c. o.
11
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Sir C. Parkinson.
Sir G. Tomlinson.
Sir C. Bottomley.
Sir J. Shuckburgh
Permt. U.S. of S.
Parly. U.S. of S.
Secretary of State.
DRAFT.
further activities that are being
planned in connection with that school.
The local confidence which these arrange-
ments are understood to have inspired
makes any lack of co-operation between
the University Faculty and local industry
the more undesirable.
A University Faculty is presumed
to prepare students for positions of
responsibility and scope superior to
those for which a technical school is
adapted.
Though such positions may be
few in number in the Colony of Hong
Kong or the Straits Settlements, it
FURTHER ACTION.
will be recalled that one, if not the
chief, object for which the University
was founded was the training of Chinese
for appointments in their own country,
and it was no doubt in consequence of
this declared intention that the
Chinese Government at Pekin and at
Canton