I nternatio; THE BATU. | St Sports THE BATTALION 7 Monday, April 15, 2002 come up one A&M holds off KSU, 6-5 ;hort against UT died down. Bysmi a I were empty, supporters intenJ igh the city in-J horns and )n - which shottitl Jelan military 9 resident last t condThance 001 * B Tied 4 ' 4 in the third set ’ so P ho ‘ ; e do hope that Or re Khalotl E1 Dorr y had an (H,t - ti^es that the By Kevin Espenlaub THE BATTALION of-bounds icial at hour match the No. 12 call overturned by the wQt/'Kini, otnciai at court No. 6. The call ;es advantagedjr 11111 , 311 ^ led ' 0 , a brea , k of E ' lunity to ritkH,l ,r !7 s serv J e i "' d , the con ^ L| S'0n of which has beer.\l to . ur ' and ' a " ha 1 ranklv in thp Jl tLirda y a g ainst on for unite■ liversit y of Texas Longhorns (18- caiH r a i.l ^-l) in Austin in front of more said Condc, ’ p ■. j, Han 700 tans. “H Texas freshman Roger Gubser itorv gesture Chi 11 t0 E1 Dorry in the tlrst set but Hinert 'Hlhed back to win the second and 11 c ors oppo^Hjd his serve for the sixth game of o,l monort * lhjrd set carrying his te 6 an , to a pr 4-3 victory over the No. 14 Aggies. 8 U ™te loss handed A&M (16-4, 3-1) first conference loss in the last 16 uruggle pillar rebellion by teral national ® matches it has played, ded in bloodshed refused to neeot s PDVSA maud owdown that end m. His intransiri which long reseat) utocratic. ar's income. Vanjokiisj he world's largest s assessed on a I 5,245, butnotbete in our fining system Leena Harkimaiw i-member Parliawt I. "People are wf ir color, age, (t» it comes to “I’ve been in that situation a few bes before and I was able to come through,” El Dorry said. “Today I let my team down, and I won’t let that happen again. I have to bounce back and persevere.” El Dorry’s valiant effort came on the heels of a come-from- behind victory by freshman Lester Cook, who tied the team score at 3-3 with his three-set victory over Texas sophomore Jose Zarhi on court No. 3. Cook took the 3-1 lead in the first set before Zarhi fired back and won five of the next six games to claim the first set. It was one of four first sets the Longhorns claimed in singles competition after claiming the doubles point. Cook won the second set by sweeping the tiebreaker and riding that momentum to a 4-0 lead in the third set. Zarhi managed a break and See Loss on page 9 By Doug Puentes THE BATTALION The Texas A&M baseball team sur vived a late scare from Kansas State and held off the Wildcats, 6-5, to win the series in front of 4,604 fans at Olsen Field on Sunday. The No. 16 Aggies (28-13, 9-6 Big 12) bounced back from a one-run loss to the Wildcats on Saturday thanks in part to better use of their bats. A&M totaled 10 hits, including home runs from Rusty Meyer and Neal Stephenson. “We got a little bit more hitting today and that’s encouraging,” said A&M head coach Mark Johnson. “We didn’t sit on the lead, we increased it, so I can’t be too disappointed about that. I think right now in our conference, anytime you can win a series you better be happy.” Trailing 6-2 heading into the top of the ninth, the Wildcats (19-16, 6-6) made a last-gasp rally that almost forced extra innings. Gabe Luttrell started the inning by reaching base on an error by A&M See Scare on page 9 JOHN I.IVAS • THE BATTALION Texas A&M second baseman Ty Garner tags Kansas State’s Tim Doty during the Aggies’ 6-5 win over the Wildcats. The win raised A&M’s conference record to 9-6. "erburgh ends ’Cats rally. Aggies survive scare from K-State STUART VILLANUEVA • THE BATTALION Texas A&M senior Majorie Terburgh returns a shot during her j match-clinching win over Maria Rosenburg on Saturday. By Dallas Shipp THE BATTALION The Texas A&M women’s ten nis team continued its hot streak heading into the final and most crucial week of