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Musicians United for Safe Energy, or MUSE, is an activist group founded in 1979 by Jackson Browne, Graham Nash, Bonnie Raitt, Harvey Wasserman and John Hall. The group advocates against the use of nuclear energy , forming shortly after the Three Mile Island nuclear accident in March 1979.
No Nukes: The Muse Concerts For a Non-Nuclear Future was a 1979 triple live album that contained selections from the September 1979 Madison Square Garden concerts by the Musicians United for Safe Energy collective. Jackson Browne, Graham Nash, Bonnie Raitt, and John Hall were the key organizers of the event and guiding forces behind the album.
The Legendary 1979 No Nukes Concerts is a live album and concert film by Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, released on November 19, 2021.It was recorded over two nights, September 21 and 22, 1979, at Madison Square Garden, as part of the No Nukes concerts organized by activist group Musicians United for Safe Energy (MUSE) against the use of nuclear energy.
Paul Ingram (nuclear disarmament expert) International Conference on Nuclear Disarmament, Oslo, 2008; International Day against Nuclear Tests; Physicians for Global Survival; Italian Union of Scientists for Disarmament
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Muse (headband), a brand of brain activity sensing headband; MUSE - Museo delle Scienze, a science museum in Trento, Italy; Tokorozawa Civic Cultural Centre Muse, a concert hall complex in Tokorozawa, Japan; Triadex Muse, an electronic digital musical instrument; Musicians United for Safe Energy, an anti-nuclear activist group founded in 1979
The office of President Yoon Suk Yeol confirmed on Tuesday the second Nuclear Consultative Group (NCG) meeting will take place in Washington D.C., five months after the group's inaugural meeting.
Some of these anti-nuclear power organisations are reported to have developed considerable expertise on nuclear power and energy issues. [2] In 1992, the chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said that "his agency had been pushed in the right direction on safety issues because of the pleas and protests of nuclear watchdog groups". [3]