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Stratton’s previous lifting experience also allowed him to fully embrace the most important aspects of the programming. “Make sure you go to complete and utter failure every set of each exercise. You have to make every set 100 percent effort. It feels like you aren’t doing enough because the workouts are so short. But building muscle and getting lean is about stimulation, protein synthesis, and growth hormone.” It only took two weeks of working out with the X3 for Stratton to start noticing changes to his physique. “I’ve never seen myself make these kinds of size gains this quickly before. Especially without taking any kind of supplements.”

Weight Lifting Is a Waste of Time

Dr. John Jaquish and Henry Alkire

The universe was expanding, swiftly and evenly in all directions. It didn't take a huge amount of imagination to read backwards from this and realize that it must therefore have started from some central point. Far from being the stable, fixed, eternal void that everyone had always assumed, this was a universe that had a beginning. It might therefore also have an end. The wonder, as Stephen Hawking has noted, is that no one had hit on the idea of the expanding universe before. A static universe, as should have been obvious to Newton and every thinking astronomer since, would collapse in upon itself. There was also the problem that if stars had been burning indefinitely in a static universe they'd have made the whole intolerably hot—certainly much too hot for the likes of us. An expanding universe resolved much of this at a stroke.

A Short History of Nearly Everything

Bill Bryson

But given a choice, a country with fewer resources might do better to give priority to plutonium. As of early 1943, Igor Kurchatov was evidently not aware of the existence of such a choice. Then he saw the accumulated NKVD espionage. “He said he still had a lot to clear up,” Molotov remembers. “I decided then to provide him with our intelligence data. Our intelligence agents had done very important work. Kurchatov spent several days in my Kremlin office looking through this data. . . . I asked him, ‘So what do you think of this?’ I myself understood none of it, but I knew the material had come from good, reliable sources. He said, ‘The materials are magnificent. They add exactly what we have been missing.’ ”240 On March 7, 1943, Kurchatov finished drafting a fourteen-page review for Mikhail Pervukhin of the documents and transmissions that Moscow Center had collected.241 He only refers to British material—most of it probably passed by Klaus Fuchs—which almost certainly means that no American technical information had yet come in. But the British knew enough, and Kurchatov learned enough, to transform the Soviet program. “Having reviewed the material,” Kurchatov began directly, “I came to the conclusion that it is of immense value for our science and our country. Its value cannot be overestimated.” The material “shows what serious and intensive research and development work on the uranium problem has been undertaken in England,” Kurchatov explained. It also, he wrote, “provides some quite important reference points for our research, informing us of new scientific and technical approaches and enabling us to skip labor-intensive phases of development.”

Dark Sun

Richard Rhodes

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