PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY TJ{URSD;AY, MA~RCH V,1~ I,._I._ THE MICHIGAN DAILY Education AtMichigan Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of StuderW Publications. Rutbushed every morning except Mondy during the )University year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matter herein also reserved En,,ved at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, 14.00, by mal, $4.50. Meber, Associated Collegiate Press, 1937.38 REPRESENTED FOR NAIONAL ADVERTISING BY NationalAdvertising Service, Inc. College Publislers Representative 420 MADISON AE. NEW YORK. N. Y, CHICAGO BOSTON " LOS ANGELES" SAN FRANCISCO Board of Editors MANAGING EDITOR ..............JOSEPH S. MATTES ASSOCIATE EDITOR.............TUURE TENANDER kSSOCIATE EDITOR....... .....IRVING SILVERMAN ASSOCIATE EDITOR ....... WILLIAM C SPALLER ASSOCIATE EDITOR ..............ROBERT P. WEEKS WOMEN'S EDITOR'................HELEN DOUGLAS SPQRTS EDITOR .......................IRVIN LISAGOR Business Department B DTSINESS MANAGER...........ERNEST A.JONES y CI DIT MANAGER ............. .....DON WILSHER ADVERTISING MANAGER ....NORMAN B. STEINBERG WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ..........BETTY DAVY WOMEN'S SERVICE MANAGER ..MARGARET FERRIES NIGHT EDITOR: HORACE W. GILMORE t is important for society to avoid the neglect of adults, but positively dangerous for it to thwart the ambition of youth to reform the world. Only the schools which act on this belief are ee ucational institutions in the best mean- ing of the term. Alexander G. Ruthven. The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staffand represent the views'of the writers only. England Struggles With CensorshipS. . DOMESTIC CENSORSHIP plagues the British press. English newspapers and American foreign correspondents alike, com- plain that the Chamberlain Government has lately hidden from the electorate, important facts concerning the progress of the Foreign Office and the developments in the Cabinet crisis. Comments on the newly-adoptec gag policy are already trickling into English editorial columns and it appears that the British Broadcasting Company, the newsreels and the newspapers have all three been thrust under the Government's Blue Pencil. The stately Manchester Guardian, four days after the cabinet crisis, observed editorially that "the readers of most of the Conservative papers, during the last few days have had a curiously distorted view presented to them of the way for- eign opinion look on Mr. Eden's resignation. The art of suppression-or should it be called selec- tion?-has been widely practiced, although it has not," the Guardian says, "reached the height of one 'popular' paper that contrived to fill three columns about Tuesday's debate without men- tioning that Mr. Churchill spoke. "Another, professing much greater ideals of fairness, makes out that dominions are quite happy and ignores all expression of American sentiment beyond recording that the Administra- tion made no public comment. Other papers have scoured the world for stray-and they are stray-expressions of confidence in Mr. Cham- berlain and left out everything said on the other side about the distress of Mr. Eden's passing." Aside from isolated jewels of candor, the Guar- dian contends "the Government has preserved a unity of silence that could hardly be bettered in a totalitarian state-a dangerous omen." Paul W. Ward, London correspondent, writing in the Baltimore Sun finds that Conservative papers throughout England have taken such lib- erties in quoting American opinion as to linger on the brink of falsehood. The Daily Express, most circulated English paper, goes as far as to find America draping the cloak of Lincoln around Chamberlain's shoul- ders! The newsreel incident which brought Opposi- tion members to their feet occurred, Ward says, the day that the Express detected the- strange similarity between Chamberlain and Lincoln. "The British Parliament half-weekly newsreel," he explained, "devoted some of its footage to the Cabinet crisis. It stated briefly the grounds on which Mr. Eden had resigned, summarized Mr. Chamberlain's view and then went on to show C. R. Atlee, Opposition leader in the Commons, repeating briefly the points he had made in de- fense of Mr. Eden and against the government in the Commons Debate on Tuesday. A few hours after the newsreel was issued the pro- ducers telegraphed all exhibitors to cut out the speech of Mr. Atlee, who had said that every- where Mr. Eden's resignation would be hailed as a great triumph for Mussolini. T