THE DAILY NEBRASKAN We'dnes'day, May 7, 1947 Paqe 2 &fjatteufL An Open Letter to the Student Body: In a letter that recently appeared in these columns written by David Innis, the issue of Hawaiian statehood was presented to the readers of the DAILY NEBRASKAN. This letter is to supplement that letter with factual information and possibly answer one of the most frequently asked questions in regard to Hawaiian statehood, Why does Hawaii desire to become a state?" "Self government is the right of all peoples, and statehood is the framework of self government most appropriate to Hawaii's economic and social situation," stated Harold L. Ickes, former Secre tary of Interior in a speech advocating statehood for Hawaii. Hawaii is the home of 502,122 persons, well over 85 percent of whom were born in Hawaii or on the mainland. These 432,818 American ciitzens have the same aspirations for self-government as Americans on the mainland. Statehood will mean to Hawaii full eaualitv in the American system of government, including the right to: 1. ' Two senators and two representatives in congress; 2. Choice of their governor; 3. Participation in choice of president; 4. Automatic share in federal grants for education, health, highways and other public improvements. 5. Carry on functions of government by their own elected of ficials in lieu of federal administrators; 6. Latitude of lawmaking law by their own legislature with out the discrestion of the President and Congress; 7. Passage of bills without the possibility of veto by an ap pointed governor absolute veto of the President; 8. Judicial functioning in their courts by local authority rather than by federal appointees. 9. Freedom from overlapping of federal and local authority; 10. Enhancement of prestige and pride in being an American. Why should Hawaii be granted statehood and the obvious benefits that would be derived from admittance to the Union? Ad vocates for statehood contend that the Territory has fulfilled every conceivable qualification for statehood, amongwhich are these: In area, Hawaii exceeds three of the states-Delaware, Connecticut, and Rhode Island. Its 1945 population of 502,122 is greater than that of any state at the time of admission with the Exception of Okla homa. As compared with the several states at the time of the 1940 census, Hawaii exceeded the population of the states of Nevada, Wvnminr Dplawarp and Vermont. Hawaii is not as isolated as .. j , - - were western states like Texas and California at the time of ad mission to statehood. Hawaii has an experienced, intelligent elec torate. It has a functioning orderly government. It has a self sustainins economy and valuable resources. It has passed through a long period of territorial tutelage and probation, and has proved its capacity to conduct its affairs as an American commonwealth. Hawaii is subject to federal taxation imposed on tne states, cnontiv navs into the U. S. Treasury a considerable larger amount than the Federal Government has spent upon the Territory, but has no vote in the Congress levying tne taxes, is taxation without representation. It is unfair th American system of government. There is but one answer to Hawaii's plight: We all must join President Truman in saying, "I urge that congress promptly acceed to the wishes of the people of Hawaii that the Territory De aa mitted to Statehood in our Union. . ." EUGENE LI BERMAN This and abhorrent to Batlu Jfobraskan U.S.A. Schedules ji'icmc saiuraay MrmSrr Intercollegiate Press FORTY-FIFTH TEAK CnhvrintloB rmtM are S1.50 per srmmtrr, tl H) prr trnmlrr mailrd, or t.M fair the rolirrr war. 3.0 malic. HI nil eopy 5e. f.hih rf.iiv iini-inr the arboal yea ex cept Mondays and Maturdaya, vacation and ... nw.Mt- hv the students of the ( nivrrtkity of Nebraska nnder the aopervt- slon of the rohllratloa Board, r ntereo as Krrond Clam Matter at the Pout Office la Lincoln Nebraska, ander Act oi .iKrr, March 3. 17. and at special rate of post- ce provided for In section 1103. act of Or tober t, 1917, authorised September 39, 19ZZ. Varsity Dairy Club to Hold Annual Contest Varsity Dairy club will sponsor its annual judging contest Friday and Saturday, according to Don Chnstenson, club president. The dairy products contest will be held Friday at 4 p. m. Prod ucts to be judged will be cheese, milk and ice cream. On Satur day at 8 a. m., the dairy cattle judging which will include Ayr thires, Jerseys, Guernseys and Holsteins will be held. All ag students are eligible to enter. En tries may be filed in the dairy building or at the contest. Dr. P. A. Downs w ill be the of ficial judge for the products con test and Robert Fossland will serve as the judge for the cattle contest. Prizes and awards for both contests will be presented at a "chili feed" Saturday at 6:30 t. m. Representatives from Bea- . .Highlighted by a hula number performed by Pat Tokomoko, the program for the U. S. A. variety show will begin at 10 p.m. Sat urday, at the Antelope Park pa vilion, where the Barb group is sponsoring its annual picnic. Other features of this program, which occur in conjunction with an evening of dancing, include a vocal number by Bob Nielsen, Boogie Woogie by Claude Under wood, and a dramatic monologue. From four to five o'clock base ball, horseshoe, and volleyball will be provided. At 5 p. m. special relay races are to take place, with awards for winners. Dancing begins at 8 p. m. trice Foods, Earl Woods Dairy Stores, Fairmont Foods and Rob erts Dairy will present cups to the winners of each division. Stanley Matzke, farm editor of the Lincoln Journal, will be speaker of the evening. Stage Closes Season With O'Neill Play Last Thursday night the Expert mental Theatre offered