take Kd P13 PI and get a higher score... gRe CLASSES BEGIN: GMAT 5/12, LSAT5/7, MCAT5/22, GRE 4/23 CALL 1 -800-KAP-TEST KAPLAN The Answer to the Test Question If .llllst 0 1 #■ J .Wv-.AW ijti ..11W IfSIf m - ■% m ill::. ' V ' ■M 1994 NCAA MEN S GYMNASTICS CHAMPIONSHIPS April 22-23 Bob Devaney Sports Center FIRST SESSION (Preliminaries) Friday, 7 p.m. SECOND SESSION (Team Finals) Saturday, 2 p.m. THIRD SESSION (Event Finals) Saturday, 7 p.m. Admission All sessions reserved - $20 Group of 20 or more - $2/ticket Friday Reserved - $7 , General admission - $5 Student general admission - $3 Saturday (each session) Reserved - $8 General admission - $6 Student general admission - $4 For tickets call 472-3111. NEBRASKA Baseball NU vs. Kansas FRIDAY April 22 7 p.m. SATURDAY April 23 3 p.m. SUNDAY April 24 1 p.m. Corporate Sponsor: 1 Buck Beltzer Field $2 - General admission Free - UNL students with photo I.D. For ticket Information call 472-3 111. Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. NU track teams limp into meet By Trevor Parks Staff Reporter Nebraska track and Held coach Gar) Pepin is just hoping his teams can survive this weekend. The Comhusker men will have tc go up against top-ranked Tennessee attb^GatoradcTrackClassicin Knox ville, Tenn.; with an injury-depleted sauad. Pepin said the meet would be tough even if the Husker men were al full strength, con sidering the strength of the Vol unteers. “I don’t know il we could beat them Pepin even n we naa ev eryone ” Pepin said. “We’ll be lucky to escape.” Ohio State, Kentucky and Soutl Carolina will alsocompeteinthemcet which starts Friday. Although the men might have a tough time, Pepin said, the women have a shot to fare well, despite inju ries to di st an ce run ner Theresa Stel 1 i ng and sprinter Shanelle Porter. “We’re without two of our best, Shanelle Porter and Theresa Stelling, and that’s really going to hurt,” he said. “We still have a chance to win, but it’s going to be tough.” Porter, who has not competed dur ing the outdoor season, has a stress fracture in her foot and might be out the entire season. Pepin said the injury might require surgery and could threaten Porter’s track career. But one Husker who has survived the injury bug that has plagued the team thisseason is sophomore thrower Paulette Mitchell. Mitchell, who will compete in the discus and shot put this weekend, said i this meet would be a good test for her because of the style of competition that would be there. * The Council Bluffs, Iowa, native has already set provisional qualifying marks in the shot put and discus in all three outdoor events this season. Although Mitchell has the provi sional marks, she still isn’t positive that she has made the NCAA meet. -You’re fair game in that posi tion,” Mitchell said. “If you get an automatic, you’re in, and that takes the pressures off.” Mitchell, who finished fourth at the indoor national championships, said there might be added pressure on her this year. “Once you do go good, you’re ex pected to do good,” she said. “In all, I just need to keep perspective, and 1 will be fine.” Pepin said Mitchell was one of the best young throwers in the country, but these next two weeks would be key for both her and the team as they prepared for next weekend’s Drake Relays._ _ Tennis women set for Big Eight meet By Tim Pearson Senior Reporter The Nebraska women’s tenn is team is heading into the Big EightChampi onships on a roll. The Com huskers lake a 10-8 record into the meet and arc coming ofTa 1 1 weekend. Even though the Huskers lost a 5 4 decision to Colorado last weekend in Ames. Iowa, Coach Scott Jacobson is confident about his team's chances in the Big Eight meet, which will be held in Norman, Okla. “We played about as well as we’ve played all year,” he said. The Huskers will get a chance to avenge their loss to the BuITaloes Fri day when they face No. 4 seed Colo rado in their first-round match. Jacobson said he knew his team could beat the BuITaloes. “We’re confident we can play with Colorado,” he said. “We had four team match points to win the dual, and we lost S-4. “If we play at that level, then we can win. But it’s another day, and it’s another city. The outcome of Friday’s match maypcndononcortwo points.” Three freshmen will be leading the Huskers in search of Jacobson’s first Big Eight title. Annie Yang, Cathy Liptak and April Yarmus will all have to play well for the fifth-seeded Huskers to pull off any upsets, Jacobson said. Yang, the Huskers’ No. 1 singles player, is 14-10 on the season, but Jacobson said her record didn’ t clearly reflect how she had played. “She’s beaten some good people,” he said. “She’s not intimidated by anybody.” The three Husker freshmen haven’t been intimidated by anybody, which surprised Jacobson. “I was hopeful that they’ddo well,” he said. “But if you would’ve told me that our three players would be beat ing someone in the Top 50, it would’ve taken me by surprise.” The play of Yang, Liptak and Yarmus is the reason the Huskers are in the position they arc in now, Jacobson said. “Those three have played at an extremely high level,” he said. “Those three freshmen, to a certain extent, have carried us throughout the