By Lynn Yarris, [email protected]
Last July, LBL celebrated the completion of the 18-meter, stainless-steel geodesic sphere that is to be a major component of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO). While the Petaluma, Calif., ceremony marked the completion of the sphere--which was subsequently shipped to Sudbury, Canada--LBL's contribution to the construction phase of SNO continued.
Scientists, engineers, and designers in the Nuclear Science and Engineering divisions, under the leadership of NSD physicist Kevin Lesko, have completed work on the panel arrays that, when attached to the geodesic sphere, will house will house 9,522 of the extremely sensitive light-detectors called photomultiplier tubes. It is the design and placement of SNO's photomultiplier tubes that will enable the facility to fulfill its scientific mission.
SNO is a collaboration involving more than 60 scientists from a dozen laboratories and universities in the United States, Canada, and United Kingdom. Its mission is to answer some of the most perplexing questions about neutrinos, the particles emitted from the sun and from supernovae. Neutrinos are intriguing in part because they are so ghostlike. One could pass untouched through a wall of lead stretching from the earth to the moon.
Operating from a cavern more than a mile underground, SNO will be the first detector sensitive enough to measure not only ordinary electron neutrinos, but also the much more rare muon and tau neutrinos. This unprecedented sensitivity stems in part from a design that maximizes SNO's light-collecting capabilities.
The SNO detector, which is suspended in a vast pool of purified water, consists of the geodesic sphere, the photomultiplier tubes attached to it, and an acrylic vessel, inside the sphere, that is filled with 1,000 tons of heavy water (deuterium oxide or D2O). When neutrinos passing through the heavy water interact with deuterium nuclei, flashes of light, called Cerenkov radiation, are emitted. The photomultiplier tubes detect these light flashes and convert them into electronic signals that scientists can analyze.
"It is vital for the success of any neutrino experiment that as many photons as possible be detected," says Lesko. "Therefore, we had to squeeze as many photomultiplier tubes as possible onto the geodesic dome while maintaining an adequate layer of water shielding between the tubes and the cavity walls of the SNO site."
The need for densely packed photomultiplier tubes was complicated by the requirement that each photomultiplier tube be individually aimed and that the entire assembly be water-tight. The design demands were made even more difficult because the components making up the tubes came from three different countries (England, Canada, and Japan), and all had to be assembled, tested, disassembled, transported, and reassembled under cleanroom conditions.
To meet this multifaceted challenge, Gary Koehler, an LBL mechanical engineer associate and the SNO project's senior designer, "checkered" the surface of the sphere with 751 panels that come in five different shapes, each of which is built up from repeating patterns of hexagons. The result is a honeycomb pattern that covers 70 percent of the sphere with light-collecting devices.
"It is an incredible problem to take a sphere and break it up into repeating elements," says Lesko. "Complex 3D models on computers had to be developed to translate Gary's design into an engineering design."
A mounting system was also needed that would allow easy alignment of the panels and give SNO's spherical structure the flexibility to go from being empty to being flooded with water. Engineer Yoichi Kajiyama and mechanical designer Dave Beck assisted Koehler on this aspect of the design. Their solution was a three-point ball and socket mount that permits each panel to be aimed by hand according to positions pre-set by computer, and provides stability to the sphere whether it is empty or full. In addition, they connected the entire collection of panels through a series of corrosion-resistant plastic skirts that make the sphere 99.95 percent water tight.
Once the design was completed, the panel components were fabricated by two Bay Area firms, Precision Plastics of South San Francisco, and Stoesser Industries of Mountain View. Finished components were sent to LBL where they were tested for low-background radiation contamination, then assembled into panels and shipped to Canada.
The SNO experiment will last at least 10 years and is expected to record between 10 and 20 neutrinos each day. NSD physicist Eric Norman will lead LBL's participation in the research phase of the project.
