The Batt don’t leave campus without it Selection by the Guitar Shop . . . Head and Shoulders Above the Crowd! All at Unbeatable Prices The GUITAR SHOP 1911 S. Texas, College Station (409) 693-8698 • BUY • RENTALS • SELL • REPAIRS • TRADE • LESSONS Largest selection in town! MAKE US YOUR CHOICE FOR VIDEO ENTERTAINMENT The Paramount Theatre 99* • VHS& BETA • Free Memberships • Players & Camcorders Also Available Located on the corner of Texas & SW Parkway in the Winn Dixie Center, College Station Movies on Tuesday & Thursday including NEW RELEASES 693-5789 | THE ACCIDENTAL TOURIST po $ DOLLAR DAYS $ BIG R 7:10 1 0:40 1 SCR00GED r 7:05 9:33 DIRTY ROTTEN SCOUNDREL PG-n 7:00 0:25 TWINS pg 7:13 9:50 NIGHT OF THE DEMONS r TODAY 1 ‘BEACHES PG-n 7:10 | 9:40 1 (THREEFUGITIVES pg 7:20 | 9:43 MANOR EAST 3 Manor East Mall 823-8300 MISSISSIPPI BURNING R 7:03 040 ’COUSINS R 7:13 9:30 ‘DANGEROUS UAS0N R 7:20 0:45 ;day! POST OAK THREE 1500 Harvey Rood 693-279cl CINEMA THREE laiS College Ave. 693-2796 THE BURBS (PG). 7:00 9:15 THE FLY II (R) 7:20 9:20 HER ALIBI (PG) 7:10 9:20 TRUE BELIEVER (R), 7:15 9:15 BILL & TED’S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE (PG) 7:20 9:30 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATED! WORKING GIRL 7:00 9:05 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 UUJj IRRITABLE BOWEL SYNDROME STUDY l]°° 0 «inn Wantec * ; Symptomatic patients with physician diagnosed $100 fine lrr ' tab,e Bowel Syndrome to participate in a short study. ^ 10 ° $100 $ 10 ° ' ncentive for those chosen to participate. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 S100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 sJoo SORE THROAT/STREP THROAT STUDY |{oo $100 For individuals 12 years and older with sore throat willing $100 $100 to participate in a study to treat strep throat. 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Evenings & weekends call 361 -1500. $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 S300 $300 $300 $300 $300 HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE STUDY “““ $300 individuals with high blood pressure medication $300 I200 daily to participate in a high blood pressure study, $300 $300. incentive for those chosen to participate. $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 Consumer Studies Wanted: Healthy volunteers to evaluate labeling information or taste-flavor of currently available medication. No blood drawn. Bonus incentive for the first 100 patients chosen to partici pate and who complete study. 6 days left. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 USS SPRING ALLERGY STUDY $100 Looking for tree and grass allergic individuals (12 years $iqo $100 anb older) to participate in a short allergy study. $100 in- 5100 $100 centive for those chosen to participate. Free skin testing $100 $100 available to determine eligibity. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 CALL PAULL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL 776-0400 Page 8 The Battalion Tuesday, February 28,1989 Landry bids farewell to Cowboy players Ousted coach asks players to do their best for Johnson Staubach feels Cowboys will greatly miss Landry IRVING (AP) — Tom Landry tearfully bid farewell to the Dallas Cowboys Monday, saying he loved them and asking them to give their best for new coach Jimmy Johnson. “It was hard to keep your emo tions under control,” said a red-eyed Landry afterward. “I tried to tell them that this crisis will pass, that you have to keep moving forward.” The 64-year-old Landry choked up and couldn’t finish his speech to the players assembled in the lecture hall. “It was one of the most difficult things I’ve had to do,” Landry said. “It was hard saying goodbye to the players.” Landry spent 29 years as the Cow boys head coach, the only one in the team’s history. His teams won two NFL championships and set a league-record of 20 consecutive win ning seasons. The team went 3-13 last year, worst in the NFL, but Landry had hoped to eventually take them to another Super Bowl, the Cowboys’ sixth. Landry cleaned out his desk on Sunday, making room for Johnson, who also said goodbye to a football team Monday, the University of Mi ami Hurricanes. He coached at Mi ami Five seasons, leading them to the national championship in 1987. Johnson, a college roommate and football teammate of new owner Jerry