Appellant sued in the District Court, seeking relief for procedural deficiencies in proceedings before the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS),1 having the object of overturning an INS decision withdrawing appellant’s status as an approved school for attendance by nonimmigrant alien students under the provisions of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a) (15) (F). On appellee’s motion to dismiss the complaint and cross motions of the parties for summary judgment the District Court granted appellee’s motion for summary judgment. Appellant raises on appeal the question whether its status has been revoked consistently with the standards of procedural due process of law. We reverse, without prejudice to renewal of proceedings which fall within guidelines which emerge from our decision.
The College had been approved since 1953 as an institution of learning for attendance by nonimmigrant students,2 under 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a) (15) (F), which refers in the following terms to such students and institutions:
* * * a bona fide student qualified to pursue a full course of study and who seeks to enter the United States temporarily and solely for the purpose of pursuing such a course of study at an established institution of learning or other recognized place of study in the United States, particularly designed [sic? designated] by him and approved by the Attorney General after consultation with the Office of Education of the United States, which institution or place of study shall have agreed to report to the Attorney General the termination of attendance of each nonimmigrant student, and if any such institution of learning or place of study fails to make reports promptly the approval shall be withdrawn * * •»
The applicable regulations include 8 C.F. R. § 214.3(g) and 8 C.F.R. § 214.3(j). The former provides that the approved school shall promptly report to the INS any nomimmigrant student “who fails to carry a full course of study, fails to attend classes to the extent normally required, or terminates his attendance at the institution.”3 The latter provides that approval shall be withdrawn for failure to submit the reports required by paragraph (g). The withdrawal proceedings against appellant were instituted under the latter regulation and are now more fully described.
On December 1, 1969, a District Director of the INS, on the basis of an investigation which had been in part ex parte, informed the school by letter of the intention of the INS to withdraw the school’s approved status because of several claimed failures to comply with the reporting requirements of the regulations. The school was afforded 30 days within which to submit written representations under oath, supported by documentary evidence, giving reasons to rebut withdrawal of approval. The school responded by denying the allegations under oath, though without documentary support. There followed an interview of appellant’s president with three officials of the INS, at which the president admitted some failures in reporting but took the position that none was willful,4 and sub*931mitted a list of 203 students for whom she claimed reports had been submitted. The INS reviewed the files of 75 to 100 students listed and, according to a memorandum of the reviewing officer who was an INS examiner present at the interview with the president, violations in reporting were reflected in 26 instances. The District Director thereafter, on January 22, 1970, without further opportunity of the school to rebut or explain the evidence, notified appellant that approval of the school was being withdrawn, with its right of appeal to the Regional Commissioner.
Appellant filed notice of appeal with the Regional Commissioner and urged that the decision to withdraw approval had been made inconsistently with due process of law, that is, that the school had not been afforded a hearing at which it could orally present evidence, that counsel had not been allowed to appear at the proceedings, including the interview, that it had not been afforded an opportunity to examine adverse evidence, and that it had been denied the right to confront and cross-examine adverse witnesses. Appellant further alleged, though without supporting evidence, that it had complied with the reporting requirements of the regulations.5 The Regional Commissioner on April 29, 1970, entered an order remanding the case to the District Director “for reopening to enable the appellant to appear with counsel for an interview, inspection of the record of proceeding, further representation, and the District Director’s reconsideration.”
Prior to compliance with the terms of the remand, the District Director, on June 15,1970, advised appellant that “additional evidence has been compiled in support of the decision to withdraw Service approval” and that appellant could examine the evidence; and on the same date the INS examiner involved in the original decision filed a memorandum stating that “[t]he College and its attorneys will be allowed to review the additional evidence of record, and unless evidence is submitted to overcome the foregoing, our decision to withdraw will stand.” This additional evidence grew out of a series of interviews by the INS of former students of the school, conducted both prior to and after the decision of the Regional Commissioner to remand the case, and at which sworn statements were obtained in the absence of counsel for appellant and without according appellant an opportunity to question the students. In addition, the INS had examined 90 files additional to those previously examined, concluding that 63 violations appeared from these files, again without affording appellant any participation.
