< Wednesday, April 28, 1993 10 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Enlargements Up To 12"X18" In Only 3 Hours!!! 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 Hillel General Information April 26-30 Celebrate with Hillel Yom Ha'atzmaut Israeli food served in the Union Square. Israeli Information Table in the Union and University Info booth on campus. April 30,6pm Shabbat Dinner and Awards Ceremony Hillel House RSVP by April 28 864-3948 May 9,8-11 pm Finals Food Ice Cream Bar Hillel House 940 Mississippi Natural Fiber Clothing from the Ends of the Earth Jayhawks assistant to go to Garden City New job a highlight in memorable year for women's coach By Jay Williams Kansan sportswriter For Kevin Cook, it was time. After 10 years at Kansas as an assistant coach for the women's basketball team, Cook will take over as head coach at Garden City Community College. Several reasons entered into Cook's decision to take his first head coaching position at the college level. "Ibelieve the most appealing aspect was that, after 10 years here, I have the opportunity to run my own program," Cook said. The day after California defeated Kansas in the first round of the NCAA Women's Basketball Championship, Garden City officials contacted Cook about becoming their coach. The next day, Cook flew out to Garden City and talked with school officials and toured the facilities, including two full-court gym. Cook returned to Lawrence, and after discussing it with his wife, Yvette, he accepted the offer. There are many aspects of the Kansas program Cook will miss, he said. While at Kansas, Cook directed the Jayhawks' recruiting efforts. His efforts in recent years have led to some of the top players in the nation coming to Kansas, including sophomore forward Angela Aycock. Aycock and the rest of the 1991 recruiting class were ranked 11th in the nation by recruiting experts. four NCAA tournament and three Big Eight Conference Tournament championships. "I've had a chance to be around some champion people, and that's what you miss the most," he said Aycko said that while Kansas was losing a good coach, everybody was happy that Cook was getting the opportunity to be a head coach. At Kansas, Cook has been a part of "He's just a great guy," she said. "He has all the qualifications to be a great coach and a great recruiter." Cook will inherit a team that went 6-24 last season in the Hawkville Conference Western Division. He will work at Kansas until May 17. Until that time, his assistant coach at Garden City, Andre Favors, will handle the recruiting chores. Cook said he realized that it could be a long road rebuilding the Garden City program. "I realize I might have to take my lumps the first year," he said. "At Garden City, my players will have to make a commitment." The new job is another highlight in a memorable year for Cook. Cook married last year, and a son, Conner, was born Feb. 19. "Somebody told me that I’ve pushed the stress meter to the limit over the past year," he said. "I think I've held up pretty well." Kansas coach Marian Washington was out of town yesterday and could not be reached for comment. Royals come back win in extra innings Late-inning hits, Tigers error, help Kansas City in route to 4-3 victory The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Chico Lind singled through a draw-in infield with one out in the 10th inning last night, and the Kansas City Royals beat Detroit 4-3, ending the Tigers' six game winning streak. The Royals, trailing 3-0, scored twice in the eighth and tied it in the ninth. In the 10th, Wally Joyner drew a leadoff walk from Kiely 0-2. Kevin McReynolds followed with a single, and Mike Macfarlane sacrificed the runners to second and third. Lind singled up the middle on a full count. Rusty Meacham, 1-1, gave up one hit in two innings in relief of David Cone, whose record stayed at 0-4 in five starts. The Royals scored in the ninth on a leadoff single by MacFarlane, a sacrifice by Lind and a throwing error by reverber Mike Henneman on a grounder by Keith Miller. Kansas City closed to 3-2 in the eight on RBI singles by Joyner and Hube Brooks off Henneman. Cone remained winless since he signed a three-year, $18 million contract with Kansas City. The Royals have not given him a lot of help, however, scoring only 12 runs in his five games. Cone pitched eight innings and gave up three runs on nine hits. He struck out seven and walked three. Mark Leiter shut out the Royals or six innings on three hits. He had given up 10 runs on 12 hits and five walks in nine innings as a reliever this season, but did well in his first start since July 23. Leiter started in place of Bill Krueger, who was held out for a second consecutive game because of a hamstring injury. He walked none and struck out two. The Tigers scored in the first inning on a walk to Lou Whitaker and a double by Travis Fryman. Kirk Gibson hit his third homer on Cone's first pitch of the second inning. Chad Kreuter drew a two-out walk in the seventh and scored on a double by Alan Trammell. NOTES: The Royals have recalled left-handed pitcher Denis Rasmussen from his rehabilitation assignment in Omaha and placed left-handed reliever Frank Dipino on the 15-day disabled list. The Royals recalled infielder Rico Rossy from his rehab assignment in Omaha, reinsteated him from the 15-day disabled list and optioned him to Omaha. Rossy went on the DL April 15 with the chicken pox. Rasmussen was 1-1 in two starts at Omaha. DiPino has a muscle strain in the right side of his neck. The left-hander had made four appearances this year with a 2.84 ERA. This What You Have Planned Memorial Day Weekend? WEDNESDAY ¢50 Draws $1.50 Scooners THURSDAY ¢25 Draws (upstairs) $1.25 Bottles (everywhere) - register all week at Johnny's WIN A MEMORIAL DAY VACATION IN THE OZARKS! Since "We Care For KU" 1907 Stress. You can manage to control it. Being a student can stress you out, especially at finals time. What is stress? It's your physical and emotional response to a perceived threat. Anything that scares you, worries you, excites you, or motivates you can be a source of stress. You can't eliminate it, but you can minimize its effects. What are some symptoms? Irritability, poor concentration, overeating or undereating, headaches, fatigue, chest pains, muscle tension. How do you manage stress? Recognize it. Balance work with play. Plan ahead. Eat a well balanced diet. Exercise. And most of all ... relax. Take time for yourself, by yourself or with others. For more information on stress management: Health Education © 864-9570. Health Education Seminars Watkins Health Center, First Floor Conference Room How to Manage Your Stress Apr. 28, 1:30 p.m.; Apr. 29, 11 a.m. Health Educators are available to present programs on many health topics. $ \textcircled{6} $864-9570 STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500 Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students Computer Software All the titles you want & need, in stock or available by special order. Film developing at great rates at the KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions, Level Two 17 West 9th Nextto Undercover 842-7423 Once A Year and This Is It! Thursday & Friday April 29 - 30 9 AM to 4 PM COTTON or Island TWO LOCATIONS on the plaza in front of the Kansas Union on the sidewalk east of the Burge Union