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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V. "Ivy League Ideal"
Wideman typified this strikingly successful balance between
academics and athletics more than anyone else. The apotheosis
of an Ivy League student athlete, Wideman excelled at nearly
everything. Besides serving as team captain, Wideman's list
of academic achievements seems endless. As described by William
K. Grollman in the DP, "His academic record
alone is staggering
.Dean's List in his English major,
Phi Beta Kappa, and the Phi Sigma
prize in creative writing
."
In an article in Look magazine profiling Wideman,
Gene Shalit explained that "
Wideman has been showered
with so many academic and athletic honors, awards and 'firsts'
that he is unable to enumerate them." Ironically, Wideman
received much more praise as an undergraduate in 1963 then
he does today, despite being a prolific award winning writer.
Growing up in the Homewood section of Pittsburgh, Wideman
traveled across Pennsylvania to attend Penn on a $2,250
scholarship. After attending Peabody High School, a
public and integrated school, Wideman was struck by
the drastic changes in his daily life once he arrived
at Penn. In his autobiographical work Brothers
and Keepers, Wideman explained the transition,
recounting,
I was running away from Pittsburgh, from poverty,
from blackness
I'd earned a scholarship and a
train ticket over the mountains to Philadelphia
If
I ever doubted how good I had it
at school in
that world of books, exams, pretty, rich white girls,
a roommate from Long Island who unpacked more pairs
of brand-new jockey shorts and T-shirts than they
had in Kaufmann's department store,
youall were
back home in the ghetto to remind me how lucky I was.
In so many ways, Penn was an entirely different world
for Wideman.
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