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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III. Student-Athletes
Impressively, the 1963 basketball team did not allow their
success to interfere with their education. As commented in
the DP by columnist Dan Rottenberg, "Today's Penn
athlete is more of a student than ever before, and yet Quaker
teams still produce a high caliber of competition
.In
this age of specialization the Ivy athlete emerges as an example
of all-around excellence." The 1963 basketball team could
seemingly compete at an unquestionably high athletic level
without compromising academics. Rottenberg continued to elaborate
on the academic success of the team, explaining, "
it
is highly significant that this year's basketball team produced
as many Phi Beta Kappas as did the D.P. features staff."
While Rottenberg failed to note that team captain and College
senior John Wideman was the lone Phi Beta Kappa from the basketball
team, his statement about the number of Phi Beta Kappa recipients
nonetheless alludes to the extraordinary academic success
of the team. 
A month prior to the Rottenberg article, the DP
published an article
in its joke issue that explained how College junior Ramon
Joseph Carazo and Wharton senior Geoffrey Charles Strum had
been dismissed from the team because of "academic issues."
Strum and Carazo were both model students as members of Phi
Kappa Beta, a junior honor society.1
In other words, their alleged academic ineligibility was implausible
and could only be interpreted as humorous. The DP's
portrayal of the academic excellence of the team was not without
strong evidence. In addition to Strum and Carazo, Wideman
and College junior Andrew Phillip Buckley were members of
Phi Kappa Beta during their respective junior years.
Based on their academic successes, several members of the
team even went on to attend Penn professional schools. Robert
Lewis Purdy, a senior in the School of Allied Medical Professions,
graduated from the Penn Dental School in 1967.2
Ed Anderson, a College sophomore, would later attend the Penn
Medical School, graduating in 1969. Wharton junior Bruce Edward
Moore would continue his business studies receiving a Master
of Science in Accounting in 1966. Without question, the members
of the 1963 team belonged at Penn regardless of basketball
talent.
1.
Phi Kappa Beta, not to be confused with Phi Beta Kappa,
was a junior honor society unique to the University of Pennsylvania.
From 1938-1962, the society selected approximately twenty
men according to a point scale that awarded points based
on grade point average and participation in specific extracurricular
activities. The society is essentially the junior year equivalent
to the Penn senior honor society, the Sphinx.
2. The School of Allied
Medical Professions was founded in 1950 and discontinued
in 1982. The school offered undergraduate degrees in three
disciplines - Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy and
Medical Technology, providing "the medically-oriented
student an unmatched opportunity to combine professional
training with an active campus life
."
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