KU A jet caught the sun for just a second, another bright speck in a bright blue sky. Its dull rumble sounded a moment later. A young Lawrence resident contemplates a candy Easter egg at an egg-hunt for underprivileged children sponsored by Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity and Alpha Delta Pi sorority yesterday afternoon. Bu PATRICIA PRUITT Horizon darkens for Christendom Below, somewhere, anywhere, a priest held the bread high and chanted the Offertory of the Mass—an ancient gesture, placed in the A.D. era only by the temporal world around. The ritual—in its many forms—is the essence of Christianity, and is symbolic of the event which Good Friday annually commemorates. HE WAS DEAD. and three daws later His friends saw Him walking among them. This is perhaps the single most important impact of the event at that time and today. Christ proved, to His believers, that there was a life after death. He had to die to do it. His death and resurrection, following His attack on the distorted practice of Judaism of the day, delineated Christianity from Judaism. For His teachings were a reiteration of conceptual Judaic literature. If not for His crucifixion and resurrection, He might have been another Judaic prophet and reformer. - UDK Photo by Glenn Phillips Easter is the oldest Christian observance, besides Sunday—which is in itself the weekly celebration of the event. Eastertide finally was established in the annual cycle of feasts by correlation with the Jewish Passover, which is based upon a lunar calendar and therefore fluctuating in the Gregorian calendar. The implications of His death inferred by Christians molded the Church tradition, which has been revised over the centuries THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU For 77 of its 101 Years The Mitchell trio, the Four Freshmen, and the Sandpipers will provide entertainment for the Student Union Activities (SUA) Concert to be held April 29 at Allen Field House. "This year's concert will consist of three separate acts designed to interest the varied tastes of the KU student body," said Tom Swale, Shawnee Mission junior and SUA Board member in charge of special events. FORMERLY, CHRISTIAN CONVERTS were baptised only on Easter, and instructed during the Lenten season. Fasting in various degrees has been and is still observed during Lent. Communion on Good Friday in the Roman Catholic Church was Continued on page 10 Traditional American folk singing will be the taste of music performed by the Mitchell trio, the Four Freshmen will provide an air of contemporary music, and the Sandpipers will represent the pop-contemporary sound. Attempts to secure the contracts of Bill Crosby, and such groups as the Wee Five, and the Back Porch Majority proved unsuccessful. Bands to play at SUA Tickets for the concert may be purchased at the SUA office in the Kansas Union. THE EGG AND I LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, March 24, 1967 Filth filling Fraser; janitors stay away Bv ALLAN NORTHCUTT New Fraser Hall is becoming a trash can. Less than three weeks after the building was opened to students, classroom floors are cluttered with an accumulation of trash—cigarette butts and ashes, paper cups, soft drink bottles, gum and candy wrappers, notebook paper, newspapers, and dirt from the unlandscaped grounds surrounding the building. THE SINGLE JANITOR on duty at Fraser yesterday said all areas except classrooms are being cleaned. The janitor said he received orders the day after Fraser's opening not to clean the classrooms. When asked if the orders came from his office, Harry Buchholz, superintendent of KU's physical plant, had no comment. Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for operations, said he didn't know of an order not to clean Fraser classrooms, although he's "concerned about the inordinate amount of trash generated by Fraser." A TOUR THROUGH Fraser's classrooms reveals trash covering large areas of most floors, particularly in rooms using the circular seminar-type seating arrangement. A newspaper from March 9, three days after Fraser's opening, lies on the floor of one classroom; a March 11 newspaper is spread about another. There were no trash containers or ash trays in Fraser classrooms when the building opened, although they were placed in most rooms this week. The new near-empty trash containers sit on fixtures covered with trash. LAWTON SAID the University doesn't have a policy of placing ash trays in classrooms. There are no "No Smoking" signs in Fraser classrooms. Charles Warriner, head of the sociology department housed in Fraser, said he directed the sociology faculty teaching in the building to urge students not to litter the rooms. Both Buchholz and Lawton said the University's janitorial staff is "spread thin." However, Buchholz said he has received authorization from the State Personnel Division to hire eight additional janitors for Fraser and the new botany laboratory but he could not hire them before April 1. CURRENTLY PENDING in the Kansas Legislature is a supplementary state appropriations bill allocating about $29,000 for janitorial and operating expenses for Fraser and the new botany laboratory until KU's fiscal 1968 budget begins July 1. KU officials requested the additional funds because Fraser was not open when the current operating budget was completed by the Legislature. Six Yugoslav students spend week on campus Bu CHARLA JENKINS Six Yugoslavian students from the Academy of Theatre, Radio, Film, and Television are now on the campus as part of the State Department's Cultural and Educational Exchange Program. The students, accompanied by their instructor, arrived yesterday for a week's stay, the first stop on their four-week tour of the United States. After leaving KU, the troupe will visit UCLA, Illinois State University, University of Wisconsin, University of Minnesota, and Cornell University. PROFESSOR BORIS Grabnar is in charge of the group, which consists of Marko Simicc, Tene Kuntner, Zvone Sedlbauer, Matiji Milciski, Mrs. Helena Sober, and Svetlana Makarovic. All are staying in McCollum Hall. The students are part of an exchange program in which six KU students took part last year. The KU group visited the Ljubljana Academy, Yugoslavia last year while on an Eastern European tour. The Yugoslavian students will spend the week observing classes in the University Theatre, watching theatrical productions and attending Festival of Arts performances. Trips to Kansas City for sightseeing and shopping and a visit to Dodge City to view the "Theatre USA" production there will highlight their stay. The group will present a program of demonstrations and scenes from world and Slovenian national drama at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre. They will depart for Tahlequah, Okla. . March 30. UDK Photo by Mike Okun YUGOSLAV STUDENTS ARRIVE Kip Niven, one of the KU students taking part in last year's US-Yugoslav cultural exchange, shows Matiji Milcinski, Yugoslav theatre student, the intricacies of a stamp vending machine after his arrival at Kansas City's Municipal Airport.