Scoreboard AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Milwaukee 11, BOSTON 10 St. Louis 1, SAN FRANCISCO 0 CLEVELAND 7, California 5' Florida 9, NEW YORK 3 (12 inn.) New York 9, DETROIT 8 CHICAGO 10, Montreal 3 BALTIMORE 5, Chicago 1 HOUSTON 4, Philadelphia 3 Texas 11, TORONTO 8 COLORADO 9, Atlanta 8 KANSAS CITY 4, Seattle 2 Cincinnati at LOS ANGELES, inc. Oakland 7, MINNESOTA 0 Pittsburgh at SAN DIEGO, inc. , . M .; . . . Wednesday September 11, 1996 10 i -p I fro Yor :s mE0. Wheatley. visitS 'M; to promote new line By Jim Rose Daily Sports Writer When you think of Tyrone Wheatley, what comes to mind? Football, for starters. The 1993Rose Bowl, probably. Maybe the New York Giants, Wheatley's pro team." How about designer clothes? Believe it or not, when Wheatley vis- ited Ann Arbor yesterday, it wasn't reminisce about his glory days ,a Wolverine, and it wasn't to discuss his future in the NFL. He was selling clothes at Michigan Book and Supply. Figuratively, of course. The last thing Wheatley needs to do is supplement his income by hawking t-shirts on the cor- ner of State Street and North University. Wheatley spent two hours at Michigan Book and Supply yesterg to promote a new line of clothing designed by Perry Ellis. The Collegiate sportswear line, bearing the Michigan logo, is sold nowhere else in the coun- try. Wheatley hasarepresented Perry Ellis for about a year. See WHEATLEY, Page 12 Jane Stevens, shown here in action last season, Is an outside hitter for the Michigan women's volleyball team. 'M' spikers struggle 'past Toledo in four By Kevin Kasiborski Daily Sports Writer Earlier this season the Michigan women's volleyball team was able to .step up its game and compete against superior opponents. Last night, it was Toledo who was keeping up with the Wolverines. Michigan, finally playing a match they were favored to win, survived sloppy play in the opening two games to top the Rockets, 15-12, 13-15, 15-5, 15-8. "The first two games were long and ugly," Michigan coach Greg Giovanazzi said. "They might look good statistically, but from a coaches standpoint, they were pretty tough." This is the second win in a row for the Wolverines, raising their record to 2-4. Toledo, which had been victorious in its last three matches entering Tuesday, dropped to 4-4 on the year. After a dominating performance in recording their first win of the season against Georgia on Saturday, and a coming off a stretch during which four of the five teams they played were ranked; a little letdown by the Wolverines might have been expected. But Giovanazzi credited the Rockets for playing well. "Toledo played a really good match against us," he said. This was the second time Giovanazzi i has coached against the Rockets Reed Sunahara, his former player. Sunahara played for UCLA when Giovanazzi was a Bruins assistant. Last year, the Wolverines beat Toledo in three straight games in Ann Arbor. The Rockets have never beaten Michigan in 10 matches. Despite not always playing pretty, several Michigan players set new career highs. Junior middle blocker Sarah Jackson led the Michigan offense with 20 kills (a career high) and a .444 hitting per- centage. Senior captain Shareen Luze added 19 kills (tyin gher career high) and 14 digs and was Michigan's best player all night according to her coach. "Shareen carried us passing and hit- ting'" Giovanazzi said. "She has been the rock for us this season. Toledo served her a lot of balls, and she hit or passed every ball." Michigan set a new season high with 84 kills as a team. Setting up all the Michigan hitters for most of those kills was junior Linnea Mendoza, who had 51 assists. Mendoza needs 347 more assists to break Tarnisha Thompson's career record of 2,619. Senior Erin McGovern had 12 assists of her own. She is currently fourth on the all-time assist list. Sophomore middle blocker Linsey Ebert did well disrupting the Toledo attack with a career high six total blocks, with one solo and five block assists. See SPIKERS, Page 12 WARREN ZINN/Daily Tyrone Wheatley signs an autograph yesterday at Michigan Book and Supply in Ann Arbor. Wheatley was visiting the store to help promote a new line of Perry Ellis clothing, designed specifically for Michigan. Michigan Book and Supply is the only store in the country that will sell the apparel. Whalers ink former Michigan captain Halko By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports Editor When Michigan hockey coach Red Berenson was asked last year about whether or not he would hire defense- man Steven Halko, the Michigan skip- per said, "In a minute." Well, the Hartford Whalers agree. Except their decision took a bit longer to make. Hartford signed the former Michigan captain to a multi-year contract yester- day, four years after they selected him in the 10th round (225th overall) in the 1992 NHL Entry Draft. In keeping with the Whalers' team policy, terms of the contract were undisclosed. "We are pleased to sign Steve in time for our training camp," Hartford Vice President and General Manager Jim Rutherford said in a press release yes- terday. "He has just completed a very successful career at the University of Michigan and certainly adds depth to our organization's defense." Neither Halko nor his agent were available for comment yesterday. The 6-foot-1, 183-pound Halko reported to the Whalers' training camp in New Haven, Conn., yesterday. Hartford opens its pre-season next Saturday in Ottawa against the Senators. If he dresses for that contest, the Bolton, Ontario, native should receive quite a bit of support from the crowd. Last season, as a senior, Halko scored four goals to go along with 16 assists and posted a plus-23 rating. In his four years at Michigan he tallied 61 points (eight goals, 53 assists) and 86 penalty minutes. After missing his first game, he never missed another during his career while playing in a team- record 153 consecutive games. Halko was a first team All-CCHA selection after the 1994-95 season and earned second team honors last year. He was honored by the Dekers Club three times with the Vic Heyliger Award as Michigan's top defenseman. In other Michigan hockey alumni news, former center Kevin Hilton, the team's second-leading scorer last year, is practicing with the Detroit Red Wings, the team that owns his draft rights, in hopes of being offered a con- tract. However, with Detroit's depth at center, Hilton will need to make a strong impression on Wings' coach Scotty Bowman. ~- 9't - ,, , ,a U I I Sl I BI Al 91 01 7 STABLISHED f983 THE ORIGINALWY YM N CHARLESTON, Ill TO AID O1ALL MY 0OURMET SANDWICHES TUDENTS 9.P.A AND GENERAL MADE ON FRESH BAKED B1 ATING ABILITY. MADE RIGHT HERE WI YOU CAN SEE IT. THE LEAN A COLLEGE CAREER" IUL HIGHEST QUALTY M ITH JIMMY JOHN'S LEARN MY m AVAILABLE ARE USED, CH IUSIESSANDOWN OUROWNwcou su vmEXCLUSIVELY BY LOUIS RIC (TOE.WOK YARPAT-IM 1Ou SOMIVsa OSCAR MAYER. THE GARDEN FR' lORE. WORK: YEAR PARTTM* ** VEGGIES ARE BROUGHT IN EACH A ND PROVE YOU'RE THE BEST. EVERY MORNING. WE 'E LVE HE EST la ~ la ~ ilHELLMAN'S MAYONNAISE AND PI LHNN RO OLIVE OIL I GUARANTEE THE BI 29 EAST ANN STREET 01E LOAM TO 3AM DAYS A WEEK o s T 6 TO JOIN OUR MY? ARE READ MERE NEST, EATS MADE AND PURE BEST! JOE WESTRAU/ Dai Steven Halko will try to duplicate his collegiate accomplishments in a Hartford Whalers uniform. The former Michigan captain signed a multi-year deal yesterday great scores... Law School Business School a 0 49D (9D ., i I it I C