PHOTO CAPTION -- Members of the SNO team, who must prepare components for shipping in the assemby shop's (Bldg. 77) ultraclean room, are (from left) Yuen- Dat Chan, Rick Norman, Igor Zlimen, Larry Mills, Ruth Mary Larimer, Dan Pinkas, Bob Stoksted, and Kevin Lesko. Photo by Steve Adams
By Jeffery Kahn, [email protected]
Japan's industrial strength is not merely the sum of its many technological successes, says professor Fumio Kodama of the University of Tokyo. Rather, it represents the success of a new method of innovation.
Kodama spoke at LBL on Monday, May 23, as part of the lecture series, "Science and Technology in a Competitive World," jointly sponsored by LBL and UC Berkeley.
Japan probably did not set out to invent a new way of developing, manufacturing, and marketing products, Kodama said. But gradually and unconsciously, a technological paradigm-shift occurred, creating a Japanese method of doing business that is very different from the American way.
He said the dimensions of the Japanese method extend far beyond the factory floor. They include research and development, manufacturing, business diversification, and even the process of innovation.
An author, government advisor, and member of the Engineering Academy of Japan, Kodama is professor of Science, Technology, and Industry at the University's Research Center for Advanced Science and Technology.
In remarks germane to LBL and the technology transfer mission of the national labs, he said product development in Japan does not start with science, but with the consumer. He said that in America, science feeds new technology into a pipeline with the expectation that a flow of new products will result.
Kodama said the Japanese prefer to begin product development by identifying what people want. He said this "demand articulation" is different from marketing and cited the case of video cassette recorders (VCRs).
The Ampex Corp. of California invented the videotape recorder in 1956. The machine was quite expensive and sold strictly to professional broadcasters. Toshiba, and later Sony, realized that residential consumers would buy and use VCRs if sold at the right price. Having articulated demand, the Japanese then began work on the technology, which resulted in the development of a very different machine.
Patterns of product innovation between America and Japan likewise are different. Kodama said although major scientific breakthroughs occur much more often in America than in Japan, this does not seem to translate into a commercial advantage for the United States. He said single scientific breakthroughs rarely result in new products. Rather, multiple breakthroughs are often required, as is a maturation and learning process.
Instead of relying on breakthroughs, Japanese companies prefer to combine or fuse several technologies. This approach has been so successful that despite the dearth of Japanese breakthroughs, Japanese companies are major holders of U.S. patents. In fact, Kodama said, in terms of the numbers of new U.S. patents applied for, many of the current top-ranking companies are Japanese.
Kodama said, to be successful, LBL's technology transfer efforts should rely strongly on interactions with industry. He said Japanese companies look beyond their own doors for emerging technologies. In fact, learning about new developments elsewhere is considered the responsibility of every employee.
By Mike Wooldridge, MAWooldridge
When is a volt not a volt, or a kilogram not a kilogram? While most people have little reason to ponder such philosophical questions, the staff of LBL's Metrology Lab grapple with them every day. The facility is the arbiter of truth when it comes to weights and measures at LBL, making sure the voltmeters, scales, and other instruments on the Hill are accurate.
"When a scientist reports in a paper that an instrument reads one volt, they need to be confident that it is indeed one volt," says Mike Bell, unit leader of the Metrology Lab. "The only way to have confidence that an instrument reads correctly is through calibrations that can be traced to national standards. This is what we provide."
The lab is staffed by technicians Bruce Gray and Mike Sawada, who between them gained 33 years of metrology experience in the U.S. Air Force.
The Metrology Lab began decades ago as a support facility for physics projects such as the Bevatron and HILAC. The facility built and serviced the thousands of electrical meters and chart recorders needed to run the massive accelerators. As time went on, the facility took on the task of calibrating instruments throughout the Laboratory.
The facility now maintains a number of precision devices to check everything from pH meters to thermometers. It also keeps a selection of standard weights used to calibrate scales and balances, from 5-kg cylinders to milligram-sized flakes of foil. (Calibration at LBL is also performed by the Environment, Health and Safety Division, which tests safety equipment such as fume hoods, and Mechanical Metrology, which handles length standards and precision dimensional measurements.)
The Metrology Lab's instruments are tuned to the strict standards of the National Institute of Standards of Technology (NIST) in Gaithersburg, Md., home of the official measures of the kilogram, second, meter, and kelvin in the United States. By using the resources available at the Metrology Lab, LBL scientists can be confident that their own measurements are traceable to these reference points.
