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<html>
<head>
<title>York Campus Folklore</title>
</head>
<body bgcolor="#ffffff" link="#555555" vlink="#000000" alink="#000000">
<h1><a href="index.html"><img src="folklore-icon.gif" alt=""
align="bottom" width="31" height="33"></a>York Campus Folklore</h1>
<hr>
<font size=+1>
<img src="/icons/greendot14.gif" alt="*">
<a href="index.html">Folklore Index Page</a>
</font>
<hr>
<h2>Disclaimer</h2>
<blockquote>
<p>All web pages on kipper.york.ac.uk are unofficial
and are in no way endorsed by the University of York.
Opinions and information on the folklore pages is
not provided by the University, but by the contributors and editors.</p>
<p>Extreme effort has been made to ensure that information on these pages
is correct and legal, however no responsibility is accepted by the authors or
the University for death or injury or loss of any kind resulting directly
or indirectly from accesses to these pages.</p>
<p>All comments regarding these pages should be addressed to
<a href="mailto:[email protected]">[email protected]</a>
in the first instance.</p>
</blockquote>
<h2>Contents</h2>
<h3><a href="#key">Key to Listed Legends</a></h3>
<h3><a href="#buildings">Buildings</a></h3>
<ul>
<li> <b><a href="#genbuild">General</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#subuild">Student Union Building</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#centralhall">Central Hall</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#library">Library</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#chemwatertower">Chemistry Watertower</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#wateronhill">Water Tower on Hill</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#biolclock">Biology Clock Tower</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#newbio">New Biology Building</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#physicsbuild">Physics</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#compscibuild">Computer Science</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#jackdanials">Sir Jack Lyons</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#bleachfield">Bleachfield</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#km">Kings' Manor</a></b>
</ul>
<h3><a href="#landscape">Landscape Features</a></h3>
<ul>
<li> <b><a href="#lake">The Lake</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#bridges">The Bridges</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#siward">Siward's Howe</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#hesgard">Heslington Hall Gardens</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#sculp">Sculptures</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#covered">Covered and Uncovered Walkways</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#signs">Signs</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#uniroadunderpass">University Road Underpass</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#quiet">The Quiet Place</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#landmisc">Miscellaneous</a></b>
</ul>
<h3><a href="#depts">Departments and People</a></h3>
<ul>
<li> <b><a href="#teaching">General Teaching</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#physics">Physics</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#compsci">Computer Science</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#compserv">Computing Services</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#biology">Biology</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#electronics">Electronics</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#chemistry">Chemistry</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#english">English</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#maths">Maths</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#psyc">Psychology</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#history">History</a></b>
</ul>
<h3><a href="#colleges">Colleges Etc</a></h3>
<ul>
<li> <b><a href="#colgen">General</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#derwent">Derwent</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#langwith">Langwith</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#alcuin">Alcuin</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#c4">College 4</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#vanbrugh">Vanbrugh</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#goodricke">Goodricke</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#wentworth">Wentworth</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#james">James</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#halifax">Halifax</a></b>
</ul>
<h3><a href="#wildlife">Wildlife</a></h3>
<h3><a href="#students">Students</a></h3>
<ul>
<li> <b><a href="#su">Student Union</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#socs">Student Societies</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#media">Campus Media</a></b>
<li> <b><a href="#studmisc">Misc</a></b>
</ul>
<h3><a href="#porters">Porters</a></h3>
<h3><a href="#misc">Misc</a></h3>
<h3><a href="#links">Links to more York Folklore</a></h3>
<h2><a name="key">Key to Listed Legends</a></h2>
<p>Each item of campus folklore is placed into one of the following
categories:</p>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> true, beyond reasonable doubt
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> believed true, but not conclusively proven
<dt> <b>F.</b>
<dd> complete falsehood
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> believed false, but not conclusively disproven
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> unanswered and may be unanswerable
</dl>
<p>Folklore for which we have additional information have a ``<b>*</b>''
in addition to the category.</p>
<h2><a name="buildings">Buildings</a></h2>
<h3><a name="genbuild">General</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> The horrible grey buildings used to be a lovely white. (And only
started to go grey in the 70's.)
