Tuesday, February 10, 1970 THE-MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Tuesday, February 10, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ager. By PHIL HERTZ Fresh from its first home win of the decade, Coach Johnny Orr's Michigan basketball squad will de- part from. the now friendly con- fines of the Events Building to- night for a tough non-conference contest at basketball hotbed Evansville. Coach Arad McCutchan's Purple Aces gained their reputation in the 1960's when they were one of the nation's top small college pow- ers; however, since joining the ranks of the major college basket- ball teams, successes for Evans- ville have become considerably less frequent. Evansville is currently 10-9 this season, but the Aces had won four straight contests before dropping a 104-89 decision to DePauw Sa- turday. Orr is vary wary of the Purple Aces at home. The Michigan men- tor noted yesterday, "Evansville. is a real hot basketball town, and it helps their players. They're really tough at home, and they've beat- en some real good teams in Evans- ville." The Purple Aces have won eight of eleven home starts this year and number among their vic- tims, a Rick Mount-less Purdue five.~~ BESIDES Purdue, the only other common opponent for Michigan and Evansville has been Butler. The Wolverines decimated Butler, 105-65, at the Events Building while the Purple Aces fell 94-88 at Butler. "They're not very big, but they're bigger than us" was the way Orr described Evansville. The Michigan coach also added, "I ex- pect we'll see a man-to-man de- fense, and they may press us." The leading weapons for M c - Cutchan's squad are 6-5 senior Mike Owens, a quick 6-0 squad James Mckissic, and a 6-3 sopho- more defensive specialist Don Buse. Also likely to see action are 6-5 Layne Holmes and 6-4 forward John Wellemeyer. Owens is often the, team's top scorer. For the Wolverines, Dan Fife and Mark Henry will man the Big Ten FStandings confront Purple Aces AGAINST THE WALL: Hoosier tanker dynasty... . .when will it end? sports NIGHT EDITOR: BILL AILTERMAN guard slots as usual, Rudy Tom- janovich and Bird Carter will be at forward and Rod Ford will be the pivotman. Orr had nothing but praise for the starting five, and for that matter the entire team, after Sa- turday's triumph. Orr commented, "They all played well. We did a pretty good job on defense, with the exception of Dale Kelley, and Rudy had another fine game." THE BIG T, who was hamper- ed Saturday by a strained arch, will be out to continue his assault on the Michigan all-time r e c o r d book. The 6-8 Wolverine captain has now scored 484 points in six- teen contests and also pulled down 246 rebounds. Rudy currently has the highest rebounidinig average in Wolverine history of 14.2 a game, better than the late Bill Buntin's 13.1 mark. He is also third in career points behind Cazzie Russell and Buntin and second in total rebounds be- hind Buntin. His current 30.3 scor- ing average for this season will set another mark.' Tomianovich should have little trouble passing Buntin for second place in the career scoring derby, and has a chance of setting a career rebounding mark despite playing seven less games than Buntin. Rudy currently has 909 re- bounds, 128 short of Buntin's career mark and he has e i g h t games remaining. including t o- night's contest,, meaning the Big T must average 16 a game to break Buntin's mark. By JIM KEVRA It's not easy for a team, particularly a college team, to build a dynasty. First of all, there is the problem of recruiting the personnel to make you the national champion. Then, because of loss- es due to graduation, a college coach has to rebuild his team completely every four years. Add to this the fact that since you are the national champion, every other school in the country will be trying extra hard to beat you and you see some of the problems involved in building a dynasty. Despite these complications, Indiana Univer- sity has truly built themselves into a swimming dynasty. Building a dynasty takes time; in Indiana's case it took thirteen years. Back in 1958, the Hoosiers hired Doc Counsilman to coach their swimming team. In Counsilman, they got one of the shrewdest coaches in the country and also one of the best recruiters. IT WAS three years before Counsilman's in- fluence started to show. In 1961, the Hoosiers cap- tured their first Big Hen Swimming champion- ship. Since then, they have added eight 'more in