course of the year.” Even if the Huskers don’t fare well at the Big Eight meet, Jacobson said, the future for the women’s tennis team looks bright. “We’re better than we’ve been in years past,” he said. “This is the best program I believe I’ve had in my three years here. We’re very young, and our lop four players are freshmen. “The future looks very, very good. ” NU tennis men like chances in OU rematch From Staff Reports The Nebraska men’s tennis team is looking to duplicate last year’s second-place finish at the Big Eight Championships this weekend at the Oklahoma City Tennis Center. The Cornhuskers go into Friday’s opening round as the sixth seed. They will go against No. 3 seed Oklahoma, which beat the Huskcrs 7-0 in the regular season. Although the Sooncrs,whoarc ranked 34th in the ITA Rolcx Collegiate Rankings.defeated the Huskcrs rather handily. Coach Kerry McDermott is optimistic about his team’s chances. “The guys basically feel that if we play well, we can win,” he said. “We’re anxious and ready to go” Nebraska is 6-15 overall and 1 -5 in the Big Eight. The Huskcrs are comingolTtwo weekend losses to Colorado and Iowa State. Seniors Continued from Page 7’ and five Big Eight individual titles. “We all feel like we need to earn our place in Nebraska history,” Harrison said. “Coming into our ca reers, people said we were going to be one of the best teams at Nebraska.” But they haven’t lived up to expec tations, Harrison said — at least not until they can claim a national title. “Hopefully, this will be the year that we can go out and do our job and win it,” Harrison said. Bowers agreed. , “It would mean everything,” Bow ers said. “That’s the whole reason I came to Nebraska—the tradition and to be part of a team. It was unfortu nate, but that was something I was unable to experience in high school. So it makes me want it even more now.” After four years of competition. Bowers said, the national meet has taken on added significance. “The regular season is not as im portant,” Bowers said. “This is the one meet that everything has come down to. I think, as an experienced team, we have learned this is the meet we want.” The Huskcrs have been so focused on the NCAA meet that they may have placed too I ittle emphasis on the regu lar season, Allen said. “I never want to lose,” Allen said, “and don’t get me wrong, neither does the team. It’s just that they know what the most important meet is. We lost a couple of meets this year, and we learned from those losses.” After three championships, Harrison said, he knows when the national meet rolls around. “You can tell it is different by the atmosphere,” he said. “We don’t re ally do anything different in prepara tion for nationals, but there’s a lot more tension and there’s a lot more pressure.” Allen said he was confident his team, cspcciallyh is fourseniors, would be able to stand up to the pressure. “It’s going to be a great gymnastics event,” he said. “We are glad to host the event and hope to go out a win ner.” NCAA Continued from Page 7 nal would be ready when the Huskcrs came calling. “I came here just to scare (Ne braska coach) Francis (Allen),” Hamada said with a smile. “We feel we can compete here. Each of the last three years has been different, but hopefully the outcome will be the same.” The two championships have g iven the Cardinal the confidence it needs to win, Hamada said. No. 2 Ohio State, Iowa and Penn State also are confident going into the national meet. The Buckeyes, who were ranked No. 1 much of the season, beat Ne braska in Lincoln on March 13. That setback was the Huskers’ first in a dual or triangular at home since 1989. Buckeye coach Peter Kormann said his team gained valuable experience in the meet, but that may not be an accurate indication of what will hap pen this weekend. “It was to our advantage to come here this year,” Kormann said. “We talk about that win a lot. We didn't have our best meet, but I don’t think Nebraska had their best meet either.” Regardless, Kormann said, the Buckeyes look at the victory as a posi tive. “That doesn’t matter this week end,” he said. “It’s going to come down to who hits the most routines.” The Huskers didn’t worry too long about the loss to the Buckeyes, Allen said. Nebraska has avenged its other two losses this season—to Oklahoma and Stanford. Only Ohio State re mains. “We are the healthiest we have been all year,” Allen said. “I’ve been saying all year that if we get Sumner Darling and Che Bowers healthy, we will be in good shape. Now they arc healthy. “And I am going to have an awful deep team.” The national meet will not be a repeat performance of Nebraska’s re gional meet, Allen said. ' At the regional meet April 9 in Colorado Springs, Colo., Nebraska outdistanced the field by scoring 287.25 points. Stanford and Okla homa, the other two qualifiers from the West Regional, did not have such an easy time. “It was a real fight at regionals for second place,” he said, “and espe cially third place. Oklahoma and Stanford were fighting with UCLA for the last spot, and UCLA didn’t get it. “Luck ily, we were far enough ahead that we weren’t involved in the fight at regionals, but this time we will be right in it.”