Dr Hyacinth Morgan: And every other country.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: I have listened very carefully to the debate and in the long period of my membership I have never known the House so apparently unappreciative of the great risks to which the world is reaching. We know very little, even in highly scientific circles, about atomic energy and its relationship to physics and chemistry, and, indeed, to all the sciences. On meeting one of the great scientists who...
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: Is this propaganda?
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: I want to express my deep regret that I have not had an opportunity during the day of being heard on a matter of this kind which contains many medical problems in which I am interested.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: It smelled.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: Surely no lady would say that.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: This is a very important matter, and I beg the Government to take these Orders back and consider them afresh from the point of view of our history and of how they will affect our citizens in different parts of the world who find themselves temporarily in countries which are not within the purview of the British Empire. I beg the Government to look at this matter again. It is not just one...
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: Withdraw the Bill.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: Why?
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: Why does the hon. Member not go to her rescue?
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: Do not be too hard on the poor chap, he does not know anything at all about it.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: Some of us do not think that we are here to keep our mouths shut.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: What is wrong with that?
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: But surely any hon. Member is entitled to ask a question?
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: Give her a chance to answer.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: May I ask a question about medicine and expenses allowed in this field? I am a member of the British Medical Association, although I disagree with its policy in most respects, and I also want to be a member of the Royal Society of Medicine which, in the case of my speciality—industrial diseases—offers one of the few places where I can get the requisite books. Will the Economic Secretary...
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: There are many worse.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: No. The hon. Gentleman should read it himself.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: Do not run away from it.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: It must be ready for any emergency.