic Church
5 - Work in Franciscan community in Chicago, IL involvement with Franciscan antinuclear movement, founding of NDE
6 - Awareness of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and testing at the NTS
9 - First visit to NTS and shutdown of Peace Camp (1989)
12 - Trial of Father Louis Vitale and other NTS protesters
13 - Participation in APT and NDE actions at the NTS (1990)
15 - Importance of Franciscan presence in developing peaceful protest at NTS, and relationship of NDE to other antinuclear and peace groups
17 - Work on staff of NDE (ca. 1994-1999) in organizing events, personal meanings surrounding protest actions, interactions with NTS security
21 - Family feelings re: increased involvement with antinuclear activities
22 - Work and dedication NDE mission over the years, and current involvement in migrant and homeless work (San Javier Mission, Tucson, AZ)
23 - People who have worked with NDE over the years
24 - Vision of NDE currently and in its continuing role in affecting people’s lives
25 - Role of the desert itself in the antinuclear mission
27 - Reasons for longevity of NDE
28 - Reflections on work with NDE, relations with NTS security, and benefit of NDE’s continued presence at the NTS
31 - Conclusion: final thoughts on working toward a nuclear-free world

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Protest Brings Back The `60s, (1988)

Protest Brings Back The `60s

Antiwar Activists Rally At Nevada Nuclear Test Ground

March 20, 1988|By James Coates, Chicago Tribune.
MERCURY, NEV. — World War II veteran Bob Barns was wearing a baseball cap from his Veterans of Foreign Wars post in Santa Cruz, Calif., when officers arrested him and more than 1,800 other antiwar activists last week.
Federal officials say they believe the weeklong series of arrests of people like Barns on the edge of the Department of Energy`s Nevada Nuclear Test Site here is the largest roundup of antigovernment demonstrators since the Vietnam and civil rights protests.
More than 1,200 people were arrested March 12, and about 100 more have been handcuffed and taken away each subsequent day. The protest is to end Sunday with a rally.
It has been street theater out of the past for some of the middle-aged demonstrators, a return to the heady days of ardent rhetoric and the world-beating zeal of young adulthood.
For the forces of law and order, whom both protesters and test site officials praised for their restraint, it was a reminder that civil disobedience can pose a vexing array of troubles.
One veteran demonstrator flashed a sign paraphrasing Mohandas Gandhi, the Hindu civil disobedience leader who wrote, ``First they laugh at you. Then they harass you. Then they persecute you. Then you win.``
For others it was all new.
``I didn`t have time to get involved while my kids were growing up,`` the wiry and gray-bearded Barns said before illegally stepping across the boundary into the supersecret installation just after dawn on Wednesday.
As many as 5,000 people have gathered at the nuclear proving grounds in a single day as part of a well-orchestrated demonstration designed to provoke arrests and win sympathy for the call to end all nuclear testing as a first step toward world disarmament.
Billed as the American Peace Test and coordinated by seasoned political organizers from the Nuclear Freeze/SANE group, the weeklong ``actions`` at the test site have involved people of all ages from throughout the country.
Sometimes singly, sometimes in pairs and more often in clusters of 6 to 12-which they called ``affinity groups``-the protesters courted arrest by such acts as blocking buses carrying test-site workers, slipping through the fences that ring the Rhode Island-sized facility and disrobing before police cameras. Between ``actions`` they slept at a ``peace camp`` of about 100 tents pitched on public land across the highway from the test-site entrance at Mercury.
Stanley Belvin of Eugene, Ore., marked his 91st birthday by forcing officers to arrest him. Others detained were younger than 17, considered minors in Nevada.
Sandy Berliant, a 52-year-old grandmother from Wilmette, Ill., who said that stopping the tests is the only way her grandchildren can survive, also was among those taken into custody.
``Our only chance for the future depends upon stopping what goes on on the other side of that gate,`` said Berliant.
TV disc jockey Casey Kasem, who arrived at the test site in a chauffeured, gray stretch limo, emceed a short entertainment program before being arrested March 12.
Others arrested that day included actress Teri Garr, who told the crowd:
``If I have an image of being conservative, I want all of you people to listen up. We are in a big mess.``
Nearly all the protesters were handcuffed without a struggle, herded into buses and driven to the Nye County courthouse in Tonopah, Nev., 150 miles north of Las Vegas.
Most of the demonstrators were released without being charged, but were not given rides back to the test site.
More than a dozen people who penetrated areas of the test site deemed dangerous or secret were charged with such crimes as criminal tresspass and defacing federal property, officials said. They face fines and jail terms of up to six months.
With a population of only 14,000, the county can`t afford to jail the hundreds of activist lawbreakers, said Barbara Yoerg, spokesman for the Nevada Department of Energy office, which is coordinating the arrests.
``I think a lot of us share these protesters` wishes that they spend some time in jail,`` Yoerg added with a smile. ``It`s too bad the taxpayers can`t afford to put them up for awhile.``
Taxpayers will foot a bill likely to be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars for bringing in private guards from as far away as South Carolina and Florida, as well as overtime expenses for state and local police.
A fleet of 50 buses-leased at about $400 per day apiece-stands by to transport arrestees from the test site to Tonopah, Yoerg said, and live video coverage of the siege is beamed via satellite to the department`s headquarters in Washington.
In addition, authorities stockpiled 10,000 pairs of disposable white plastic handcuffs and spent $33,000 building a 100-by-220 foot chain link and barbed wire corral to hold the arrested protesters, Yoerg said.
The protesters have been almost as well-prepared. Jessie Cocks, cofounder of the American Peace Test, acknowledged the group has an annual budget of about $500,000, and spent $160,000 on direct mail and phone appeals to bring the protesters to the desert to face arrest.

