Introduction
- Academics and Athletics
- 1963 City Champions
- Student Athletes
- Extracurricular Activities
- "Ivy League Ideal"
- Adjusting to Campus
- "The Astonishing John Wideman"
- The Covington Apartments
Conclusion
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I. Academics and AthleticsFor the first
half of the twentieth century Penn strived athletically. With no recruiting or
scholastic regulations, Penn excelled in the Ivy League and nationally. From 1920
to 1930 Penn basketball teams won twenty games six times, finished first in the
Ivy League four times, finished no worse than third only twice and even won a
National Championship in 1920. In 1945, fearing lowering academic standards
in the Ivy League, the eight member schools came to a consensus regarding athletics
and released the "Ivy Group Agreement." Essentially, the agreement proposed
strict academic eligibility rules and prevented athletic scholarships of any kind
so that "
intercollegiate competition
be brought into harmony with
the essential educational purposes of the institution." As a result of the
Ivy Agreement, Penn could no longer compete with national powers that had the
ability to recruit and ignore academic responsibilities. Though the Ivy Agreement
would eventually help transform Penn into an elite academic institution, athletics
at Penn noticeably declined. In the fifteen years after the Ivy Agreement, from
1945 - 60, Penn won twenty games only twice, lost over ten games five times and,
worst of all, finished first in the Ivy League only once. It seemed that the Penn
basketball program might never be the same. 
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