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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IV. Extracurricular Activities
By no means, however, did the team members limit their undergraduate
experience to just basketball and academics. Out of the eighteen
players on the 1963 team, according to their respective senior
profiles in the Record, at least fourteen players were
involved in some significant undergraduate activity other than
basketball. Some players sought additional competition outside
of basketball, playing baseball or running track. Ray Carazo,
Bob Purdy, David Charles Robinson, Bruce Moore, Geoff Strum
and Karl Richard Vogelsang played for the baseball team and
John Wideman and Ed Anderson ran for the track team. For most
of the 1963 team, playing basketball was only part of their
undergraduate experience.
Some team members took active roles in student policy organizations.
Senior Sidney I. Amira had represented his class by serving
on the Freshman Council, sophomores Ed Temple Anderson and
Frederick John Greene would later serve as Senior Class Vice
President and Election Chairman of the Men's Student government,
respectively.
Players also participated in academic or leadership organizations
such as the Senior Sphinx honor society. The Sphinx, an undergraduate
honor society unique to Penn, honors noteworthy seniors based
on strong academic, athletic or other skills. The society
selected seniors John Wideman, Charles Strum and Bob Purdy,
junior Ray Carazo and sophomores Bruce Moore and Ed Anderson
to join the society during their senior years. Wideman, Moore
and Anderson all assumed roles as leading officers of the
Sphinx. Also at the end of their respective senior years,
Wideman and Anderson both received the Spoon award, "the
highest honor
voted [on] by members of the senior class
."
In addition to being athletically and academically gifted,
the Basketball team acted as leaders and model citizens on
campus.
It would be easy to assume that like on many athletic teams,
the smartest individuals on the team did not actually contribute
to the success of the team. Yet in 1963, no such distinction
was necessary. Wideman, Purdy, Strum and Amira, four players
who excelled academically, composed a significant portion
of the team's core group, as defined by the 1963 Record.
Wideman additionally led the team in scoring and was one of
six players named to the all Big 5 team.
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