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> The horrible grey buildings used to be a lovely grey.
<dt> <b><a href="buildings.html">F. *</a></b>
<dd> The concrete panels were designed with a life expectancy of
30 years. (This was in 1963 or so).
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> The University holds a large stockpile of spare concrete panels
just in case. There are sufficient to build another block or so.
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> In the sixties when the campus was planned, there was a lot of
student political activity - occupying buildings and the like.
The lack of large central facilities at York was meant to stop
this happening, Rowntree's were keen that `their' University
would be a quiet place.
</dl>
<h3><a name="subuild">Student Union Building</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The SU building was converted from a pair of
squash courts.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> Due to the inquoracy of UGMs, the SU building wasn't named for
more than a year after completion. One of the proposed names for the
SU building was "Clean Pancake Building". This was supposed to capture
the mood of the students at the time (1994). Students were apathetic
and without direction. "Clean Pancake" is meaningless and was part of
a computer generated phrase. This meaningless captures the apathy of
the students.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The SU building used to be called the
``Vaseline Building'', named after the well-known
petroleum jelly product. This was voted through a UGM by members
of the Athletics Union. The AU subsequently won
£6,000 from the makers of Vaseline,
for ``most original advertising of the year''.
(<b>T.</b> The following year, the AU won the same competition, run by Halifax,
by floating a raft with a big `X' on it down the Ouse, on the day of the Halifax
conversion into a bank. One of the exec. even changed his name by deed poll
from `Antony Gareth Elliott' to `Antony Halifax BUSA Elliott'.)
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> Is now (1997) called the ``Daw Suu'' Building. Named after a
Burmese pro-democracy activist.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> The SU building is also referred to as the ``Student
Centre'', since it meant that the signs with abbreviations for
Squash Court need not be changed.
</dl>
<h3><a name="centralhall">Central Hall</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> No dancing allowed.
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> Will topple into lake anyway.
<dt> <b>F.</b>
<dd> Top bit is designed to lift up.
<dt> <b>F.</b>
<dd> It is in fact a flying saucer that cannot take off
because it is stuck in all that duck shit.
<dt> <b>F.</b>
<dd> Last band to play were the <a href="b-rats.html">Boomtown Rats</a>. The audience jumping up
and down caused structural damage.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> They did however damage the orchestra pit cover.
<dt> <b><a href="b-rats.html">Tb. *</a></b>
<dd> The Boomtown Rats was an
all-seated gig and fire regulations for a seated gig then
prevented dancing, which St. Bob was told. He got
people to dance, and the SU were sued by
the University for allowing him to break the regulations. The SU
then sued St. Bob.
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> The acoustic tiles on the ceiling are on
upside down and therefore absorb sound rather than reflecting it
back in.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> The acoustics were found to be so bad after the place was
built, that a special active speaker system had to be designed
and installed. All the funny tubes hanging from the ceiling are
microphones for the system.
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> The active speaker system was so far ahead of its time,
it is totally crap and is never used.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> When the projector was first used (by National Film Theatre), some
of the roof beams blocked the screen.
</dl>
<h3><a name="library">Library</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> Before the current building, the library was in Heslington Hall.
<dt> <b>F.</b>
<dd> Built without regard for weight of books.
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> Sliding down the hill into the road - look out for the
mystery markers in the pavement outside.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> The cellar under the library used to be a rifle range.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> Books for the Vanbrugh Rotten Book sale have been kept under the library.
<dt> <b>F.</b>
<dd> Plans for underground car park abandoned at
some stage due to weight of books necessitating stronger
foundations. (<b>T.</b> It was found to cost less to build the library on
the hillside.)
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> The extension was built onto the back of the
library to stop it falling down the hill.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> Two students were caught having sex in the microfilm room.
