PAGE SIX Oberl Lions Trail Ags, 40-31; Krufka 2nd By ROY WILLIAMS For the first time in the 46- year history of Penn State wrestling, the Lions have come home with two National Col legiate At h letic Association wrestling champs—Larry For nicola, 137-pound Eastern tit list, and Bill Oberly, crown bearer of the 1955 heavyweight honors. Oberly and Fornicola, along with Joe Krufka, burly Lion sophomore who copped five points for second place in the 177-pound class, were the men who pushed the Lions from a seventh-place slot before the outset of the finals to a final second place spot with 31 points Saturday night at Cor nell's Barton Hall. Oklahoma A and M won its 17th team title with 40 points to successfully de fend its 1954 title with two champs and one runnerup. Fornicola won the champion ship with a 6-0 whitewashing of Michigan's Big Ten senior champ, Andy Kaul, who held a 7-1 rec ord. After taking a first period 3-0 lead, Fornicola rode Kaul the second period while keeping con trol of Kaul's legs. In the final period Fornicola escaped and gained a point for time. Oberly's win came over Le high's Werner Seel, 5-2. Oberly got a takedown in the first per iod. Seel escaped from the down position in the second period to knot the score 2-2, but Oberly reversed to lead 4-2. In the final period Seel rode Oberly, while attempting 'in vain to gain a near fall. Oberly's riding time accumulated in the first and second periods, added his final point. Krufka, who defeated Frank Rosenmayer, Colorado, in the semi finals 7-6, met Dan Hodge, Oklahoma soph with an 11-0 card. Hodge, 1954 AAU champ, pinned Krufka at 4:23. Hodge got a two point takedown in the first per iod, but Krufka rallied in the clos ing seconds as he started to re• Hart, Oklahoma, in the 137-pound tussle for the national crown. Fornicola dropped Hart, 6-0. Fornicola also beat Pacific Coast, Big Ten, and, Big Seven individual champions to earn his berth in the finals. Fornicola is the first 137-pound Penn State matman to win an NCAA title. verse just as the bell sounded to nullify a move that would have definitely netted two points. The East had 16 place winners of the 44 wrestlers who finished in the top four brackets in ten weight divisions. Five were cham pions, while three earned second place honors. Two Eastern men won third place honors, and six wound up in fourth place. After he won the 147-pound NCAA crown, classy Ed Eichel berger —L ehig h's 147-pound Eastern champ and the out standing wrestler of the EIWA tourney two weeks ago was awarded the NCAA trophy for the tourney's outstanding per former. Eichelberger turned in five snappy victories—four of them pins—to clinch the crown. Defending 191-pound champ Pete Blair, Navy, breezed past four opponents—four of them by pins to retain his title. After dropping Dick Anthony, Indiana, 6-3, in the semi-finals, Blair pin ned Len Leuer, lowa, in 5:01 for the title. Blair led the lowa junior, who showed an 11-1 card, 4-0, when he scored the pin. It was East vs. East when Ed Peery, Pitt, and Lewis Guidi, West Virginia, met for the 123-pound title. Peery led 3-1 after taking an early first-period lead with a takedown—when he eked out a pin at 8:30. At 115 lowa's Terry McCann THE DAILY COLLEGIAN jumped from his third place slot of 1954 in the NCAA's to cop the title with a pin at 7:06 over Dave Bowfin, Oklahoma A and M. McCann dominated the match. 4-0, in the final period atfer putting in a showy first and second period stand. Myron Roderick, 1954 NCAA 137-pound champ from Oklahoma A and M, clamped a 13-2 score on Bob Lyons of Oklahoma in win ning the 130-pound title. A merry-go-round of scoring highlighted the frantic race for the 157-pound cro w n between Bill Weick, lowa State Teachers, and Michigan's Mike Rodrigues. Weick, just out o the armed ser vice, and 1952 157-pound champ, and Rodrigues, Big Ten title win ner, were even 2-2 at the Send of the second period. In the final period, with the score 4-4, Weick grabbed a takedown in the final 21 seconds to win 6-4. Fred Davis, Oklahoma A and M, won the laurels at 167-pounds —the same class in which he was fourth last year. He defeated Lar ry Ten Pass, Illinois, third place winner a year ago, 8-2. men Pass, hampered by an injured leg sttf fered in his semi-final win, man aged to gain only two points by escapes. Following are the team scores and the order in which each (Continued on pagg seven) BY GREYHOUND Convenient • Dependable • Low Cost Om Way One Way EAST WEST . Harrisburg $2.00 Altoona $1.35 Philadelphia 4.25 Pittsburgh 3.70 New York 6.20 Erie 7.35 Baltimore 3.80 Blairsville 2.65 Washington. D.C. . ... 4.60 Youngstown. 0. 5.30 York 260 Washington, Pa. 4.45 Reading 975 Dußois • 2.15 Scranton 3.80 Indiana Wilkes Barre 3.40 Buffalo, N.Y. Elmira. N.Y. • 4.20 Oil City Pius U.S. Tax. Big EXTRA Savings each way on Round-Trips ...and to hundreds of places th. sensational nave Scenieruiserand isl. HIGHWAY TRAVELER STATE COLLEGE PLINNSAVANii n:cola Sam Snead started as golf career The last pitcher to shutout the as a shop boy at a golf course. His Yankees in a World Series was job was to repair clubs, shellac Preacher Roe of the Dodgers. He and finish woods as well as other beat them 1-0 in the secoed game chores around the clubhouse. of the 1949 series. STUDENT SPECIAL! Malted Milk and choice of: *Hamburger *Grilled Cheese only •Egg Salad 45c •Nam Salad GREYHOUND POST HOUSE RESTAURANT in State College on Route 322 TRANSPORTATION NOTICE • • EASTER VACATION Take a Tip and Make Your Trip by GREYHOUND LINES For the convenience of PENN STATE UNIVERSITY STUDENTS, SPECIAL BUSES will be provided for the EASTER VACATION and will leave from the GREY HOUND POST HOUSE at 1:00 pm. Wednesday, April 6. Reservations for the SPECIAL buses will be made with the purchase of your ticket at the GREYHOUND POST HOUSE. ALL RESERVATIONS MUST BE MADE BY 10:00 P.M. TUESDAY, April sth. For additional information, call the Greyhound Post House. Phone ADams 7-4181. TUESDAY. MARCH 29. 1955 Win . 2.85 . 5.90 . 6.45 GREYHOUND POST HOUSE