User:The Captain Returns

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I'm back, I'm the Captain, and I'm better than you. Have a nice day :> By the way, the Captain is looking for work! Help the Captain find a new article to work on, please!

File:Nuvola apps kfm home.png The Captain Returns

  • Location: I currently reside in the beautiful city of Austin, Texas
  • Rights Status: Ordinary user. But I'll typically act like an admin.
  • Edit Count: 350+. Not noobish anymore, but still in the 'meh, nothing special' range.
  • Sign-Up Date: I've had accounts before this one, but those days are past me.
  • Hobbies: Video games, eating, sleeping, sometimes school.
    • Favorite Video Game: MapleStory
      • IGN: Messiah (Scania). Back from a long break.
  • Leave a message
  • View my contributioms
    • Projects
      • Stubbing
      • MapleStory I'm starting to give up on this one...
      • New Articles I'm saving articles that would usually suffer a quick death because of the speedy delete policy. Join me!
      • Whatever YOU want. I'm looking for an interesting article to work on! Employ me for free!

I no longer use userboxes.

This user believes
userboxes should
burn in hell.

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From today's featured article

Automatic tube loader of B Reactor at the HEW
Automatic tube loader of B Reactor at the HEW

The Hanford Engineer Works (HEW) was a nuclear production complex in Benton County in the US state of Washington, established in early 1943 as part of the Manhattan Project during World War II. Plutonium manufactured at the HEW was used in the atomic bomb detonated in the Trinity test on 16 July 1945, and the Fat Man bomb used in the bombing of Nagasaki on 9 August 1945. DuPont was the prime contractor for its design, construction and operation. The land acquisition was one of the largest in US history. The construction workforce reached a peak of nearly 45,000 in June 1944. B Reactor, the world's first full-scale plutonium production nuclear reactor, went critical in September 1944, followed by D and F Reactors in December 1944 and February 1945, respectively. The HEW suffered an outage on 10 March 1945 due to a Japanese balloon bomb. The total cost of the HEW up to December 1946 was more than $348 million (equivalent to $4.1 billion in 2023). (Full article...)

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Today's featured picture

Snake handling in Christianity

Snake handling in Christianity is a rite performed in several churches in the United States. Originating in rural Appalachia, the first instance of snake handling was seen about 1910. Pentecostal minister George Went Hensley was prominent in the early development of the rite. Practitioners commonly quote the gospels of Luke and Mark to support the practice. Practitioners are also encouraged to lay hands on the sick, speak in tongues, and occasionally drink poisons. This photograph, taken by the American photographer Russell Lee in 1946, depicts snake handling at the Church of God with Signs Following, a Pentecostal church in Lejunior, Kentucky.

Photograph credit: Russell Lee; restored by Adam Cuerden

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