'63 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SV olverine Nine Face Rugged Rivals " By BOB ZWINCK The Wolverine baseball squad will try and establish the winning habit again when they play three conference games. Iowa inyades Ferry Field this afternoon for a 3:30 contest and then Minnesota follows them in for a doubleheader here tomorrow at 1:30. Ed Roebuck has received the starting nod from Coach Moby Benedict for today's battle against the Hawkeyes- Benedict thinks Roebuck is really a much better pitcher than Conference statistics seem to in- dicate. He went eight innings in a losing cause against Purdue last weekend giving up six runs, four of them earned runs, and 12 hits. Fluke Hits "But don't overlook the fact that several of those hits were of the fluke variety," countered Ben- edict. "Really, a couple balls were just barely reached-way out on the end of the bat. Two, I think,. were broken bat singles. One of them, in fact, splintered the bat and the end of it flew farther than the ball did. With just a little luck he'll be in there all the way if he does just as, good a jo6." Roebuck struck , out six while walking only two to give a strong hint of his control. Fritz Fisher is slated to hurl the first game of the twin bill against the Gophers, but Benedict is not yet sure just who will draw the assignment in the second game. Tough Luck Southpaw Fisher once again opened the Conference on a losing note. Yet he allowed only five hits and struck out three in his eight inning stint while being charged with four earned runs. Ironically, Michigan's weekend opponents battled each other in a three-game series last week, with Iowa coming out on top two games to one. Benedict nevertheless put his finger on Minnesota as being the tougher of the two. "I think Min- nesota and Ohio State must both be considered as real contenders for the Big Ten title-along with undefeated Wisconsin, of course," he stated. "It shouldn't take as many vic- tories to win the crown this year as it did in 1962. Illinois had to, win 12 to take the title from us then. But still baseball is really tough to call that way. Wiscon- sin just might go on to win every- thing all year. You just can't tell." Important Pair Iowa boasts a pair of hurlers who went all the way for triumphs against the Gophers in Jack Wi- land and Dale Miner. Wiland gave up three hits and two runs, neither of them earned, in his nine innings. Miner went the distance in the nightcap of the doubleheader, seven innings, and gave up seven hits and one earned run, which came in the top of the last frame. , The Hawkeyes also sport a duo of top hitters. Jim Freese, who handles the catching duties, has gone four-for-eight with four RBI's. He ranks sixth in the con- ference. Clean-up hitter and first-sacker Rich Lee has a .333 mark picked up with three-for-nine at the plate. The Gophers possess a group of timely hitters as well as good pitching. Gary Raasch is hitting .571 with three RBI's, a double and a triple. MermaiOds Water Pol0' Ch ampions Five Ann Arbor Swim Club players were named to the 1963 All-American water polo team after the AASC won the Women's AAU National Championship for the third straight year. The local women named to the honor team were Cynthia Osgood (left forward), M i c k i King (goalie), Connie Corson (center forward), Nancy Wager (1 e f t back), and Peggi Wirth (right back). The team was coached by freshman swimmer Bob Hoag. The AASC won the four team tournament Sunday with a 7-5 double overtime victory over the Northern Virgiana Aquatic Club at Detroit. Miss Osgood was the most valuable player in the tour- nament, scoring a total of 18 goals and both Ann Arbor goals in the two overtime periods. In jury Ends Honig's Career By LLOYD GRAFF Michigan has had a multitude of sour breaks so far this year but none quite so bitter as the one shortstop Dick Honig sustained on a tiny bone in his wrist. QUADRANGULAR MEET: Hoosiers To Provide Toughest Net Test With the sharp finality of a gunshot the college career of a gritty, determined ballplayer was prosaically ended. Honig didn't bow out with a diving catch or a titanic home run, but by calmly trotting to first base after being hit by a pitch served up by Il- linois hurler Pat Holland. Knuckle Ball "It was a knuckle ball that hit me straight on; then it dropped with a thud, like hitting a wall. If it were a fast ball or a curve and had some spin on it, it prob- ably wouldn't have broken the bone, but the knuckler has no rotation so it didn't just glance off." Honig wasn't taken out im- mediately. He stayed in to run the bases and score the tying run in the game but went out in the bottom of the inning. "By the time I reached third base I figured it was broken," he commented. "The wrist will be in a cast for approximately six weeks the doc- tor says, and if I'm extremely lucky I'll be out of it is five. This means I'11 definitely miss the Big Ten season, but I could possibly get into the playoffs if the team can make them," Honig said. Not a broken wrist or a little plaster of Paris can keep Dick away from the diamond. He is helping coach Moby Benedict out by pitching batting practice, shag- ging fly balls and coaching down the lines. "It's the type of injury where you can be active but can't play," he says. NewExperience Dick's first experience as a traf- fic director at third base was exasperating for him. "I almost jumped out of my skin at Purdue. I'm not used to watching a game from the sidelines." Honig never did much idle star- ing when he was playing. He was usually in the heart of the action. Last year he combined with Cap- tain Joe Jones for 60 double plays, a college