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SUNY


Let me tell you about Stony
Brook, that fine example of
State sponsored education two               That is, SUNY
hours away from New York City,              at Stony Brook.
out in the suburban blandness
of Long Island...

Despite having some excellent
academic departments, the
primary theme of Stony Brook
always seems to be "screwed
up".  The unofficial school
slogan was "Stony Brook
Sucks."  Some people had
T-shirts made up with this on
it...

Tis a huge place, with an enormous
amount of land donated by Ward
Melville.  In the late 60s, Nelson
Rockefeller, then governor of New
York, pointed his finger at it,
and a furious explosion of
construction took place, none
of which they could get right.

   They were constructing a long
   bridge connecting the second
   floor of the new Student Union
   with the newly expanded library,
   but when the bridge reached
   the library they realized that
   there was nothing to connect
   it to.  Apparently they
   flipped the library plans over
   and put the entrance on the
   wrong side. So they walled off
   the end of the bridge and it
   became "The Bridge To
   Nowhere", the perfect symbol
   of the university. Many people
   were annoyed when they
   eventually put a left turn on
   the end of it and connected it
   up with something else.

      They were pouring the
      foundations for this new
      student union building on the
      same day that they were
      pouring the concrete for the
      walls of the lecture center,
      and they apparently got the
      loads of concrete
      switched... Hence the student
      union foundations had some
      cracking problems and the
      lecture center turned out a
      very ugly drab gray color.
      I often wondered what it was
      supposed to look like...


         The lecture center itself was
         a very odd building in any
         case.  A big lump of
         windowless modernistic
         concrete, often compared to a
         bomb shelter.  Some people
         seemed very proud of the way
         it completely avoided the use
         of right angles in it's
         structure.  Going up the
         staircases was an interesting
         vertigo inducing experience:
         your inner ear tells you
         you're standing straight up, but
         the slope of the walls tell
         you you're leaning over
         fifteen degrees...


             Another classic Stony Brook
             story: when they built the
             South Campus Complex, some
             bright person did an analysis
             that proved that installing
             light switches was a waste of
             money.  The cost just wasn't
             worth the little bit of power
             saved by turning off
             florescent lights.  But then
             the seventies rolled around,
             power prices went up, and you
             could drive by South Campus at
             3 AM, and see the lights blaze
             away in the midst of the
             "Energy Crisis".



                Then, there's the Health Science
                Center, a truly gigantic
                structure, a huge cube formed by
                a cluster of smaller cubes, all
                elevated on stilts, visible from
                miles around.  It was not
                appreciated by the Long Island
                suburbanites at all.  Among my
                circle of friends it was often
                compared to Chronos, a big alien
                robot from some old science
                fiction movie, and it does
                indeed have the imposing
                presence of a Godzilla-class
                monster... As you walk up to it,
                there's something deceptive
                about it's size, you keep
                thinking you're almost there,
                but actually it's still bigger
                and further away than you
                thought... finally you approach
                the entrance, and the tremendous
                cube is looming over you, and
                you look at the structure's great
                legs... and you realize they're
                _rusting_:

                   Is this thing safe?
                   Couldn't they afford to paint those legs?

                It turns out that the
                architects _wanted_ them to
                look that way.  They put a
                cladding on the pillars that
                was intended to rust, which is
                sometimes used to give things
                a kind of soft, natural
                appearence.

                   (On a high-tech science
                   fictional concrete cube?
                   Don't ask me, I'm no
                   architect).



                One story I've heard about the
                Health Science Center: they
                installed a large number of
                ventilating fans, mounted on
                the roof, all of them wired to
                start at the same time.  The
                combined torque of these
                things accelerating was
                apparently enough to make the
                building creak (think about
                the stability of a huge cube
                up on stilts...).  The
                solution: they replaced half
                of the motors with models that
                spin in the opposite
                direction, so they would
                cancel the effect of the other
                motors.


                But my absolute favorite story
                about the Health Science
                Center: as originally
                constructed, they forgot to
                include a morgue.  Cadavers
                had to be refrigerated in the
                cafeteria facilities...

                I understand they didn't fix
                this problem until they built
                an adjacent hospital
                complex...



But I've just been talking
about the problems with the
buildings at Stony Brook.
There's more to a university
than just buildings, right?

   For example, there was the
   time the adminstration decided
   to make a change in the rules
   concerning continuing housing
   on campus.  If you wanted to
   stay where you were, you
   needed to get a certain form
   stamped... on the ONE
   particular day they set aside
   for this process.  _Thousands_
   of people mobbed the
   adminstration building,
   forming a line a mile long
   with a completely stationary
   tail, since more people were
   cutting the line than standing
   in it.  What was this all
   about?  Why did anyone think
   this proceedure was necessary
   or desireable?  Truly an
   amazing place.

      The year that I graduated, a
      new President wanted to hold a
      single, university wide
      graduation ceremony, rather
      than the smaller departmental
      graduations they had been
      doing.  The only place
      remotely big enough to hold an
      entire graduating class at          (Stony Brook for all it's
      Stony Brook was the football        other sins, has never been
      field, which is where they          a big football school, and
      decided to do it                    having thousands of people
                                          trampling the football field
                                          wasn't as unthinkable as it
                                          would be some other places).

      Reporters for the school
      newspaper interviewed the
      adminstration, asking them
      about rain-out plans.  They
      said "For something like this,
      you just have to assume that
      it isn't going to rain."

      So of course, it rained.

      Nearly everyone left early,
      except for a small hardcore crowd
      that clustered up front by the
      stage, heckling the speakers,
      and chanting in unison

          "Stony Brook Sucks!
           Stony Brook Sucks!"


      A shame I missed that ceremony.
      A more fitting expression of the       I'm not very big on graduation
      Stony Brook spirit, I can't            ceremonies.  Skipped it for
      imagine.                               both college and grad school.
                                             Ditto high school.

                                             (I fell asleep that
                                             afternoon, and hence
                                             wasn't there to
                                             pick up the award
                                             they tried to give me.)



                   But there's definitely an upside to all this:

                   There are virtues to attending a school
                   that takes pride in a bad attitude.

                      Very little football bullshit.
                      Very little fraternity nonsense.

                                     Post "Animal House",
                                     some guys wanted to
                                     start a fraternity.
                                     They were ignored.


                   And there are virtues of anonymity:

                   You study the stuff, take the tests,
                   and get your grades, with no worries that
                   the prof will get pissed off if you skip
                   classes, show up late, don't cut your hair,
                   etc.  Some people complain about a lack
                   of personal contact in these places, but
                   when personal contact disappears you also
                   lose many other things:

                      favoritism, prejudice...


                         Stony Brook: the mediocre meritocracy?



      I wrote an essay in the Logbook
      of the Stony Brook Science
      Fiction Forum that seemed
      popular:

           Stony Brook is the Void:
           There is nothing here
           but what you bring yourself.


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