(This story appeared in the campus press apparently, we'll
try and track down more).
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> Due to the acoustics of the library, even if you fart
quietly, it can be heard clearly.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The library snack bar used to be inside the building.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> The snack bar was closed by the then VC because staff and students
were meeting there. (This was during some student unrest). There was
such a fuss they had to build a new one outside - you can see the paving
slabs continue from the outside to the inside.)
</dl>
<h3><a name="chemwatertower">Chemistry Water Tower</a> (aka the mushroom)</h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> Built without regard for weight of water. Some
evidence for this is in its shape - it looks like there should
have been a tall cylinder added on top of the mushroom of the
same diameter at the top bit.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> Is slowly sinking into the ground. (The pipe at the bottom has to be
reattatched every few years.)
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> Prof. Heavens has been to the top.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> A RAG stunt once involved breakfast on top.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The <a href="http://www.york.ac.uk/~socs3/">Caving Club</a> have been up
there, and have some great pictures to prove it.
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> Not built high enough, therefore providing insufficient pressure.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> It is believed that the architect designed this to
symbolise the use of psychedelic mushrooms during the 60s.
<dt> <b><a href="watertower.html">Tb. *</a></b>
<dd> The mushroom can and does hold water and is
actually used by the Dept as a primary source of water.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> When the mushroom was first floodlit York police were inundated
with UFO sightings.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> Standing underneath it can help cure a hangover.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> Standing underneath and looking up reminds you of scenes from
<i>Independence Day</i>. (It helps if you're drunk.)
</dl>
<h3><a name="wateronhill">The Water Tower On The Hill</a></h3>
<p>(the thing that looks like a castle)</p>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>F.</b>
<dd> This is the secret headquarters of the SU/Admin/KGB/etc.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> The aerials on top of the water tower are
believed to be mobile telephone antennae rather than
anything suspicious.
<dt> <b>F.</b>
<dd> Holds one millions gallons of water.
<dt> <b><a href="siwardtower.html">T. *</a></b>
<dd> Used to hold one million gallons of water, now empty.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> The auxiliary supply tank contains 10 million gallons
and is actually beneath the all weather hockey pitch
behind Alcuin.
<dt> <b>F.</b>
<dd> It is used to stabilise lake water level.
</dl>
<h3><a name="biolclock">Biology Clock Tower</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> It only has one face because that's all they could afford.
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> It was a choice between a clock tower for
Biology and a swimming pool for campus - the right
choice was obvious.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> The Biology Clock Tower is in fact a chimney.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> The Biology Clock Tower was designed to hold a water tank for the
department. Somebody donated a clock. Then it was
found they didn't need a water tower. But they still had to build it ...
</dl>
<h3><a name="newbio">The New Biology Building</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> Most energy-efficient building ever.
</dl>
<h3><a name="physicsbuild">Physics</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b><a href="buildings.html#physics">Tb. *</a></b>
<dd> The Physics Building cost a million pounds to build.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> There used to be stepping stones beneath PX001, when the lake went
right up to the side of the building.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> Colin Johnson inadvertently walked off them while
showing prospective undergraduates round.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The stepping stones were filled with land to improve
access for the disabled, at the expense of many a potentially
interesting bar-crawl.
<dt> <b>F.</b>
<dd> The sound system inside PX001 was upgraded for minimal cost by
FilmSoc (as they then were) who went round York stealing car stereos.
(YSC (as they now are) don't use them - they belong to admin).
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> Many years ago when the roof of the Physics
building was leaking, a number of
contractors were contacted for quotes to fix it, and
the cheapest was chosen. They came and worked for a few days
and all the leaks stopped. Several months later,
estates needed to do some work in the roofspace, and
discovered lots of dustbins full of water, which the
contractor had put under the holes in the roof, thus ``solving''
the problem.