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Protest at Nuclear Test Site; 38 Seized, 1989

Protest at Nuclear Test Site; 38 Seized

January 29, 1989|From Associated Press
MERCURY, Nev. — Thirty-eight protesters were arrested Saturday in a peaceful demonstration at the Nevada Test Site, authorities reported.
The protest by members of the American Peace Test Organization coincided with the 38th anniversary of the first nuclear test at the desert site. Members gathered in Las Vegas on Friday to mark the actual anniversary date.
Government spokesman Jim Boyer said the protesters were arrested for trespassing when they reached the cattle guard at the entrance of the test site.
He said that the demonstration lasted "for only a couple of hours" and that about 60 protesters turned out. "There was no big deal to it," he added.

Monday, October 27, 2014

Anti-Nuclear Protesters Arrested at Nevada Test Site, 1990

Anti-Nuclear Protesters Arrested at Nevada Test Site

April 01, 1990|From Times Staff and Wire Reports
MERCURY, Nev. — About 250 anti-nuclear protesters were arrested Saturday for trespassing during a large demonstration at the Nevada Test Site, 65 miles northwest of Las Vegas.
An estimated 1,600 demonstrators gathered at the highway entrance on the second day of the protest, an event that has been held every spring at the test site for a decade.
The demonstrators were participating in a five-day "Decade to Disarm" protest, sponsored by three peace groups: American Peace Test, the Western Shoshone Council and a Soviet anti-nuclear group called the "Nevada" movement.
The action began Thursday and was timed to coincide with the deployment last week of the Trident II missile from Kings Bay Naval Submarine Base in southern Georgia, organizers said. The Trident II is the Navy's most powerful nuclear weapon.
The protest also was scheduled to coincide with similar demonstrations this weekend in Great Britain, Germany and the Soviet Union, said American Peace Test spokeswoman Katherin Dress.
Energy Department spokesman Derek Scammell said Saturday's arrest figures were not immediately available. There were 170 arrests Friday, he said. No injuries were reported.
Dress said the protesters held a rally earlier in the day and then began their civil disobedience tactics. At one point, she said, about 100 demonstrators scaled a fence at the test site. The protest will continue through Monday, she said.
Those arrested were transported to the town of Beatty, where they were cited for trespassing and released, Scammell said.
Nevada Highway Patrol Capt. Glenn Jewett said most of the arrests occurred when the demonstrators crossed the cattle guard at the main Mercury entrance and stepped onto the top-secret federal government property that makes up the nation's nuclear weapons testing grounds.
Jewett said the demonstration was orderly, with no violence reported. "It's a good crowd," he said.
However, protesters closed the access road at the test site's Mercury entrance for more than five hours Saturday when they physically blocked the highway and then built a rock wall across it.
Among the protesters were students from several campuses of the University of California and from various high schools in Los Angeles and Orange counties. Michael Valleo, 18, a student from Brentwood High School, said a recent visit to the Soviet Union persuaded him that the Soviets are as interested in peace as the United States. "We all want peace," he said
Since 1986, American Peace Test has organized nonviolent protests at the Nevada Test Site. More than 10,000 people have participated and more than 5,000 arrests have been made as a result, Dress said.
An 8 a.m. Mass was scheduled today at the Mercury entrance, followed by a parade of giant puppets, kites and banners. More arrests were expected during activities today and Monday.

