Sports Monday, March 29,1993 The Battalion Page 7 DAVID WINDER Sports Writer Hand injury just the breaks with switch in sports T hanks to the Texas A & M Physical Plant, I now think I have a broken bone in my left hand. I don't think they did it on purpose, but nonetheless I have an injured hand. Since the first of last se mester, some friends and I have played football in the large yard next to Ho- tard dormitory. At the beginning of the year it was a nice green field, but after we came back from the Christ mas holidays we discoved that someone had made large tire tracks near the south endzone and filled them back in with some kind of dirt substance. (I suspect the A&M Physical Plant did this, also). We continued to play anyway, and after about a month of bone-crushing tackles, the grass began to disap pear. So to fix this problem, the A&M Physical Plant was sent out to put dirt on the lawn so the grass could grow back. But instead of dirt they put little scraps of metal, shards of glass, rocks, pieces of bricks, and one huge chunk of cement. I guess they were putting the nuclear waste and hypo dermic needles somewhere else. So after months of being able to vent out the frustrations of school every weekend by knocking one of your best friends senseless, we were forced to find a new recreation. Bas ketball, baseball and frisbee golf were all mentioned as replacements, but none fit the guidelines we had See Winder/Page 8 Barking out the signals BILLY MORAN/Tlie Battalion Bob Davie, Texas A&M's assistant head coach/defensive The Aggies begin their second week of spring practice, which is closed to the public, today at Kyle Field. coordinator, leads the A&M defense through drills last week. Perdomo earns All-American honors at NCAA meet By LAURA GRIMES Special to The Battalion Sophomore Diego Perdomo earned Texas A&M 15 points on its way to a three-way tie for 28th place at the NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships in Indianapolis, Ind., last weekend. Perdomo, a transfer from Oral Roberts University, took fourth place in the 100- yard butterfly March 26 to earn All- American honors. Perdomo was second going into the finals with a time of 47.74 in the preliminaries, but finished in fourth with a time of 47.82. "Diego got All-American honors - not honorable mention, but the real thing," A&M assistant head coach Jay Holmes said. "That's how it should be done. He went in there and had fun with it. We had a lot of fun watching him on the awards stand." Perdomo was the only Aggie to score points at the meet. The Aggies swam all five relays, but came up short in each one. The 200 freestyle and 400 medley relays both placed 17th, while the 400 and 800 freestyle relays both finished 18th. The top 16 places swim in the finals for points. To continue the run of bad luck, the 200 medley relay squad was one of five teams disqualified for illegal relay ex changes. "We wanted more out of the relays," Holmes said. "Scoring in them would have helped us out a lot as far as breaking the top 20. It just wasn't in the cards." Junior Steve Lutz was the next fastest qualifier after Perdomo with an 18th- place finish in the 400 individual medley. Stanford won the meet with 520.5 points, followed by Michigan in second with 396 points. The University of Texas was the top Southwest Conference team, finishing third with 326 points. Fellow £WC team Southern Methodist finished 10th with 148.5 points. A&M sweeps Coogs, ties Tech atop conference By WILLIAM HARRISON The Battalion The Texas A&M baseball team's dou ble-header against the Houston Cougars at Cougar Field Saturday was just too big for one day. This year's decreased load of 18 inter conference games to determine the Southwest Conference Championship pitted A&M, vying for first place in the SWC, against Houston, struggling against virtual elimination from the race. After the dust settled from the 11-in ning come-from-behind marathon series finale that started Saturday and was com pleted Sunday, A&M had swept Houston for the three-game series to claim a share of the Southwest Conference lebd with Texas Tech at 5-1, and dropped the Coogs to the bottom of the barrel at 1-8. The two teams combined in the dou ble-header for 63 funs, 64 hits, 37 runners left on base, 35 walks and 13 errors after seven hours and 35 minutes of play. After the second game of the twinbill was called fbr darkness, an additional 40- minute debate dragged on as the two schools' sports information staffs and the umpires scrambled to interpret a vague conference rule that was not specific re garding suspended play for darkness. A&M co-captain Billy Harlan was at a loss to recall anything like the suspension at Cougar Field, the only field in the con ference without lights. "We weren't sure about the ruling, but we went and stayed in the hotel last night and everybody was real positive," Harlan said. "It took two days to do, we spotted them seven runs, but those guys on the team never doubted that we could come back because we've got the firepower to do it." In the first game on Friday, A&M won 6- 3 on the strength of Aggie pitcher Jeff Granger's third complete game and right- fielder Stephen Claybrook's four runs batted in. A&M never trailed, and Hous ton pitcher Jeff Wright got the loss for the See Sweep/Page 8 University Committees Academic Appeals Panel Academic Scholarship Selection Committee AIDS Committee ommencement Committee ommittee On Charitable Contributions Committee For A Discrimination Free Campus oncessions Committee otton Bowl Representative Selection Committee Council on Teacher Education urriculum Committee Disciplinary Appeals Panel nvironmental Safety and Health Committee Evans Library Council Fiscal Appeals Panel Graduate Appeals Panel Graduate Council Handicapped Planning and Advisory Committee Honors Program Committee New Student Committee Outcomes Assessment Committee Career Center Advisory Council Parking Citation Appeals Panel Recreational Sports Advisory Committee Rules and Regulations Committee Scholarship Committee Security Awareness Committee Student Health Insurance Committee Student Health Student Services Advisory Committee Student Organization Advisory Council Student Publications Board Students Rights Appeals Panel University Lectures Committees Women's Issues Committee Yell Leader Advisory Committee Call or come by the Student Government Of fice (Rm 127 SSB, 845-3051) and submit your recommendations, questions, concerns, and comments regarding University Committees. GO TEXA I 1 ! /ferUDENT VERNMENT S Afchjl UNI IIVERSITY /fefUDENT IvERNMENT