<p>The final solution involved flooding the roof with tar, having
first covered the rooms below in plastic sheeting to catch
drips. This did the trick, and left behind enough plastic to
keep everyone happy for months.</p>
</dl>
<h3><a name="compscibuild">Computer Science Buildings</a></h3>
<b>The new one</b>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> If you look closely at the weather mast,
you will see some logic gates cut out of the bottom part.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The direction pointers also have Pi/2, Pi,
3Pi/2 and 2Pi instead of W, S, E, N.
</dl>
<b>The even newer one</b>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> Only six car parking spaces for the whole building.
</dl>
<h3><a name="psycb">Psychology Buildings</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> The tower on new psychology building houses a
sensory deprivation tank for experiments.
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> The various flags which are flown from the
top of the building are part of a psychology experiment to see
how many people go and ask about them.
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> There are a number of steel loops set into the outside walls of the
building - these were supposed to be for chaining bikes to. Due to
a mix up with the plans, they are at head-height.
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> The steel rings are for attaching guy ropes to in
the event of bad weather, since it has been calculated that
strong winds could catch the roof and lift the entire building
into the air.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> There is a pitch-and-putt course round the back.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> The pitch-and-putt course is no longer used due to damage to cars
in the adjacent car park.
</dl>
<h3><a name="sport">Sports Centre</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> The glue used to fix the tiles to the walls in the
sports centre showers was not waterproof with
the unsurprising result that they fell off.
<dt> <b><a href="buildings.html#sports">T. *</a></b>
<dd> The original designs included a swimming pool and a
grandstand.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The new Astroturf pitches were paid for by former
student Greg Dyke, now a TV executive. (He actually
contributed £250,000 towards the cost. Ed).
</dl>
<h3><a name="jackdanials">Sir Jack Lyons</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> Sir Jack Lyons had his knighthood removed
after the Guinness fraud inquiry - University
declined to remove the building's knighthood on the grounds that
he was still Sir Jack when he donated the money, and when it was
built.
</dl>
<h3><a name="bleachfield">Bleachfield</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>F.</b>
<dd> Bleachfield is so called because there used to be a
bleach factory there.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> Bleachfield is named after Bleachfield Farm, which
previously stood on the Bleachfield -- Music Department
site. The area was so-called because linen bleaching
took place on the site. (University News Sheet, April
1991, page 8).
</dl>
<h3><a name="km">Kings' Manor</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b><a href="km.html">T. *</a></b>
<dd> There is an oak panelled phone box in Kings' Manor.
</dl>
<h2><a name="landscape">Landscape Features</a></h2>
<h3><a name="lake">The Lake</a></h3>
<p>(See also ``<a href="#wildlife">Wildlife</a>")</p>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> When it was built, it was the largest plastic lined lake in Europe.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> There was a fire in biology; water used to
put it out drained into the lake along with lots of nasties.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> Chemistry don't drain anything into it. (And <b>Tb.</b> neither do
any of the other departments. (The water that is pumped into it
by Physics is just rain-water.)
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> There was an outbreak of botulism in the mid to late 80s.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> It is used to drain the surrounding land - if it wasn't
there the surrounding land would simply be a marsh.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> During a particularly cold spell one winter, the
ice was sufficiently thick for a mini to
be driven out onto it and over the fountain -- which
wasn't working at the time.
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> The ice was not as thick as expected - the
mini fell through the ice and is still down there
somewhere.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> During a fairly cold spell a few winters ago, someone
put a college fridge out in the middle of the lake
one evening and it was nowhere to be seen next morning.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> The fountain used to be higher before it was cleaned and redesigned.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> The fountain exists to oxygenate the lake water.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> The fountain moves around from time to time - it floats on a pontoon
which is tethered by it's supply pipe.
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> Only life in the lake is under-evolved eels and over-evolved fish.
<dt> <b><a href="bales.html">T. *</a></b>
<dd> Since 1994, after a summer when the lake turned very
green, there have been several bales of hay floating around in
the lake each year. These were said to be intended to improve
the quality of the lake water (but didn't seem to have much
effect).
