PAGE SIX Joe Lemyre Lion Cops 167 Pound Crown; Dick Lemyre Places 3d at 130 Always at his best in tournaments, Joe Lemyre upset the "smart guys" once again to win the I'TCAA 167 pound wrestling champion ship and earn himself a permanent niche in Penn State's wrestling hail of fame. With four clearcut, almost runaway, victories in the National Collegiate Athletic Association tourney held over the weekend in Fort Collins, Col., Joe added a na tional title to his EIWA cham pionship won two weeks ago. Joe thus became the second Penn Stater in Nittany history to score a double by winning the EIWA's and NCAA's. Only Red Johnston, oddly enough in the same 165 weight category, had ever won a NCAA title (1935). Charlie Ridenour, .123 pounder and three times EIWA champ, twice won the National AAU championships bu t never won in the National Collegiates. Parke Isbock, the only other Nit tany to win a national mat title, copped a National YMCA crown in 1936. lowa State 2d Led by Joe's six points for a championship, Penn State's three man representatives of the EIWA champion Lions wound up in fifth place in the team standings. lowa State Teachers made a spirited attempt to wre s t the team championship from the dom inating clutches of the Sooner state, but Oklahoma successfully defended the title with its, second straight one-point victory mar gin, 22-21. Oklahoma A&M fin ished in third place with 20 points and Toledo, Ohio, took fourth with 10 points. Dick Lemyre Falls Only Oklahoma A&M's George Layman retained his individual title at 137 pounds while two time EIWA champion Brad Glass was dethroned of his National crown in suffering the first defeat of his college career. State's crack sophomore, Dick Lemyre, also fell from the ranks of the unbeaten collegians when he dropped a semi-final bout at 130 pounds to lowa Teachers' new champion, Gene Lybbert, 14-8. • McCarron Tops Homan Dick, unbeaten since his high school defeat at th e hands of State's former great, Charlie Rid enour, went on to win two con solation bouts to give him third place and the Lions' two more points. Coach Charlie Speidel's other NCAA entrant , Bob Hainan, dropped a first round match to lowa Teacher's Jim McCarron. Bob recovered from an ear ly slipup to assume command and ride his man for the final period but it was too late. Beats Sonneman En route to his NCAA cham pionship, Joe Lemyre had little trouble as he won all four matches by four points or better. Joe opened with a first round win over Cornell of lowa's War ren Sonneman, 6-0, then took a , 13-7 decision from Waynesburg's Ralph Schneider. Reverse artist Joe rolled on with a 8-3 quarter final win over lowa's Don Heaton and then hung a 6-0 loss on Michigan State's Big Ten champion Orris (Pete) Bender to bring back the 167 laurels to Penn State. Peery Cops Ciown For younger brother Dick, his loss to the eventual champion Lybbert was his first since his high school junior year. With much of his strength drawn by a rugged quarter-final 8-6 win over Oklahoma A&M's Don Meeker, Dick couldn't cope with the cham pion to be. The East's only two other cham pions were Pitt's Hugh .Peery at 115 pounds and Toledo's Harry Lan z i, 191 pounds. Sophomore Peery's only loss of the season, came at the hands of State's EIWA champ Homan. 4-2, in the dual season at 123 pounds. Other individual championships were won by Billy Borders, Ok lahoma, 123; Clarence Weick, lowa Teachers, 157; Bently Lyon, California, 177; Gene Nicks, Ok lahoma A&M, unlimited; and the meet's outstanding wrestler, Tom Evans, Oklahoma, 147. Niftany Bouts 123—80 b Homan lost to Jim McCarron, lowa STC, 6.5. 130—Dick Lcmyre beat Merle Dunn, Min ois, 8-2. 130—Dick Lemyre (quarter-final) heat Don Meeker, Oklahoma A&M, 8-6. 130—Dick Lemyre, semi-final) lost to Gene Lybbert. lowa STC, 14-8. 130—Dick Lemyre (consolation) beat Phil Duggan, lowa, 6-5. By JAKE HIGHTON Lions' National Champ Joe Lemyre Is Week's Top Athlete Overshadowed all season long by a sensational sophomore broth er, Joe Lemyre, in winning a NCAA. championship, accomplish ed what everyone thought his brother Dick could do but which he was conceded little chance to achieve. For his outstanding and rare feat in Nittany wrestling history, Joe has been chosen "Athlete of the Week" by the Collegian sports staff. Joe's NCAA title winning ef fort has been matched by only one other Penn Stater and is something such Lion mat stal walts as Charlie Ridenour, Harry Light, Homer Barr and Jim Maur ey have failed to do in NCAA championship matches over the past 22 years. Fornicola Wins YMCA Championship Larry Fornicola, early season first team 137 pounder for Penn State's EIWA champion mat team, won the Pennsylvania St ate YMCA 137 pound championship Saturday in Harrisburg. Fornicola's 11-2 decision victory helped, Bellefonte YMCA to a sec mid straight title. Ken Moyer, 123, and Dave Adams, 130, also won for the Bellefonters. Penn State starting hea v y weight Lynn Illingworth wa s leadi n g in the heavyweight championship when a recurrence of his rib injury caused him to default. Nittany Bill Shawley finished runnerup for Bellefonte at 177; Penn State 157 poun de r Bill Krebs lost in the semi-finals for Bellefonte; and Nittany Doug Cassel finished runnerup for Har risburg at 423. Jim Schulte Elected '53 Head Boxing Manager Jim Schulte, a sixth semester engineering student, was recently named - next year's head boxing manager. He succeeds Jim Wharton..