The measurement standards were tweaked slightly in January, 1990, Sawada says, when an international agreement equalized the official weights and measures worldwide. "Before 1990, everyone had slightly different standards. Germany had a volt, Russia had a different volt, and we had a different one, too."
Bell emphasizes that attention to standards should become more important as LBL develops a stronger relationship with private companies, which generally have much stricter requirements for instrument calibration.
"As we develop closer ties with industry through Cooperative Research and Development Agreements (CRADAs) and tech transfer, industry is going to ask what our quality assurance standards are," Bell says.
Researchers interested in using the Metrology Lab's services should contact Bruce Gray or Mike Sawada at X5360.
PHOTO CAPTION -- Technicians Bruce Gray (left) and Mike Sawada calibrate a voltmeter at LBL's Metrology Lab in Bldg. 7. Photo by Steve Adams
LBL postcards can now be purchased from Carma Hamer in the Bldg. 65 Reception Center. Two different postcards are available, one a midday overview of LBL with San Francisco Bay in the background, and the other an ALS close-up at sunset. The postcards are also available from the Employee Buying Service.
6/1 First Aid (EHS-116) 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. 66-316
6/2 Level (I) Crane/Hoist Operator Training (EHS-211)* 2:30-6:30 p.m. 70A-3377
6/6&9 Radiation Protection - Radionuclides
(EHS-430) - both days 1-5 p.m. 2-100B
6/7 Medical/Biohazardous Waste (EHS-730)** 10-11:30 a.m. 66-316
6/8 Introduction to Environment, Health & Safety
at LBL (EHS-10) 9-11:30 a.m. 66 Aud.
6/8 Adult Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR)
(EHS-123) 9 a.m. - noon 66-316
6/9 Fire Extinguisher Use (EHS-530) 10-11:30 a.m. 4-102B
6/13&15 Radiation Protection - Radionuclides
(EHS-430) - both days 8 a.m. - noon 2-100B
6/14 Lockout/Tagout (EHS-256) 9 a.m. - noon 90-4133
6/14 Hazardous Waste Generators (EHS-601)** 4-4:45 p.m. 70-191
6/14 Chemical Hygiene & Safety Training (EHS-348)** 1- 4 p.m. 70-191
6/14 Radioactive & Mixed Waste (EHS-621)** 4-4:45 p.m. 70-191
6/14 EH&S Roles & Responsibilities for Supervisors
(EHS-25) (for supervisors in office settings) 8:30 a.m. - noon 66-316
6/15&22 EH&S Roles & Responsibilities for Supervisors
(EHS-25) (for supervisors in research settings)
- both days 8:30 a.m. - noon 66-316
6/16 Forklift Truck Safety (EHS-225) 8:30-10 a.m. 90-3148
6/16 Blood Biosafety Training (EHS-735)** 1-2:30 p.m. 66-316
6/17 Laser Safety (EHS-280)* 9:30-11:45 a.m. 90-2063
6/21 Pressure Safety/Compressed Gases (EHS-230) 8 a.m. - noon 70A-3377
6/21 First Aid (EHS-116) 8:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. 66-316
6/21 Introduction to Environment, Health &
Safety at LBL (EHS-10) 1:30-4 p.m. 66 Aud.
6/21 Blood Biosafety Training (EHS-735) 1:30 p.m. - 3 p.m. 90-3148
6/22 Chemical Hygiene & Safety Training (EHS-348) 9 a.m. - noon 2-100B
6/23 Building Emergency Team Training (EHS-154) 9-11:30 a.m. 66-316
6/29 Adult Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) (EHS-123) 9 a.m. - noon 66-316
*Date change from what is printed in the Quarterly Course Announcement.
** Special courses for summer students
Pre-registration is required for all courses except New Employee Orientation (EHS 10). Call the Emergency Preparedness Office at X6554 to register for: CPR, First Aid, Fire Extinguisher Use, Earthquake Safety, and Building Emergency Team Training. Call X6612 or send a fax with your name, extension and employee number to X6608 to pre-register for all other EH&S courses.
