12—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Dee. 10, 108 G First move pending in baseball trades By BEN WALKER AP Baseball Writer HOLLYWOOD, Fla. -The scramble for talent, particularly pitching, continued yesterday at baseball’s winter meetings with the Kansas City Royals and San Diego Padres doing most of the shopping. There were no trades, but several rumors, by mid-afternoon. There was further speculation that big name free agents such as Andre Dawson and Lance Parrish may face tough times. In other business, American and National League owners unani mously approved the sale of the Cleveland Indians to the Jacobs brothers, who own or operate 40 shopping malls across the country. Mark Gubicza and Danny Jack son, two of the Royals’ talented young pitchers, seemed to head every team’s swap list, while San Diego General Manager Jack McK eon nicknamed “Trader Jack” prowled the Diplomat Hotel lobby for prospects. “Someone’s going to panic soon and make a trade in a few days,” McKeon said with a confident smile, puffing on a cigar. “It’s not going to be us." The Padres and the Royals were said to be the only teams offering pitchers. San Diego, needing an f Christmas Special! | l LG. Plain Pizza *5.25 | r toppings .75 12 oz. soda .45 #£• £ Open 4 p.m.-l a.m: M-Th 4 p.m.-2 a.m. F& S . P Expires 12/21/86 « 238-3112 Drivers No Checks Please g;’ £ 418 Clay Lane Needed Now Free Delivery outfielder who could bat leadoff, had talked to Philadelphia about Gary Redus and seemed close to making some sort of trade. “We need hitting,” Royals Gener al Manager John Schuerholz said. The Royals were discussing a deal with the New York Yankees to exchange Gubicza for a package including power-hitting Dan Pas qua. Kansas City also has express ed interest in San Francisco outfielder Chili Davis. At last year’s meetings, following the Royals’ victory in the World Series, it was thought Kansas City’s young pitchers were untouchable. But after an off-season, apparently all are now available, including former Cy Young winner Bret Sa berhagen. “Every deal we hear has Gubicza or Jackson in it,” a Royals official said. “Our camp is split. Half wants to trade Jackson and half wants to trade Gubicza.” The Cincinnati Reds and Chicago Cubs spent a lot of time huddling. Chicago, overloaded with old play ers, would like clear out its roster witii a 3-for-l trade, possibly for Nick Esasky. The Reds also were shopping sec ond baseman Ron Oester. One of the teams interested could be Atlan ta, and Cincinnati may want pitcher Zane Smith in return. The Braves showed some interest in Toronto second baseman Dama so Garcia but apparently backed off when reports circulated that Garcia had a bad shoulder. Garcia, anxious to leave the Blue Jays, made an appearance yesterday afternoon, seemingly ready to show he could still throw. Also at the meetings was Montre al outfielder Tim Raines, a free agent who has rejected the Expos’ contract proposal and has been offered salary arbitration. If Rain es declines, the Expos have until Jan. 8 to sign him, or they will lose that right until May 1. “Jan. 8 is going to be Armaged don for somebody,” Tom Reich, Raines’ agent, said. “If there is going to be a free market, it will assert itself after that date.” Last season, free agents such as Kirk Gibson complained they had not gotten offers from any clubs other than their own, which re sulted in the players’ union filing a charge of collusion against owners. Reich also represents Parrish, an All-Star catcher. Parrish is also a free agent and has been offered salary arbitration by the Tigers. But St. Louis Manager Whitey Herzog, whose team needs a catch er, shook his head when asked if the Cardinals would go after Parrish if he had not signed with the Tigers. LEHIGH TONIGHT 7:30 P.M. Rec Hall Admission free with Penn State Student ID . ATO • Ar • ATQ • Ar • ATQ • Ar • ATQ • Af > 7 Dear Delta Gamma, ® g The Splash was a blast! 7 •Thanks to Audrey and Kiersten i, *for all of the hard work you did.