Archive for the ‘MEDIA ROOM’ Category
How Creative Mass Non-Violence Beat a Nuke
Thursday, June 14th, 2007How Creative Mass Non-Violence Beat a Nuke and Launched The Global Green Power Movement
by Harvey Wasserman, photographs by Lionel Delevingne. Published on Sunday, May 13, 2007 by CommonDreams.org
Thirty years ago this month, in the small seacoast town of Seabrook, New Hampshire, a force of mass non-violent green advocacy collided with the nuke establishment. A definitive victory over corporate power was won. And the global grassroots “No Nukes” movement emerged as one of the most important and effective in human history.
To read the whole article, view the photographs click this blue link:
Seabook Revisited
Thursday, June 14th, 200730 years after the pivotal anti-nuke protest, the debate goes on
by Karl Meyer, published in Hampshire Life, 6/8/07 (Daily Hampshire Gazette,
On the morning of Saturday, April 30, 1977, 2,000 protesters from across
The Good Fight
Thursday, June 14th, 2007New Hampshire Magazine article by John Walters, photos by P.T. Sullivan, April 2006
Thirty years ago, a few Seacoast activists started a fight against nuclear power that would spread far beyond the Seabrook marshlands where it began.
To read the whole article, view the photographs and listen to “Acres of Clams” click this blue link:
http://www.nh.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060331/NHM01/60331005/-1/
Nuclear Reaction
Thursday, June 14th, 2007Anti-Nuke Groups Gird for New Battle
Sunday, May 13th, 200730 years after Clamshell standoff, the push for nuclear energy to reduce greenhouse gases is splitting environmentalists
by Tim Harper for the Toronto Star, published May 7 2007, also published by Common Dreams News Service
WASHINGTON - Thirty years ago, they stormed the New Hampshire coast, arriving by foot and by boat, to be met by state police, National Guard troops and a governor roaming the site in army fatigues. By the time they slapped the cuffs on Paul Gunter and more than 1,400 others known collectively as the Clamshell Alliance, the battle had already been won and a band of New England activists had stalled the Seabrook nuclear plant and essentially stopped the American nuclear industry.
To read the whole article click this blue link:
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/05/07/1033/
Photo Essay: 30th Anniversary of Mass Arrests at Seabrook
Sunday, May 6th, 2007Photo Essay and text by Lionel Delevingne for Mother Jones.com, May 4, 2007
On April 30th, 1977, a rag tag army of 2,400 people descended, marching and singing, on Seabrook, New Hampshire, to protest the building of a new nuclear power station. Inspired by the civil rights movement and mentored by the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker group, the “Clamshell Alliance,” a small group of local activists had trained the crowd to express their collective frustration with the powerful nuclear lobby. The tactic was non-violent civil disobedience…
to view the photo essay and read the whole article click on this blue link:
http://www.motherjones.com/news/update/2007/05/30_ann_seabrook.html
Huge Anti-Nuke Demo was 30 Years Ago This Week
Sunday, May 6th, 2007by David Tirrell-Wysocki for AP, published by Common Dreams news service and elsewhere worldwide, April 27 2007
Thirty years ago this week, hundreds of anti-nuclear demonstrators trekked down a dusty road and set up camp next to piles of construction material destined to become the Seabrook nuclear power plant. Police dragged or carried away 1,414 protesters on May 1, 1977, ending the skirmish, but galvanizing a national anti-nuclear movement… to read the whole article click this blue link: http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/04/28/830/
The Clamshell Legacy
Sunday, May 6th, 2007A tale of resistance to the Seabrook Station Nuclear Power Plant, and the role of the nuclear industry today
by Matt Kanner for the Wire, a NH Seacoast news service, April 26, 2007
About 150 anxious demonstrators occupied a marsh island in Seabrook on the morning of April 30, 1977. They waited for the tide to go down so they could trudge through the surrounding marsh and reach the construction site of what is now the Seabrook Station Nuclear Power Plant, where they would join about 2,000 other anti-nuclear activists… to read the whole article, click on this blue link:
http://www.wirenh.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2054&Itemid=18
Seabrook protesters stand firm over 1977 protest
Sunday, May 6th, 2007by Eric Parry for the Eagle Tribune, North Andover, MA
Chris Nord hasn’t changed his mind in the three decades that have elapsed since he was arrested for trespassing at the Seabrook nuclear power plant. Nuclear power isn’t worth the risk, he believes. Nord, a resident of Newton(NH), was one of more than 1,400 protestors…to read the whole article, click this blue link:
http://www.eagletribune.com/nhnews/local_story_119093832