There's still time to sign up for the Health Services Department's annual Skin Cancer Screening Clinic, to be held from 8 a.m. to noon on Friday, June 3, at Bldg. 26. Patients will be seen by a physician, and all questionable findings will be examined by Dr. Edward Ringrose and Dr. Elizabeth Ringrose, both Berkeley dermatologists. Call X6266 for an appointment. Please plan to take the LBL shuttle to your appointment as parking is very limited.
According to a new study in May's Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, "Skin cancer now appears to be as common as all other types of cancer combined." Scientists doubled their estimate for the number of Americans who get non-melanoma skin cancer--the common, less serious type that, nonetheless, accounts for more than 1,200 deaths and countless disfiguring surgeries a year.
Most skin cancer is curable, but the costs of surgery and other treatments are substantial. Those costs could be decreased if people avoided sun exposure and had regular checkups.
The most deadly form of skin cancer, malignant melanoma, has soared in recent years--from 19,000 cases in the U.S. in 1984 to 26,000 in 1987. More than 7,800 of those patients died in that time.
With summer approaching everyone should know the warning signs of melanoma and the appropriate precautions.
Most moles are benign. This checklist can help identify those that may need medical attention:
* Does the mole itch?
* Is it bigger than the blunt end of a pencil?
* Is it growing?
* Does it have a ragged, irregular outline?
* Does it have mixed shades of brown and black?
* Is the mole inflamed or reddish on the edge?
* Is it bleeding, oozing, or forming a crust?
Such moles do not necessarily indicate melanoma, but they should be checked by a doctor.
You can also lower your risk by observing a few rules:
* Avoid the midday sun, between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.
* Use sunscreens with a sun protection factor of at least 15; apply liberally before exposure and every two or three hours while in the sun.
* Wear a wide-brimmed hat, long-sleeved shirt and long pants when working in the sun.
* Keep children under 6 months old out of the sun. Use sunscreen on older children, and minimize their exposure.
* Examine your skin regularly for changes in moles, freckles, and skin discolorations.
The LBL cafeteria will be closed for remodeling from Friday, June 3, through Friday, June 10. There will be a catering truck in the cafeteria parking lot to handle breakfast and lunch during this period.
The last day to drop off film in the Qualex Photo drop box (in the cafeteria lobby) before the shutdown is Wednesday, June 1st.
During the shutdown, the Employee Buying Service will be headquartered in Bldg. 90-1136B, the office of EBS representative Helen Coleman. She will have postage stamps and postcards for sale, discount coupon packages for amusement parks, and finished film orders from Qualex. Coleman is in her office from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. You may contact Coleman at X7138 to arrange for her to mail finished film orders via lab mail.
The cafeteria will be open for business again on Monday, June 13. Canteen Corporation apologizes for any inconvenience.
The Technology Transfer Department has issued a call for proposals for Multi-year CRADAs under the Energy Research-Laboratory Technology Transfer (ER-LTT) program. Proposals are due from each division by close of business, Monday, June 20. The ER-LTT projects are expected to be funded starting in October 1994 (FY95).
The ER-LTT Program plans to provide funding of approximately $2 million for new starts at LBL on projects that have potential commercial application. This call is to distribute funds through "Multi-year CRADA" proposals, ranging from $100,000-500,000 per year, for up to 3 years. Approximately 10 new projects are expected to be funded from this call.
There are several changes from past procedures regarding the proposal selection process. The major change is that project selection will occur on site at LBL, rather than in Washington, D.C. To accommodate this new policy, the entire process will be placed on an accelerated time schedule. The goal is to have the projects approved at all levels and actually start work just after the beginning of FY95.
Proposal forms are available in the public folder of Mary Hart on AppleTalk "Dir" zone (filename "Multi-year CRADA Prop"). For a hard copy, call X6462. For more information, call Harry Radousky (X5566), Mary Hart (X6462) or Cheryl Fragiadakis (X7020).
