2—The Daily Collegian Friday, Sept. 2, 1983 Phils end long quest by acquiring Lezcano PHILADELPHIA (AP) The he came up as a pinch hitter in his Philadelphia Phillies hive ended a only at-bat yesterday. three-year quest to acquire out "I heard about it on the bench," fielder Sixto Lezcano and Paul Owens, the team's manager and Lezcano said of the impending general manager, says he plans to deal. "When I went up there, my head was half with the Phillies and get good use out of him. Lezcano, 29, and another player half with the Padres." to be named later were obtained Lezcano came up with the Mil just before midnight yesterday waukee Brewers for 15 games in from the San Diego Padres for 1974, was traded to St. Louis in four minor league players, also to- 1981 and spent one season with the be named later. Cardinals before being dealt to the "I'm going to play him regular ly, but I don't know exactly how yet," Owens said. "I mean we just He has been plagued with inju made this (deal). I haven't really ries and averaged only 122 games thought about it yet. I just want a year. This year he hurt an ankle, him on my ball cluli." and batted .234 with eight home The deal was made less than two runs and 49 runs batted in in 97 hours after the Phillies rallied for games. a ninth-inning run to beat San "They wanted me to play hurt Diego 4-3. Lezcano, who hit a two- and I did play hurt," he said after run homer in a Padres' 7-5 victory walking from the Padres dugout to here Tuesday night, flied out when the Phils dugout. THE . • . • , :—.... LIKE FRESH THINGS? AR; ALLIANCE . •PriN ' • Locally Grown et .N. CHRISTIAN s 't • Fruits • Vegetables • Baked. Goods • Eggs ••Honey • • FELI_O/SH IP . ' Vi. --- 1 -- -- Friday:ll: 3o-5 : 30 - - -oil , -:, \ McAllister St. ./1 , ‘ DOWNTOWN Campus Worship Service Sundays 10:45 , 1 .) .-. * 4 --- vi ri \ . HUB Ballroom / 65 * r y. . , \ ~.,/: ' ,.44 .. ... . ~,,../ . A i) ) - ) 2 .t. • 4,..4k_ I Wednesday Night Fellowship Wednesdays 7:00 ' 1114!'+ ‘ -4 - 1 •nrilk .• ~ HUB room 305 ..:,... P o e I V , ilk - MARKET - 1 ,<• % . , ~; -, 5..6w, . sponsored by For more information call: • A ''.'r-Yr''- ( 4 , Central Pa. Farmers Market Assoc. • Pastor Dave Janssen 237-7991 or Ken Turnbull, Administrator 234-2145 A •..,,. -..‘, ;J.., ,-- RD2, Spring Mills 0008 `;‘,- ~.., ...../ . 4 ,. 5. ,. I ,-7, 7 . 4 - Phone 364-9482 444 44,4-4-44.444444- Midnight Mexican Madness Every Friday and Saturday between 12 midnight 2:30 am 154. ...f; • •.7 choice beef 990 tacos wlcheese for - ,.1 ) 4.18 , 444444-444444-444 THE a DELI 0 0 4 * NA l fs" 41 ' 44Al FRIDAY & ti***************** 10( 1W * IE * ;I( :14 -1( 7: 30 "THE BIG SURPRISE: tc 9 :30_ HIT THIS SUMMER!"* m rr,on. & Tues. * : . $2.00 TaANARGOVES ) 1: 1,111 * ARENA 5 PLEX * ~.. THEATRES & CASINO * 71".. et ,_ DONKEY*KONG * * 10 IWO N Atherton t 237 2114 lA, • 9 I`. MS PACKMAN— S p4XXON 7, • 4. BlAck B. I V , 4( Silk * . STOCkiNq o,* xr ****************** Padres PED 131 S. Garner St. near corner of • 4, College & Garner • Think about it! You've got to call up and order your pizza. After it's baked and before it gets cold the cost of a delivery person and an automobile and the ap- propriate insurance has to be added in. Hopefully that person is good at finding addresses quickly. While you wait for your delivery you can ponder the what ifs ... what if it isn't what I ordered .. . I wonder how long it will take ... what should I say if it takes too long .. . who is going to show up at my door ... how much should I tip . .. etc. Get's a little dicey, huh? Hi-Way Pizza's 20 year reputation as the pizza 'maker for thousands of Penn Staters is built on fresh, high quality con- sistently good pizza. Not on something promises' Ryan, DiPino shut down Pirates' bats HOUSTON (AP) Fireballing No lan Ryan and Frank DiPino com bined for a three-hitter and pinch hitter Kevin Bass drilled a bases loaded triple in the seventh inning, giving the Houston Astros a 3-0 victo ry over the Pittsburgh Pirates yester day. Ryan, 13-6, who gave way for Bass, yielded the three Pirates' hits and walked four in seven innings. He also struck out 10, extending his major league record to 150 games with dou ble-figure strikeout totals, and now has a career total of 3,639 strikeouts, 24 behind all-time leader Steve Carl ton of Philadelphia. Pittsburgh starter Lee Tunnell pitched six scoreless innings, raising his string to 19, but three Pirates' relievers ran into trouble. Loser Cecilio Guante, 2-2, began the seventh by yielding a single to Jose Cruz and walking Ray Knight. Rod Scurry replaced Guante and walked Denny Walling to load the bases. Kent Tekulve then came on and got Phil Garner and pinch-hitter Jerry Mumphrey