Sunday, October 26, 2014

438 PROTESTERS ARE ARRESTED AT NEVADA NUCLEAR TEST SITE, 1987

438 PROTESTERS ARE ARRESTED AT NEVADA NUCLEAR TEST SITE

By ROBERT LINDSEY, Special to the New York Times
Published: February 6, 1987
More than 400 people were arrested today when they tried to enter the nation's nuclear proving grounds here after nearly 2,000 demonstrators, including six members of Congress, held a rally to protest nuclear weapons testing.
In a scene that at times recalled the antiwar protests of the 1960's, 438 demonstrators, some carrying American flags, were arrested as they marched past the entrance to the 1,350-square-mile Nevada Test Site. Among those arrested were the astronomer Carl Sagan and the actors Martin Sheen, Kris Kristofferson and Robert Blake.
The protesters who were arrested were taken in buses to nearby Beatty, Nev., where they were booked and released. A spokesman for the Department of Energy said 433 of those arrested were charged with trespassing and five were charged with resisting arrest. They will face trial at a later date.
The march came after a rally protesting the Reagan Administration's resumption of nuclear weapons testing despite a Soviet moratorium on the testing of new weapons. The demonstration at the desert test site 65 miles north of Las Vegas was organized by a consortium of groups that included Greenpeace, the American Peace Test, Physicians for Social Responsibility and the Peace Committee of the American Public Health Association. Test Moved Up Two Days
The demonstration was initially called to protest the nation's first nuclear test of the year, which had been scheduled for today. But the Department of Energy rescheduled the test, in part because of the demonstration, and detonated the weapon Tuesday.
Standing beneath a banner that read ''Nuremberg Requires That We Act,'' Representative Pat Schroeder, a Colorado Democrat, assailed what she called President Reagan's ''Rambo-type foreign policy.''
She said, ''I think the President's pushing the test two days ahead of schedule when the American people didn't want to test, when Congress didn't want to test, when the world didn't want to test, was the most arrogant exercise of power I've seen in a long time.''
Five other Democratic members of Congress also attended the rally. They were Representatives Thomas J. Downey of Suffolk, Mike Lowry of Washington and Jim Bates, Leon E. Panetta and Barbara Boxer of California. They left before the demonstrators entered the test site.
''We came basically to make sure that the people protesting here know they are not alone, that their message is being heard in Washington,'' Mr. Downey said in an interview.
One demonstrator, Hugh DeWitt, a physicist at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory in California, said he and other technical specialists here had concluded from seismic measurements that Tuesday's test was ''of extremely low yield, equivalent to less than five tons of TNT,'' far smaller than any other announced test.
''Either it completely fizzled or it was experimental in nature,'' he said.
Owen Chamberlain, a University of California professor and winner of the 1959 Nobel Prize for Physics, said he was puzzled not only that so small a weapon had been tested, but also that ''they had gone out of their way to make an announcement about it.'' Such a step, he suggested, was likely to goad the Soviet Union into ending its 18-month moratorium on nuclear testing. A Highly Organized Protest
Although today's protest scene at the Nevada Test Site was reminiscent of the 1960's, it was unlike the often disorganized, spontaneous peace demonstrations of that era and, indeed, was marketed with a promotional flair befitting Madison Avenue.
In recent weeks, news organizations have received numerous announcements and telephone calls about the event. Representatives of the sponsoring groups have appeared on network television shows in recent weeks, and today's arrests, which took place at 10 A.M., Pacific standard time, were timed to gain maximum publicity.
''Why do you think they scheduled the arrests at 10 o'clock?'' said Don Oliver, a correspondent for NBC News. ''So they could make the evening news.'' U.S. NUCLEAR TEST DEFENDED GENEVA, Feb. 5 (Special to The New York Times) - Kenneth L. Adelman, director of the United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, today defended the decision to conduct a nuclear test Tuesday despite warnings that the Soviet Union would end a self-imposed moratorium on nuclear testing with the first United States test of this year.
''If the Soviets want to resume tests, as I understand that they do, let them resume tests,'' he said.
Mr. Adelman also asserted that the timing of the test, which had initially been scheduled for today, was not connected with the start Tuesday of the 1987 session of the 40-nation Geneva Conference. Soviet officials implied that the test was ''cynically timed'' to coincide with the opening of the conference.
Soviet officials here echoed comments from Moscow that the Soviet Union would resume nuclear testing, but would only say that the tests would begin again at an ''appropriate time.''
Photo of Kris Kristofferson and Martin Sheen (AP)

Saturday, October 25, 2014

Another Blog is out there!

There is another blog on the Peace Camp at the Nevada Test Site.
It looks to be abandoned. If anyone knows whose blog this is, can they get in touch with me? Thanks!
Linda

There is some good stuff there! Check it out.

