available, and if the income from fees cannot, be increased to the extent envisaged, the University might find itself trying to meet a wide programme of expansion with the resources at present available and no more; s position of having under- taken everything and being unable to carry anything through. Our inclination would be to suggest that the $250,000 grant from H.k.ü.. should be used for the most urgent of the five individual projects shown in paragraph 13 of your despatch, and e rhape also in part for rehabilitation work (your paragraph 2 estimates that rehabilitation work costing some 45,000,000 remains to be done, in which case some of the University's other resources would be released to meet ordinary recurrent expend- iture; and that an alternative plan to the one in your despatch should be worked out before the visit of the Inter-University Council delegation (without prejudice, of course, to consideration of the present plan) to meet the above possibilities. This would naturelly involve striking a balance between the full plans for building and the full numbers of stoff recommended to arrive at a reduced, but still well-balanced, scheme for the University as a whole.
(Signed) J. J. PASKIN.
(J.J. PASKIN)