« d $ 1000 or less merciol advertisers ou get an n must call before the 5 additional ; cancelled early. Ilaneous j400+/wk . part-time. Noexpe- 5 'JTS No Pay Back. No GPA I 800-645-3525. >RE ISLAND ITY BEACH A BEACH T xmn l/ER CREEK MION / BREAK DATES / LENGTH OF STAY JN CHASE noN & pksecvatioNS I N G A K ! in and u from 29 35-TRIP tREAK 95 CUN 3EACH RESORTS, PARTI ES, AN D MORE!!! \CH-BUM (1-800232-2428) REAK 95*** I Break Company! as, Daytona & Lowest Price ze 15 friends and Earn highest iO) 32-TRAVEL Thursday - December 1, 1994 THE BATTALION The Battalion • Page 11 Smith places emphasis on winning Super Bowl Third rushing title eludes running back IRVING, (AP) — He’s 199 yards behind with four games to go. Emmitt Smith needs a 50-yard difference per game to win his fourth consecutive NFL rushing title. “If it’s meant to be, fine,” Smith said. “If not, I’ll take another Super Bowl ring.” Smith is chasing the one runner he might not be able to catch, Barry Sanders of the Detroit Lions. “My job is to try to win games right now, not another rushing title,” said Smith, who has been bothered this year by pulled hamstrings and sore shoulders. He adds that, “I’d be lying if I said I’m not looking at what (Sanders) does. Sure I look at the man. He’s the only one ahead of me. But I’m really not worrying about it. What could hurt Smith’s bid to join Jim Brown as the only rusher to win four consecutive titles is the Lions playoff chances. The Dallas Cowboys suspect that if Detroit gets bounced out of the playoffs, the Lions will feed the ball to Sanders on an above normal basis. “Barry may get the ball 50 times a game if they lose another game or two,” offensive tackle Nate Newton said. “If they’ve got no playoff goals then they’ll go with their star looking for individ ual goals.” Newton said Smith’s primary concern is getting his team in po sition for another Super Bowl run. “Barry could go down as the greatest of all time but he’ll have no Super Bowl rings,” Newton said. “Emmitt may get me into the Hall of Fame with all the rings he’s helped this franchise win.” Smith is still going strong, but not as strong as last year. He has 1,207 yards but is averaging only 4.1 yards per carry. Last year he rushed for 1,486 yards and averaged 5.3 yards per carry, his best season average in his five-year career. “It’s been a tough physical year,” Smith said. “It seems like something is always hurting.” Newton said some teams have been out to hurt Smith. “He’s been taking some shots, some of them a little on the late side,” Newton said. “I see some of these guys jump up and down like Butkus after they make a tackle. They’re trying to hurt Emmitt. ” Smith always likes to see the Philadelphia Eagles on the schedule. In the last five games, he’s rushed 134 times for 792 yards against Philadelphia for a 5.9 average. His biggest game against them was for 237 yards last year on Halloween. “Philly will be pumped up and play hard against us,” Smith said. “Their fans make it a very difficult place to play. They’ll be all riled up.” Dallas Cowboys’ running back Detroit’s Barry Sanders in the AP Photo Emmit Smith is 199 yards behind NFL rushing title race. Williams signs contract NHL season in jeopardy "Wild Thing" returns to baseball as Angel Hockey schedule cut down to 60 games 5 Nights Hotel, RT Air, Daily 1-800-569-2223. ’ ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Re liever Mitch Williams is getting a new life in baseball with the California Angels. Williams hasn’t pitched since a disappointing stint with the Houston Astros ended in his re lease May 31. He was 1-4 with six saves and a 7.65 ERA in 25 appearances last season. The Angels said Wednesday that Williams agreed to a non- guaranteed contract. It calls for a base salary of $500,000, with $2 million in performance bonuses. Under his previous 3-year deal, he made $2.5 million in 1994. “My time with the Astros was very demoralizing and took all of the fun out of the game for me,” Williams said from his home in Hico, Texas. “I had time at home to clear my head and decided I wanted to pitch. The Angels were the most persistent team after I got home. “I wasn’t going to go back and pitch the rest of the year. I knew I had to clear my head. I knew I wasn’t mentally right in Hous ton. Basically, I was just lied to. I’ll do whatever job they brought me in to do, but don’t tell me my job is one thing and use me in another thing.” Williams said the Angels have made no promises to him. “Of course. I’d like to close,” he said. “Whatever decision they make, I feel Lach (Angels manag er Marcel Lachemann) will be honest with me. If he tells me I’m a setup guy, I’m a setup guy.” Williams, 30, is best known for allowing a three-run, game winning home run by Toronto’s Joe Carter’s in the sixth and fi nal game of the 1993 World Se ries while pitching for the Philadelphia Phillies. It was his last pitch for the Phillies, the team he helped win the NL East championship and league playoffs in 1993 with 43 saves. He was traded to the As tros in the offseason. Williams has a career big- league record of 44-55 in 592 appearances, three of them starts, with 192 saves and a "I had time at home to clear my head and de cided I wanted to pitch. Angels reliever, Mitch Williams 3.51 ERA. He started his ca reer with the Texas Rangers in 1986 and pitched three years for them before joining the Chicago Cubs in 1989. “I’m real excited,” Williams said. “It’s a new start. I’m fine, I’m healthy as heck, healthy as I’ve been. I had knee surgery last spring. Everything now I think is healed up.” The Angels are without a proven stopper in their bullpen, but reportedly are pursuing ca reer saves leader Lee Smith, who had a major league-lead ing 33 saves in the strike- shortened 1994 season. (AP)- NHL negotiators meet in Chicago starting Thursday in what could be a last attempt at salvaging the hockey season. “It’s getting to the point where they are going to have to make a decision (on the collec tive bargaining agreement),” a management source told The As sociated Press on Wednesday. “Time is of the urgency,” said Troy Loney, player representa tive of the New York Islanders. NHL commissioner Gary Bettman, reached at his New York office, remained noncommit tal on the eve of the latest talks. “We’re trying to move this process along, we’re trying to make a deal,” he said. “That has been our No. 1 priority right along since Day 1.” The source said the NHL and NHL Players Association have booked hotel space for three days in hopes of resolving the dispute that has sidelined the league for 61 days. Players are expected to pre sent the owners with their thoughts on such major issues as the rookie salary cap, free agency and salary arbritration. The contentious luxury tax is sue is another story, however. “If the tax is on the table, there’s trouble,” Loney said. Until now, the owners have in sisted on a tax of team payrolls that go over the average team salary in the NHL and give the money to teams under the pre scribed limit. The players have been against such a tax, believing it has the same effect as a salary cap. Players reportedly would ac cept a diminished version of the payroll tax if owners share the burden by taxing gate receipts- So far, the owners’ lockout has resulted in 341 games called off in the longest work stoppage in NHL history. The schedule is already down to 60 games, fol lowing the cancellation of 24 for each team. Owners have said they will accept no less than a 50-game schedule. One source told the AP that the players are not happy with what they’ve already conceded. “Players feel they’ve given away the farm,” he said. Winder Continued from Pg 9 call 1-800-849-4301 to reserve your order now. 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