<dt> <b><a href="lake.html">T. *</a></b>
<dd> In 1993, Vision had an article about the
state of the lake. One of the professors of Ecology said that
in 60-70 years time, the lake would become a swamp.
<dt> <b><a href="lake2.html">T. *</a></b>
<dd> The lake has always been a source of complaints about the
smell, as seen in a Nouse article nigh on thirty
years ago.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> There is no plant life in the lake because
of an over-ambitious project to poison the
weeds in the lake during the 70s.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The top pond, next to Derwent dining room, is prone to bad algae
growth. On some occassions, it has been known to flouresce slightly at
night. It hasn't done this in a few years: last time was about 1991.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> There is a stream flowing into the lake. You can find it
by looking in the vicinity of Heslington Church
(follow the path from Derwith car-park to the
church).
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> There is also a stream flowing out of the lake, it goes behind
the Sports Centre and under Heslington Lane.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> The fountain in the lake is said to add fresh water and
oxygen into the lake water. Unfortunately, nobody has the sense
to turn it off when it's windy. Considering that a fortune must
have been spent on building covered walkways just so students
don't get wet when it's raining, someone could at least make
sure that nobody gets soaked when the spray of the fountain is
blown towards dry land or a bridge.
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> The sub-aqua club were once asked by the
admin to dive in and check the integrity of the plastic bag
that the lake is, but hired an environmental health officer to
check the water first, who pronounced that it would be dangerous
to their health to swim in it.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The main reason for not allowing swimming in the
lake is that the original builders threw all their rubbish into it - hence
the bottom of the lake consists largely of broken pieces of glass.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> If you fall in the lake, you are advised to see a doctor immediately.
(<b>T.</b> The same is true of the Ouse)
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> After the murder of an open university lecturer, police frogmen
spent several days trying to find the murder weapon. In the end
they took a knife from Vanbrugh kitchens,
threw it into the lake, watched where it fell, and then tried to
find that. They couldn't, and given that they couldn't find
something even when they knew where it was, they abandoned the
search.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> The (original) knife was later found on top of a covered walkway
anyway.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> There was once a raft moored permanently by
Goodricke beach, in its latter years it held only a
sign ``Keep Off''.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> It is believed that the raft could not float,
and was supported only by duck shit.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> The wooden beams on it rotted away and became more and
more hazardous; it was removed for this reason.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> The raft affair just off Goodricke Beach
was reputedly sailed (post finals) halfway
across the lake by several including brother of Dr
Simon Eveson (maths), journey curtailed by collision
with fountain mechanism.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The lake was contaminated in 1974 by a ``mock battle of Trafalgar''
involving lots of soot, oil and paint bombs. Large numbers of
fish died, and the lake had to be dredged. RAG paid the
costs to the University.
</dl>
<h3><a name="bridges">Bridges</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> The Goodricke-Wentworth bridge
cannot be destroyed by students bouncing up and down on it. The
fact that it is still standing is testimony to that.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> You can tell who thinks this bridge will fall
down by seeing them jump up and down on it.
<dt> <b><a href="wentchall.html">T. *</a></b>
<dd> The Goodricke-Wentworth bridge is the scene for the
Wentworth Challenge, the general idea being to cross the
bridge using only the girders underneath.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The <a href="http://www.york.ac.uk/~socs3/">Caving Club</a> also have
a bridge challenge, which involves absailing off one or more of the road bridges
in the middle of the night.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> Underneath the Alcuin/Library bridge is the entrance to ``Library
Fell'', now bricked up, that enabled access to the bowels of the library.
It's believed that the survey for this is in the library.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> Curse on James Wentworth Bridge - not long after its
construction a particularly superstitious member of the campus media
was crossing the bridge from James to Wenty with some "lucky
charms" which he felt had been bringing him only bad luck, he decided that
to bring himself good luck he would get rid of them by chucking them into
the lake, he and at least one other campus journo became convinced that
these charms had caused the bridge itself to become cursed.