the season by defeating the Kansas State Wildcats, 5-2, Saturday. The No. 27 Aggies held off a strong upset bid from the Wildcats, who were looking for their first- ever win over A&M. The win ties the A&M school record for most wins in a season and improves A&M’s record to 20-3, 8-1 in Big 12 play. “Kansas State is a very solid team,” said A&M head coach Bobby Kleinecke. “Their top play ers are very, very strong, and I knew they were going to give us everything we could handle today.” The match started off on a pos itive note for the Aggies, who won two out of three matches to win the doubles point. The Aggies are 20-0 this season after winning the doubles point. Soon after singles play began, senior Martina Nedorostova was forced to end her match early after she reinjured a pulled muscle in her back. Junior Ashley Hedberg quickly regained the lead for the Aggies, barely breaking a sweat while knocking off Andrea Cooper, 6-1, 6-2. Sophomore Jessica Roland’s struggles continued in singles play. After dropping a hard-fought first set to Alena Jecminkova, 4-6, Roland fell 1 -6 in the second set to lose her fourth straight match. The loss on court No. 1 gave the Wildcats a strong surge with only four matches to play. “[Roland] has been playing well,” Kleinecke said. “She just hasn’t come up with the win and her confidence is really shaky right now. When you play at No. 1 it doesn’t matter if you are playing a good team or a low team, they are going to have a good No. 1 player.” A&M regained its lead thanks to sophomore Roberta Spencer’s win over Paulina Castillejos, 6-0, 6-4, at No. 6. However, that was the last match decided quickly and easily. After gaining a 3-2 lead, the Aggies dropped the first sets on courts No. 2 and No. 4. Senior Majorie Terburgh, play ing at No. 4, dropped her first set, 5-7, against Kansas State’s Maria Rosenburg. After winning the sec ond set, Terburgh stormed through See Aggies on page 9 1Q1 j ir designing form and \ald Bldg. ipher ns: L editor like to ^ou have io you c? Texas A&M Book Store •Seniors get 10% discount on Texas A&M logoed product •Free commemorative Class of 2002 Coca-Cola Bottles — while supplies last •Sign up for your free AggieNetwork.com email address from The Association of Former Students be on the e do y 011 [e position Senior Week 2002. April 15 th - April 20 th Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursdav Frida v saturdljy lOam-Jotn 10am~2pm 7am~5:30Dm 10am-? Dunk Booth Dead Zip Bus Pick up Ring tickets Ring Dance Pictures -Located at Rudder -Bus will drive around -Pick up your Ring -Have your Senior fountain. Dunk campus with free pizza and ticket at the Clayton W, Ring Dance photos student leaders. “2002” merchandise giving Williams Jr. Alumni Show off your taken. 6pm-10pm 6pm-10pm rides for seniors only. Center. new Aggie Ring! 9Dm-lam Blackeyed Pea Som-Close RING DELIVERY Ring Dance Blackeyed Pea Special Kona Ranch Special Day!!! -Tickets on sale at Special AH Dav 5:30pm-9Dm All Dav Rudder Box Office. Johnny Carino’s Square One Special Gumby’s Special Seven rooms full of Special Cillvi lailllllvllu Book Store Sales and Activities L . ——a—mmmm m. Restaurant Specials: Black Eyed Pea - 10% off purchase (Monday and Tuesday, 6pm - 10pm), Square One - Buy one entree, get one half off (Wednesday 5:30pm-9pm), Johnny Carino’s - Free non-alcoholic beverage with entrde purchase, All-you-can-eat pasta (Tuesday, All Day), Fazoli’s - Gift certificates at on campus activities Kona Ranch - Buy one, get one free chicken fried steak plate, (Wednesday, 5pm - close), Gumby’s Pizza - 50% off any pizza purchase (Thursday, All Day) Texas A&M Bookstore in Tlte Memorial Student Center for more information visit classcouncils.tamu.edu/2002/ The Association CD 1= S-r UJ O E r-J T s® t/j/e,