Friday, July 27, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Eleven ,S ,r Sports of The Daily By The Associated Press Secretariat and Riva Ridge to meet in match race NEW YORK - Meadow Stable stablemates Secretariat, the Triple Crown winner, and Riva Ridge, 1972 Kentucky Derby and Belmont wininer, will race against each other in a $250,000 match race Sept. 15 at Belmont Park, it was announced yesterday at Aqueduct Race Track. The 1-1/8-mile race will be nationally televised by CBS and will be held on the same day as the $100,000-added Bel- dame for fillies and mares at Belmont. Because the entire purse will go to Meadow Stable, Mrs. Penny Tweedy, operator of the stable, said the money will be given to charity. CBS also announced it will televise the $50,000-added Whit- ney when Secretariat is expected to run against older horses for the first time. A victory in the Whitney would make the 3-yearold a million-dollar winner, a plateau already achieved by Riva Ridge. All-Star game tonight CHICAGO - An impressive and cautiously-groomed College All-Star squad will strive to shatter a nine-year pro domination against the heavily-favored Miami Dolphins in the 40th All-Star Football Game here tonight. This 40th renewal of a Soldier Field series sponsored by the Chicago Tribune Charities will be telecast nationally by ABC, Channel 7, beginning at 9:30 p.m., EDT. Michigan Repertory'73 in the air-conditioned POWER CENTER CHARMING AND EXQUISITE"-Gibson, NEWS WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE'S The Comedy of Errors FINAL PERFORMANCE TONIGHT ALL PERFORMANCES AT 8:00 P.M. POWER CENTER BOX OFFICE OPEN 12:30-5:00 P.M. MON. 763-3333 12:30-8:00 PM. DAYS OF PERFORMANCE Season Subscriptions $7.00-$10.50 INDIVIDUAL TICKETS $2.00-$3.00 TOMORROW "THOROUGHLY ENJOYABLE"-Kane, NEWS GEORGE BERNARD SHAW'S Mrs. Warren's Profession FINAL PERFORMANCE TOMORROW NEW WORLD FILM COOP presents Joe Willie rests QUARTERBACK JOE NAMATH smiles during a rest period in the Jets' training camp in Hempstead, New York. 5th HIT WEEK! SHORTS! Feature promptly 3.zk at % JAMES 2 BOND STATE B N RYAN & TATUM O'NEILL in "PAPER L MOON" A statement from the outhiir 1214 Diol THE HARRAD EXPERIMENT 1973 Sooth by Robert H. Rimmer Univ.' 668 -6416 'mndihtd tht ationgi at Ith iArrdT Eperimeti-a mcc When t THURS. &FR AT705&900PM ONLY arteHr i n 196i~-Itdedictedtict ts SAT SUN. & WED AT] 153:05-5-7:05&9P.M to me aand om ea tht 21st1"en- t v - sy dithti e dia tat it oltd 0e at least fifty years before the kind of undergraduate college where a male and female roomed together-were ac- tually pre-chosen for each other as one possible marital mate-would come into existence.*; t I have the feeling that the Harrad T1E MOST READ BOOK ON/fC:o US Experiment, which after seven years IS NOW ON SCREEN! continues to be widely read by the younger generation, has re-inforced the kind of living environment now avail- able on most campuses. But keep in mind-there is still nd WEEK Harrad Colletgte where a male and fe- male can actually room together with- in the college grounds with administra- T E - tion and faculty approval. Nor is any premaritalstructure whose avowed purpose is to create a learning environ- ment where young males and females eat experience, intimately (over a per- iod of several years), more than one - - ----- _ - rx member of the other sex as a part of their total educational experience. I believe - thatwithin the next ten Haad ole years Harrad will be a common experi- o*poo ence available to millions of young peo- where free he Harrad Experiment, as a moving liberated relations picture, w illreaoh aditolt cllions between who will make a Harrad type under- graduate experience a reality in our coed students are li"timo. Wooe cthappens iaa It wibe ad morejlyuauwoadtoo d lie 1n! encouraged! r01 STARTS WED., AUGUST 1ST: "LAST TANGO IN PARIS" ILLY, JACK There are so many great things in 'Hilly Jack' I hardly know where to begin . . . It is a film of ineotimable value, a work of monumental goals and majestic achievements. I went expecting nothing, and discovered something memorable"-Rex Reed "One of the m o s t electrifying entertainments to inhabit any theatre this year:- --N.Y. Daily Mirror "Searing tension . . . one of the year's most important pictures." --L.A. Times TONIGHT ONLY-8 and 10 p.m. NATURAL SCIENCE AUDITORIUM (Central UM Campus) $1.25 (Tickets on sale at 7 p.m.)