PIZZA P the bulk of thell tadium cheering 4 tis huddled as Val J.S. kick in the ski . Nippon, Nippon,"! S-A" chants as theJl nbered the Amencl las. JelT Agoosaniii while Japan's Shit* oto and Ryuzo MaJ a. who plays inliii post with a right4| ■ ground, punched^ d States had thed , lifting his shotisl i scored again. Via 1 wild exultations, [ .tunning, divingsa ertips to Nakata'sj e, said it wasthdi| t for American sJ o\ er-age playerol e it this far in at«| lis is just fantastic, isawa scored then led header. :es when he firedai i after the Japanes m Agoos. I to the left comers ,ck almost immedii .vo shots to eel an adii harlie Garner ran :o record 201 j at Philadelphia’s ainst the Cowboys) earlier. i scored on their sions of the sel the game out oft ry, 98-yavd drive 1 than 9 1/2 mk TD catch i nifc^ of the fourth ). rhey's 38-yard ft e first quarter gavel -0 lead. The Cowl their next drivel 40-yard field goal ter linebacker Dei 26 yards on a mi formation. | Jackie Harris caf n passes in thelef )allas, an ll-yx that madeitJJ- 6-yarder from back Clint Sloe': I Smith had their .-interference calli D broke the3-3| ers ahead to stay«1 first half. Tham| tier Ryan Mci'l s in the end zone illy. rrtMJtms Monday Nile: Beat the Clock Time You Call is the Price You Pay! (from 6 p.m. - 8 p.m.) On a Large 1 Topping Pizza Tips are appreciated College Station 764-7272 Northgate 846-3600 Bryan 268-7272 1100 Harvey Rd. 601 University 3414 East 29th St. Harvey Road location open till 2 a.m. on Thursday, 3 a.m. on Friday & Saturday Christian Faculty Network ID CO. i night to jading economics be given 00 p.m. J udio Dr. Walter L. Bradley Emeritus Professor of Mechanical Engineering Texas A<$?M University Formerly a professor and department head of Mechanical Engineering at Texas A&.M University; Research Fellow of the American Society for Materials; consultant for many Fortune 500 companies; authored >120 technical articles including one book 6 book chapters on the relationship of faith and science; has made this presentation on more than 60 major university campuses around the world. Rudder Theatre Thursday at 7:00 pm. September 28, 2000 Co-sponsored by Campus Crusade for Christ and Intervarsity Christian Fellowship Monday, September 25, 2000 SPORTS THE BATTALION Page 3B Buffaloes Continued from Page IB total over the weekend. Midfielders Andrea Starns, Jessica Martin and Amber Childers each joined Ragsdale by sinking one in the back of the net. But it was the midfielders who provided the impact play Sunday. Just minutes before kickoff, freshman mid fielder Ashley Murray went down with what ap peared to be a tom ACL in her right knee. If so, it would mark the fifth A&M player to be side lined with the long-term knee injury. Despite the loss of a starter, the midfield took over the game. “Our emphasis this week was to pressure and win balls in the middle field,” A&M coach G. Guerrieri said. “Our midfield did a good job of that.” That midfield was responsible for three assists and three goals against the Buffaloes and was the key to the Aggies’ ball control for the entire game. “Our outside midfielders gave some of the best crosses today,” Tamporello said. “All they did was put the ball behind their defense, and all we had to do was run into the ball, make a con nection and the ball will do the rest.” Meanwhile, the defense kept the Aggie keep ers from working hard. After allowing Texas Tech only a single shot, the back line gave up only four to Colorado. “This is the first weekend we’ve really come together,” said defender Amber Reynolds. “Everybody is really starting to mesh well, and our confidence is much higher.” CODY WAGES/The Battalion Freshman defender Adrienne Dillard clears a ball against- Texas Tech in Friday's 3-0 win. | Tech Continued from Page IB Tamporello said the team has adopted a new attitude. “We’ve got a new little slo gan,” Tamporello said. “It’s ‘Whatever It Takes,’ and from this point on, that’s what we use. This [victory! is a great confidence booster for this team. This is where our season starts, and we are only going to go uphill from here.” With the shutout, the Agj- gies will add a bagel to the “bagel pole,” a tradition which began last season. Af ter every A&M shutout, the team will hammer a bagej into a pole located behind the Aggie Soccer Complex grandstands. At season’s end, all the bagels will have blown away or been eaten by birds, but a nail will remain in the pole as a reminder. Volleyball Continued from Page IB Colorado returned from a timeout to tie the score at 13-13 on an A&M error, but Cole came through in the end. She pushed the Aggies ahead with a kill, and then pounded another attack to give A&M the game. Colorado scored the first two points of game three, but A&M came back to take the lead 3-2 on another Cole kill. With the score at 5-4, A&M scored four consecutive points to extend the Aggies’ lead to 9-4. Colorado called a timeout, but the Aggies came out and scored two more points thanks to kills from Gibson. However, the Buf faloes found momentum and began to knock down A&M’s lead. The Aggies called a timeout with a 13-12 lead, then called another timeout after Colorado took the lead and posted game point. Eventually, a Colorado kill gave the Buffaloes the third game. “Our attacks started to become less intense, and they [Colorado] jumped on that,” A&M coach Laurie Corbel- li said. In the fourth game, A&M bounced back from the game three loss by taking a 6-0 lead. After a Colorado timeout, the Aggies moved the score to 7-0 with a block from Marshall and Moscovic. Once again, the Buffaloes defensive skill powere^ their comeback, and A&M called a timeout with the score at 11-8. The Aggies found momentum and finished off the Buffaloes with two kills from Gibson for the match. Gibson led the way for the Aggie offense and defense^ as she posted match and career highs in kills (25) and digs (35). Cole set a career high in kills with 21, and Marshall set a career high in digs with 23. ] “We played awesome defense,” Corbelli said. “Our blocking is coming around in spurts, and that’s probably our biggest weakness. It’s just going to take some fine tuning in practice.” On Sunday, the Aggies concluded their home stand; defeatingTexas-Pan American 15-3,15-5,15-1 at G. Rob lie White Coliseum in a non-conference match. Freshman outside hitter Beth Skypala led the Aggie$ with a career-high 10 kills, and senior setter Claire Hau vey posted a season-high 33 assists. ! A&M will travel to Lincoln, Neb., on Saturday to bafi tie the No. 1 University of Nebraska Cornhuskers. The match will take place at the Lincoln Center at 2 p.m. J \ ■ . t Today's Preparation Determines Tomorrow's Achievement As a graduating senior, you are preparing for your future. At Peterson Consulting, we too are preparing for your future... your future as a management consultant. Peterson Consulting (a unit of Navigant Consulting, Inc.) is a visionary international consulting firm, creating economic/information management solutions for our clients in the corporate, insurance, healthcare, government and legal communities. 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ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS V V '* V i n $ < ‘Resume Drop Deadline* TOMORROW September 26th ‘OnCampus Interviews* October 17th \