• Walter Hall is the alternate, while Howard Abrams, George Richards, and Rudy Kohn were named first assistants. 130—Dick Lemyre (3rd place bout) beat Lew Wagner, Waynesburg, 3-2. 167—Joe Lemyre beat Warren Sonneman, Cornell of lowa, 6-0. 167—Joe Lemyre (quarter-final) beat Ralph Schneider, Waynesburg, 13-7. 167—Joe Lemyre (semi-final) beat Don Heaton, lowa, 8-3. 167—Joe Lemyre (championship) beat Pete Bender, Michigan State, 6-0. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Joe -Lemyre Wins NCAA Title Peoria Five Routs Oilers By 64-50 NEW YORK, March' 31—(iP)— The National AAU champion Pe oria Caterpillars broke the game wide-open with, a ten-point rally in the third period and trounced the Phillips Oilers of Bartlesville, Okla., 64-50 ; tonight to qualify for the •U.S. Olympic basketball team. By winning tonight's semi-final tryout test before a crowd of about 10,000 at Madison Square Gar den, the Caterpillars won seven places on the American team that will invade Helsinki this summer. The other seven players will come from the winner of the sec- BULLETIN Kansas 70, LaSalle 65 ond' game on tonight's double header program—the "dream bat tle" between Kansa s' NCAA champions and La Salle's. dark horse National. Invitation Tourn ament titlists. After a rough and tumble first half in which the score was tied nine times the- Caterpillars, went on a scoring binge in the first four minutes of the third period to break the game open. Ahead 33-29 at intermission, they increased • their margin, to 43-30 with a series of brilliantly executed plays and the Oilers, who represented Uncle Sam in the 1948 Olympics, were never in it after that. The game was virtually clinched for the Caterpillars when Bob Kurland, the seven-foot giant center of the Bartlesville, Okla., team who was double and triple teamed- all night, went out on per sonal fouls at the 12:50 point of the last half. 6 Teams Cop First Victories In WRA Action WRA opened its intramural league playoffs last night in White Hall with six 'teams win ning victories in bowling, volley ball, .and badminton. In bowling, Phi Mu won over Chi Omega, 1076-890. Alpha Xi Delta beat Delta Gamma in vol leyball, 36-32. Kappa Kappa Gamma defeated Phi 10, Alpha Xi Delta beat Zeta Tau Alpha, Alpha Gamma Delta won , over McAllister H a 11, and Atherton East beat Theta Phi Alpha. There will be a meeting tonight of all ping pong players who have signed up for the All-College tour naments in ping pong, at s'p.m. in the WRA room at White Hall. The volleyball playoffs start at 6:30, with Simmons meeting Al -Ipha Xi Delta; at 7:15 Kappa • Al pha Theta plays Alpha Epsilon Phi, and Theta Alpha Phi meets McAllister Hall. At 8 pan. Alpha Gamma Delta meets Atherton East in the badminton playoffs, and Kappa Kappa Gamma op poses Alpha Xi Delta. Alpha Gamma Delta bowls against Mc- Allister Hall at 6':30 p.m. Carter Risks Boxing Crown LOS ANGELES, March 31—(PE') —Jimmy Carter risks his world's lightweight boxing title for, the second time tomorrow night when he fights Lauro Salas, the Cali fornia featherweight king who calls Monterrey, Mex., home. Jimmy, , the Cinderella champ-- ion from New York with a quick smile and equally rapid punch, rates the solid choice to whip . his lighter foe in the scheduled 15- rounder. However, Salas, a surprise choice whose scarred brows be speak more than five years, of ring warfare, figures he has a chance to pull an upset. Should he do it, he'd become the 'first native of IVlexico to hold an un disputed title. Midfield Big Problem For Lacrosse Team As midfielders Jack Wilcox, and Paul Raffensperger went last year, so went the Penn State lacrosse team. ' With this thought in mind, lacrOsse Coach Nick Thi'el, starting his 18th year as Penn State coach, is looking for two men to re place Wilcox and Raffensperger, who 'were graduated. , State will open its 40th season of intercollegiate lacrosse" April 10 at Loyola (Baltimoke) and. Thiel will undoubtedly miss the eight goals Wilcox and Raffensperger scored against Loyola last year even though the Lions lost, 14-12. Of the 101 goals State scored in nine contests last year, this dud accounted for 41 of them; Wilcox getting 21 and