For many graduates, their college degrees come at the end of at least four years spent roaming the campus. Max, a 6-year-old tabby, is no different. Except now, he’s a Doctor of Litter-ature.
He’s been visiting Vermont State University’s
Castleton campus ever since his owner, Ashley Dow, began letting him out of the
house, which is within walking distance of the school.
Maurice Ouimet, the school’s dean of admissions and
enrollment services, said the “very affectionate” Max is usually the first to
greet him in the morning and will even come inside the admissions office in the
wintertime.
“The rest of his daily routine really revolves around
where our students are at,” Ouimet said.
“So, he’ll frequently head up the hill and park himself outside one of our main
academic buildings so as students come and go from class, he’ll oftentimes just
be sitting on the wall.”
Max doesn’t shy away from climbing all over the
students, Dow said, and “so he’ll get up and get on their backpacks and they’ll
walk around and everybody’s doing selfies.”
“I would say he’s a charismatic cat because he just
brings people to him,” Ouimet said, adding Max often reciprocates bystanders’
affections by “standing up and purring.”
Max also greets visitors who come for tours of the
school, with Ouimet saying the tabby “feels like he has a job to do in
welcoming people to the campus.”
Max earned a degree at a pivotal time in the
university’s history. Vermont State University’s 2024 class marks the first
combined graduating class after the merger of Castleton University, Northern
Vermont University and Vermont Technical College. The three schools combined to
form Vermont State University in the summer of 2023.
The university communications office created a
countdown to graduation to “build up and celebrate this year’s seniors” who not
only went through the Covid-19 pandemic as freshmen but also dealt with the
transition that resulted from the merging of the schools, according to Ouimet.
It was the school’s social media manager, Rob
Franklin, who had the idea to make Max a part of that historic class – with an
honorary doctorate in “Litter-ature.”
According to Ouimet, the university does not
actually award doctorates (at least not to people), leaving Max in an exclusive
club of one.
“It was just intended to be just kind of
lighthearted and kind of a joke but at the same time, realize that this cat did
conjure up real feelings and real emotions and was a real support to a lot of
people on our campuses during a difficult time,” Ouimet said.
When Dow found out about Franklin’s idea, she laughed. “I’m like, ‘Really? OK,’” she said. “And I had no idea what it was going to open up.” The furry graduate even has his own school email and directory page.
Dow and her daughter, Kaitlyn Tanner, a student at
Vermont State, monitor Max’s email and have responded to messages from as far
as Germany and England.
Dow says there was recently a feral cat
problem in the community, causing Max to be regularly attacked by other cats.
So, she put posters around campus asking students to send her a text or bring
Max home if they saw him out after dark. Soon, they were arriving on her
doorstep with Max in hand.
As far as celebrating his graduation, Dow said Max
did not walk at the ceremony on May
18 but his name was called.
With summer coming on, Ouimet doesn’t see Max taking
a break from his school visits since the campus is home to summer camps.
“He’ll be out there getting all the attention and I
think he’ll just be a little more famous this year,” he said. “People will be
like, ‘Hey, that’s Max! He’s the famous cat.’”
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