RAS-1963 — Page 8

RASHKB Journal 皇家亞洲學會香港分會學刊 All AI Reviewed

2

marvels of the life under the waters around us in the brilliant colours of Mr. Bromhall's underwater photography could not have been revealed to us a quarter of a century ago.

The lectures last year covered a wide variety of subjects, following the policy advised by the first President of this Society in Hong Kong, Sir John Davis, who stressed the importance of directing the attention of the Society to practical projects and to natural history, ethnology and botany as well as to linguistic and literary pursuits. The wealth of our local talent was strikingly shown by the fact that half of the lectures were given by scholars and experts from amongst our own members. The lectures given during the year were:

January 15th
February 26th
Dr. Herold J. Wiens* "Some of China's 35 Million Non-Chinese"
Mr. J. D. Pearson "Recent Development in Oriental Studies in Great Britain"
"Buddhism in Modern Life"
Sir Lindsay Ride "The Old Protestant Cemetery in Macao"
Mr. Ma Meng "Recent Changes in the Chinese Language"
April 2nd
Ven. Khema "Hong Kong Flowers"
May 7th
Miss B. T. Chiu
June 18th
Mr. J. L. Cranmer-Byng "The Old British Legation at Peking 1860-1959"
July 16th
Professor L. C. Goodrich "The Development of Printing in China and Its Effect on the Renaissance under the Sung (960-1279)"
August 20th
September 3rd

* Printed in Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. 2, 1962,

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2 marvels of the life under the waters around us in the brilliant colours of Mr. Bromhall's underwater photography could not have been revealed to us a quarter of a century ago. The lectures last year covered a wide variety of subjects, following the policy advised by the first President of this Society in Hong Kong, Sir John Davis, who stressed the importance of directing the attention of the Society to practical projects and to natural history, ethnology and botany as well as to linguistic and literary pursuits. The wealth of our local talent was strikingly shown by the fact that half of the lectures were given by scholars and experts from amongst our own members. The lectures given during the year were: January 15thFebruary 26thDr. Herold J. Wiens* "Some of China's 35 Million Non-Chinese"Mr. J. D. Pearson "Recent Development in Oriental Studies in Great Britain""Buddhism in Modern Life"Sir Lindsay Ride "The Old Protestant Cemetery in Macao"Mr. Ma Meng "Recent Changes in the Chinese Language"April 2ndVen. Khema "Hong Kong Flowers"May 7thMiss B. T. ChiuJune 18thMr. J. L. Cranmer-Byng "The Old British Legation at Peking 1860-1959"July 16thProfessor L. C. Goodrich "The Development of Printing in China and Its Effect on the Renaissance under the Sung (960-1279)"August 20thSeptember 3rd * Printed in Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. 2, 1962,
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2 marvels of the life under the waters around us in the brilliant colours of Mr. Bromhall's underwater photography could not have been revealed to us a quarter of a century ago. The lectures last year covered a wide variety of subjects, following the policy advised by the first President of this Society in Hong Kong, Sir John Davis, who stressed the importance of directing the attention of the Society to practical projects and to natural history, ethnology and botany as well as to linguistic and literary pursuits. The wealth of our local talent was strikingly shown by the fact that half of the lectures were given by scholars and experts from amongst our own members. The lectures given during the year were: January 15th February 26th Dr. Herold J. Wiens* "Some of China's 35 Million Non-Chinese" Mr. J. D. Pearson "Recent Development in Oriental Studies in Great Britain" "Buddhism in Modern Life" Sir Lindsay Ride "The Old Protestant Cemetery in Macao" Mr. Ma Meng April 2nd Ven. Khema May 7th June 18th July 16th August 20th September 3rd "Recent Changes in the Chinese Language" Miss B. T. Chiu "Hong Kong Flowers" Mr. J. L. Cranmer-Byng "The Old British Legation at Peking 1860-1959" Professor L. C. Goodrich "The Development of Printing in China and Its Effect on the Renaissance under the Sung (960-1279)" * Printed in Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. 2, 1962,
2026-05-12 13:57:12 · Baseline
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2

marvels of the life under the waters around us in the brilliant colours of Mr. Bromhall's underwater photography could not have been revealed to us a quarter of a century ago.

The lectures last year covered a wide variety of subjects, following the policy advised by the first President of this Society in Hong Kong, Sir John Davis, who stressed the importance of directing the attention of the Society to practical projects and to natural history, ethnology and botany as well as to linguistic and literary pursuits. The wealth of our local talent was strikingly shown by the fact that half of the lectures were given by scholars and experts from amongst our own members. The lectures given during the year were:

January 15th

February 26th

Dr. Herold J. Wiens*

"Some of China's 35 Million Non-Chinese"

Mr. J. D. Pearson

"Recent Development in Oriental Studies in

Great Britain"

"Buddhism in Modern Life"

Sir Lindsay Ride

"The Old Protestant Cemetery in Macao"

Mr. Ma Meng

April 2nd

Ven. Khema

May 7th

June 18th

July 16th

August 20th

September 3rd

"Recent Changes in the Chinese Language"

Miss B. T. Chiu

"Hong Kong Flowers"

Mr. J. L. Cranmer-Byng

"The Old British Legation at Peking

1860-1959"

Professor L. C. Goodrich

"The Development of Printing in China and Its Effect on the Renaissance under the Sung (960-1279)"

* Printed in Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. 2, 1962,

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