ITERNATI0\- r HE BATTAUt ses Sports SECTION THE BATTALION Wednesday, March 27, 2002 —. Lawmakers! a bill Tuesday; ighly unusual, lie third since ation is crucial in the United i Parliament, victory againsi is kind is enar a Advani as he as an draconiar ed fears the K 1 use the law st al rivals. )ill al low's poll; ■ three months n and an a special court J of giving in iport to terror-: ig from a Aggies sweep doubleheader GUY ROGERS • THE BATTALION freshman Derrick Bauer hits a forehand during a doubles match, he Aggies hit the road to face TCU at 2:30 p.m. kgs take break from 3ig 12 play vs. TCU / will be eft By Kevin Espenlaub THE BATTALION The Texas A&M men’s ten- nu-Kashmir. Iris team will be in its final run blamesthemih Tore resuming its Big 12 ays they were: ihedule with a Wednesday > a perilousmillatchup in Fort Worth against ivals. Be Texas Christian University lomed Frogs at 2:30 p.m. m I The match comes on the 11 s) |/'A|els of A&M’s doubleheader Hd-lVv|eep against the University of ■xas- San Antonio and No. 35 Tiiversity of Tulsa on Friday |at improved its overall season :ordto 13-2. "Tulsa has really had a great |ason." said A&M head coach m Cass. “They had beaten ugh Rice and TCU teams ear- :rthis season, and I think a lot our players really played their [st matches of the season (on iday) which is a positive for lit team.” The No. 31 Horned Frogs ■5) will host No. 10 A&M n quake ological Survey .9-magnitude shook Afghanist ing at least 1 ijuring 2,000 otte IKpPlp larif - *Kunduz after scoring an upset of the No. 26 Washington Huskies before falling in the finals to No. 1 1 Pepperdine University in the Pepperdine Shootout last weekend. “We were really pleased with the win against Washington,” said TCU head coach Joey Rive. “Much like A&M, we're playing with a lot of new faces on the roster this season and we dropped some matches earlier this season that I think we could have won, so Fin pleased we seem to be heading in the right direction.” The Horned Frogs roster is stacked with five freshmen, including Fabrizio Sestini, who Rive sees as an important factor coming into Wednesday’s match up. “Everyone there at A&M knows to watch out for (junior) See Break on page 2B Slataper, Rippee lead A&M to victory over N’western St. By Kevin Espenlaub THE BATTALION Back-to-back complete game shutouts by sophomore Jessica Slataper and junior Lindsey Rippee led the Texas A&M softball team to a doubleheader sweep of the Northwestern State Demons on Tuesday at the Aggie Softball Complex. Slataper held the Demons (24-19) to one hit and recorded 1 1 strikeouts in the Aggies' 4-0 victory in the first game of the evening. The game marked the eighth com plete game of the season for Slataper and the fifth time this season that she has recorded a double-digit strikeout total. Not to be outdone, Rippee pitched a no hitter into the fourth inning of the second matchup before Demons third baseman Lindsay Leftwich hit a shot up the middle for a single, for the first of only two hits managed in the game by Northwestern State. “Both the girls stayed ahead in the count when they were out on the mound tonight,” said A&M head coach Jo Evans. “The kind of performance they had helps this team to build some confidence as we get ready for the rest of the Big 12 (schedule) starting this weekend.” The Aggie offense left no time for Rippee to be disappointed, as they put the game’s first run on the board in the bottom of the fourth before exploding in the fifth for four runs to clinch the victory for the Aggies, 5-0. Senior Kelly Ferguson, who extended her current hitting streak to 15 games with four combined hits in Tuesday’s action, capped off the rally with a two-run single that scored freshman Adrian Gregory and junior Selena Collins. “My approach to the plate is to tell myself that I am better than that pitcher is,” Ferguson said. “I think that I can hit any RANDAL FORD • THE BATTALION A&M junior third baseman Jennifer Davis fields a fly ball during the Aggies 4-0 victory over Northwestern State in the first game of a doubleheader on Tuesday at the Aggie Softball Complex. pitch she sends at me, and that is usually the key to good hitting. I think once you get that first hit it just starts rolling from there.” The games were the final non-confer ence contests of the season for the Aggies, and they came on the heels of two disap pointing losses to the No. 9 Oklahoma Sooners last weekend. “To lose those two games to Oklahoma was very frustrating for us,” Evans said. “We think we are good enough to beat [OUJ, especially when we out hit them like we did, so I was pleased that tonight we came out and got some good hits and some big RBIs. We needed to start feeling good about ourselves at the plate, and with the good pitching we had as well, it really gave us some confidence for the rest of the season.” The No. 22 Aggies (26-8) will resume their Big 12 schedule this weekend with a visit to Ames, Iowa for a matchup against the Iowa State Cyclones. “We have proven that we can play with some of the best teams in the country,” Slataper said. “If we just play relaxed and confidently, like we did tonight, we can have a strong Big 12 finish.” (NISTAN ,KaW TTT'TTT-ApiT' 'ZB P TAJIKS he expc cted'* * *★ A- * The Pharmacy i^AmericaTrusts OPEN 24 HOURS unpusnext !arbookf° r McDonald ween 8:30 $7 maili n 9 >ss accept^ Locations To Serve You College Station Texas at Brentwood 696-8688 Rx: 696-5905 Bryan Briarcrest at 29 th 776-9137 Rx: 776-9128 Drive-Thru Pharmacy • / Hour Photo Chilifest Inc. presents TOMMY ALVIiSW PLAYING AT 11:00 DROSS CANADIAN RAGWEED PLAYING AT 12:30 TICKETS AVAILABLE: A66IELANB OUTFITTERS, THE TEXAS STORE, INSPIRATIONS IN THE MAIL, CATALENA HATTERS IN BRYAN, THE EXCHANGE AT LUTHER STREET, AOOIELANO OUTFITTERS AT SOUTHGATE, & TICKETWEB.COM P FOR MORE iiFORMATION: ' BENEFITING: BURLESON COUNTY GO TEXAN, BOYS & GIRLS CLUBS OF THE BRAZOS VALLEY, SMART MOVES ALCOHOL AND DRUG PREVENTION PROGRAM,