Let My Walter Adams haut copies for confidential Xarelation to the Inter-Venivesity Comcil members a few

days to for this weeking

Sast

the 262.

They

wer.

Vold at

just being

rather boor

this meeting in July that the report was

signet

& it might note, unnecessarily, impression if it todent in the interal reached the stage when

Z

لحرة

Also they

• I`shir Whee

it could to confidentially cautated to them. don't west again till the and I know how they react to the Report.

I shoke tring to his H. Prideaux-Brune lines of the last sentence in my previous minute.

asked whether in aries to but

مان

A

Cit

4

ine in túc

an

He

the

copy f

the

F.O.'s concident in of the report, we and lows any object in to letting him or My Kitson (whom he has kept informed throughout of the Cre's proceedings) have now the Refort for immediate despatch to the F.O. ople at Nanking tas their advanced confidential intration; F.O. view is not likely to to formulated until their Nanking people's considered veins are available and these will take time to ottain. It uld of course to explained to Nanking that My Hall's vaise cadent yet been received by

making from In Bevin & that they and to hearing again war

I said I wld bass this the F.C. when they and bean.

at once.

rely

for

I have discussed with Mr. Cox. I agree that copies of the Report should now be circulated to the Members of the Committee and that Mr. Walter Adams should have further copies, as Mr. Cox suggests, confidential circulation to the Inter-University Council Members a few days before their meeting on the 26th September. In the letters distributing these copies expies, which should be marked "confidential", attention should be drawn to the confidential nature of the contents of the Report.

As regards the question of letting the Foreign Office have advance copies of the Report for Nanking, Mr. Cox agrees with me that on the whole it would be better to wait a little while in the hope that the Secretary of State's letter to Mr. Bevin will not be too long delayed. The Report is not a long document, and if it is sent to Nanking for advance information and without any lead there is the danger that the Ambassador may formulate and telegraph views which might prejudice our case with the Treasury later on. I should hope that when the Report goes out to Nanking, the Foreign Office will adopt the line taken in the draft letter to Mr. Bevin, namely that the case for a University

in

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