Miles Dresser. I was here from 1953 to 1957. Physics. Math. Being a physics major ah, the Linfield Research Institute was just being formed when I got here. We earned big money cause we'd get a dollar an hour and anybody else working on campus was getting fifty cents an hour. So ha ha ha it was a big money job. I realize in this time and day that ha ha sounds like peanuts ha ha. The group of us that were physics majors it was kind of an exciting time because that was just blossoming. We had been located in the basement of Melrose. The time I I remember the most which was the time we blew up chapel ha ha ha. We really didn't blow anything up on that scale. A bunch of us were excited about the work we were doing in the lab, so we cut chapel and went down there. They have this kinda huge jar that's about, oh three feet high and two feet in diameter, that was filled with hydrogen. You could heat things up in there and when you got them hot they wouldn't burn cause it's the oxygen that burns things not the hydrogen, so that they would come out nice and clean. One of the guys was heating up something and he got it too hot and it melted and dripped off. Well now this red hot metal hit the air hydrogen interface right at the bottom and it made the biggest explosion I mean my ears were ringing for hours ha ha ha ha ha. And when he saw it falling he knew he was in trouble and he jumped off the stand he was on and ran for the door and the rest of us were headed for the door before it hit and it went boom. There were a lot of questions about what's going on down here cause everyone was up in chapel ha he and we were right underneath it and we really shook the floors and ah we were no longer allowed to work in the lab during chapel time ha ha heh.