A "brown bag" question-and-answer session about the proposals will be held in the Bldg. 50 auditorium from noon to 1 p.m. on Thursday, June 2.
Remember to mark your calendars for 11 a.m. on Monday, June 6. A reception will be held outside the Advanced Light Source to honor, for their recent awards: LBL Associate Lab Director Glenn Seaborg, Art Rosenfeld of the Energy and Environment Division, Heinz Heinemann of the Materials Sciences Division, and Robert Bergman of the Chemical Sciences Division. All employees are invited to attend.
A timely thought for Memorial Day, Monday, May 30.
" . . . G I S O L D O H O N O, R D E A D D W Y O B I S O S I H E W K;
R D I W H O Z O H E G D O U, W G L D I F J D L D O C
D W U B O Y O H N O O B . . . N F L L D O E H B W S O G
K E Y O K I H O Y O H S I H O."
O A A K O G E W G L O G
Answer to last week's puzzle:
"DON'T BE TOO HUMBLE: YOU'RE NOT THAT GREAT." --GOLDA MEIR
C A L E N D A R
30 m o n d a y
MEMORIAL DAY HOLIDAY
31t u e s d a y
CENTER FOR PARTICLE ASTROPHYSICS SEMINAR
12:30 p.m., 375 Le Conte; V. Sahni, IUCAA, India, "Calculating Big Nothings: Voids in the Adhesion Model"
1 w e d n e s d a y
MATERIALS SCIENCES DIVISION SEMINAR
1:30 p.m., Bldg. 66-316; C. Mathews, Indira Gandhi Ctr. for Atomic Research, "Thermodynamics of Fullerenes"
2 t h u r s d a y
BROWN BAG Q&A ON CRADAs
Noon - 1 p.m.
BUILDINGS & ENERGY SEMINAR
12:15 p.m., Bldg. 90-3148; D. Sartor, LBL/National Park Service, "The Presidio Project, Lessons on Promoting Energy Efficiency in the Federal Sector"
3 f r i d a y
SKIN CANCER SCREENING CLINIC
8 a.m.-noon, Bldg. 26; appointments necessary, X6266
AFRD TOWN MEETING
9 a.m.-2 p.m., Bldg. 50 Aud.
MENU
monday
Memorial Day Holiday
tuesday
Ham & cheese omelet
Lamb mulligatawny
Cajun roast turkey
Fishwich w/fries
Caesar salad
wednesday
Biscuit & gravy w/eggs
Vegetarian split pea
Broiled pork chop
Jumbo chili dog
South of the Border
thursday
Blueberry pancakes
Manhattan clam chowder
Salisbury steak
Philly cheese steak sandwich
Pizza singles
friday
Closed for Remodeling
Flea Market ads may be sent via Lab mail to Bldg. 65B, electronic mail to [email protected], or via Fax to X6641. The deadline is 5 p.m. Friday.
AUTOS/SUPPLIES
'90 HYUNDAI Excel, red, 2-dr hatchbk, 4-spd, 49K mi., exc. cond., Sony stereo, $3600. Waltraud, X7363, 843-1103
'92 TOYOTA Tercel, 2-dr sedan, 24K mi., white, basic model, exc. cond., under warranty, very well maintained, avail. 6/27, $6900. Remi, X6186
'93 FORD Tempo, fully loaded, 29K mi., 5 yr. full warranty, $13K/b.o. Elena, 642-4445, 233-5732 (eve.)
WANTED
AUTOMOBILE, '87-'88 Toyota Camry, sedan, a/t. 528-1032
BREAKFAST NOOK, prefer oak, will consider if it's made from another type of material. Monte, X6761
CALCULATOR, HP-15C. Bill Cooper, X7909, 526-3526
CHILD'S BICYCLE for 5 yr. old; chess table. R. Roots, 526-2007
CREW needed for a Catalina 30, 1 design racing sailboat, extensive training in return for dedication & a substantial time investment. Bill Myers, X5626, 601-7827
HOUSE TO SIT by LBL staff scientist (Concord homeowner), prefer No. Berkeley/Hills, experienced w/refs., pets OK. Hank, X4517, 673-9716
IN-HOME CHILD CARE for 5 mo. old girl, 3 days/wk, starting mid-June, Cent. Berkeley. Rich, X6192, Geri, 848-2321
MISCELLANEOUS
CHESTBED, twin sz. mattress, solid wooden frame, 3 drwrs below bed, new cond., $200. John, X4716, Anne, 843-6693
GUITAR, Yamaha, left-handed, steel string, like new, must sell, $150. Sara, X6396
MICROWAVE OVEN, Kenmore Sensor Cook, 750 watt, exc. cond., $75/b.o. Khristal, 482-1559 (after 6 p.m.)
