Abstract
THE augmentation of the scientific research services of the British Empire is such an immediate necessity that at the conclusion of the preliminary plenary sessions of the Imperial Agricultural Research Conference, held last October, the view was expressed in these columns that the representatives of the home government should have been in a position to state “what further financial provision the government is prepared to make, and what financial support has been promised or is expected from the dominions and non-selfgoverning dependencies, for the effective carrying out of the schemes submitted to the delegates for their consideration.” The hope was also expressed that some definite statement of this character would be made before the break-up of the conference.
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Imperial Agricultural Research. Nature 121, 781–783 (1928). https://doi.org/10.1038/121781a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/121781a0