I Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, August 4, 1972 FRIDAY & SATURDAY Metropolis Dir, by FRITZ LANG (1926). Long's masterful conception of the raging metropolis of the fture utopia or mechanized nightmsare? 7 & 9:05 75c A & D Auditorium 0 AUG. 11, 12-~ ARSENIC & OLD LACE AUG. 18, 19- MARX BROS. in DUCK SOUP Read Daily Class ifieds Derek dons Philly skates PHILADELPHIA (A) - "Like the Godfather they made me an offer I couldn't refuse." So jested Derek Sanderson after jumping from the champion Boston Bruins of the National Hockey League to sign a mul- ti-year contract for a reported $2.6 million with the Philadel- phia Blazers of the new World Hockey Association. James Cooper, president of the Blazers tolds a news confer- ence yesterday that for the 1972-73 season Sanderson was "the highest paid professional athlete in all the world." He said Sanderson would make more this season than Bobby Hull, Wilt Chamberlain, Joe Namath, or Pele, the highly paid South American soccer player. Cooper refused to disclose the exact amount involved or the terms of the contract, stating, "I will only say that the money is in the range of the $2.5 and $2.6 million figures I've seen, and that the years involved are within the range of the 5 to 15 years I've read. It's definitely in that range." Sanderson explained thai he had given the Bruinsevery op- portunity to match the Blazer's offer and that he made the switch with the blessings of Boston's top executive.Weston Adams Sr. "I'm very, very close to Weston Adams Sr. and we've always been on very good terms." Sanderson said. "I dis- cussed it with him and he told me 'as a friend, and not as an owner, I must tell you if that's the offer than you must go. I'm sorry to see you go.' As a friends he shook my hand and said 'you gotta go."' Sanderson said the Boston fatis, however, are not taking as lightly the loss k Bruins' stars to the WHA. "They're very upset. Sand- erson said. "I've been getting telegrams and letters and so has my attorney . . . and they wanted me to stay in Boston. They wanted to keep the hock- ey club intact so they could have a dynasty. But right be- fore their eyes because of the competitiveness of this country, a dynasty has dissipated." Boston has lost five players to the WHA, including goalie. Gerry Cheevers, Cleveland, John McKenzie, Philadelphia and Ted Green, New England, and rookie Ron Plumb, Phil- adelphia. so 0 MAN . REFORM ABORTION dennocrat state representative Paid Political Advertisement Classied Safe at third The formerly sexist Daily Sports Staff, shown here in barromn antics, pledges from this day forth never to run another picture of a pretty girl doing stupid things just to appeal to your baser interests. BARCELONA BIGGIE: Davis duel set for Spain, Smith primed for match 1224 Washtenaw - 665-8825 A CHARTER REALTY APARTMENT BARCELONA, Spain (/(') - The United States sends its No. I ace, Stan Smith. against left- handed Manuel Orantes of Spain today in the opening match of the Davis Cup Inter- Zone tennis semifinals at the Royal Tennis Club. "Remember 1965." is the battle cry of the Spaniards, re- calling the upset of the Ameri- cans in the last Inter-Zone match here. The second singles match has the United States' 19-year-old rookie, Harold Solomon of Sil- ver Spring Md., against the for- midable veteran Juan Gisbert. Gisbert defeated both Dennis Ralston and Frank Froehling III in the 1965 Inter-Zone final here, won by the Spaniards 4-1. The 6-foot-4 Smith, an Army corporal from Pasadena, Calif., winner of the U.S. Open title in 1971 and Wimbledon this year, is favored to win both of his singles matches, but the other three points are expected to be hotly contested. In the doubles, Smith will team with young Erik Van Dil- len of San Mateo, Calif., against Orantes and Gisbert. The red clay courts here are very slow and should favor the Spaniards, Spanish observers expect both Orantes, 23, a fla- shy youngster who is a protege of Andres Gimeno, and Gisbert to give Smith trouble on the slow surface. In the final two singles Sun- day, the pairings will be re- versed, with Smith playing Gis- bert and Orantes meeting Solo- mon. Gisbert was the hero of Spain's recent 3-2 victory over Czechoslovakia. He was a sur- prise choice for singles play over Gimeno, the former con- tract pro who is rated one of the world's best. The winner of the US.-Spain series will play the winner of the match between Romania and Australia with the finals to be held in either Bucharest or Sydney. jHE'S SEEN I «T ALL &"Keep You Cool at the Campus' HE'S DONE IT ALL! _ FROM THE HARD-HIT SKYSCRAPERS OF GOTHAM TO 1214 S - -Un ens THE RABBIT CYCLE GANGS OF NEVADA TO THE POWER DIAL 668-6416 PLANTS OF LA., THE KEROVAC OF THE 60'S GETS IT ON! ksr>~,., Night-Long Horror Extravaganza 5 Edgar Allan Poe Classics featuring VINCENT PRICE FRIDAY and SATURDAY beginning at 11:15 p.m. FREE COFFEE TO ALL! ALL SEATS $2.00 FREE PASSES TO ALL WHO HAVE THE COURAGE TO STAY ALL NIGHT ticeis now on sale box office will close Fri, Sat. atmidnight - - mRG2. EDGAR ALLAN POE'S sleATeRR*R s t, - 9 COLOR Ray Millndi in VINCENT PRICE PETER LORRE -.~-------------..... .. BASIL RATHBONE '.'DEBRA PAGET ,d ( d= .< ROGER CORMAN pT0,a T0 RsEf I -{ COLO PANAVI 510fF ,Nm.:ourasn PAT iECOLOR ac taPRICE ostiLORRE somiKARLOFF 5. Vincent Price in "HOUSE OF USHER' NFOMA " 7 1-91 Fri. at 7 p.m. & 9 p.m.!w , Sat, &rStan. Coniti ntouts f rom 1 :30 3rd _] FR EAKED-O()T . 1J WEEK! He's X rated and animated!