<dt> <b>F.</b>
<dd> The library bridge was designed to have a
Students Union building on top of it, which is why it is so wide.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The rooms under the library bridge (now security, used to be URY and the
scanner room) used to house the SU shop.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> The bridge connecting the library with the spiral is
crumbling. Some people have seen bits falling off it. In fact
the concrete of the Library-Spiral bridge is showing signs of
deformation and buckling due to the pressure of the Library
sliding down the hill towards the lake. After rain, water pours
through hairline cracks caused by the buckling, down onto cars
passing underneath (and people standing at the bus stop).
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> One of the concrete bridges on campus will have to be replaced
soon. (The development review of 1985 said `within 10 years'.
This is because the concrete has been attacked by use of
chlorides. The cost was thought to be about £250,000, so
the library bridge is probably the most likely.)
</dl>
<h3><a name="siward">Siward's Howe</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> A burial mound for an ancient Earl of Northumbria.
Just his head though.
<b>Tb.</b>Siward had a house on the howe. (and <b>T.</b> he appears in
<i>Hamlet</i>)
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> Used by a local coven as one of seven (it would be seven,
wouldn't it) meeting sites at All Hallow's Eve.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> Siward's Howe was a textbook example of a terminal moraine before Alcuin,
Chemistry and the JBM Library were built on it.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The hill (Heslington Hill?) is the highest point for miles around,
and is used to celebrate the Summer Solstice.
</dl>
<h3><a name="hesgard">Heslington Hall Gardens</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The Yew trees used to be cut in the shapes of
chess pieces.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The Yew clippings are currently being sold as
ingredients for anti-cancer drugs research.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> The Sunken area near to the lake used to be a mirror
pond in the previous layout of the gardens, to reflect the gazebo.
</dl>
<h3><a name="sculp">Sculptures</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b><a href="may.html">T. *</a></b>
<dd> The thing which used to be next to Central Hall, known
as the crisp, cornflake etc. was really called
``Mayflower 1''.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> A visiting rugby team redecorated it one night and it was removed
soon afterwards
Nick Jackson managed to take <a href="crisp.gif">this picture</a>
of the cleanup job afterwards. There was a
<a href="crisp1.jpg">picture of both sides</a> in <i>Nouse</i>.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> After the admin removed the Mayflower, Aaardvark made a papier-mache
<a href="http://www.xs4all.nl/~ellman/ae-a/aaardvark/photos/">replica</a>
and which was put up between Central Hall and Langwith.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The Mayflower was once turned into a broken
smiley face (ie. painted yellow, with one black eye
somewhere).
<dt> <b>F.</b>
<dd> The thing in the middle of the spiral up to the
library bridge
is called the Avocado. It is made with lead from the
Minster's roof. (In fact, it is an untitled aluminium work.)
<dt> <b><a href="algol.html">T. *</a></b>
<dd> The two balls outside Goodricke library represent the binary star Algol,
the subject of the work of John Goodricke. When new they
were lit up, with one globe red and the other blue.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The sculpture out the back of Goodricke is made from
bits of the last steam train in York.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> Some years ago (c.1990) there was an exhibition of sculptures
(by <a href="a_wright.html">Austin Wright</a>) in
the area between the accommodation near the VC's
house, the Lake, Derwent B block.
These were tall, narrow
sculptures with small (ca. foot square) bases -- an open
invitation. They were moved, knocked over, stacked up, and
thrown in the lake over a period of time. And rapidly
removed as a result.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> Suspiciously similar sculptures can now be seen in the
courtyards at King's Manor. These are the same sculptures,
relocated to a safer haven.
<dt> <b>F.</b>
<dd> There were once plans to build a new cashpoint
machine into the statue of the stone Buddha. (Actually, there
were plans, but only during an Aaardvark meeting.)