Swarthmore College Peace Collection: American Peace Test Records, 1985-1994 Collection: DG 197

Descriptive Summary
Repository Swarthmore College Peace Collection
Creator American Peace Test 
Title American Peace Test Records
Inclusive Dates 1985-1994
Call Number DG 197

Language of Materials Materials in English
Extent 6.25 linear feet [papers only]
Abstract In 1985 six members of the National FREEZE Campaign founded American Peace Test as a direct, non violent action campaign to protest the testing of nuclear weapons at the Nevada Test Site, near Las Vegas, Nevada. The first large scale action took place in 1986, drawing large crowds of protestors. Protests throughout the 1980s continued to draw larger numbers of protestors and the support of some nationally known celebraties and politicians. In the early 1990s American Peace Test regrouped, but eventually the organization foundered. Protests at the Nevada Test Site continued through the 1990s, sometimes sponsored by other organizations and groups of protestors. 


Historical Background
[Based on a history of APT by Peter Bergel]

In August of 1985, Jessie Cocks, Nancy Hale and Jim Driscoll from the Nuclear FREEZE Campaign decided to recruit Peter Bergel, Ted Coran and Nancy Heskett, and became the founders of The Great American Peace Test – a project of the Nuclear FREEZE Campaign. This was later shortened to American Peace Test (APT). In the fall of 1985, this group organized 30 days of nonviolent civil disobedience at the Nevada Test Site (NTS), leading up to the Reagan/Gorbachev Summit in Iceland. Well over 100 people were arrested.

Early the following year the American Peace Test became a separate organization, and that summer APT held its first large action at NTS. Dan Ellsberg and Oregon Congressman Jim Weaver spoke at the protest. Bill Rosse of the Western Shoshone National connected with APT around this time. APT continued to organize anti-nuclear demonstrations at the NTS,for, and with, groups like Union of Concerned Scientists, Physicians for Social Responsibility, and the Great Peace March. Support came from individual celebrities such as Carl Sagan and Martin Sheen for APT activities. Although APT protestors had been arrested and charged with trespass through 1986, by that winter, organizers Peter Bergel and Jessie Cocks were cited for “conspiracy to commit trespass,” a more serious criminal charge. These charges dragged on for almost a year, but were finally dropped, thanks to the assistance of Carl Sagan and Nye County Sheriff Lt. Jim Merlino.

By 1987 APT organized much larger gatherings at the NTS with celebrities such as Teri Garr, Casey Casem, Robert Blake, and Kris Kristofferson involved. That same year APT core staff appeared at a series of exclusive house parties in major cities across the country attended by wealthy donors and celebrities like Sheen, Ellsberg, Brian Willson, Peter Yarrow, Ronnie Gilbert, E. L. Doctorow, and Mary Stuart Masterson

In early 1988 five thousand people attended the largest APT protest so far. 1,200 were arrested in one day. New celebrities such as Top Forty DJ Casey Kasem – the most listened to person in the world – , six members of the U.S. Congress attended the large protest and the U.S. national media covered the event for days. Even the Olympic flame was carried to the protest by a team of runners. However, at the same time APT was being consumed by internal conflicts. During the following months, the entire staff, including all the founders, were fired and the organization was taken over by a new board. Throughout the next year APT got $80,000 into debt and the new board resigned. With the internal conflicts and financial instability APT organizers sponsored smaller events. Over the next few years APT flounders, and Larry Levy, David Solnit attempted to pay off APT’s debts. By the mid 1990s with a partial Comprehensive Test Ban as U.S. policy and declining attendance at protest, APT members voted to close down the organization. Protests at the NTS continued, sponsored by other organizations.

Collection Overview 
Collection contains American Peace Test administrative records, correspondence, literature, mailings.
Items removed:
Photographs and slides
-- 2 boxes of photographs in 8" x 10" boxes (all sizes)
--2 folders of oversize photographs and contact sheets
--Individual-29 slides in slide binder in Photograph Collection
Audio visual materials
--Slide set-37a and 37b, 2 boxes in Audio Visual Collection
--Video recordings, #0231-0244
--Phonograph recordings--#0048a and 0048b
--Audio cassettes--#0321-0328
Posters
Oversize/Memorabilia
--1 t-shirt
--1 small cloth sign
--cloth and paper banners 

Friday, October 17, 2014

Starting to collect pictures and other images, media articles and other written word documentation and digitally scanned ephemera, etc. It would be nice for it to be all inclusive, i.e. not just about Corbin or NDE, etc., but attempt to represent all the different organizations and individuals that had lived and/or protested at the gates of the Nevada Test Site.


  • Pictures of the protests, individuals and logos, and old posters and t-shirts, nonviolence handbooks, land use permits from the Shoshone,

  • Links to all the news articles, etc

  • YouTube or other links to Corbin's talks, Bill's country music, videos of actions, individuals oral histories, etc... 

  • Will like to add a bunch of people to have access to this blog so we can all participate in adding these items together. 


Blogging by consensus! HA!