Appellant filed suit in the District Court on July 1, 1970. After the suit was filed, and in compliance with the remand of the Regional Commissioner, the District Director on July 10, 1970, in addition to the advice previously given— that appellant could examine additional evidence which had been compiled — advised appellant it could appear on or before July 27, 1970, for an interview, with counsel, and could submit additional evidence and make further representations. Appellant did not take advantage of this opportunity and on August 13, 1970, the District Director notified appellant of his decision to withdraw the school’s approved status. The case was certified to the Regional Commissioner for review where it presumably remains pending the outcome of this appeal.
I
The record contains evidence that appellant failed to comply with its *932reporting obligations. To affirm for this reason, however, would overlook substantial procedural defects in the manner in which the record was compiled. It would also overlook the possibility that had appropriate procedures been followed, action less drastic than total withdrawal of approval by the District Director might have resulted. The wide latitude and discretion inevitably given to executive officials and administrative agencies in regard to enforcement policy puts upon them a corresponding obligation to institute and abide by procedures that give affected persons a meaningful opportunity, before adverse decisions are crystallized, to make an appeal to their discretion. While 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a) (15) (F) plainly contemplates that approval shall be withdrawn “if any such institution of learning or place of study fails to make reports promptly,” this does not mandate withdrawal for any and all delicts.6 There is discretion inherent in the word “promptly,” and this is a point that lurks in the entire proceeding without clarification. There is discretion as to the concrete standard derived from the statute; as to whether the colleges had reasonable notice of the standard, either by fair implication from the statutory language, or some official specification; and as to what deviations or tolerances might be deemed in a zone sufficiently reasonable to avoid the sword of withdrawal. Similarly there is discretion as to the number or proportion of significantly late reports that warrants withdrawal of approval. Finally there is discretion, as will be amplified in the following discussion, as to the kind of opportunity that will be allowed for correction of practices, at least where there is no determination that these are deceitful rather than careless.
The case falls within no familiar pattern, but does come within the general ambit of recent decisions of the Supreme Court, Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254, 90 S.Ct. 1011, 25 L.Ed.2d 287 (1970); Richardson v. Perales, 402 U.S. 389, 91 S.Ct. 1420, 28 L.Ed.2d 842 (1971), from which it seems clear Blackwell was entitled to procedures conformable with due process of law. See also Bell v. Burson, 402 U.S. 535, 91 S.Ct. 1586, 29 L.Ed.2d 90 (1971). Its approved status was a valuable asset in the nature of a license which the governmental proceedings threatened to terminate.
In Goldberg the problem concerned initial termination, after ex parte investigation, of welfare benefits without a prior fair hearing. The Court held that while the pretermination hearing required by the decision “need not take the form of a judicial or quasi-judicial trial,” the recipient of benefits must have, among other rudimentary aspects of due process, “an effective opportunity to defendant by confronting any adverse witnesses and by presenting his own arguments and evidence orally.” 397 U.S. at 266, 268, 90 S.Ct. at 1020. In Perales, however, involving a federal statutory claim of disability benefits, which turned primarily upon medical evidence, the confrontation and cross-examination held required by due process of law in Goldberg were not carried into the Court’s decision.
As the above cases make clear, in this respect breaking no new ground, the requirements of due process vary according to the nature of the case, the question of due process being influenced by the relative importance of the governmental and private interests. In Cafeteria & Restaurant Workers Union v. McElroy, 367 U.S. 886, 895, 81 S.Ct. 1743, 1748, 6 L.Ed.2d 1230 (1961), quoted in both Goldberg and Perales, the Court said, “consideration of what procedures due process may require under any given set of circumstances must begin with a determination of the precise nature of *933the government function involved as well as of the private interest that has been affected by governmental action.” See also Bell v. Burson, supra, 402 U.S. at 540, 91 S.Ct. at 1590, where the court noted that “[a] procedural rule that may satisfy due process in one context may not necessarily satisfy procedural due process in every case.”