MOVING SALE, queen-sz. futon oak finish $100; queen-sz. futon, blk and b&w cover, $160; Martex twin sz. comforter, b&w, $20; queen-sz. comforter cover, blue & blk stripes, 2 pillows w/cases, $20; ironing board $15; iron $15; Pyrex dishes, food processor, B&D Shortcut, $20; toaster $7; 4 blk metal chairs, $25; Matisse "Blue Nude" $5; Doisneau "Baiser de l'hotel" $7; boogie board, $20; 13" TV Philips, $100. Remi, X6186
WATERBED, king sz., sturdy, w/head board & functioning heater, you haul, $100 or make an offer. X4973
HOUSING
ALAMEDA, furn. 4-bdrm home in Harbor Bay Isle, lots of parks & lagoons, walking & bike trails, ferry to S.F., nr beach, 30 min. drive to S.F./Berkeley, possible use of car, avail. 6/20 - 8/6, Alice, 523-7709
ALBANY, furn. rm in new queen sz. bed in modern condo w/balcony & 1-1/2 bth, kitchen privs., coin op. washer/dryer, nr trans. & shopping, 3 mi. from UCB, short/long term, st. parking or $25 extra for carport, prefer male, non-smoker, share condo w/male UCB employee, $495/mo. incl. utils. except phone (line hook-up in rm) + $300 refundable dep. 559-8009 (5-10 p.m. best/msg.)
ALBANY, Stannage Ave., between Solano & Marin Aves., 2-bdrm, upper floor of duplex, off-st. parking, w-w carpet, no pets, mo.-to-mo. lease. 524-3887
BERKELEY, College Ave., spacious 1-bdrm, avail. July & Aug., $725. 843-4014, 548-1887
BERKELEY, Virginia/Euclid, furn. 3-bdrm townhouse, $1580. 843-4014
BERKELEY, furn. 2-bdrm, 1-bth house, pvt. garden, nr public trans., 15 min. drive to LBL, avail 7/11-8/5, $750 + refundable dep. Ted, X4203, Cloe, 845-3146
BERKELEY upstairs furn. 1-bdrm apt., hardwd flrs, full kitchen & bth, 5 min. walk to UC/LBL shuttle/BART, avail. 6/15, $595/mo. incl. parking/heat/water. 527-1358
BERKELEY, 2-bdrm house, living & dining rms, frpl, garage, workshop, yd, 20 min. walk to UC/LBL shuttle, $875/mo. 527-4192
BERKELEY, lg. furn. bdrm in furn. rooming house on Piedmont, 5 min. walk to UC/LBL shuttle, $500/mo. incl. TV & microwave; unfurn. bdrms also available. 540-0385
BERKELEY, furn. studio w/skylight, parking, full kitchen & bath, 15 min. walk to UC/LBL shuttle, $525/mo. 548-9869
BERKELEY, Grant St. (between Allston & Bancroft), 2-bdrm, 1-bth apt, kitchen & eating area, wall to wall carpeting, coin op. washer/dryer, 1 off-st. parking spot, approx. 3 blks from LBL shuttle stop, avail. 6/1, $892/mo.+utils. 841-0632
EL CERRITO, 1-bdrm, 1-bth unit, 800 sq. ft., frpl, stove, refrig., dishwasher, washer/dryer, nr BART & shopping, $650/mo. incl. utils. Denny, 237-8171
BERKELEY HILLS, Euclid/Cedar, 5 blks from UCB, furn. rm in pvt. home, kitchen privs., washer/dryer, deck, bay view, nr trans., shops, tennis cts. & Rose Garden, non-smoker, no pets, must be clean, prefer visiting scholar/ft working person, avail. 6/1, $450/mo. + util. 642-8517, 548-1287
EL CERRITO, 3-bdrm, 2-bth house, lg. living rm, sep. dining rm, frpl, garage, washer/dryer, nr bus, BART & shopping, no pets, avail. 6/20, $1150/mo. 525-8431
