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            Web Exclusives: 
              Under the Ivy 
              a column by Jane Martin paw@princeton.edu 
             
            January 
              28, 2004: 
               
            Here's 
              to Jadwin 
              She's a grand old dome 
            Thirty-five years ago this month, on January 25, 1969, Jadwin Gymnasium 
              made its debut in a nationally televised basketball game between 
              Princeton and Penn (the Tigers won, 74-62). According to PAW, the 
              TV commentators "seemed more interested in the building than 
              the game as well they might: 250,000 square feet, 10,000,000 cubic 
              feet, accommodating 1,000 athletes, 7,500 spectators, six sports, 
              and practice facilities for three more, lectures and concerts, etc, 
              etc."
              The "multiplex" was on the vanguard of a sports movement 
              that would sweep the country. Like Houston's Astrodome, which was 
              constructed in 1965 as a home for major league baseball's Astros, 
              pro football's Oilers, and the University of Houston's football 
              team and which provided a blueprint for massive stadiums like Seattle's 
              Kingdome (1976), Minneapolis's Metrodome (1982), and Indianapolis's 
              Hoosier Dome (1984), Jadwin was designed to meet many different 
              needs. (Unlike Houston's Astrodome, Jadwin was not designed with 
              padding on every seat.) As PAW explained, "It's easier to describe 
              Jadwin in terms of what it does not do rather than what it is designed 
              for." 
              It did not provide any facilities for golf, hockey, swimming, 
              or rowing. Otherwise, most sports could use some part of the space-age-looking 
              dome. Basketball, track, wrestling, fencing, and squash would hold 
              their winter matches there. Football, soccer, and lacrosse could 
              practice on the lower, dirt-lined level. Ten tennis courts and a 
              regulation infield provided space for the tennis and baseball teams 
              to play and practice. On the main level, partitions and moveable 
              flooring allowed for different practices to take place at once, 
              as well as seating space for 7,500 for concerts, lectures, and Commencement, 
              if necessary.
              Thirty-five years later, Jadwin is still used for all those purposes 
              and more. Women's teams joined the mix soon after the gym's dedication. 
              Over the years Jadwin has hosted a wide variety of collegiate national 
              championship competitions as well as professional basketball exhibition 
              games and even the World Junior Squash Championships in 1998, the 
              first time the event was held in the U.S. And the basketball court 
              seems to have swiped a few of the legendary leprechauns from the 
              old Boston Garden, the ones that tipped the Celtics' shots into 
              the hoop. According to the Princeton athletics Web site, the men's 
              basketball team is 277-63 in Jadwin and has had perfect home records 
              in six seasons: 1968-69, 1974-75, 1976-77, 1989-90, 1990-91, and 
              1997-98. The Tigers have lost just 13 of 111 games at home in the 
              past nine years.
              That success would probably please the gym's namesake, Leander 
              Stockwell Jadwin '28, captain of the Princeton track team in his 
              senior year, who died in a car accident just eight months after 
              graduating. The Princeton Companion notes that at the gym's dedication, 
              Jadwin's friend and roommate John Dalenz '28 described him as "dedicate 
              but light-hearted, accomplished but with great modesty." Dalenz 
              said that during their senior year, he asked Jadwin how a meet had 
              gone; "Oh, I didn't do so badly," Jadwin replied. The 
              following day, Dalenz recalled, the New York Times reported, "Princeton's 
              Jadwin Ties High Hurdle World Record."   
             
             
             Jane Martin 89 is PAW's former editor-in-chief. You can 
              reach her at paw@princeton.edu 
              
              
              
            
             
               
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