In our case the governmental and private interests merge in at least one respect. The policy behind the statute under which nonimmigrant alien students may come to the United States to study can be fulfilled only if there are schools where they can pursue their studies. The interests of the United States and the schools separate, however, when the integrity of the immigration laws, and the integrity of the manner in which a particular policy is carried out, may be undermined by the possible use of the schools as a means of evading the usual immigration requirements. In fulfilling that policy we do not understand appellee to question that the government’s interests, compared with the schools’, authorizes withdrawal of approval only in accordance with procedural due process. Appellee says, and we agree, that the situation requires an appraisal of what constitutes due process in these withdrawal proceedings.
Bearing on this determination, in contrast with the situation presented in Goldberg v. Kelly, and Richardson v. Perales, and perhaps to a lesser degree in Bell v. Burson, is the fact that withdrawal proceedings are not part of a massive administrative undertaking. The schools are not numerous like, for example, claimants to welfare benefits; there is no “sheer magnitude of [the] administrative burden.” Richardson v. Perales, supra, 402 U.S. at 406, 91 S.Ct. 1420, 28 L.Ed.2d 842. Moreover, there would seem to be no such reason as there was in Perales to permit an adverse decision to rest upon reports and affidavits of experts. Evidence is more credible in the form of medical reports of doctors than is hearsay evidence of students or others in matters such as are involved in the present case. On the other hand, the nature of the case, involving the failure of the school to submit required reports, would not seem to require that all evidence relied upon be that of live witnesses who could be confronted and cross-examined.
II
The INS, under the supervision of appellee in the Department of Justice, is an “agency” within the terms of the Administrative Procedure Act. 5 U.S.C. §551(1). Cf. Soucie v. David, 145 U.S. App.D.C. 144, 448 F.2d 1067 (1971). In one respect at least the Administrative Procedure Act applies to the proceedings in this litigation. “License” is defined in the Act to include the whole or part of an agency permit or approval, while “licensing” is defined to include agency process respecting the grant, revocation, or withdrawal of a license. 5 U.S.C. §§ 551(8), 551(9). Under Section 558(c) it is then provided:
* * * Except in cases of willfulness or those in which public health, interest, or safety requires otherwise, the withdrawal, suspension, revocation, or annulment of a license is lawful only if, before the institution of agency proceedings therefor, the licensee has been given—
(1) notice by the agency in writing of the facts or conduct which may warrant the action; and
(2) opportunity to demonstrate or achieve compliance with all lawful requirements.
There has been no finding of willfulness or other basis for noncompliance by the INS with the above provision. Nevertheless, the original action of the INS was the initiation of a proceeding to withdraw the school’s approved status rather than the giving of “notice * * in writing” and “opportunity to demonstrate or achieve compliance with all lawful requirements.” The Administrative Procedure Act seems clearly to contemplate that when there is a withdrawal sanction possibly to be imposed, one hold*934ing a license — here “approval” of its status — be afforded an opportunity to put its house in lawful order before more formal agency proceedings are undertaken.7
We need not rely alone, however, upon the failure of the INS to comply with the above provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act, for we find that the proceedings as they progressed did not in other respects supply procedural due process.8 As provided in 8 C.F.R. § 214.3(j), appellant, after receipt of “a notice of intention to withdraw the approval,” was allowed to submit “written representations under oath supported by documentary evidence setting forth reasons why the approval should not be withdrawn * * * [and to have] an authorized representative of the school appear for [an] interview before an immigration officer. * * * ” Thus, appellant was required in this restricted manner to refute a case already built up essentially ex parte, and to do so, prior to the remand of the Regional Commissioner, without the assistance of counsel at the interview. When subsequent to the interview the INS reviewed the files of 75 to 100 of the 203 students on the list furnished by appellant, and drew conclusions from them, appellant was provided no meaningful hearing with an opportunity to refute the INS’s conclusions. It seems, indeed, that appellant did not know just which failures to file reports had been relied upon. Moreover, the District Director, who on the basis of the original investigation had notified the school of the INS’s intention to withdraw approval, decided the case, giving rise to appellant’s claim under the principle stated in Goldberg v. Kelly, supra, 397 U.S. at 271, 90 S.Ct. at 1022, that “an impartial decision maker is essential” to due process of law. Though the Court said that “prior involvement in some aspects of a ease will not necessarily bar a welfare official from acting as a decision maker,” it also said that “[h]e should not, however, have participated in making the determination under review.” Id. Perhaps this was not fatal to the procedure at this stage, in light of the totality of the circumstances, see Richardson v. Perales, supra, 402 U.S. at 410, 91 S.Ct. 1420, 28 L.Ed.2d 842, but it is an element which added a cloud to the procedure.9
The formless — and essentially ex parte —character of the proceedings did not improve when the case was remanded by the. Regional Commissioner. The District Director continued as the decision maker, notwithstanding he had previously made a decision against the school and the procedures underlying that decision were inadequate.10 Moreover, in the compilation of additional evidence by the INS, which included examining additional student files and interviewing students after which sworn statements were obtained, there was no participation afforded appellant with or without counsel. Thus there was no hearing in any real sense, only an interview afforded on re*935mand with an opportunity to examine the record of the proceedings consisting primarily of affidavits of former students. The proceedings, in essence, were formless and uncharted.