® Love, Alpha Tau Ome u : § a 5 * < ATQ • Ar • ATQ • Ar • ATQ • Ar • ATQ • AT * King 74© S. Atherton St. State College 238*2536 “Dal (GM Maxvill) has already stated our club policy. We’re going to try to sign our own free agents, that’s it,” Herzog said. Another prominent agent, Dick Moss, said one of his clients had heard an ominous story. “Late in the season, Andre (Daw son) was told by someone in the front office that he had better sign with Montreal because if he didn’t, he wouldn’t play baseball next year.” Several trades that had been talked about earlier in the week fell through. Montreal, knowing Los Angeles needs bullpen help, offered Jeff Reardon to the Dodgers and asked for a package that included Orel Hershiser. Los Angeles instead dangled Rick Honeycutt and Ale jandro Pena for Tim Wallach. Also, the prospects of a Willie Hernandez-for-Tom Brunansky tra de seemed to dim. The one concrete action taken yesterday came from baseball’s scoring rules committee, which voted to abolish the game-winning RBI as an official statistic. The stat, which has been criticized as meaningless since its inception in 1980, must be voted out by the scoring rules committee and the Players Association before it is removed. numSttiß NITTANY LION BASKETBALL Professionally Typeset and Printed at Printing e Sampler! igs for the price of 1. my size pizza. PitaaTT North (Heritage OaM. toltreea » Part Fomt) 1786 N. Atherton L >mer 238-2220 Want Better Grades? Looking For The Perfect Gift? See The Mag Text ® System Available at “Penn State tFJooKstore e&p \ \ J 8 kink9's 1 « . f 5 'GZ5 SSSS *. ? /j NOON FRI. DEC. 6th JJ » THRU ft 8 NOON FRI. DEC. 12th W 3 9 6 224 W. COLLEGE AVE. § 266 E. BEAVER AVE. Rejoice Together Sunday Mass December 14, 1986 11:00am Rec Hall Gaudete Penn State Catholic Center \ic •* '*- vi’% .•V, • /> * < * ♦ |L -f'-'' Tenn State tßooKjstore on campus Owned and Operated by the Pennsylvania State University A the Author - E. Willard Miller - and Receive Off Your Signed Copy of “Pennsylvania” December 10th Noon to 2PM - A Wonderful Christmas Gift! - take of itself,” said Seahawks’ quarterback Dave Krieg, who passed for two touchdowns and 243 yards. “We’re all professionals,” said Plunkett, who started, left with an injury, returned to start the second half and was knocked out again. “We all better bounce back. Special teams, blocked punts. It doesn’t matter how. We have to find a way to win.” The one-sidedness of the game left Long dazed. He went back in time to his college football days at Villanova and a big defeat against Clemson. “At least they were more charitable,” Long said of Clemson. “They put their third team in in the third quarter.” Krieg, benched for two games during Seattle’s four game nosedive, completed 14 of 21 passes and was not intercepted. He passed 12 yards to Ray Butler and 10 yards to Steve Largent for scores as the Seahawks rolled to a 24-0 halftime lead. Warner, the AFC’s rushing leader, put together, his sixth 100-yard game of the season, gaining 116 yards on 23 carries. He scored on runs of 5 and 3 yards. Norm Johnson kicked field goals of 53,51 and 46 yards. His 53-yarder was one yard short of his club-record 54- yarder. “It’s exciting to start playing well when we need to,” said Johnson. “Things are clicking.” Meanwhile, the Seahawks’ defense logged a team-re cord 11 sacks, two more than it racked up against Philadelphia’s Randall Cunningham three weeks ago in the Kingdome. Seattle had three pass interceptions, two by Kerry Justin. It was the first shutout of the Raidei-s since 1981, when Denver, Detroit and Kansas City blanked the Raiders on successive weekends. The Seahawks recorded their sec ond shutout of the season. Seahawks’ Coach Chuck Knox wanted to dwell on the victory afterward. “I’m not thinking about the playoffs and I’m not thinking about the San Diego Chargers (the Seahawks’ next opponent),” Knox said. “The only thing I’m thinking about is what a great effort we got out of our people in this game. We went out and won a big football game and that’s what it’s all about.” 5.. ‘‘ t 'ff,' H »■. ,; r v? v> ' A- • •• ’ ?. ‘ <’ “i ' * >< . i. - t£> * \ ,*4 i> AP Laserphoto Stretch your job-search horizons. Collegian Production can get you started. MAKE COL LEGIAN PRODUCTION’S RESUME SERVICE YOUR FIRST STOP WHEN PREPARING TO ENTER THE JOB MARKET. A RESUME BY COLLEGIAN PRODUC TION CAN BE ONE OF YOUR MOST VALUABLE TOOLS WHEN SEARCHING FOR A JOB. TO CONVINCE A POTEN TIAL EMPLOYER THAT YOU REALLY MEAN BUSINESS. ARM YOURSELF WITH A PROFESSIONAL-LOOKING RESUME THAT SERVES NOTICE TO ALL THAT YOU’RE READY TO GO TO WORK. WITH QUALITY TYPESETTING. AVAILABLE IN A NUMBER OF AT TRACTIVE TYPEFACES. 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