-6capabilities. His informal list of those underground tests and experiments as well as such other things as @rion which LASL would think of doing if they could Bradbury's statements on the laboratory's momentum and personnel and budgeting within the moratorium as to how this momentum has changed with no testing possible and how he feels if might change in the next few years, is particularly interesting. He is very specific about the kinds of questions and objectives and decisions that he feels should be raised and detailed in order to better define the direction of the laboratory for the immediate future and to better utilize the personnel. Also, his views on the need to maintain specific devices and capabilities in readiness for testing are very significant and his estimates of the difference between maintaining something of a well-defined readiness capability vs. just carrying on the weapons development and keeping people busy. Finally, in the area of seismic detection, he clearly sees very little involvement in this by LASL personnel, A 4& Aug. 1960 memo from ALOO to Starbird gives some interesting numbers that indicate the weapon laboratory contribution to the stockpile over the next few years. It is particular significant in showing what the laboratories, LASL and Livermore, have done up to this time in completing designs that the military has accepted and put in stockpile. Thus even though the trend is for Livermore to get slightly more contribution each year, LASL still would have contributed more than 90% to the national stockpile at that time.

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