Anonymously contributed:
Pining for the good old days?
Let's remember some golden moments.
Alchohol onsite. Old Rad Lab punch made from reagent-grade ethanol. Popular until someone barfed in the stairwell in B-111.
A Lab Director trying to hop the fence and getting caught.
The Star supercomputer.
One of the lead scientists in MFE who was a notorious womaniser and loved to flim-flam Congress with outrageous promises about progress on fusion.
Using bolts and a steel girdle to "repair" quake-damaged buildings. Ones with asbestos in them.
Not knowing how to operate high-power switches properly ends up launching one of the main lab transformers into low orbit.
Forged x-ray laser data.
Associate Directors openly defying the Director's new IT policies.
Having machinists manufacture awards for Directorates.
An employee getting approval for more disk drives to soup up his onsite porn server.
Credit card abuse.
Another Director whose testimony in congress indicated he knew nothing about existing computer security practices at his own lab.
The new "fairer" job-ranking system.
Off-site "planning sessions" at luxery resorts.
A steel trampoline for car-bombs along East Avenue. Two flatbed trucks blow through Echo-1 gate and get 3/4 of the way down the road before being stopped.
High-power weapons are too dangerous to the local populace. So LLNL buys 6 miniguns that will cut a car in half and run for maybe 30 secs at best.
Anyone have more fond memories?
Pining for the good old days?
Let's remember some golden moments.
Alchohol onsite. Old Rad Lab punch made from reagent-grade ethanol. Popular until someone barfed in the stairwell in B-111.
A Lab Director trying to hop the fence and getting caught.
The Star supercomputer.
One of the lead scientists in MFE who was a notorious womaniser and loved to flim-flam Congress with outrageous promises about progress on fusion.
Using bolts and a steel girdle to "repair" quake-damaged buildings. Ones with asbestos in them.
Not knowing how to operate high-power switches properly ends up launching one of the main lab transformers into low orbit.
Forged x-ray laser data.
Associate Directors openly defying the Director's new IT policies.
Having machinists manufacture awards for Directorates.
An employee getting approval for more disk drives to soup up his onsite porn server.
Credit card abuse.
Another Director whose testimony in congress indicated he knew nothing about existing computer security practices at his own lab.
The new "fairer" job-ranking system.
Off-site "planning sessions" at luxery resorts.
A steel trampoline for car-bombs along East Avenue. Two flatbed trucks blow through Echo-1 gate and get 3/4 of the way down the road before being stopped.
High-power weapons are too dangerous to the local populace. So LLNL buys 6 miniguns that will cut a car in half and run for maybe 30 secs at best.
Anyone have more fond memories?
Comments
Cherish those memories from the past because the future at LLNL looks mighty bleak. I doubt many people working at LLNL two years ago had any idea it would turn out the way it did once for-profit LLNS took over. A few people warned what was coming, but most employees didn't pay any attention to them. They do now!
When we actually accomplished something and felt good about it
When we had the respect of the scientific community and the citizens of the United States
Calibrating with coworkers over lunch the success of an experiment or project
Enjoying working with the best of the best
Frustrated with UC policies, while realizing that UC looked out for me (I worked for private industry; similar to LLNS prior to coming to the LLNL, and know what the difference is between the UC and the corporate world)
Watching my retirement grown each year and planning the day for retirement with the UCRP (I kept what I had in the UC)
Now I just do whatever job is passed my way and hope to survive long enough to retire.
God I miss the good old days.
STORES, where you could buy real mechanical and electronics, for rush projects.
Daily flights to the Test Site, where people actually performed experiments.
Many things changed when LLNS took over the management of the Lab. LLNS has been a disaster. The new management is way overpaid and have made many bad decisions. They do not value the workforce. They have changed the culture of the Lab and should be ashamed of themselves.
All of what you say is very true, but remember that this is exactly what NNSA wanted!
That is why keeping the nuclear weapon research labs under NNSA management is a non-starter if they are to have *any* hope of surviving over the next decade.
- the Swimming pool
- the Softball fields
- an employee store
- three cafeterias
- the lab plane's daily trips to NTS
Pencil sharpeners with a lead brick base. Dewars for coffee cups. It's amazing that we took such risks and survived.
Driving Army Surplus vehicles
Old Rad Lab punch during the holidays
The pool, the softball fields, the softball leagues
Having one of the first Macs ever made
Sharing desktop calculators
Doing work without email or computers
Family Days
Taking your son/daughter to work
Getting parts at Salvage, Stores
Walking POs through Purchasing
Buying supplies from downtown merchants using Petty Cash
Film badge dosimeters
3-Wheel Carts
Summer Students who were excited to be here
Being proud of the Visitors' Center and having the displays changed regularly
The Biomed Farm and Greenhouse
Corn and alfalfa growing in the NE corner
Doing meaningful research
Being allowed to venture out into the community and local schools to promote science and the Lab without having to worry about what account to charge
Management that cared about what you did, not just how much money you brought in
A university atmosphere, not a corporate one
Being rewarded for doing a good job, not for kissing ass
PIs being in the field and getting their hands dirty along with us grunts
Everybody having a team spirit and being on a first-name basis
Being proud of the Lab and the work we were doing
All, sadly, now long, long gone.............
Believing that you were part of the UC Family.
Believing that you could retire under UC, with both UC pension and UC provided medical benefits.
Believing what management told you about most anything and that you could trust them.
Believing that the country and its leaders appreciated you and the work you did.
Believing in science to solve problems.
Believing that if you did great science, you would get ahead and be rewarded.
Believing in scientific method, hard work, and documentable/defensible results, instead of fluff, flim-flam, and spin.
Believing that it was wrong to chase BS funding just because you could get it. Believing that scientific integrity was valued by DOE and LLNL management.
Believing that sacrificing yourself and your career at LLNL was worth it.
...and a Congress that appreciated what we did, even if the anti-War, anti-Nuc elements of the public hated us then as much as the current Congress does now.
Lemmee guess: PIP?