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response at least is immediately necessary if full atvantage is to be taken of the very generous offer by the Rockefeller Foundation, the details of which are discussed in the section "Medicine" (page 35.)
The appeal is addressed:
(a) to the friends of the Univer- sity who have so generously helped it in the past:
(b) to British firms and to in- dividual British subjects, who recognise that wealth drawn from trade with Ching carries the obliga- tion to contribute, at a critical moment, to the intellectual develop. ment of her people :
(c) to those Chinese, of Chinese or of are in British nationality, who sympathy with the aims of the University or who desire that the youth of China, or their own sons and daughters in particular, should have the fullest opportunities of profiting by Western learning with- out being exposed to the risks in- cident to complete removal from Chinese surroundings at a critical period in their lives.
Fully to benefit by the Rockefeller bene- faction. the immediate raising of some $400,000 to
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