to hit into force plays at the plate, but Bass slammed a 3-1 THE BEACH BOYS AT BOWMAN FIELD, WILLIAMSPORT Tues, September 6, 7 PM Limited number of tickets available at One Stop Audio and Jerry's, Lock Haven Record Ranch, State College . • Listen to The Ultimate Fm WSQV Put your money where your mouth is . . . Hi-Way Pizza is a friendly place to be with an ever growing menu of pizzas including our Original Stuffed Pizza and a team of people ready to custom bake your "to go" pizza at the ring of our phone. Something for nothing ... only in fairy tales. Delivery for nothing ... you know better. At Hi-Way Pizza what you pay for is high quality pizza ... not delivery expenses. HI-WAY PIZZA . ALWAYS WORTH GOING FOR! pitch near the fence in left-center to clear the bases. DiPino pitched the final two innings for Houston for his 14th save. Blue Jays Orioles 3 TORONTO (AP) Jesse Barfield smashed two home runs and Ernie Whitt and Willie Upshaw each hit one to back the six-hit pitching of Doyle Alexander and lead the Toronto Blue Jays to a 5 7 3 victory over Baltimor6 yesterday, snapping the Orioles' win ning streak at eight. Barfield, who has five homers in his last five games, has 19 for the season. Alexander, 2-8, outpitched Jim Palmer, 3-4, for his second consec utive victory. The Toronto right hander struck out six and walked two in hurling his third complete game of the season. The Jays took a 1-0 lead on Up shaw's first-inning RBI single, which drove in Lloyd Moseby, who walked and stole second. Barfield made it 2-0 with a homer deep over the left field fence in the second inning. SUNDAY WORSHIP 10 a.m. Eisenhower Chapel 11:45 a.m., Grace Lutheran Church (corner of Beaver & Garner) 5:30 p.m., Eisenhower Chapel Labor Day Picnic, September 5 (Meet at Eisenhower Chapel at 1 p.m.) Sponsored by The University Lutheran Parish Downtown: Downtown: America Westerly Parkway Sicilian Style Cut Pie Shop College Ave. Hi-Way Pizza Pub 1688 N. Atherton St. Hi-Way Pizza Pub 112 South Garner St. 340 East College Ave. 237-0375 237-1074 234-0349 237-5718 of Town: There's such thing free pizza delivery. South Borough: Pittsburgh's Dave• Parker (39) beats Astro first baseman Ray Knight to the bag in the Astros' 3.0 win over the Bucs yesterday in Houston. a growing part of State College TV Supply 41 , for— 232 S.AIIEN • 814.238.6021 Reactions mixed to Maulers' name By ALAN ROBINSON AP Sports Writer PITTSBURGH Now that they've had a week to mull it over, some Pittsburghers are appalled the name Maulers was chosen for the city's United States Football League team. "Have another shot and a beer and it will seem wittier," the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette wrote in an editorial panning the name The newspaper said Maulers throws "civic pride for a thumping loss." "You can tell someone from Youngstown came up with the name," said a caller to a KDKA radio talk show, referring to team owner Edward J. Deßartolo'Sr. Deßartolo, a shopping mall developer, selected the name Maulers from a list of seven finalists in a contest that elicited 50,000 entries. But Maulers General Manager Geofge Heddleston, rolling with the punches, thinks the aggressive, hostile sounding name is already catching on. "I've seen our mail and it's running 50-50. And I'm just not saying that," Heddleston said: "The mail has been as much pro as it's been con." Heddleston predicts the name will become more populai when the Maulers' logo and team colors are unveiled later this month. AP Laserphoto "We'll have a logo that every kid in Pittsburgh will want to have on a T-shirt," hee said. "We're going to appeal to the young group, because they like pro football and they're ; 1 1i f':';; ,`~ STATE COLLEGE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH WORSHIP SERVICE 11:00 A.M. College-Age Fellowship Wednesday, September 7, 7:00 p.m. Coffee House Friday, September 9, 7:00 SCHOLARSHIPS The School of Journalism has scholarships for freshmen planning to major in Jour nalism and who demonstrate need and ability. Also, a variety of scholarships will be awarded to School majors. Applica tions for both are available in 216 Carnegie. Deadline: September 30. 