KENSINGTON, furn. 3-bdrm house, secluded, avail. 7/15 - 9/1, $1200/mo. R. Roots, 526-2007, X6949 (FAX)
KENSINGTON, spacious 5-bdrm house to share w/1 person, pvt. bth, privacy, bay view from lg. bdrm, garden, trees, nr busses & shopping, favorite of LBL people, $530/mo., 1st, last + $200 cleaning dep. & 1/3 utils. 524-7086
KENSINGTON, self-contained, furn. 1-bdrm, 1-bth apt., deck, view, living rm w/frpl, den, modern kitchen, pvt. entrance, 1 person only, lease req., avail. mid-June, $725/mo. 527-0189
MONTCLAIR HILLS, 1-bdrm in-law apt., pvt. entrance, frpl, use of washer/dryer, $650/mo. incl. water, garbage & cable TV, pay 1/3 PG&E. 547-0709
OAKLAND, nr Montclair, 1-bdrm in sunny 2-bdrm house, 15 min. from LBL, deck, veg. garden, fruit trees, gas stove, washer/dryer, cat, $450/mo. Sara, X6396, 531-7293
OAKLAND HILLS, furn. 2-bdrm (1 is an ofc.) house, 3 bridges & bay view, dishwasher, yd, fruit trees, parking, care for 2 cats, light watering, avail. early July for 4-9 wks (flex.), $600. 568-4258
RICHMOND HILLS, 1-bdrm w/pvt. bth in pvt. home, for 1 person, 6 mi. no., end of Arlington Ave., quiet, share kitchen & laundry, no pets, no smokers, $450/mo. incl. utils. Jim/Diane, 235-8853
RICHMOND VIEW, pvt. room in home, share kitchen, laundry, etc., nr Del Norte BART, $325/mo. + dep. includes util. X6329, 236-0956
SAN FRANCISCO, Marina, unfurn. 1-bdrm, hardwd flrs, 2 walk-in closets, dinette, pantry, steam-heat incl., $895/mo. (415)921-4026
FALLS CHURCH, VA, few min. from Washington DC, 2-bdrm, 1-bth house, avail. 7/11 - 8/26, $200/wk for 1 or 2 adults, $250/wk for 3 or more. 642-8517, (703)237-5433
EXCHANGE: Australian visiting professor would like to exchange house w/Bay Area resident during 7/20 - 1/8/95. [email protected], +61-2-692-37-60 (FAX)
EXCHANGE: Italian couple w/college student son would like to exchange their Rome attic (2 bedrooms in Monte Verde) w/equivalent housing during Aug. Lina, X4411, 339-8113
WANTED: Sm. house/condo in Kensington/Berkeley/Oakland Hills, approx. Aug. '94-June '95, up to $1500/mo. Prof. G. Thomas, X5656
WANTED: Visiting faculty couple desire furn. apt/house in Berkeley/SF for 8/7 - 9/4. Al Glassgold, (718) 884-0419, (212) 995-4016 (FAX)
WANTED: Housing for visiting professor from Israel, 2 adults, 3 children, from July or August, price range $1K. Jacob Sonnenschein, [email protected]
WANTED: Housing for visiting professor from Brazil, 2 adults, 3 children, for 2 yrs beginning 1/95, price range $900. Farnezio de Carvalho, farnezio%[email protected]
WANTED: Housing for visiting professor from Germany, 1 adult, from 9/15/94 10/2/96. Dr. A. Kwiatkowski, [email protected], +49-721/370 726 (FAX)
WANTED: House/2-bdrm apt for visiting physicist from France, for Aug. Remi, X6186
WANTED: Friendly & clean scientist looking for rm w/kitchen privs. during visit to LBL, for 3-4 wks starting 6/13/94, willing to do light house work or house-sit in lieu of rent. [email protected].
