Monday, March 3, 1986AThe Battalion/Page 9 I by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds AU. tfiGpr! f?E£4?UrriK)& Kic?5> \kjpo AtieeApy MA^e OUlU-A NJlCG CUAMGe OP PACG! FRONTIER PHOTO LAND Grand opening special March 8, 1986 Complete Photo Processing (Roll processing $1.99 Color prints 290 1-2 hours) now open 9-5 Mon-Sat 401 A Mitchell & Cavitt 822-2737 opening soon Process Booth 401 Mitchell We welcome Randi Jackson to our fjspuiioi: , 9-5 Mon-Fri 9-1 Sat 823-2355 Yo Hablo Espanol! No. 18 A&M trips Trinity with strong singles play Aggies rebound from early SWC loss, tag Tigers 6-3 By KEN SURY Assistant Sports Editor The No. 18 Texas A&.M men’s tennis team bounced back from a disappointing Southwest Confer- ence loss to Baylor last Thursday to stop No. 21 Trinity, (i-3, Saturday at the Omar Smith Tennis Center. The Aggies won four of their six singles matches as Kimmo Alkio, Mark Smith, Marcel Vos and Chris iStanich all won in straight sets. I Alkio, A&M’s No. 1 singles player, jdefeated Trinity’s Fanie Reinach 6- [1,6-4 to inmprove his spring singles [ record to 12-0. “It’s amazing at this point of the Men’s Tennis season to have someone undefea ted,” A&M Men’s Tennis Coach Da vid Kent said of Alkio. “That shows the credit you have to give to his play.” Alkio is currently ranked the No. 27 singles player in the country. Smith, ranked 71st in singles, helped set the tone for the clay’s wins, Kent said, with his 6-2, 7-6 vic tory over Trinity’s Dexter McBride. But McBride received some satis faction in the No. 1 doubles match as he and Reinach handed Smith and Photo by BRIAN PEARSON A&M’s Kimmo Alkio, who remains undefeated in spring singles play at 12-0, blasts a serve over the net Saturday against Trinity. teammate Russ Simmons a 4-6, 6-2, 7- 6 loss in the most exciting match of the day. Smith and Simmons twice battled back from match-point games to head into a tiebreaker. The two tan dems fought back and forth until Reinach and McBride won the last game and the match on points, 10-8. Alkio and Vos beat Trinity’s Frank Grannis and Chris Greer 6-2, 6-2 in the No. 2 doubles match, while A&M’s Dean Johnson and Dean Goldfine, who r»oth had lost their singles matches, defeated Grayson Underwood and Chad Marsh 6-3, 6-4. The A&M men will compete in the 18th Annual H.E.B. College Tennis Team Championships in Corpus Christi Wednesday through Saturday. Women’s Tennis The 23rd-ranked A&M women’s tennis team, meanwhile, looked unstoppable this weekend as they blasted both Southwest Texas State and Baylor with 9-0 victories. At the Omar Smith Tennis Center Friday, the only match to go three sets was the No. 1 singles as Vanne Akagi beat SWTSU’s Maria Le- dezma 4-6, 6-4, 6-1. Akagi also posted a three-set win over BU’s Jen nifer Forti Saturday at the Royal Oaks Racquet Club in Bryan to up her spring singles record to 9-2. A&M’s No. 3 singles player, Gaye Lynne Gensler, helped pace the team’s strong performance Saturday with a 6-0, 6-0 win over BU’s Shelly Fowler. “Gaye Lynne really played great,” A&M Women’s Tennis Coach Bobby Kleinecke said. “Any time you win 6- 0 in college, that’s fine playing.” Gensler’s singles record moves to 8- 2 in spring action. Akagi and Gensler, A&M’s 16th- ranked doubles team, evened its SWC mark at 1-1, with a 6-2, 6-3 vic tory over BU’s Jean Carder and Jen nifer Forti. More importantly for the A&M women, the 9-0 win keeps them in the early SWC title race, since Baylor took two matches from No. 4 Texas Wednesday. The SWC champion is deter mined by which team earns the most points in match and tournament play. Each match win is worth one point toward that goal. Kleinecke said the win over Bay lor and the 7-2 victory over Houston Tuesday has the team on its way. “It seems like we’re peaking at the right time,” Kleinecke said. Thursday through Saturday the women will play matches in Florida. The Aggie women battle Rollins Thursday, No. 24 South Florida F'ri- day and Mississippi Saturday. Attention Seniors! Interested in representing the Class of 86 as Co-Class Agent? Responsibilities for the two Class Agents include writing Class newsletters, attending Association of Former Students Board meetings twice yearly and planning your five-year Class reunion. Class Agent elections will be held at the Senior Induction Banquets April 7 & 8. A mandatory informational meeting will be held at 4 p.m. Wednesday, March 12 in the Association of Former Students conference room. For more information, call Ann Alsmeyer at the Association of Former Students, 845-7514. SCHULMAN THEATRES 2.50 ADMISSION 1. Any show before 3PM 2. Tuesday - All Seats 3. Mon-Wed Local students with current ID’s International Week '86 Cultural Display March 3 March 4 Food Fair March 5 Fashion & Talent Show March 7 Combination Tickets 6 p.m. MSC Hallway 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. MSC 2nd Floor $6 00 Rudder Auditorium 8 p.m. $2 00 $7 00 Awards Ceremony & Party-Aggieland Inn Tickets on Sale at MSC Hallway and Box Office Starting Monday, February 24 DAILY CONCESSION DISCOUNTS ‘bENOTES DOLBY STEREO PLAZA 3 226 Southwest Pky 693-2457 ‘PRETTY IN PINK PG-13 7:20-9:40 ‘THE COLOR PURPLE PG-13 ‘OUT OF AFRICA PG 8:30 MANOR EAST 3 Manor 823 East Mall 8300 ‘DOWN AND OUT IN 7:25 BEVERLY HILLS R 9:45 YOUNGBLOOD R 7:15-9:35 ‘WILDCATS R 7:30-9:50 SCHULMAN 6 2002 E 29th 775-2463 ‘PRAY FOR DEATH R 7:35-9:55 CRY FROM THE MOUNTAIN PG 7:20-9:35 ‘DELTA FORCE R 7:15-9:50 MURPHY’S ROMANCE R 7:20-9:45 ROCKY IV PG 7:30-9:55 WITNESS R 7:25-9:45 Who is the only AGGIE running for governor? ANDREW BRISCOE Democratic Candidate for Governor Andrew Briscoe 8:00 p.m. 410 Rudder This program is presented for educational purposes and does not consitute an endorsement for any speaker. March 5 Battalion Classified 845-2611