Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, Dec. 7, 1962 Japanese Quiet On Anniversary Of Pearl Harbor TOKYO. Dec. 7—(UPI)—The 21st anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor — which falls tomorrow in Japan because of the international dateline — is expected to pass here almost unnoticed. The Japanese have not celebrated Pearl Harbor dav since 1944. American - Japanese friendship has been growing since the end of the war and neither the U.S. Embassy nor U.S. forces in Japan have officially observed the occasion in years. "It is not a lack of respect for the dead of Pearl Harbor," one American official put it. "But we are in Japan." It is not that the Japanese are ashamed of Pearl Harbor or even want to forget it—though hundreds of thousands of younger Japanese have probably never heard the name. It is merely part of a vanished past. The Japanese regard the war as a tragic lesson for themselves and all mankind. And the Japanese have turned to rebuilding their country at a pace that has staggered the world. American war films produced since the war, without the wartime propaganda. like "Flattop" and "Sands of Iwo Jima," pack people for in re-run after re-run. Japanese boys lovingly collect pictures of World War II zero fighters the way American boys collected chewing-gum cards of Eddie Rickenbacker in the 1930's. But as for Pearl Harbor Day, it will be an ordinary working day for the hard-working Japanese people. Orchestra Concert Featured Sunday The University Symphony Orchestra will present a concert, conducted by Robert Baustian, associate professor of orchestra, Sunday at 3:30 p.m. in the University Theatre. The concert will be open to the public without charge. The program will include Bach's "Concerto for Three Pianos," featuring Richard Angletti, instructor; Marian Jersild Lott, associate professor, and John Perry, assistant professor. Other numbers will be the "Tragic Overture" by Brahms, "Suite Provencale" by Milhaud and "Petrouchka" by Stravinsky. Conductor Baustian received his formal training at the Eastman School of Music. For five seasons he was on the musical staff of the Zurich Opera, followed by a post as second conductor of the Hessian State Opera in Wiesbaden, Germany. TRADING POST 704 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Ph.VI 3-2394 Located 1 door South of K.P. & L. in basement. R. C.A. Hi-Fi Stereo, 90 day warranty $42.50 Room Divider ... $ 7.00 Premier Gas Range, 30" like new, 1 year warranty on all parts ... $89.95 19" Portable T.V., 30 day warranty ... $69.95 Bookcase, 3 shelf ... $ 8.95 Magnavox portable stereo, perfect, 60 day warranty ... $59.95 3/4 Hollywood bed ... $24.95 Bed, complete with wooden headboard ... $22.95 G.E. electric dryer, perfect, less than one year old. Will carry a one year war- ranty on all parts $119.95 We invite you to come in and look around. Remember a few steps down gives you a big step up in savings. Sorority Misses Mirrors; Carpet Is Fuzzy, Too Those women on campus with crooked lipstick and red fuzz on their socks are probably Pi Phis who don't have mirrors yet, but who do have a thick red carpet in their new house. By Linda Machin Mildred Dunivent, the Pi Phi house mother, explained the whole thing by pointing to a blob of red fuzz on the floor in her apartment. "The first week or so, the fuzz got all over everything. Now, it's much better, but the girls can't walk down the halls without red fuzz clinging to their socks. "MIRRORS FOR the girls' bedrooms just arrived," she continued. "Since we moved in October 28, they have been using pocket mirrors or the bathroom mirrors." Though the new Pi Phi house has many conveniences that the old house lacked, something rather basic is missing—hot water. "It's a race every night," said Mrs. Dunivent, "to see who can take a shower before the hot water runs out." A hot water tank of suitable size will be installed today. Mrs. Dunivent said that due to an architectural error, a hot water tank only half the required size was installed originally. Session Discusses Nuclear War Most Nuclear war and its alternatives have been the major topic of the weekly public discussion sponsored by the Student Peace Union, KU-Y, and Wesley Foundation. The session is held every Monday afternoon at 4:30 at Wesley Foundation, across from the Kansas Union. The discussions center around chapters from "Preventing World War III," an anthology edited by Quincy Wright. The discussion groups, said Steve Long, Mission junior and Student Peace Union president, have comprised a major part of the Student Peace Union's activities this semester. Long has made tentative plans to attend the International Symposium on Arms Control at the University of Michigan, December 17-20. Government personnel from all parts of the world will attend the symposium. Two-Dab Men? BELLEVILLE, N.J. — (UPI) — That greasy kid stuff made two detectives suspicious yesterday and they questioned three well-groomed teen-age boys. One admitted stealing 2,000 tubes of hair cream from a barber supply house Nov.30 and implicated his two companions, police said. The volunteers of America told Walker to turn in his beard yesterday after police reported irate parents complained that Santa ignored little children, sat on the curb smoking fat cigars and doffed his whiskers to munch a candy bar. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. — (UPI)— Harold Walker, 50, is through as Santa Claus. Cigar-Smoking Santa Fired JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W. 9th VI 3-4720 STUDENTS Grease Jobs . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers 35c admission - tickets for both shows on sale at Union Friday until 6 p.m. and then at the door. ALLEN'S OWL SHOW "The Wild and the Innocent" Starring AUDIE MURPHY and SANDRA DEE FREE TICKETS available at ALLEN'S Drive-In with $1.00 purchase. See this outstanding show FREE Saturday, December 8, at the VARSITY THEATER at 11:00 p.m. only. The Drive-In which is interested in YOU, the Students of KU ALLEN'S Drive-In 1404 W 23rd