THE DAILY NEBRASKAN SUNDAY, JANUARY 10, 1937. SIX Daily Nebraskan Station A. Lincoln. Nebratks. THIRTV. FIFTH YEAR Published every Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday, Fri day and Sunday mornings of the academic year by stu dents of the University of Nebraska, under supervision of the Board n Publ's" W36 Member . ojf Fbsocicded Cblleeiate Press Distributor of CoHe6iaeDi6esf National Advertising Service, Inc Cmtlrtr PMiiktrt Krpmrmimtiwt AZO Madison Ave. New York. N.Y. CMICAOO BOSTON - SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANSCLCS rORTUANO - CATTLf ARNOLD LEVIN BOB FUNK Editor Business Manager EDITORIAL STAFF Managing Editors GEORGE PIPAL DON WAGNER News Editors Jans Walcott Willard Burnry Ed Mm ray Helen Pascoe Bob Reddish BUSINESS STAFF Assistant Business Managers Boo Wadhami Webb Mills Frank Johnson This oaoer is represented tor general advertising by the Nebraska Press Association. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice In Lincoln. Nebraska, under act of congress. March 3. 1879. antl at special rate of postage provided for In section V103. act ot October S. 1917. authorized January 20. 1922 SUBSCRIPTION RATE i 50 a ye.ii Single Copy 6 cents $1.00 a semestei 12 5C a year mailed 1.50 a semester mailed Under direction of the Student Publication Board. Editorial Office University Hall 4. Business Office University Hall 4A. Telephones Day: B6891 : Night: B68S2. B3333 (Jouina.) D-?sK Editor Pipal ON THIS ISSUE Night Editor Reddish Slaughter (' Merrily On. The Union Is Under Way. Yesterday, at 2 p. jii., the Student Union building officially was gotten under way. Sur rounded liy the hoard of regents, the architect, and other administrative bigwigs, and all un announced. Chancellor Hurnett swung a pick axe into frozen turf; pebbles flew, camera shutters clicked, and the Union building was on ! A few miirutcs later, when the adminis tration had whisked away from the scene, several members of the Daily Nebraskan staff who had learned of the scanty ceremony planned, just a few minutes before the event, took over. They, too, swung pickaxes and shovels, and a hastily requisitioned camera re corded the students' celebration of the break ing of "round. Somewhat a bit more infor mal. to be sure, but nevertheless sincere and with a pr;ier for the success of the structure which they helped plan and found. Their joy is so much more expressive of the purpose ;ind ideals of the building than mere official commendation. The administra tion posed for its picture se) I'-sal isfiedly. and with llie feeling that it had dune s etliing worth while to benefit campus life. The stu dents were the ones benefited, and they frisked about and exchanged hearty congratulations in their unofficial ceremony, altho the most wi re seniors who never will actively enjoy the The Counsellor's Corner Happy New Year Stress llie "Happy'" By Miss Grace Spaelit, Baptist Student Secretary. "Happy New Year!'' How many times have you hailed your friends with that cheery phrase this last week? What did you mean by the word 'happy'? Happiness may be considered a universal desire, but its interpretation and ways of achieving varies with eacli individual. After the rush of the ChristmasO season, it is customary for nier- which bring him recognition, re- . i Union as undergraduates. I I 1 1 i.al ion s worst Joe, lis most Iwooii tliirMv eiiemv. will take the Jives of .".7.000 American citizens during H,:- the lives of j The keynote of the Union is to be taken helpless children, of their mothers and tat hers. not from the official, but from the unofficial Thousands more will be injured and maimed, j breaking of ground riles. The comradery that A tragedy a major, national tragedy will knitted together that small group will find its in- ultimate expression in the good fellowship of They will not go as a sacrifice to the the entire student body thru a common means, greedy gild of war, not as the uiisusfSict ing 1 1 he Union. sufferers of the wrath of nature, but rather as Ti.c determined lull of a vicious maniac, the careless driver. The whole course of lives, of families, of Jiomcs will be darkened. Jt will be a recur rence of the world's most needless calamity, a calamity because it can largely be prevented. Revive The Forums. Last . midyear, to promote cultural influ ences on the campus, llie Student Council ap pointed a forums committee to brio problems of the day before the student body for open The year ju',1 closed was the nation's worst from the standpoint of fatalities - a death every 1.1 minutes, four lives during each hour of every single day. I nbss the present trend is cheeked sharplv. more peo ple will be mercilessly murdered on the na- s,.IIH.sf f operation. Several open for- i u m s were held, were well attended, and the student body seemed pleased with this means discussion. The committee f unci ioiied -vcrv w ell in its linn s st reels luring tlie next I lii'ilillis than there were American soldiers killed during the