User:ECH3LON

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HI! I'm the user ECH3LON and I love wikipedia!

ECH3LON This user is the commander now! Don't order this user around, you civilian!
This user honestly just doesn't care anymore about what shape the Earth is. Let it go, man.
This user prefers using userboxes to fill up their user page instead of actually writing something useful.
This user was up all night finding userboxes and is now very drowsy.
This user DOES NOT live in a pineapple under the sea.
This user just sank your battleship.
This user needs more userboxes. MORE, I tell you, more!!! Muhahaha!
Today is 24 April 2024
This user prefers using userboxes to fill up their user page instead of actually writing something useful.
This user is part of the Welcoming Committee.
Flag of Maryland
^_^This user reads manga.
This user is a Rouge admin and a Halo 3 veteran, Trespassers will be shot. Survivors will be shot again.

Gamertag: SER4PH1M





I'm a good samaritan and i love to help out in debates (especially Articles for Deletion that's one easy way to get started. I LOVE to read, i also love to play videogames and watch South Park. My favorite bands are Led Zepplin, Journey and All-American Rejects. Oh, and most importantly... I never get tired of helping around this website! =D

Random fact o' the day: A Bus station is where a bus stops. A train station is where a train stops. My desk is a work station...plz don't steal this...


Luis Walter Alvarez
Luis Walter Alvarez (1911–1988) was an American experimental physicist who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1968 for his discovery of resonance states in particle physics using the hydrogen bubble chamber. After receiving his PhD from the University of Chicago in 1936, Alvarez went to work for Ernest Lawrence at the Radiation Laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley. He joined MIT Radiation Laboratory in 1940, where he contributed to a number of World War II radar projects and worked as a test pilot, before joining Robert Oppenheimer on the Manhattan Project in 1943. He moved back to Berkeley as a full professor after the war, going on to use his knowledge in work on improving particle accelerators. This 1969 photograph shows Alvarez with a magnetic monopole detector at Berkeley.Photograph credit: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory / Department of Energy