Monday, October 23, 1961 (Continued from Page 3) Short on jayvee players, the Frosh Give Foreign dol.vnstaters were forced to field a few varsity runners, and thus Beh- Flavor To Term rend was up against a far more ex- perienced team. In addition, Grove An important factor for Beh- City began practice on September rend Center's surge into soccer 19 and played a tune-up game prominence has been the appear against Slippery Rock before corn- ance of two freshmen students on ing here. Considering these facts, campus. Willi Schickhaus and Ed the Nittany Cubs played remark- Paauwe, the co-captains of the ably well. soccer team, are the nucleus on The outstanding players for which Coach Gallagher has based Coach Jim Gallagher's Cubs have his team this year. to be wing Ed Paauwe and for- Willi Henry Frederick iSchickhaus ward Willi Schickhaus as they was born in Bielefeld, Germany, in combined to lead the Behrend at- 1939. He came to the United States tack with their fine footwork. in 1951, making his home in Erie. Goalie Torn Mac Allister put in an He completed his secondary edu excellent game in the cage, record- cation at McDowell High •School ing 17 saves. and graduated in 1957. Willi then The Cubs' next match is on Octo- enlisted in the Army and served ber 23rd against a strong Fredonia for three years. He is now enrolled (New York) State Teachers' junior at Behrend Campus as a D.D.T. varsity squad. The varsity Blue major, but still finds time to play Devils, as they are called, compiled golf and soccer—a game he hasn't , a seven and two record last season played for almost ten years. and boast a "big time" soccer Edward Paauwe was born in eleven. It should be good experi- Barendrecht, Holland. He then ence for the Cubs. moved to Leidschendam, Holland, STARTING LINEUPS - where he attended Huygens Ly- BEHREND GROVE CITY ceum for three years. After com- Position ing to the United States on June Paauwe LW Reynolds 28, 1960, Ed's family made their Rausch LI Becker home in Fayetteville, Pennsylvania Schickhaus CF Bostur where his father was a consulting Prozan RI Bainbridge engineer in nearby Chambersburg. Larson RW Hartman He attended Gettysburg High Kennedy LH Beachem School in his senior year and is Nathansohn CH Batz now enrolled in Penn State's Col- Loftus RH Rickards lege of Chemistry and Physics. A. McAllister RB Jenks These two students are not only Irish LB Mulholland fine additions to the soccer team, T. Mac Allister G Jahn but are also fine additions to the Behrend subs: Estock, Greer, So- United States and Behrend Cam renson, Ross, Harkens, Wood. pus. BEHREND'S Tom Larson grapples for the ball with a Grove City assailant as the Cubs' Tom Kennedy looks on. Action is from the October.7th game which the Grovers won, 44. THE NITTANY CUB Two new teachers have joined the ranks of the Behrend Campus faculty for the Fall term. The two are Mr. A. Gordon Wilcox, Assist ant Professor of English, and Mr. John Bedford, Instructor in Engi neering. Mx. Wilcox comes to Behrend from the Hazleton Campus, where he taught English for the past eight years. A native of Massa chusetts, he obtained his M.A. in English from the University of lowa. He moved to Pennsylvania in 1941 to work at a radio station in Harrisburg. When the U. S. en tered W. W. 11, he served as radio instructor in the Air Force. Behrend Greets New Teachers CO PYR 10 1961, THE COCA•COLA COMPANY. COCA.C! . I : A .... Ar .. C: . :t ., C .,. A r p \ E4EOIST i: E x R n. ED =.. TAAI : : r ;EM r. A ; M r..ma KN • raggA; : !' R n a i 'i: . g : iiil !.,..::aRf.:;" . ..,.. .. w, M . ...: V.:' EMB .m........,.. , . . ~ . i:i,•;:;:::::::•.:. 'K"::::i'l•i?:. EBBE BETWEEN HALVES... get that refreshing new feeling with Coke! Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by Mr. Bedford is originally from Columbus, Missouri. He obtained his B.S. in Electrical Engineering at the University of 'Missouri in 1949, and attended Washington University in St. Louis from 1951 to 1955. In 1960, he acquired his M.S. from Notre Dame. His duties at Behrend mark Mr. Bedford's first position as a college instructor. Besides teaching engi neering, he is also sponsoring the y Engineers' Club. YOUNGEST CHAMPION Fred Herreshoff was only 16 when he won the U. S. Open in 1904. MOM ~~~n>' •'•c>~~ Div ....~f f