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Dome it , Damn it

zappinpoke

Well-known member
This is taken out of the book A Million Cheers,100 years of Wyoming Cowboy football written by Steve Weakland.
There's nothing like a dome on the range-a place where UW athletics, not deer and antelope, could play. And in 1976, a legislative push was intended to accomplish exactly that.

The concept, discussed as early as 1967, was to expand War Memorial Stadium to form an indoor 50,000-seat, bowl shaped all-events center to house Cowboy's athletics. Athletics's Director Red Jacoby envisioned a four-stage plan to update the athletic facilities. Architectural plans were drawn up in 1969, and stage one of the project, the semi-circular west upper deck addition, was completed in 1970. Further plans included the symmetrical east upper deck, the end zone seating, and the dome.

In the early 1970's, however, the Cowboy's fell on lean times-on the field and in the athletic budget.

The dome would cost $20 million to build. Opposition to the dome was particularity harsh in Natrona County, where Casper broadcast executive Jack Rosenthal led the fight.

In a series of scathing KTWO- Radio editorials, Rosenthal blasted the project as being a "sump-hole" for tax monies, termed the universities values "distorted", and described the dome as a " Roman circus".

At the time, Casper was planning an all-events center also. Furthermore, legislative efforts to establish Casper College as Wyoming's second four-year university were narrowly defeated in 1975. The dissenting votes cast by Laramie and Cheyenne legislators were the difference. Rosenthal's editorials intensified the increasing anti-Cheyenne/Laramie/University of Wyoming sentiment in Casper and northern Wyoming.

Despite the hostile political atmosphere and seemingly poor timing, two House bills to establish funding for the dome were broached in the 1976 legislative session. The bills needed two-thirds approval to be officially introduced.

The first bill proposed granting the the Univerity Board of Trustees power to issue a $30-million bond extracted from the mineral severance taxes to pay for the dome. The bill was refused by a resounding 42-19 margin.

The other bill funded the dome through a 25-cent-per-ton tax on coal mining. The bill received 36 "ayes", 26 "nays", and fell six voted shy of the two-thirds criterion. All 10 Natrona County representatives voted against it.

War Memorial Stadium still stands exposed to the elements, but the 1979 legislature approved $14 million for the Arena-Auditorium to replace the venerable Memorial Fieldhouse.

Although denied a Superdome. the university had the last laugh. The shape of the Arena-Auditorium? A dome.

So there you have it boy's and girl's. That's why we don't have a dome. By the way you should all get a copy of the book, it's a great read on the first 100 years of Poke football, written by Steve Weakland.
 
I've always wanted to have a copy of that book, but it's hard to come by. I wish they'd reissue it. I looked it up on Amazon and they have a copy of the book rated new at $135

In only six more seasons Wyoming will be marking 125 years of Wyoming football. Maybe they'll do an update to this book.
 
That would have been a mighty large hut - so does putting the RAC that far back keep the dream of the Dome alive or has it be squashed already by current events?
 
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i would much rather they expand the war to levels of epicness over doming it or even a new stadium
 
wyosteelerfan said:
img-do-not-want-141


i would much rather they expand the war to levels of epicness over doming it or even a new stadium

If we sell out on a regular basis you will see it come to fruition, until then there isn't a need.
 
Get one of these in y'all's size.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cowboys_Stadium" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
 
alyssa said:
Get one of these in y'all's size.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cowboys_Stadium" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Someone with vision might suggest the world's first "clamshell"-expandable stadium. Something that can be scaled to demand, open to the elements in beautiful weather, and closed to the harshest. Maybe something that can host both football and 35K+ fans, and basketball with 15K+ without feeling at all thin or under-attended. Maybe something with two levels, the lower one holding a basketball court and seating that retracts to accommodate a football field and a roof that opens to expose the upper seating to the field below...

Just thumbnail sketching...
 
Wyovanian said:
alyssa said:
Get one of these in y'all's size.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cowboys_Stadium" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Someone with vision might suggest the world's first "clamshell"-expandable stadium. Something that can be scaled to demand, open to the elements in beautiful weather, and closed to the harshest. Maybe something that can host both football and 35K+ fans, and basketball with 15K+ without feeling at all thin or under-attended. Maybe something with two levels, the lower one holding a basketball court and seating that retracts to accommodate a football field and a roof that opens to expose the upper seating to the field below...

Just thumbnail sketching...
And probably $1 billion price tag for those kinds of settings, plus everything else.
 
fromolwyoming said:
Wyovanian said:
alyssa said:
Get one of these in y'all's size.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cowboys_Stadium" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Someone with vision might suggest the world's first "clamshell"-expandable stadium. Something that can be scaled to demand, open to the elements in beautiful weather, and closed to the harshest. Maybe something that can host both football and 35K+ fans, and basketball with 15K+ without feeling at all thin or under-attended. Maybe something with two levels, the lower one holding a basketball court and seating that retracts to accommodate a football field and a roof that opens to expose the upper seating to the field below...

Just thumbnail sketching...
And probably $1 billion price tag for those kinds of settings, plus everything else.
Yep. Progress costs money. Fortunately, one can always make money. Time's what we run out of and can't increase. You can waste all your time complaining about money, or you can spend some of your time making it.
 
Wyovanian said:
fromolwyoming said:
Wyovanian said:
alyssa said:
Get one of these in y'all's size.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cowboys_Stadium" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Someone with vision might suggest the world's first "clamshell"-expandable stadium. Something that can be scaled to demand, open to the elements in beautiful weather, and closed to the harshest. Maybe something that can host both football and 35K+ fans, and basketball with 15K+ without feeling at all thin or under-attended. Maybe something with two levels, the lower one holding a basketball court and seating that retracts to accommodate a football field and a roof that opens to expose the upper seating to the field below...

Just thumbnail sketching...
And probably $1 billion price tag for those kinds of settings, plus everything else.
Yep. Progress costs money. Fortunately, one can always make money. Time's what we run out of and can't increase. You can waste all your time complaining about money, or you can spend some of your time making it.


I think of University of Wyoming Athletics as an investment for the entire state - not an expense.
 
WYCowboy said:
I think of University of Wyoming Athletics as an investment for the entire state - not an expense.
I agree completely, but that right there might be the fundamental difference. The people making the big decisions think otherwise....
 
J-Rod said:
WYCowboy said:
I think of University of Wyoming Athletics as an investment for the entire state - not an expense.
I agree completely, but that right there might be the fundamental difference. The people making the big decisions think otherwise....
And it just might be why the program heads into oblivion much like the University of Idaho will.

BTW, I do agree with your statement, WYCowboy. UW Athletics should be an investment, not a liability.
 
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