One of the special highlights of Open House was a noontime luncheon honoring the nine Nobel laureates who did their scientific research at this Laboratory. The five living Nobelists were joined at the luncheon by their family members and the families of their four colleagues, plus the mayors of Berkeley and Oak-land. In a ceremony after the luncheon, the nine roads running through the Laboratory were named in honor of the Nobelists: Ernest Lawrence (Berkeley Lab's founder and namesake); Edwin McMillan, Glenn Sea- borg, Emilio Segrè, Owen Chamberlain, Melvin Calvin, Luis Alvarez, Donald Glaser, and Yuan Lee. The Laboratory also installed an entrance sign featuring the bronze image of Ernest Orlando Lawrence.
In education, the Laboratory continued its traditionally close ties with the neighboring UC Berkeley campus. Each year, nearly one thousand graduate and undergraduate students make the trip up the hill from Cal to Berkeley Lab to participate in our scientific research projects. A growing number of students are also now coming to the Lab from UC Davis and other campuses. The Laboratory also continued to work with grade school children, primarily through its Center for Science and Engineering Education (CSEE). Berkeley Lab has been the lead laboratory in the highly acclaimed Bay Area Science and Technology Education Collaboration, and is a founding member of the Science Education Academy of the Bay Area and a contributor to the PBS science series, "The New Explorers."