We accordingly conclude that withdrawal of approval in the procedural manner described falls short of meeting the requirements of due process of law in the context of the nature of the interests of the parties involved. The interests of the government, set forth below,11 simply are not so urgent, cf. Cafeteria & Restaurant Workers Union v. McElroy, supra, that the private interest of the school in protecting its license should not be accorded procedures consistent with due process. Cf. Goldberg v. Kelly, supra.
Ill
We also hold that resort to the court in the circumstances was not premature. The Regional Commissioner did not upset the withdrawal decision. It remained in effect, with the burden cast upon appellant of obtaining a reversal. On the remand appellant could appear with counsel for an “interview,” inspect the record, and make “further representation.” 12 This did not, however, supply the procedure we have found missing. The fact is, moreover, that after the suit was filed the District Director, on July 10. 1970, conformably to the remand, informed appellant that it could appear with counsel for an interview, submit additional evidence, and make further representations, thus indicating the Director’s interpretation of the limited character of the remand, including the permitted “further representation.” And after the remand order, but before counsel was afforded any representation under the terms of the order, the INS ex parte compiled additional data based on interviews with students, and thus of a hearsay character.
Neither the statute relating to the schools, nor the applicable regulations, sets forth any clear-cut administrative procedure for withdrawal of a school’s approved status. The provisions of 8 C.F.R. § 214.3(j),13 while they may serve a useful purpose, are not an adequate delineation of a procedure equal to the task of resolving a contest over termination of a valuable license status. Nothing comparable to a hearing under the Administrative Procedure Act is provided. See Richardson v. Perales, supra, 402 U.S. at 409, 91 S.Ct. 1420, 28 L.Ed.2d 842. Congress has prescribed no administrative procedure in the statute, such as was the basis for the Court’s decision in W. E. B. DuBois Clubs v. Clark, 389 U.S. 309, 88 S.Ct. 450, 19 L.Ed.2d 546 (1967); and there is no “prescribed procedure” otherwise to be followed, such as the Court referred to in Aircraft & Diesel Equipment Corp. v. Hirsch, 331 U.S. 752, 773-774, 67 S.Ct. 1493, 91 L. Ed. 1796 (1947). In addition, we find no provision in the statute defining the scope of review by the Regional Commissioner in case of appeal.14 In this situation we think the remand, as understandably construed by the District Director, was too circumscribed to afford the fair hearing to which appellant was entitled.
*936IV
While we think the withdrawal of approval cannot stand, it would not do for the court simply to order that it be set aside on procedural grounds without supplying guidelines. In the first place we think 5 U.S.C. § 558(e) applicable and should be followed. Should the INS go further, the notice of intention to withdraw approval under 8 C.F.R. § 214.3(j) should specify in reasonable detail the particular instances of failure to report upon which the INS relies. The documentary evidence the school is permitted to submit within 30 days can then be directed to the specific grounds alleged. In addition, if requested the school should be granted a hearing before an official other than the one upon whose investigation the INS has relied for initiating its withdrawal proceedings.15 If the evidence against the school is based upon authentic records, findings may be based thereon, unless the purport of the evidence is denied, in which event the school may be required to support its denial by authentic records or live testimony. If, however, the data presented in support of noncompliance is hearsay evidence the college, if it denies the truth of the evidence, shall have opportunity, if it so desires, to confront and cross-examine the person or persons who supplied the evidence, unless the particular hearsay evidence is appropriate for consideration under some accepted exception to the hearsay rule. In all the proceedings the school, of course, shall be entitled to representation and participation by counsel. The factual decision of the INS shall be based on a record thus compiled; and the record shall be preserved in a manner to enable review of the decision.
