What's Inside? Saturday's football game appraised, see p. 4... Executive muscle examined on p. 2... Work of a woman architect on display, see p. 6. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years 76th Year, No. 30 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Weather Weather Bureau officials predict fair and mild temperatures through Saturday. The low tonight will range in the low 40's. Friday, October 29,1965 Hawk Homecoming Hails KU's History By Judy McGhee "Johnny" Jayhawk will project the homecoming theme— "Hawker's History"-disguised as agent 007, Carry Nation, and Matt Dillon when various living groups complete their homecoming displays. Starting at 5 p.m. today a panel of five judges will make their ratings based on cleverness of expressions, embodiment of the theme, appropriateness, good taste, and state of completion. RESULTS OF the judging will be announced publicly at 8:30 Saturday morning. Trophies will be awarded to first, second, and third place winners in sororities, women's residence halls, fraternities, and men's residence halls. Each winning group will be given an award plaque to display with their decorations. Winners will be announced again at the game. The winner of the traveling trophy for grand prize will be presented at the Robert Goulet concert at 8 p.m. Saturday in Allen Field House. House displays show the Jayhawk in a variety of historical happenings. Delta Chi fraternity has built a 40 ft. Jayhawk who is beating a purple and white striped wildcat against a liberty bell. Battenfeld Hall shows the Jayhawk as a government agent breaking down a Wildcat still. ONE OF THE more unusual displays is that of Watkins Hall which has temporarily lost its front yard because of the construction of new Fraser. Their title, "The Great Depression," refers to the huge excavation in front of their house. Kappa Alpha Theta sorority has presented the Jayhawk as Carry Nation. Their slogan is "Distemperance the Wildcats." Carry, hatchet in hand, is attacking a bar with a Wildcat slumped across the top. The Phi Delta Theta fraternity house has built a plane supposedly sitting in the stadium. The Wright brothers are inside and a Wildeat is on top. From the Campanile a Jayhawk swoops down and bombs the plane. (Continued on page 7) Templin Hall is presenting the three Jayhawks that have evolved through the years in a "Century of Progress." The Hawks are shown with a rocket ship, a trolley car like the one that used to run on the hill, and a horse-drawn surrey. Camelot's Prince Reigns in Concert "The Robert Goulet Show" will cap a weekend of homecoming activities in a performance at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Allen Field House. GOULET, WHO will spend the night at the Holiday Inn in Kansas City, was to have held a closed rehearsal at the Allen Field House earlier this afternoon. It is not known whether he will make any additional appearances in Lawrence. There is the possibility he may be interviewed over KLWN, a Lawrence radio station, sometime Saturday. KLWN officials said no arrangements had been made, however. The show, which stars the 31-year-old Goulet, will include The Greenwood County Singers and the music of the Ralph Marterie Orchestra. It will mark the first time the group has worked together, as they initiate their college tour. Goulet rose to stardom overnight when he was chosen to play the role of Sir Lancelot in the Broadway play, "Camelot," after play officials had passed over Laurence Harvey and Christopher Plummer. ALTHOUGH NO program has been released, it is expected Goulet will sing many of the songs that have helped make him popular. He will also do some selected renditions of folk songs and "current musical expressions." Don Costa, the famed arranger, is putting this new act together for Goulet. Robert Goulet NAPKIN STUFFERS—Jeanie Burgardt, Des Moines, Ia., junior, and Betsy Kastner, Salina sophomore, work on the Homecoming display in front of the Pi Beta Phi sorority house. The —Photo by Dan Austin decoration features a panoramic view of Memorial Stadium and a Jayhawker in a coonskin hat. Need Private Funds Council Considers KU Future The KU Council for Progress today heard the report of a University committee calling for increased funds from private support. It included requests for additional resources for student assistance, for faculty development and enhancement, and for supporting resources in the form of new buildings and an opportunity fund. The Council for Progress is composed of some 275 distinguished University alumni and friends appointed by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe to consider the University's needs in its second century and to develop plans for meeting them. IN ITS FIRST gathering, the Council was asked to endorse the concept of an increased level of private support for the University's second century, to consider the projects identified by the faculty committee, to inform their friends about them in preparation for a later meeting which will adopt final goals, and to elect a permanent chairman and an executive committee. The presentations made to the Council were based on the report to Chancellor Wescoe of the University Committee on Objectives for the Second Century. It was appointed two years ago by Chancellor Wescoe to recommend projects which it considered essential to the University's future. The Committee's report stressed the need for additional student assistance, faculty development, and supporting resources.