Just so you know, the length is due to the length of the CRT, and the length of the CRT is as long as it is to keep the deflection of the cathode ray as low as is practical.
Deflecting the CRT in order to direct the trace to the screen naturally introduces some error in the accuracy of where it lands; the less you have to do, the better. Same reason that CRTs used in serious broadcast monitors for TV stations were as long or longer than your scope. We are more used to CRTs for home use, where they trade off accuracy for making the depth of the product shallow enough to be acceptable in your living room.
Take heart, though! When I was in school, we had "lab" scopes that came built onto their own wheeled carts and took two guys to lift! Yours would have been considered to be a compact model!