<dt> <b><a href="buddah.html">Tb. *</a></b>
<dd> It's not a statue of a stone Buddha; it's not
even a stone statue of a real Buddha. It's bronze.
<dt> <b><a href="rose.html">T. *</a></b>
<dd> A few years ago there was a plan put forward by an artist
to put a huge metal rose in the middle of the lake.
The thing was to be powered by sunlight, and would open and close
during the day.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> <i>Family Group</i>, by Henry Moore was lent to the University
by the artist. It stood for many years on a plinth in front of
Heslington Hall Yew Garden.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> An unknown (to us) 1970's artist once spent several days erecting
sculptures made of scaffolding poles next to Alcuin - much to the disappointment
of the students, who had thought he was going to paint the
college windows. The sculptures were called `A Frog' and `A Railway
Station', but were subsequently combined into a single large tower by
some students. (Exit one irate artist with his poles, enter Private
Eye, who report the incident.)
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> In 1970 there was a sculpture at Langwith, which was so ugly that
someone tried to blow it up with a home-made explosive device.
It was eventually removed in 1974.
</dl>
<h3><a name="covered">Covered and Uncovered Walkways</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> Although supposedly there so keep pedestrians dry in wet
weather, the covered walkways main purpose is to provide
easy-maintainable cable supports for the computing service
wires.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> If you took all the covered walkways and joined
them end to end, you could walk to the Minster under cover.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> In the vicinity of the water tower on the
hill, there is a network of pathways. These seem to mysteriously
disappear as soon as you are near a major campus pathway.
Sometimes, they are used a a shortcut for when travelling from
Alcuin to Town. If you look from the top of the hill
(on the Road) towards the forest in the direction of Alcuin, you
can see one of them emerging and vanish as it gets nearer.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> Members of URY exposed themselves to dangerous amounts of asbestos
when laying cabling along the covered walkways.
</dl>
<h3><a name="signs">Signs</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> There are ``Danger, thin ice'' signs on the lake between
Vanbrugh and Biology, and next to
Physics, all year round. I
suppose the term 'thin' means non-existent as well.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The newly-erected green signposts have letters that can
easily be unstuck and re-arranged. Students often take this as
an opportunity to show off their vocabulary of swear words. One
sign had ``Routefinder'' changed to ``tour for nerds'',
and one by NYS travel became ``rude often''; also seen were
``Psychology'' -> ``Psychologie'',
``Campus Nursery'' -> ``Campus Nurser''.
Possible original
mistakes on the signs were ``Goodrick'' and ``Vanburgh''.
Apparently, Admin paid thousands of pounds for the signs.
</dl>
<h3><a name="uniroadunderpass">University Road Underpass</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> This was originally designed as an access to
College 4.
<dt> <b>Fb.</b>
<dd> It was designed as a nuclear fall out bunker
for admin, unfortunately it's not possible to run there
in 4 minutes whilst carrying a brief case.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> There were once plans for a miniature railway around
campus to carry students to and from lectures and colleges.
This was built as the main underpass to get to the College 4,
Alcuin, library side of campus.
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>
<dd> There is an Underpass ghost.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> People used to keep boats there - the ends were blocked up to make
a garage.
<dt> <b>T.</b>
<dd> The underpass is now used for it's intended purpose, with the installation
of the cycle track to the newest Computer Science building.
</dl>
<h3><a name="quiet">The Quiet Place</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b><a href="quiet.html">T. *</a></b>
<dd> There was/is a plan to build a circular enclosure between
Langwith and Spring Lane Bridge, incorporating part of the
lake and forming a Quite Place for private contemplation.
<dt> <b>U.</b>
<dd> It was never built because next to Langwith is not a very quiet
place.
<dt> <b><a href="quiet.html">T. *</a></b>
<dd> The gazebo is now to be converted into a Quiet Place.
</dl>
<h3><a name="landmisc">Miscellaneous</a></h3>
<dl compact>
<dt> <b>Tb.</b>