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So you may have seen a video of a block of carbon from the world's first nuclear reactor, which was given to our minister of science when he and I visited the Argon National Lab in Chicago.
Well, a few days after the video, a box has arrived from the Argon National Lab, and I thought, I mean by open it together and see what's inside yet I got a nice pen and the minister got this block and I I suggested on the video that perhaps the minister should give the block to me.
And although he hasn't yet asked for it back, I haven't been given it.
So let's see what's in the box.
It says on the label that it is a memento from the director of the lab, so I'm quite excited that it might be something interesting will be real happening.
If I cut myself on screen, we could do another video on blood ever the professional that you do it.
I read the story a letter from somebody who said he started chemistry because this chemistry teacher had an explosion with sodium, was covered with blood and still took out a piece of litmus paper and put it in the water and said, Look, it's alkaline.
So inside is a smaller box.
There's some quite interesting packing material here could be recycled inside.
Tiff is the white folks looks quite like the minister's white books.
So let's open it.
Maur packing.
And wow, uh, it's a block like the minister's.
This is a block of graphite from the world's first nuclear reactor that started on the second of December 1942 in Chicago under the sports field.
So it's really nice.
I'm delighted.
So you're gonna give the minister's back so I shall give the minister's back.
So I think this is absolutely great on DDE.