Date:
28.11.86.
Time:
Reporter:
8.30
PMO
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
12.30
S for S: Yes but not, with the greatest possible respect, as smart as those who have tailor-made uniforms and they have to have tailor-made uniforms, they must look really smart because they are out on the streets. Honestly, I think you would need an army of tailors to establish a proper relationship between people wearing the uniforms and those, if you have stock sizes, altering the stock
sizes to fit the people concerned.
MR CHEONG: Mr Secretary, I am in the garment trade.
S for S: I know you are.
MR CHEONG: I know what it entails to develop a pattern,
I know what it entails to develop sizes that fit and based on so
much information that your individual tailors would have, on the statistics of the uniforms they are making, I submit that using a computer programme you would now be able to look into developing 18 reasonably less corrective stock size uniforms, that would look 19 extremely smart and functional.
17
2 2 2 2
S for S: Yes, very good.
MR CHEONG:
Would you then please take the trouble to
23
24
look into it ?
10
11
k
12
13
14
15
16
3
20
IW
243
25
26
27
2 2 2 2 2 2
S for S:
If you guarantee the computer programme.
28
29
MR CHEONG: Take the trouble to look into it.
please take the trouble to look into it ?
Would you
30
31
S for S: If that is what you would like me to do,
32
certainly.
33
34
35
36
CHAIRMAN: May I also ask this serious question; is the
Royal Hong Kong Police Force, Customs and Excise Department and Immigration Department, are all the officers' uniforms made-to-measure?