WANTED: Visiting faculty postdoc seeks housing from July 1994 - July 1995, furn./unfurn., 2+ bdrms, Berkeley-Oakland-Albany-El Cerrito, 2 adult nonsmokers will care for pets, plants & garden, local refs. avail., max. $1K/mo. Professor Deborah Berman Santana, (518)442-5173, (518)442-4867 (FAX), local contact, Beth Dickinson, 654-9694
WANTED: 3-bdrm house for visiting scientist & family from France, for July & August, prefer Berkeley, Albany or El Cerrito, rent range $1100. M. Salmeron, X6230, P. Sautet, [email protected]
WANTED: Furn. house for Danish LBL scientist & family in June, prefer No. Berkeley, Kensington or in the hills. Henning, X5323 or 524-6383
WANTED: Furn. house/large, for visiting Danish professor, 2 bdrms, for 1 yr., starting Sept. '94, prefer No. Berkeley, Kensington. Val, X5369
WANTED: 1 to 3-bedroom sublets (2) for visiting teachers participating in LBL's Teacher Research Assoc. (TRAC) program, prefer nr LBL shuttle, needed mid-June to mid-Aug. Karin Levy, X5513
VACATION
HIGH SIERRAS, comfortable, quiet 4-bedroom cabin, washer & dryer, deck, frpl, hiking, swimming, fishing, canoeing (comes with house), sunbathing, 4 hrs from Berkeley, 1 hr from Truckee, wks/wkends, to those who will take gd care of our vacation home. Jane Mauldon, 642-3475, 849-4096
MENDOCINO, 2-bdrm country home, overlooking the Anderson Valley, views, warm & sunny, 20 min. inland from Elk Beach, pvt., quiet, decks, gardens, set on 24 acres of redwood forest, wkend getaway/family vac. Rose Sergeant, 849-1726
NO. LAKE TAHOE, Incline Village, furn. 3-bdrm condo, slps 8+, convenient to lake, shopping & gambling, by day/wk. Hank, X4517, 672-2893
CENT. LONDON, furn. 2-bdrm, 1-bth apt., living rm, modern kitchen, cent. heating, carpet, walk to trans., stores, etc., lease req., avail. Aug. '94. 527-0189
REAL ESTATE
BERKELEY, spacious 5-bdrm, 2-bth, (2) 1/2 bth Architect's home, sunny, level entry, patio, deck overlooks woodsy, secluded garden & creek. Sandy, 524-7402
OAKLAND, 4190 Shafter Ave., Temescal area, 2-bdrm, 1-bth Craftsman home, hardwd flrs, enclosed porch, boxed beam ceiling, stain glass, built-ins, open Sun., 5/29, 1-4 p.m., $189K. Forrest, X6219
LOST & FOUND
FOUND: Gray fake fur hat found in parking lot nr Bldg. 69, reclaim at 69-107, X5211
FOR FREE
KITTEN, male, 2 mo. old, Gray European, litter trained, needs new home. Florence, 238-8949
KITTENS, long hair, 6 wks old, 3 housebroken (2 female, 1 male), plus 2 outdoor kittens. Jim McMahon, X6049, 376-4804
PUPPY, 7 mo. old, v. affectionate female, mixed-breed (small), spayed & vaccinated, nds loving home, preferably w/children & lg. yd. Travis, 524-9281
EDITOR:
Mary Bodvarsson, X4014
Mac QuickMail, fax X6641
STAFF WRITERS:
Jeffery Kahn
Mike Wooldridge
Lynn Yarris
CALENDAR:
Fax X6641
Deadline: 10:30 a.m. Tuesday
FLEA MARKET:
Fax X6641
Deadline: 5 p.m. Friday
INFORMATION:
Mary Padilla, X5771
PRODUCTION:
Alice Ramirez
PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY THE
Public Information Dept., Bldg. 65B
Mike Chartock, Acting Manager