We have discussed the components of procedure in the interest of justice to assure that in further proceedings involving petitioner and any proceedings involving another school, the agency will proceed on the basis of a structure of regulations, or at least instructions available to the persons affected, that will be responsive to the reasonable concerns of the schools involved. We should add that we do not mean that each and every procedural item discussed constitutes by itself a prerequisite of procedural due process. Rather our conclusion of unfairness relates to the totality of the procedure. There was a carelessness in executive procedure that requires correction as surely as any carelessness in school reporting. The ultimate requirement is a procedure that permits a meaningful opportunity to test and offer facts, present perspective, and invoke official discretion. This was not provided by the INS repair of makeshift procedure that remanded the matter for decision to an official who had not only already crystallized a decision but had done so in a context marred by procedural shortcomings.
Reversed and remanded for entry of judgment granting appellant’s motion for summary judgment.
. The INS is in the Department of Justice under the Attorney General of the United States, the appellee.
. The College has developed and maintained facilities and a faculty to educate nonim-migrant students.
. The report shall be on a specified form known as Form I-20B.
. It does not appear that the Director relied upon this admission when the Director later decided to withdraw the appellant’s approved status.
. Appellant also submitted a letter it bad received from the American Embassy in Nigeria, dated March 16, 1970, which indicated that the INS had advised the Embassy “that student visas be withheld from prospective Blackwell students until a final decision had been made on the school’s status because of certain irregularities.” Pending this appeal we stayed the action of the INS and directed that appellee require that the American Embassy in Nigeria, and other foreign officials who might have been similarly notified, be advised of our stay.
. While the statute states that approval “shall” be withdrawn for failure to submit the required reports, we are unwilling to construe this language as mandatory in the absence of an administrative practice or ruling that it deprives the INS of all discretion, especially in light of the provisions of 5 U.S.C. § 558 discussed in Part II of this opinion.
. Notwithstanding indications on the record of informal warnings given the school by the INS, we do not think these complied with 5 U.S.C. § 558(c). In any event we do not rely alone on this failure of compliance by the INS as a basis for decision, and if further proceedings against the school are contemplated, compliance with Section 558(c) will be an easy matter.
. The Regional Commissioner himself did not approve all the procedural steps by which the District Director had reached his decision to withdraw appellant’s approved status. While we cannot say the Commissioner found a lack of procedural due process, he did at least deem the school to be entitled to enhanced procedural rights over those previously accorded.
. In this respect the character of the overall procedure reviewed in Perales, “designed, and working well, for a governmental structure of great and growing complexity,” 402 U.S. at 410, 91 S.Ct. at 1432 might distinguish the situation at hand.
. In this regard it should be noted that other persons involved in the decision with the District Director, such as the INS examiner, participated in the investigation of the school.
. These interests, as alleged by appellee, are the protection of the interests of bona fide nonimmigrant students, proper enforcement of the immigration laws, and the promotion of better relations with other countries, which can just as easily be protected by better procedures.
. The “further representation” presumably is that referred to in 8 C.F.R. § 214.3 (j), i. e., “written representations under oath supported by documentary evidence setting forth reasons why the approval should not be withdrawn.”
. 8 C.F.R. § 214.3(j) permits the written representations referred to in footnote 12 swpra, after which there may be an interview before an immigration officer. No other regulation provides guidance to the INS.
. We are referred to the provisions of 8 C.F.R. § 103.1(e) (10) which in turn make reference to 8 C.F.R. § 214.3, and which provide merely that the school shall be notified of the reasons for a decision and of its right to appeal in accordance with the general provisions of Part 103 of the chapter.
. AVe suggest this as not an absolute requirement but as a means of avoiding controversy over due process of law.