Baffy 20. Both totals were good enough to break the old record of 18 set by Cliff Sullivan in 1946. Lout Fulton Lion Trackmen Continue Drills For 'Relays With one week of practice un der their belts, Coach Chick Wer ner's Lion trackmen continue to lay the groundwork on the Beaver Field oval in preparation for the Penn Relays later this month. With only a limited number of non-tested material to work with, Coach Werner's main concentra tion is centered around the four mile relay team. Last season the Penn State four mile quartet won the event in championship style. The Nittany foursome of -Bob Parsons, Bob Freebairn, and the Ashenfelter br o t Ire rs, Don and Bill, was clocked in the fast time of 17:24.6, erasing the Lion record of 17:30.7 set in '4B by Shuman, Karver, Williams, and Horace Ash. The Nittany thinclads have won the Penn Relay four mile event four out of , the last five years, but in as much as not one mn is left from last season's record breaking group, Werner's chances of duplicating his previous feats remain a big question mark. Some of the leading candidates for this year's combination in clude Jack Homer, Lamont Smith, Lloyd Slogan, John Chilrud, Bob Roessler, Bob Gehman, Don Aus tin, John Blood, Tom Demboski, and Allen Terill. "Although there isn't a veteran in the bunch, it (Continued on rage seven) Heart Attack Fatal to Coach BLOOMINGTON, Ind., March 31—(W)—Alvin N. (Bo) McMillin, who coached four college and two professional football teams after calling the signals for Centre col lege's "Prayin' Colonels" of 30 years ago, died today. He was 57. His 35-yard touchodwn run in 1921 for Centre College's "Pray in' Colonels" -inflicted Harvard's first defeat ,in six years. He was Walter Camp's All-A mer i c a quarterback of 1919. McMillin coached Indiana Uni versity to its only Western Con ference football championship in 1945 after successful coaching ca reers at Kansas State, Geneva College of Pennsylvania and Cen tenary College of Louisiana. The '1945 team was undefeated. 111 Wrestling Finals Scheduled for Thursday The finals of the intramur al wrestling tournament will be held Thursday night instead of tomorrow night, Dutc 12 Sykes, assistant IM director, announced• yester da y. Th e bouts will start at 8 p.m. The volleyball games sched uled for Thursday night will be played Tuesday, MAY 6. The changes ih,the IM schedule are due to the lEC Greek' Week program. , W. F. Krwririne Bike Shop Rr. 433 W. College Aire. • TUESDAY, APRIL 1, , 1952 By TOM SAYLOR In addition to his record break ing 21-goal t o t.a 1, Wilcox was named to the North squad in the annual North-South AII-Star game. Raffensperger was named to• the All-Pennsylvania team. Besides Wilcox and Raffen sperger, *ate also lost Al Fulton, who was drafted into the Army last summer, Bill, Forrest and Ja son Stone, both who were grad uated. Thiel has some consolation, however, in that lie has foqr re turning lettermen at that- posi tion, including Captain Bud Wol fram, who, even though he stands just five feet seven inches tall and weighs a mere 130 pounds, is one of State's scrappiest players. Besides Wolfram, a senior, State has junior Wayne Hockersmith and seniors Tony Eagle and John Yohman. Wolfram teamed up with Wil- Cox and , Fulton last year to make up the first, midfield trio while Hockersrnith and Eagle played along • side- of Raffensperger to make . 4p the second. 2d Midfield Green With Wilcox and Raffensperger gone, Thiel has moved Hecker smith and Yohman into the start ing threespme ' with Wolfram. At second midfield, Thiel will have three men with no experi ence with the exception of Bob Pawloski who saw limited action last year. The other two are fresh men—John Steinmuller and Lu cien Girard—with no experience except in high school. With all the running the midlielders do, State's second trio could be the deciding factor in a winning or mediocre season. At third midfield, Thiel will have Eagle, Jim DeVoe and Jack Espenshade, who broke his . leg in the State opener at Western Mary land last year. DeVoe is a sonho-' more while Espenshade is a senior. IM Mat Semis Start Tonight The stage was set for ten semi final intramural wrestling Matches eight fraternity and two independent tonight when two postponed fraternity' bouts were run off last night. Semi-final rounds, will start at 8 tonight with the finals starting at 8 .p.m. Thursday. The finals were originally scheduled for Wednesday night but were switched because of conflicting Greek Week activities. In the two bouts last' night, heavyweight Bob. Sinith; Beta Theta Pi, scored hiS .third suc cessive fall with a 1:22 pin of John Gazlay, AGE. In the other match, Bob h Bark ley, Phi. Kappa Psi, 128, 'look.- a referee'S' decision from Bill Wal ters, Phi Gamma Delta. 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