132 West Beaver Avenue the ones unable to get Steelers' tickets." "This is just something you ride out," Heddleston said. "We were told to prepare for a lot of negative comments at first, no matter what name we chose. It's such a subjec tive thing. "The Philadelphia Stars had some negative reation to their name at first and a lot of people in Memphis said, `What kind of name is Showboats?' when they chose their name." Heddleston said some fans liked the suggested name Flash, including his 13-year-old daughter, but he said, "Flash isn't Pittsburgh. Maulers is Pittsburgh. "What were we supposed to do? Dress up in chartreuse and powder blue uniforms and call ourselves the Flash? That's not Pittsburgh. Maulers sounds like a Pittsburgh name and it sounds like a USFL name. Pro football is a different sport. It's Earth, Wind And Fire, it's not the Beach Boys." Heddleston said the name Maulers is "exciting" and supplies a "fighting feeling." "We want people to fear us, just like people used to fear Al Davis and the Oakland Raiders," said. Heddleston, a former executive with the Dallas Cowboys and San Fran cisco 49ers of the NFL. "But we won't be black and gold, like the Steelers. We'll do something different." Heddleston added, "At least the people are talking about us. We're pleased about that. We think Maulers is a natural. We just have to show people we're not going to be a bunch of gruffy hooligans." THE BEACH BOYS AT BOWMAN FIELD, WILLIAMSPORT . Tues, September 6, 7 PM Limited number of tickets available at One Stop Audio and Jerry's, Lock Haven • Record Ranch, State College Listen to The Ultimate Fm WSW The Official Penn State Class Ring from the Offical Bookstore Every fine Siladium ring is crafted with careful attention to detail, and backed by the Art Carved Full Lifetime Warranty. Now, at these special savings, the value is exceptional! Don't miss this oppor- RT RVE,D !unity to get a beautiful buy on a fine Siladium ring. Visit the Art Carved Ring Table soon. CLASS RINGS.INC Penn State `BooK§itore on campus Owned and operated by the Pennsylvania State University Deposit Required. Master Card or Visa Accepted Pitt kicks off season with Vols By ALAN ROBINSON AP Sports Writer PITTSBURGH The University of Pittsburgh's coaches are hoping Tennessee doesn't get a bigger kick out of their season-opening game than the Panthers do. "They have the best kicking game in the nation," Pitt defensive coordinator Bob Junko said of the Volunteers. "Any time they get inside the 50-yard line, their field goal kicker (Feud Reveiz) is in range. "And their punter (Jimmy Colq uitt) ... he lookslike Ray Guy to me." Pitt, unranked in the AP pre-sea son poll despite four consecutive Top 10 finishes, opens against the Volunteers and a sold-out Neyland Stadium crowd of 92,000 in Knox ville tomorrow. The 7:30 p.m. game will be televised back to Pitts burgh. The Volunteers, considered a Top 20 contender, are so proud of their kicking game that the cover of their multi-color football brochure shows .. 1 41 )0 lit Reveiz kicking off, outlined with the words, "Alive 'N Kickin'. Re veiz and Colquitt are pictured on the back cover. "It's obvious we have to play good defense against them," Junko said. "We can't give them a lot of the field to work with. Their punter put the ball on the 20-yard line, in the air, from the end zone, against LSU last year. He's a big weapon. There was a lot of field exchanged on punts with them last year. "`And they can score at any time with that kicker." Reveiz, a junior, hit on eight of ten field goal attempts of over 50 yards last season a National Collegiate Athletic Associations re cord from that distance and made 27 of 31 attempts overall. He set a Southeastern Conference re cord with a 60-yard field goal against Georgia Tech and con verted all 20 of his extra point attempts. Colquitt, also a junior, is the nephew of Craig Colquitt, a former Tennessee player who now punts for the Pittsburgh Steelers. Colquitt (. *.._ . '' ' N, - . ' , l i *; • tllll 3 i,'; ; `;, • ."-:.:.;:. ",...: .:''';' ,., 4:.:." , .•< ~;.' :,-;;;,.:, , ( e.e?, ~. if .. i:,;i, ~:ii.v... i 1 . .1 ' ( r / • • • Zs, • Open Labor'Day $2O holds you fall coat or suit lay-away , plus $2O-80 savings on selected suits and coats 228 e. college ave. open monday-friday 'till B:3opm P.S.U. football saturdays 'till B:3opm The Daily Collegian Friday, Sept. 2, 1983-13 averaged 46.9 yards per punt last season, second best in the nation, and averaged 54 yards on five punts against LSU. "He can keep you backed up," Junko said. That's exactly what an inex perienced Pitt offense, with just four returning starters, doesn't need. "I just hope that when we get in there, those 92,000 fans make us play that much harder," said Pitt Coach Foge Fazio. "If you're a competitor, the noisy crowd can make you play better. If we just play as a unit, we'll be OK defensi vely." Tennessee Coach Johnny Majors, the former Pitt coach, thinks Pitt will be much more than just OK on defense. "They're tremendously skilled on defense," said Majors, whose Vol unteers were 6-5-1 last season, com pared to Pitt's 9-3. "They're reckless and aggressive and they really go to the ball. I've never seen Pitt out of position on defense." aides