record. The comforting thought of Honig at short made the pitchers more willing to let the batters hit the ball rather than going for a strikeout with every batter. Honig could certainly not be considered purely a glove man. He finished second in team batting last season with a .292 average, and had a .269 mark going before the injury this year. His overall ability attracted epicurean eyes of Major League scouts. "I've had some offers to play pro ball," remarked Honig, "but I guess the wrist ended those dreams. I was hoping this would really be my big season," he said with a tinge of regret. Benedict voiced the same sen- timents. "It's a shame it had to come in his senior year. Dick's injury is a tremendous loss for the team." Lets Eligibility Expire Neither Benedict or Honig are thinking about trying to get eligi- bility granted for next year. Dick has enough hours to graduate in June from the School of Educa- tion and may be headed for grad- uate school, "depending on other job opportunities." So ends the college baseball career of an. outstanding student athlete. Not a very dramatic finish for such an exciting player. By TOM ROWLAND The Michigan tennis team will still be without the services of Captain Harry Fauquier when the Wolverines take on three Big Ten opponents in a quadrangular meet this weekend. Fauquier has been competing in the Pan American games for Canada and has yet to put in an appearance this spring in a Mich- igan. tennis meet since the end of the Southern tour. Slated for number two singles play -this sea- son, where he is the defending Big Ten champion, Fauquier wrapped up .his tennis play at the Games after being knocked out in the sec- ond round, and he returned to his home in Toronto ill with the flu. Good Substitute Sophomore John Fraser has been taking the Wolverine cap- tain's spot on the second court in singles and teaming with= Ray Senkowski in first doubles. The Wolverine newcomer has a 4-1 record in northern competition. With Fauquier out of the lineup Coach Bill Murphy ,has been af- forded the opportunity of giving his four sophomores some stronger competition, but as Senkowski puts it, "We'd sure feel a lot better with Harry in there." Murphy's soph-stacked netmen face Ohio State, Illinois and In- diana this weekend, playing two meets today and the remaining team tomorrow. The Wolverines defeated OSU earlier this spring, 9-0. Toughest of Three Indiana looks to be the toughest of the three, boasting a 14-1 sea- son record, the only defeat com-' ing against North Carolina. Last weekend the Hoosiers blanked both Minnesota and Purdue, 9-0, and nipped Michigan State, 5-4. Doubles play has been the Hoosiers' forte this spring, with sophomore Roddy McNerney and Charley Kane at number one. In- diana was trailing 4-2 after singles play against MSU when the doub- les team swept the Hoosiers to victory. "In other seasons I felt we had to at least break even' in singles to win," said coach Bill Landin. "But this indicates that, in addi- tion to having some real competi- tors, we've got doubles play to help compensate for any break- down in the singles." Top Records Both McNerney and Kane are 11-1 for the season. Number one singles man Gary Baxter is 10-0, This Weekend in Sports TODAY BASEBALL-Michigan vs. Iowa, Ferry Field, 3:30 p.m. TENNIS-Michigan vs. Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio St., Champaig SATURDAY BASEBALL-Michigan vs. Minnesota (2), Ferry Field, 1:30 p.m. FOOTBALL-Intrasquad Scrimmage, Michigan Stadium, 2 p.m. GOLF-Michigan at Michigan State, East Lansing TENNIS-Michigan vs. Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio St., Champaig TRACK--Michigan at Purdue, Lafayette THE EAST QUADRANGLE presents BERMUDA featuring MAXIMILIAN May 10, 1963 9 to 12 p.m. South Side Donation: $1.50 per couple Sponsored by Cooley House as is Hoosier sixth man Bob Wham.. Illinois is suffering from a'lack of experienced talent this spring with only two starters returning from last year's team. The Illini have a 2-5 season mark. Behind Senkowski and Fraser at numbers one and two singles, Murphy will go with Brian Flood and Hal Lowe at third and fourth with Bo Barker and Ron Linclau in the fifth and sixth spots. The Wolverines are 3-6 in the Big Ten this spring and are unde- feated in five meets since .the return from Florida, where Mur- phy's crew dropped four straight. Senkowski, Fraser, Lowe, Flood_ and Barker have yet to lose a conference match. Northwestern. Shows Power In MSU Rout' Northwestern's Big Ten tennis stock rose more than a few points up at East Lansing last week when the Wildcats, top challengers to Michigan's conference net crown, powered by Michigan State, 9-0. The Spartans, no pushovers this spring, were sporting an 11-3 rec- ord before the Wildcats came to town. Marty Riessen, playing number one after a three-meet take-over of the top spot by Clark Graeb- ner, shut out. State's Tom Jamie- son, 6-0, 6-0. Graebner rolled past Spartan sophomore star Tony O'Donnell, 6-1, 6-1, at number two. Michigan plays MSU up at East Lansing on Tuesday, and Riessen and Company visit the Wolverines for the final dual meet of the season on May 11 in Ann Arbor. PREMEDICAL STUDENTS The Student Microscope by NIKON Approved by Medical Schools NIKON 35 mm Comeras and Accessories Write for catalog, low prices Sold and Serviced by THE DANN COMPANY' 2014 East 46th Street Cleveland 3, Ohio EXpress 1 -7240 What you've been waiting for: The ALL NEW will be distributed beginning MONDAY, MAY 6 Student Publications Building 420 Maynard Street If you haven't bought your copy HURRY! Only a limited amount left ! 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