Jones on the unbeaten 1964 Arkansas Razorbacks, will meet the Cowboys today. He has scheduled a 1 p.m. press conference. Former linebacker coach Dave Wannstedt who recently joined the Miami Dolphins’ staff, and David Shula, the Dolphins’ assistant head coach and passing game coordina tor, have accepted positions with the iCowboys. Johnson was also expected to bring the Hurricanes’ offensive line coach Tony Wise, receivers coach Hubbard Alexander, defensive backs coach Dave Campo and de fensive coordinator Butch Davis. Landry’s farewell speech pre ceded a mini-camp for the players Monday. “There wasn’t a dry eye in the room,” said linebacker Eugene Lockhart. “Coach told us he loves us all and although he couldn’t be with us in person from now on he would be with us in spirit.” Then Lockhart paused and added, “I couldn’t stand much more.” Quarterback Danny White said he had never seen Landry break down like he did. “I felt for him,” White said. “It’s rare you see him in a situation that’s difficult for him to handle. It’s some thing I’ll never forget. It must have lasted only five minutes but time stood still, believe me.” White said he would stay with the team until he sees what develops. “I’d still like to play another year,” he said. “Tom wasn’t the only one in the room who broke down,” said line backer Jeff Rohrer. “It was tough, he was saying goodbye to 29 years.” Rohrer, like other players, was still furious over the way Landry was replaced. “There was a better way to dump Tom,” he said. “You could take two people with IQs of three, put them in a room together and let them brainstorm 10 minutes and they could have found a better way.” Jones told reporters in Little Rock Monday that he handled Landry’s dismissal poorly. “It did mean everything to me for Coach Landry to hear what I had to say in the manner I had to say it as quickly as possible, and that was done,” Jones said. “We made every effort in the world. Frankly, Coach Landry would have known about it a second after (club president) Tex Schramm would have known about it if we could have gotten to him.” Jones and Schramm flew to Aus tin Saturday, where Landry was spending the weekend, to tell him of the change. Reports of the trans action leaked out Thursday. Landry had one year left on his contract but had been talking like he wanted to coach well into the 1990s. It hasn’t been determined how Landry’s contract, which has one year left on it, will be handled. He is owed some $800,000. Landry said on Sunday he didn’t want to stay with the organization, NASHVILLE, Term. (AP) — Although not handled in an ideal manner, the parting of the Dallas Cowboys and Coach Tom Landry was inevitable, according to Roger Staubach, who quar terbacked the Cowboys during their glory years. “I feel very sympathetic right now and 1 know that down deep he’s (Landry) hurt, but the change was inevitable. Jerry Jones was very specific from the beginning that he wanted Jimmy Johnson as his coach,” Staubach said Monday between presenta tions at the National Corn Grow ers Convention. Landry, who guided the Cow boys through their first 29 years of play in the National Football League, was unceremoniously dumped this weekend by new owner Jones and replaced by the University of Miami coach. Staubach said the suddenness of Landry’s release made him wonder if his former coach could have been treated better. “Probably, I would have waited awhile and I would have met more with Coach Landry. 1 think everyone would have liked to have seen Tom Landry have an other year to bring the team back. The way it happened — it wasn’t ideal,” Staubach said. “Coach Landry felt the team was young. I think he really wanted to be a part of the team coming back in a strong fashion,” said Staubach, who led the Cow boys to two victories in four Su- “just hanging around looking over everyone’s shoulder. ” He said he didn’t ever want to coach again or get into politics. “I can’t stay inactive though, so 1 will have to do something,” Landry said. per Bowl appearances. Staubach said he didn't put much stock in reports that Landry had become detached from the players in the lasttwoor three seasons. “1 look at him as being the best at what he did,” Staubach said. “Even when we were winning he was (so) concentrated (in his job) so much that he could have been looked at as detached. When you’re losing