SCIlTEq BATTALIO! y mon? Yechou, tis h, thinksl >ciety arrived s began to % nillions of fcti rives scounj rhe five specis the steelhea; S percent olalyoiif ' controKed hatcter, eriaa est and unite eg$s ad Hah. Yields ant higher, but the ge* mailer range ottna or deease reestaa thrive without three i non mental vanatfe metics and to the surface they see a huttv rs at the stage Unk h tend not to staggr is the group is rat imental threats ion are not yet set one study, tor ever; parents, only 16w he same number i ipawnmg in streen ■en Revoluir )f the No:; 1970 for : agriculturei ui, is a stnxi liotechnolop ig’s contrite :d plant-bree; to produ;: wheat, continue tore throufJ nd tradition: ethods on iIn le will benefit tore is fullo have not beet biotechnolc?f Rathonsjif are eduoi the benefe i fra id of th eard: prof las no >ervice ri for table m Parts /l 2,000 Warranty Sports SECTION THE BATTALION Thursday, March 21, 2002 SPORTS IN BRIEF Aggie softball blanks Houston Texas A&M sophomore pitcher Jessica Slataper threw her seventh complete- game shutout of the season as the No. 22 Aggie softball team defeated Houston, 6-0. Slataper had a perfect game through four innings before surrendering a walk to start the fifth inning. Senior Kelly Ferguson pro vided the Aggies with all the offense they would need, blasting a solo home run in the second inning, her fourth home run of the sea son. Ferguson's career-high 11 game hitting streak is the longest current streak on the team. A&M (24-6) hosts No. 9 Oklahoma this weekend. Arnott arrives in Dallas after trade DALLAS (AP) - Although Jason Arnott was stunned to be traded from the New Jersey Devils to the Dallas Stars, the move south has had one nice side effect. He has gotten to relive the greatest moment of his career over and over. Two years ago, in the sec ond overtime of the sixth game of the Stanley Cup finals, Arnott scored New Jersey's championship winning goal in Dallas. It was the first thing he thought of once the shock of the deal wore off and he started focusing on where he was going. "It was the first thing they brought up in the locker room today," Arnott said. No. 20 Ags cruise past Hawkeyes, 6-1 By Dallas Shipp THE BATTALION The Texas A&M women’s tennis team is off to its best start in school history alter defeating the Iowa Hawkeyes, 6-1, Wednesday night at the Varsity Tennis Center. The Aggies improved to 13-2 on the season, breaking the pre vious record set last season when the Aggies Stormed to a 12-2 start. A&M began the match in usual fashion by sweeping the doubles matches for the crucial doubles point. The doubles point has given the Aggies momentum heading into sin gles play in each of their wins this season. The Aggies are now 13-0 when winning the doubles point. A&M was led by No. 16 sophomore Jessica Roland and junior Ashley Hedberg, who won their match quickly and easily, 8-0, over Iowa’s Toni Neykova and Dani Alexander on court No. 1. A&M’s No. 56 duo of sen iors Leah Killen Hottois and Martina Nedorostova defeated Iowa’s Steffi Hoch and Pascale Veraverbeke, 8-6, in Hottois’ first match after being married earlier in the week. Sophomore Roberta Spencer and senior Majorie Terburgh won their match on court No. 3 to give the Aggies the sweep in doubles play. “We played well in doubles,” said A&M head coach Bobby Kleinecke. “We did exactly what we needed to do, especially on courts one and three.” Singles play ended almost as quickly, as five of the six match es were decided in straight sets. The Aggies were led by the play of sophomore Jessica Roland on court No. 1 and sen ior Olivia Karlikova on court No. 2. Roland, who re-entered the national rankings this week at No. 109, defeated Iowa’s Toni Neykova, 6-1, 6-4, on court No. 1 in a match that was domi nated by the Aggie sophomore. Karlikova was equally See Rout on page 2B A&M senior Olivia Karlikova hits a return during the Aggies' 6-1 win over Iowa at the Varsity Tennis STUART VILLANUEVA • THE BATTALION Center on Wednesday. The win gave A&M — now 13- 2 on the season — its best start in school history. Yankees still the team to beat as season nears (AP) — That little bloop single by Luis Gonzalez proved to teams and fans everywhere that indeed it was possible: the New York Yankees could be beaten. Now, who is next? It could be those always on-deck Atlanta Braves, boosted by Gary Sheffield. Maybe the revamped New York Mets, rejuvenated with Robbie Alomar, Mo Vaughn and Jeromy Burnitz. Perhaps the Boston Red Sox, spurred by a healthy Pedro Martinez and Nomar Garciaparra. Get the picture? All of a sudden, there’s hope all over, cracked open by Gonzo’s cracked-bat single off Mariano Rivera in the bottom of the ninth inning in Game 7 that won the World Series for the Arizona Diamondbacks. Heck, even the poor, orphan Montreal Expos are optimistic they might play well for their new owners — the other 29 major league clubs. “That would be a great story,” said commissioner Bud Selig. Provided, of course, the Yankees do not sweep in at the July 31 trading dead line and steal Vladimir Guerrero from the Expos. Then again, the team that came within a double-play grounder of winning its fourth straight title already did its damage in the winter. Because while the rest of baseball was still getting used to Cal Ripken, Mark McGwire and Tony Gwynn being retired, free-agent prize Jason Giambi was putting on pinstripes and homering in his first at-bat of spring training. “It’s an exciting feeling to be the lead dog, and not chasing it,” said the former AL MVP. David Wells, Rondell White and Steve Karsay also headed to the Bronx, becoming teammates with Derek Jeter. Roger Clemens and Bernie Williams. “The Yankees are the Yankees,” said Dan Duquette, a couple of months before being fired as Boston’s general manager. See Yankees on page 3B (94-0018 Check us out on the web for more info We were busy over SPRING BREAK.. COME SEE OUR NEW LOOK... 3 OF TEXAS TOP DISC-JOCKEYS NEW DANCE FLOOR, DANCE PLATFORMS NEW LIGHT SHOW,NEW SOUND SYSTEM NEW RAISED CEILINGS IAMB lift ((Vtl AIL Mil 11 NHL, LONMd H111PX o > n w > H k! diversity o enga8 e ' i 1 SHOWS / 9 & 11 P.M. / $5.00 Cover Starling March 29 U ITCi’j N >< ; j A1 ,Nivi r " PETES PIANO B6R HOWL AT THE MOON CROCODILE ROCKS He's Filled Em All if you love sing-a-long fun loving piano bars you’ll love this $2wtll/longnttlatil9p.iii. ttcovtMpjn. 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