a row with the Wolverines finishing second every year. Indianacompletely dominated the nationals in 1969 as they picked up points in every event. Ex- cept for three events (the 200-yard butterfly, the 100-yard freestyle, and the 50-yard freestyle) they had at least one man finish in the top three. Their best performance was the one-meter diving where the Big Red swept the event finishing one-two- three. As for this years team, Michigan's head swim- ming coach Gus Stager commented," Counsilman has probably the greatest swimming team he's ever had down there". Stager is a living testament to the strength of the Indiana swimming team as last Friday night, the Hoosiers destroyed his Wol- verines, 91-32. The defeat was the worst that the Michigan tankers have had in recent years. What makes this margin of victory even more impressive is the fact that Michigan had a good swimming team, probably one of the ten best teams in the country, and that the Wolverines swam some of their best races of the season. Commenting on the large margin of victory, Counsilman explained, "This is the only real dual meet competition that we'll have this year, so I had to throw everything we had into the meet to see how far we've progressed. But, I didn't expect that they'd swim out of their minds like they did. I sort of feel sorry for Gus." AS FAR AS this years NCAA championship, it should be a walkaway for the Big Red. When asked, if anyone could beat the Hoosiers, Stager replied, "I doubt it. Stanford might be able to give them a good run in swimming but they have no divers." He also added that the Wolverines would be in a seven or eight way battle for second place but that it was "too early to tell" how they would do. Indiana's domination of swimming the past few years can be traced to the excellent recruiting of Counsilman. By selling high school students on the idea that "to be a great swimmer, you have to practice with great swimmers", Counsilman has persuaded (among others) the two best swimmers in the United States, Mark Spitz and Gary Hall, to attend Indiana. Both Spitz and Hall were two- time American record holders while they were still high school students. As to how long Indiana's reign can go on, the answer is not clear. Stager said that "other schools will have to do some good recruiting" before they can hope to challenge the, Hoosiers. With their strong freshman-sophomore contingent, Indiana will not be too seriously hurte by graduation for a few years. -Daily-Sara Krulwich RUDY TOMJANOVICH angles,. in two points during last Sat- urday's 95-84 win while three Northwestern defenders look on helplessly. Rudy is closing in on Bill Buntin for second place in Michigan career scoring. This Week in Sports L' Iowa Illinois Purdue: Minnesota Ohio State Wisconsin MICHIGAN Michigan State Indiana Northwestern W 6 5 5 5 4 3, 3' 2: 1 L 0 2 2 S 3 3 5 7 POt. 1.000 .714 .714 .625 .571 .50! .375 .286 .167 .125 TODAY BASKETBALL-at Evansville, 9 p.m. (Radio-WAAM) FRIDAY HOCKEY--at Wisconsin GYMNASTICS-INDIANA STATE and SOUTHERN at Indiana State SATURDAY BASKETBALL--at Wisconsin HOCKEY--at Wisconsin WRESTLING--at Iowa SWIMMING-at Illinois GYMNASTICS-at Indiana TRACK-MICHIGAN STATE RELAYS at East Lansing 4 ILLINOIS aq Not until you find out just how rewarding a career in Computer Sales or Systems Support is with RCA. Computer Salesmen at RCA are selling packages that are eighteen months ahead of the major competitor. First we have the Octoputer. It combines time-sharing and regular processing in a new remote computer package. Then we produced Octoputer's big brother-Octoputer II. It boosts programming efficiency as much as 40%. It tackles STILL ON TOP Bru ins romp in polls bigger jobs at three times the speed. And, it can support over 350 remote terminals. If this sounds good, you should know we intend to double our sales force in 1970. We also intend to increase our business at twice the rate of the computer industry. Our sales force is drawn from a variety of majors-a technical degree is not required-in fact, one of our most successful salesmen was a music major.. Also, you might prefer being with a corporation that is diverse, technologically sophisticated, and highly concerned with human values. If Computer Sales sounds like your thing-we would like to talk to you. Contact your College Placement Director, or write td RCA College Relations, Dept. L, Cherry Hill, Camden, New Jersey 08101.. We not only believe in equal opportunity employment-, we practice it. By The Associated Press The UCLA Bruins, college bas- ketball's only unbeaten team, re-, mained in their usual position atop the Associated Press' weekly ratings Monday while Florida State snuck into the Top 10 for the' first time this season. 