these things are looked at in a different perspec- live. .ulM “He knew how to get his point across. He has those darting eyes or he could just give you ‘that look.’ 1 don’t think the game passed him by. “One thing about Landry, or anyone in the limelight. You dis sect them and you look at what you have. For 29 years Tom Landry was a class act. He was a very consistent person. He is not a phoney. He doesn’t have any skeletons and he would change his style for his players. He’s sur vived the time.” Under Johnson, Staubach said he believes the Cowboys will be a team on the move. “I don’t think there will beany problems with the new coach, al though 1 think the players ini tially will miss Tom Landry more than they thought. I feel that Dal las Cowboys f ootball is on its way up and that Johnson is stepping into a situation where he has a chance to bring the team back.” Schramm said his role would be outlined by Jones within the nexi month. “1 will do what I can to help the new owners make the transition and continue the Cowboys tradition," Schramm said. Arizona leads poll after Sooners fall TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — When it comes to the top ranking in college basketball, the first time around is best, says Arizona coach Lute Olson. Olson’s Wildcats moved up a notch to No. 1 this week after a 77- 75 victory Sunday over No. 9 Duke in East Rutherford, N.J. It was Ari zona’s second time on top this year and fourth in the past two seasons. “I don’t know that it will have much effect on us,” Olson said Mon day. “I think our players have been there, not just this year but, with most of them, a year ago. “We’d like to finish the total sea son ranked No. 1,” he said. Arizona, 22-3, the fourth team to be honored as No. 1 this season, spent only one week on top the first time before an 82-80 loss to Okla homa on Feb. 12. The Sooners then held the top rung for two weeks but dropped to fourth after a 97-84 loss Saturday at Missouri. Georgetown and Indiana moved up one spot each to second and third as no teams dropped from or broke into the Top Twenty. Duke held the top spot from the preseason through the first nine polls. Illinois replaced the Blue Dev ils for a week, followed by Oklahoma and then Arizona the first time around. i Oklahoma’s loss cleared the way for the Wildcats to regain the No. 1 ranking, and Sean Elliott made a 3- pointer and another basket in the last 53 seconds as Arizona seized the opportunity against Duke. Elliott had made only four of 19 shots before his 20-footer from the top of the key, but Olson said he had no doubt the 6-foot-8 senior would come through. TANK MFNAMAUA* Duke’s Danny Ferry, who was guarding Elliott when the Arizona star hit a clutch 3-pointer, said after tjie game he expected to see the Wildcats regain the top spot. Olson, whose squad made the Fi nal Four last season after a total of six weeks atop the poll, said he’d like to have seen them pick Georgetown, which received five first-place votes and 1,219 points to Arizona’s 54 first-place votes and 1,305 points. He said was more concerned with a season-ending road trip Thursdai against Washington State and Satur day against UCLA. T he Bruins are still smarting from a 102-64 loss here, which ranks as UCLA’s worst Pacific-10 Conferenct loss ever. The nationwide panel of sports writers and broadcasters gave In diana, 23-5, five first-place votes anil 1,122 points for the No. 3 spot,wit Oklahoma, 24-4, had one No. 1 volt and 1,083 points for fourth. by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds p* AklOTHEf? i NCI PEKlT AT THE ATMLETlC P9F?M ? l / A coa ‘Q. ll mwwmmih IV LADIES & LORDS HURRY! FINAL BIG WEEK SALE ENDS MARCH 4TH! 5TH ANNIVERSARY SALE! MEN! NEW Tuxedos - From $135.00 Tie/Cumberbund Sets -$15.95 Tuxedo Shirts - $15.95 LADIES! SAVE- 15-70% On: All Special Occasion Dresses! Bridals, Formals Brides-Maids, And More! 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Willie her of a gang. 1 of shots aimed may have been fit. “A wrong lot certain neighbi Los Angeles C Gott. Of the 55 si: this year, 15 ar out competitor: At least four each last year it Commander L< “These urba fora normal lif • Similar ba' major U.S. cit crime, which o day, an averag possessing, sell to the Phi. Half to thre the the Job M One-wc for stude to learn word proci Cost Sterling Learning R Room V