entire World war. Property loss from accidents during the ;.st year is estimated by ihe lialioii.il salely council at .41 . ;o 1,001 1.0O0: 1 Ml.OfKj.lK Kl is the estimated factory cost of all the new passenger cars sold in l!l!H. chants to take an inventory of their goods on hand. After our Christmas rush is over, after the melody of the beautiful Christmas music has faded from the air, let us take an inventory of ourselves to see what we are doing that will make our wish of a "happy" new year come true for ourselves as well as for others. It is easy to make a child hap py by giving him the things that he desires at the moment and satisfying his every want, but this does not bring happiness in adult life. For one of the meas ures of being grown up, of be ing mature, is the ability to de fer satisfactions, to work and to wait for the sake of a desired result in the future. "Learning to wait" is one of the greatest lessons that must be learned if we would attain happiness. How do you rate on this first ques tion in your personal inventory? Neither does happiness depend upon living in a certain place or under certain conditions, for hap piness may be sought and found in any place, because it is in our selves that it exists and only there. Happiness is an individual product, dependent upon the organization and health of the body's cells, the stability of the nervous system, and the attitudes of the mind. What health habits are you form ing? Are your nerves "on edge," dashing from one activity to an other, keeping up, under pressure? Are your attitudes growing more tolerant, more understanding, more appreciative of those who differ from you in color or race or creed ? "Happiness is a perfume you cannot pour on others, without getting a few drops on yourself." If one centers his attention on himself, only doing those things gardless of the other person, lives "egocentrlcaily," as our psychologists say, he is far from the road to inner happiness. Life becomes richer and more stis- v fying as we live "objectively," become absorbed In a cause out side' ourselves, and lost our sel fish traits in working for the development of the larger group. "For he that saveth his life shall lose it, but he that loseth his life, for My sake, shall find it." Jesus, the Master of Life, under stood and lived and taught the way to lasting happiness. t "Happiness belongs to the inde pendent, the competent, the cour ageous, to those who have re sources within themselves to com bat ill-fortune, to those who can inhibit anger over trivialities and a release it for just causes, to those who have few fears, to those who can love unselfishly, and can give pleasing expression to that love." The year is before you. Will you make it a "happy" new year? "Listen to the salutation of the dawn! , 'Look to this day. For it is life the very life of life. In its brief course lie all the ver- ' ities and realities of your existence. The bliss of growth, The glory of action, The spendor of beauty. . For yesterday is but a dream, and tomorrow is only a vision; But today, well lived, makes ev ery yesterday a dream of happiness. And every tomorrow a vision of hope. Look well, therefore, to this day. Such is the salutatio.t o the dawn." Fale of Unicameral Evident in Four Months, Says Sociologist; Calls Seiining"s Hook 'Timely' for their expression of thought openly and ! freely. i This year, the Student Council forums i committee lias made nice promises whieh ap ! jm-.i ri I in print, but the forums never were j forthcomiiiL'. A semester has passed, and no act ion has been t a ken. ! The J)ailv Nebraskan belices the forums . . a I steering wheel ami an acceiijator , .,(.,,,,. r , (. .s, propa-.-alc! by tj.c council ,rr I m i ics 1 1 i a o s iii-i iirvi mi h m ('an it be that thi.s slaughter must go on.' Miisl we believe that automobile drivers arc transformed from sound, sane humans to irre sponsible, irrepressible killers w hen eon front ed wild pedal V r ni vears. and ihat this activity ought tl,,.ii- l',. I I, .;n cs Ihe street colli' All' wc helpless before this ov r, w helming death!""' 1odicforwa.it of a pjili-at ion in t he coun ,),..,!, ,.' -eil. The committee must be rejuvenated, and I Ibv ioiisly not. Man has never been so .must take more active control of its sphere in the coining semester. igncij. IMucatiou and public interest can solve this problem. Kxpelieiicc lias proved this to be iruc. When drivers are properly educated and pedestrians properly instructed, and when a community i.s aroused to the nee. for iincjein engineering methods ami intelligent law enforcement methods d'-aths and aeci- b ills are reduced. According to n rcnrl from Kvansion. III.. 'Iiv i iibghlciicl enforcement and common sense engineering, cut it dealh rate lrm to to i deaths last year Syracuse. . V.. has reduc-d its deaths from 1 in VX'A lo in l!i:..Y Lincoln's chief of police. Waller Anderson, has compiled a booklet of Iraffb regulation. 