'The Bruins continued to bore basketball fans by rolling o v e r Washington 66-56 Saturday night for their 17th straight win. Flor- dia State whipped tough Dayton and pushover Kent State for an 18-2 season mark and a c 1im b, from 12th to .ninth in the rank rankings. Spoilsport South Carolina kept UCLA from, complete supremacy in the poll by drawing one first place vote, but the Bruins grab- bed the other 27. The first'six spots remained un- changed from last week as Ken- tucky, St. Bonaventure, North Carolina State and New Mexico State followed the 17-1 Game- cocks. Pushing on the top six from the rear are skyscraping Jacksonville, 17-1, up one spot to number sev- en; Pennsylvania, 19-1, up two places to eighth; Florida State, the only team to beat Jackson- ville this year; and North Caro- lina, 14-4, which plummeted three places to tenth. This gives the At- lantic Coast Conference three, teams in the Top 10, a feat no other conference in the nation can match. Marquette, despite the frantic antics of super-duper Dean Mem- inger, fell to 14-3 and No. 12 after -dropping a tough 96-95 double- overtime g a m e to Notre Dame. The Irish, finally starting to play some ball, lifted their mark to 14- 5 and are now crouched danger- ously in the No. 16 spot. Other newcomers to the Top 20 beside Notre Dame were Ohio Val- ley Conference leaders Western Kentucky and Southeast Confer- ence co-leader (with Kentucky) Georgia. Illinois, Kansas State and Villanova, all losers last week, dropped out of the Top 20. Illinois got burned by Wisconsin last Sat- urday, a loss which dimmed their already miniscule Big Ten cham- pionship hopes. The magical Second_ 10 in or- der: Drake, Marquette; Davidson, I o w a, Houston, Notre Dame,y Western Kentucky, Southern Cal- ifornia, Columbia and Georgia. 1. UCLA 27 2. SouthcCarolina 1 3. Kentucky 4. St. Boneventure 5. North Carolina St. 6. New Mexico St. 7. Jacksonville S. Pennsylvania a. Florida State 10. North Carolina 11. Drake 12. Marquette 13. Davidson 14. Iowa 15. Houston 16. Notre Dame 17. W. Kentucky 18. Southern California, 19. Columbia 20. Georgia 17-0 17-1 17-1 15-1 17-1 18-2 17-1 19-1 18-2 14-4 16-4 14-3 16-3 11-4 16--3 14-5 15-2 13-4 16-3 11-6 540 476 423 343 313 255 236 195 154 109 108 73 61 56 50 35 34 33 17 13 Gamecocks roll on COLUMBIA, S.C. (P) -- Second- ranked South Carolina demolish- ed Wake Forest's stalling attempts in the first half last night and then ran away from the Deacons for an 81-54 Atlantic Coast Con- ference basketball victory. South Carolina, which has now won 17 straight, abandoned i t s zone defense when ,Wake Forest went into a stall in the opening moments. The Gamecocks topk a 6-3 lead on three long jump shots by John Roche and gradually built the mark to 28-15 at halftime. Wake Forest came out run- ning in the second half and scored the first four points, but the Gamecocks, with their massive front line, got numerous easy bas- kets and outscored the Deacons 53- 29 in the second period. Roche and Tom Owens led the Gamecocks with 24 points each while Charlie Davis was the high scorer for Wake Forest with 22. The Gamecocks topped the Dea- cons in rebounding 44-19 with Owens, the conference leader, get- ting 18. Tar Heels squeak by CHAPEL HILL, N.C. ,(P)-Soph- omore Dennis Wuycik sank a pair of free throws with four seconds left last night to cap a stunning comeback and give North Caro- lina an 88-86 basketball victory over fifth-ranked North Carolina State. Wuycik's charity shots followed a Tar Heel comeback which saw the 10th ranked home team bounce from a 12-point second half ,deficit. North Carolina reeled off 10 straight points late in the half to overtake the Wolfpack and claim the lead at the 7:53 mark. r c"?.; .. rs;;wv:;q rSr~sy 'Big E blasts Rockets,; Cowboy sues old school By The Associated Press 0 SAN DIEGO - Elvin Hayes says he's had it with the slumping San Diego Rockets and would relish being traded to the National Basketball Association's newly-awarded franchise in Houston. Hayes termed his team "a bunch of losers" following Sunday night's 125-113 loss to the Los Angeles Lakers. "@HOUSTON - Dallas 'Cowboy defensive back Otto Brown has /