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Logbook of Jun-July 2007
Fermilab Archives

First users’ meeting

In 1967, 400 enthusiastic scientists met at Argonne National Laboratory to discuss plans to build a new 200 GeV accelerator and a national laboratory to house it. Although the discussions that weekend largely focused on the future of accelerator physics, they also set the stage for what would become the annual Users’ Meeting at Fermilab.

For 40 years, these meetings have brought together users of the accelerator from around the world, offering them an opportunity to interact with and learn from each other.

The program from that first meeting shows a line-up of sessions chaired by future leaders of both Fermilab and the user community, including Norman Ramsey, chair of the advisory board that recommended what type of accelerator to build; Robert Rathburn Wilson, first director of the National Accelerator Laboratory, which later became Fermilab; and his deputy director, Ned Goldwasser. Wilson and Goldwasser used that first meeting to establish the framework for Fermilab’s userfriendly principles.

“Wilson took the opportunity to explain that the lab was really a national lab,” Goldwasser said. “Until that time, although laboratories had ‘national’ in their names, they were really regional. Wilson and I wanted the users to be people who not only visited the lab, but who were involved in the design.

Logbook of Jun-July 2007
Fermilab Archives