Wt. 49614/485*3/46 50m. S. & S. Ltd.
54147/46
C. O.
Mr. Mayle
AX
14/20/146
15/10
V. mi
Mr Lind 16 alonce
Mr.
Permt. U.S. of
Mr.
CEIVED
boded x sept
2100.hs 17.10.46
Atte
118 OCT 1946
Parly. U.S. of S.
IMPORT Secretary of State
18
Permat
CONFIDENTIAL
DRAFT CODE TELEGRAM
GOVERNOR,
(53)
HONG KONG,
(80)
FURTHER ACTION.
(46)
Conformante
by Acikail
18/x/46
No 1090
Nassarokes personal &confidential
Following/from Lloyd begins:
s/from
Your telegram H.K. 1009 and your
letter 27th September. Hong Kong Universit
1. When the Committee's report came
before the late Secretary of State with
a recommendation on the lines of paragraph L
of my letter of the 17th August, Mr. Hall
gave instructions that a memorandum should
be prepared to accompany his letter to
Mr. Bevin indicating (a) the probable
size of the University's student body and
the vacancies which were likely to be
Colonial Comitiis filled respectively from Chine, the Colony-
DROMINIONS AND FOREIGN
and ether territories and (b) the
proportion in which the capital and
recurrent expenditure might be divided as
between Hong Kong revenues and C.D. & W.
funds on the one hand and U.K. funds other
than C.D. & W. on the other. Grounds for
contribution from latter source would of
course be that the provision of facilities
for students other than Colonial or
2.
Dominion was primarily an Imperial interest.
Following figures of domicile of
students have been provided by Sloss under
the three headings (a) from Colonial
territories