JudithKD
New Hampshire

Caltech

Worth visiting!

My dad worked here  — 2 years ago

and so periodically we would go together. My dad’s problem was how to keep a little kid busy while he did whatever it was he had to do, pick up papers and mail, set up meetings, whatever. So, what he did was find things for me to do.

One big thrill of my young life was eating Eggs Benedict the first time in the faculty club, the Atheneum. I’d also hang around his office and play with his old, huge calculator.

I spent a lot of time in the bookstore, which at that point was in what had been the student union. I always spent a fair amount of time looking for the “Klein” brick that dad had bought when they were putting up the building. Also, the capitals of the pillars on one walkway were NOT the usual classical figures. And there was looking for the red caps from one of the eucalyptus and the bay laurel which smelled so good.

If I’d known about the fireman’s pole in the windtunnel, I probably would have stayed for days (which is almost certainly why my Dad never took me there).

I have a couple of funny stories about the fireman’s pole anyway, one of these days I may post them.

So, my experience of Caltech is that of a small child, not a student or faculty member. You CAN find things for a small child to do here, but you’ll have to work at it!

jkd

Comments:

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Fonk
Da Nang

it' my dreamin' place

I love it ,I love it all
I dream about it frequently
Will you be my Graduat place ..my mecca of Astrophysics

JudithKD
New Hampshire

Okay, here are the windtunnel stories...

My dad was a young professor when the Co-Op windtunnel was built as a part of what was then the Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory, California Institute of Technology (GALCIT) now the Graduate Aeronautical….

Anyway, my dad was always what he called “constructively lazy.” He did not want to have to walk up and DOWN the stairs in the windtunnel all day long. He wanted a fireman’s pole. Theodore Von Karman who was the head of the effort thought it was undignified, and that real scientists and engineers wouldn’t want to do anything so undiginfied. They put it to a vote, dad’s position won. [For a better description of this particular story, see Von Karman’s autobiography, The Wind and Beyond.]

Many years go by, the windtunnel is dismantled, my dad dies, and we donate many of his papers to the Aero Library, of which he was the founding patron. In the process, I got to know the Aero LIbrarian.

Just before we moved east, I was in Pasadena and went out to the Aero Library. The Librarian I’d known had retired, and just happened to be there taking care of some last minute details. She said, “Come on. I’ve got something to show you.” and she lead me down a hall with offices on each side to what looked like a utility closet.

“Open it.”

I did, and there was this big metal pole there. “Jean, what is it?”

“It’s your Dad’s fireman’s pole. It helps stablize the building and it was going to be ungodly expensive to move, so they built a closet around it.”

My dad would be pleased and amused.

I wonder what some historian is going to think the silly thing was for in oh 100 years or so?

jkd

SallyKitt
Acton

LOL!

Now that’s a pretty fabulous skeleton to have in one’s family closet!

RuthG
Chicago

That IS a great story!

Caltech should add a historical plaque to the pole.

My memories of Caltech mostly have to do with going Scottish country dancing each week for about five months. There was a lot of folk dancing on the campus for some reason. And all the Caltech nerds I knew (from church) were excellent musicians.

JudithKD
New Hampshire

Sally,

what a great line…I laughed out loud. Thanks!

Ruth, yeah, I’ve always thought this was a kick. My dad would have too.

The Co-op windtunnel, which the pole was in, changed aviation and computing history. I suppose one of these days I’ll post the bit about that too. The Smithsonian agrees. When they dismantled the windtunnel, the balances which my dad and someone else designed were sent to the Air and Space Museum. Dad would have been proud of that too. I don’t remember the story, but I know that the design of the balances was a bitch.

jkd


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