Surely, that is the best way of making use of our very scanty resources of scientists, chemists, metallurgists, and all the rest.
They should talk with steelmen of every calibre, from those who work before the furnaces to the great metallurgists.
Doctors, solicitors, chartered accountants, chartered engineers, professional chemists, physicists, biologists, metallurgists architects, quantity surveyors and so on may wear white collars and work in offices.
In many cases, they will need to be specialists—physicists, metallurgists and so on—and people with ample training in nuclear power of all sorts.
The lesson in all this is that strength is not all, as any metallurgist will tell us.
Now engineers, metallurgists and steelmakers have their mystique as well.
I consider that a very competent metallurgist should be on that staff.
I have spent some 35 years of my career in university as a metallurgist carrying out research in the applied sciences.