Welfare and Internal Affairs
HKUSU student activities and service outlets include:
| Outlet Name | Services offered | Location |
|---|---|---|
| The Union Office | Room, poster, banner sites booking services | UG1, Union Building, HKU |
| The Student Co-operative Store (Co-op Store) | Discounted stationery and souvenirs | UG1, Union Building, HKU |
| Computer Hardware and Accessory Store | Computer Hardwares, Accessories, Software, banner and poster printing | G/F, Union Building, HKU |
| Self-serviced Photocopying Centre | Octopus Card-operated Photocopying Machines, mobile phone charging | UG1, Union Building, HKU |
| HKUSU Photocopying Store | Discounted photocopying | Room 202, Chong Yuet Ming Amenities Centre |
Read more about this topic: Hong Kong University Students' Union
Famous quotes containing the words welfare, internal and/or affairs:
“I have an intense personal interest in making the use of American capital in the development of China an instrument for the promotion of the welfare of China, and an increase in her material prosperity without entanglements or creating embarrassment affecting the growth of her independent political power, and the preservation of her territorial integrity.”
—William Howard Taft (18571930)
“A State, in idea, is the opposite of a Church. A State regards classes, and not individuals; and it estimates classes, not by internal merit, but external accidents, as property, birth, etc. But a church does the reverse of this, and disregards all external accidents, and looks at men as individual persons, allowing no gradations of ranks, but such as greater or less wisdom, learning, and holiness ought to confer. A Church is, therefore, in idea, the only pure democracy.”
—Samuel Taylor Coleridge (17721834)
“Winter lies too long in country towns; hangs on until it is stale and shabby, old and sullen. On the farm the weather was the great fact, and mens affairs went on underneath it, as the streams creep under the ice. But in Black Hawk the scene of human life was spread out shrunken and pinched, frozen down to the bare stalk.”
—Willa Cather (18731947)