PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1950 MICHIGAN'S 53RD HOMECOMING CELEBRATION: r ow s 'loodArbor for Festive Weeken J ^? ,! FOR STRATEGIC PLAY STADIUM-BOUND ALUMNI LEAVE UNION n, Read and Use The Michigan. Daily Classifieds! f TRI-DELT WON FIRST- PLACE PROCLAIMING THAT WISCONSIN WILL SEE RED. THE ANIMAL IS A COW, AS INDICATED. * * * * * * rc~:~'~ Tri-De tSig Ep Win Firsts a"Cu: i Delta Delta Delta yesterday cop- ped first place in the women's Homecoming .display contest for the second year in succession. Sigma Phi Epsilon was awarded first prize in the men's division. SECOND prize winners were Al- pha Delta Pi in the women's con- test and Anderson House in the men's. Anderson also garnered first place in the East Quad contest. Annexing third place trophies in the all campus competition classification and Tau Kappa Epsilon in the men's. Honorable mentions for women's houses went to Martha Cook, Coti- zen's Hall and Sigma Delta Tau. In the men's class Phi Delta The- ta, Pi Lambda Phi and Chicago House each won honorable men- tions. Chicago also tallied a first in the contest at the West Quad.. * * * DELTA DELTA DELTA mem- bers transformed their front lawn into a miniature barnyard, com- plete with a real cow, to earn their were Alpha Phi in the women's 4>first place women's trophy. The cow, a grand champion bovine from the Michigan State Fair, had a sign above it reading "Wisconsin will see red today and this is no bull." At the Sigma Phi Epsilon house, a big hunk of "Wiscon- sin cheese" formed the nucleus of the first place display. A gi- gantic Michigan player chopped away at the cheese with a knife labeled "Michigan Steel." The display awas rounded out with animated papermache mouse- heads poking out of the cheese be- low a sign reading "are you a man or are you from Wisconsin." ALPHA DELTA PI won its sec- ond place cup in women's compe- tition with a hybrid affair com- bining the features of a Michigan player and a ukelele. Recorded mu- sic came from the background and a slogan overhead told our team "Uke'n Win Michigan." A mammoth "reducing salon" won the men's second prize for Anderson House. The display featured a large Badger getting his "rose bowl" eliminated by the reducing machine. Alpha Phi's third place woman's display applied Dali-type surreal- ism to -the Homecoming theme. Tau Kappa Epsilon won third in the men's class with a Phoenix Project theme of harnessing Bad- gers "for peaceful purposes." THE HERCULEAN task of judg- ing the 80-odd contest entries was performed by two crews of judges. Ethel A. MacCormick, women's social director; Marvin Felheim, of the English department; and Ivan W. Parker, assistant to the Dean of Men, judged women's entries. Men's displays were surveyed by Prof. Donald B. Gooch of the arch- itecture and design college, Mrs. Sarah L. Healy, acting Dean of Women, and Prof. Shorey Peter- son of the economics department. ,..3. (7 - (4 it :q ?i 'J FANS GRAPPLE FOR WAYWARD FOOTBALL * * * :N *4.- 4 : >:. ?<.::$ .C4;.. eF ':; t ":v I:.'s .:: ;:;:;%; i': : i r:=a your best BASS DRUM CREW STEPS LIVELY FASHION INVESTMENT SIG EP'S FIRST PLACE CHEESE SLICER superbly fit for Fall .. . DAILY PHOTO FEATURE Photos by BURT SAPOWITCH and MALCOLM SHATZ Story by BOB KEITH * * * suits vI 4 WOMEN'S JUDGES * * * Left: Imaginative welt and brack- et pockets . .. and a stubborn adherence to fit perfection .. Block, brown, green, grey: Sizes 10 to 18. 65.00 Right: Easy curves and smart lines . . , the shortest distance be- tween good fashion and Hand- macher. Grey yorkshire flannel in sizes 9 to 15. Red, navy or green gabardine in sizes 1072 to 1812. 60.00 HIandmacher's scholarly treatment' of yard-dye worsted by Miron is a sight to behold! Fit and styling accomplished with a real reverence for Fashion's important figure-work! AND THEY'RE OURS ALONE SUITS - THIRD FLOOR ;s r :ii'f isi4i3>::i. "t °".+'>::2>?i:5"':>ii: Si' : f."4 . iij:L:"iJi:?:j':i':v i$':; iii: \.. ? .:,x: 'r'.......'jcS