
From The Hindu, June 20, 1925: Educational problems
London, June 18: Mr. P.J. Harlog, C.I.E., speaking at a dinner to welcome him at the Criterian Restaurant dwelt on the urgency of the difficulties of the educational problem in India. He believed that the great characteristics preserved in historic books and wonderful monuments and paintings in India and in the hearts of the Indian millions would survive any shock of foreign ideas. Regarding unemployment among the University graduates, Mr. Harlog believed that with the right kind of education in Bengal the hides and skins trade might be converted into a leather trade employing far more trained men.

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From The Hindu, June 20, 1925: Educational problems
London, June 18: Mr. P.J. Harlog, C.I.E., speaking at a dinner to welcome him at the Criterian Restaurant dwelt on the urgency of the difficulties of the educational problem in India. He believed that the great characteristics preserved in historic books and wonderful monuments and paintings in India and in the hearts of the Indian millions would survive any shock of foreign ideas. Regarding unemployment among the University graduates, Mr. Harlog believed that with the right kind of education in Bengal the hides and skins trade might be converted into a leather trade employing far more trained men.