1,'ead 1 hem and above all, obey idem. IJciiicni per Idat ''courtesy is the byword to safe driv ing "' I d ive carefully. h un ' i. pie responsible for 12 deaths and 'i red jo juries in New Viars tree fires in soviet I'ussia are to lie arrested and punished. Mow much more civilized is America here the deaths from auto accidents alone mounted to over 200. We couldn't be bothered with VI deaths from New Vears tce firi. j There are any number of interesting sub ijeets which Ihe students of Nebraska would 'enjoy listening to and discussing. Among them :are subsidization, now coming in for a great j ideal of controversy in Ihe press: fraternity , v . the dormitory system, one of the major collegiate social issues; censorship of student ! political ions ; regimentation: new NTIA, and many others of political and social nature. There j no Jack of material. 'Ihe campus abounds with controversial subjects in wJiieh every student at least should be interested, and which he would be anxious and willing to discuss if given the opportunity and needed impel us. The Sludeiit Council sdoiild take action at once to see td.il its system of forums is not destioved. A Hollywood playwright and Hollywood actress are gelling married after )u fell in love wild her when he fcaw lier in a motion picture. Typirydly Holly woodiaii 1 iTIw oUli. t. Or. i. O. HitIIi-i--. fnt-ftirfilt r.lirrnll llir llnM-ly allrur-itiirv- ni Or. J. f. l-nnliiK's lir IxMik on fill' nr Imiiimi IrclMfMturi. Or. Ilrrt. Sfr I rkiirmu ! tlif df imrlniriit f WHiloKy at ilir lflttrMy ! .Nrlirmatt and Or. Nraninc t rhainnwa f tlir 4r pmrlmi'lil i,f pwlltb-al rtMirr. I "Sow that the unicameral is in session we will Ik; able to see in part at least whether this type of government is more open, respon sible and responsive, freer from buck-pasMing, log-rolling and pork barrelling, than the old bicameral form. At the same time it roust be eranteij that a single session will not be a fair test of thia epochal experiment. .Social blueprints are not so easily translated Into Hocial structures. For Home time the mcmbciA Individually and as a whole will have to 'feel their way.' furthermore, many persons of consider able importance, as well as certain organized interests will attempt to embarrass the new legislature and if possible scuttle it. Nevertheless a partial 'proof of the pudding' will occur during the next four months. Most Significant. "Vr. Sennieg's book Is most sig nificant. In view of the fact that the author was one of the chief pioponeiito of the unicameral Idea in Nebraska, the foremost xlitical theorist in tli determination of the technical details, one of the leaders In the: movement which re sulted in the adoption of the amendment by the electorate, arid the man largely responsible for the legislative dlrtrii-U now es-tabhshi-ij, the book has a com mendable degree of objectivity. "The eyes of the- politically In terested people of the country will be on Nebraska during the enau Ing months, for the Interest in a unicameral legislatuie is wide nprcad. Thla is attested by the fact that resolut ioni catling for the establishment of a one-house leg islative body were proposeij by 2?, of the state legislatures meeting in 1935 and It remained for the citizen of thin Mate to defi nitely replace the bicameral leg islature with the one which so auspiciously met for the first time the paat week. Theory of Bicameralism. "Professor Srnning s book starts with a meaty and well reasoned chapter on the theory ami prac tice of bicameialism. The second chapter recounts the unicameral movement in the United States since 1912, and includes the early cultivation of the idea in Nebraska by such men as J. N. Norton and Senator Norris. The third chapter is largely devoted to a discussion of the principles' arid policies which influenced the model legin lative committee in drawing up the amendment which was submitted to the people of the Htate, and a . statement of its seven provisions with the reasons for their Incor poration. "Thin is followed by a most in formative presentation of the case for the one-house legislature, stated in terms of the social and economic changes and the new de mands which the treatment of these have made on the state leg islatures, and presented In the light of the inadequacies of the bicam eral body previously discussed. The main points offered in favor of the one house legislature are its non partisan character. Its smaller size ami the increased importance, re sponsibility and accountability of each member. Its simpler proced ure. Ms inability to shift responsi bility to a second house, its greater economy, greater freedom from corruption due to more publicity per member and less Involved ma chinery, and the removal of the time limit on sessions which en courages mature consideration and does away with the careless dis posal of bills in thct rush of closing days. Rules Suggestion. "The book concludes with some very Interesting suggestions as to the ruled which should tie or might be Adopted by the one house legis lature. .