its final isrogram of one-act plays for the current season. The two plays were both directed by Max Whit taker, head of the Experimental Theatre. "Before Breakfast," an early ef fort by Eugene O'Neill, was pre sented by Mary O'Donnell. Writ ten in monologue form, the play is a character study of a nagging wife living out a drab existence in a tenement district with the artis tic husband she supports. Miss O'Donnell, and Arts and Science freshman, gave further evidence of the pronounced talent which she first exhibited earlier in the season in another O'Neill one-act, "He." Criticism. By way of criticism, Miss O' Donnell's portrayal looked a trifle too prim and might have been more effective had she made the wife more shrewish and slovenly, The pacing of the play was slow in the beginning and the build-up to the very effectiv climax was not as smooth as it might have been. Also, Miss O'Donnell's tran. sition between soliloquy and bit ter words addressed to her off' stage husband needed to be more concrete and clear-cut. Farewell to Love," by Ryer son and Clements, is a rather weak sophisticated comedy. The plot concerns an actor and an actress who both wish to find true love off-stage and yet maintain indi vidual top billing behind the foot lights. Lorma Bullock and Dale Wisser played the comedy with a light touch and managed to inject a good deal of life into the play, Both showed an easy stage pres ence and smooth delivery of their lines. Only in one or two spots did they allow the tempo of the play to lag or become jerky. Miss Bullock and Mr. Wisser will be seen later this month in Experimental three-act produc tions of "Claudia" and "Thunder Rock" respectively. These two plays, plus one other three-act, "Children of the Moon," will be given one-night production during the week following "Pygmalion. Exact playing nights will be an nounced later. An apology might herewith be offered to Miss O'Donnell and to Mr. Whittaker, the director, in be half of those people who arrived late Thursday night. Whether it was through carelessness or through thoughtlessness, the con fusion they created did little to help the effect which the people on and back-stage were attempt ing to creat. Unit Inspection Of ROTCers Begins Today The annual federal inspection of Nebraska Army ROTC unit will be held today and Thursday, Col. Howard J. John, professor of mili tary science and tactics announced Monday. The inspection will be conducted by a team of four officers from Fifth Army headquarters in Chi cago, and one officer from the Second Army Air Forces at Of f utt Field, Omaha. The team is headed by Col. Wil liam May, Inf. Col. Elmer P. An- brecht, F. A. Major, Robert M. Lorenz, Eng., and Capt. O. C. Vi- gen, xm. The Air Forces officers has not yet been announced. Highlight of inspection of the parade and review of all ROTC students and the ROTC band, which starts at 8:30 a. m. Thurs day on the University athletic field west of the coliseum. RS!! ADDITIONAL GRADUATION ANNOUNCE MENTS HAVE BEEN ORDERED FOR THE BENEFIT OF THOSE WHO WERE UN ABLE TO ORDER PRIOR TO DEADLINE. ORDER NOW AS THE QUANTITY IS LIMITED. NEBRASKA BOOK STORE About Degrees . . . With less than five weeks of college left before grad uation, seniors are aching to get that degree they have worked so hard for in their four years of university. After the diploma is resting in a scrapbook or hanging on a wall, exactly what have they received? It is supposed to re present education, but to many it means a completed edu cation an open road to a good job. Dr. Henry M. Wriston, president of Brown University, however, claims that the degree is "no better measure of the character of a person who receives it than of his com petence," and "is no indication of personal qualifications pertinent to success." His article, "What Good is a Col lege Degree," in the current issue of The American Maga zine strikes out a degree-chasers, and with good reason. It is too late now for seniors to wonder if they ac tually got the kind of education they wanted, but the un dergraduates, who are by far in the majority, still have time to make up a noticeable lack of that elusive stuff, education. As Dr. Brown states, "the requirement of a college degree (for a position) is becoming so general as to stimu late a rush to college in order to acquire .the label." He cites examples of journalists or would-be bankers being re fused jobs of carrying copy or clerking merely because they did not have letters after their names. A college degree is the best thing in the world, if it is obtained and used in the right way. If the sheepskin means as thorough a knowledge as possible of a particular field, combined with an understanding of other fields, es pecially those which increase the capacity of a man to exercise the functions of citizenship correctly, it has been obtained the right way. If the diploma means to the grad uate a stepping-stone to more and more education through experience and training, it will be used the right way. Dr. Brown sums that thought up in these words: "En ightenment is not a matter of degrees. Self-discipline, reflection on experience and its meaning, wide reading may educate a man in the best sense of the world." Each senior must answer for himself the question, 'What good is MY college degree?" The anwer may not come for 20 or 30 years, but it will inevitably spring from the way he got it and the use he made of it. Our Forty-Second Yer! Mothers idea Jf a perfect gift..". LEISURE SLIPPERS In beautiful frolic print Ml Gay colored beach umbrellas, sun bathers end palm trees brighten these frolic-print, soft platform'd slippers. Mother will love their cheery,' cool comfortl Shoe Salon, Fifth Floor-