blank image Home blank image Site Map blank image Contact Us blank image Search blank image blank image   blank image
Garnet to Cream Gradient Graphic
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
Round Table
Goats at Reunion. Need we say more?
By Lee Ostaszewski

I went to my wife’s 15th Reunion, and we took the boys along, because the kids’ program looked exciting — fireworks, a magician, an outing to play miniature golf, and swimming. The adults, on the other hand, had to attend an awards ceremony held outside in 107-degree heat. This year’s Reunion just happened to be scheduled on the hottest day ever in the history of the world. The high temperature was probably the reason we never saw the Bates mascot, the bobcat, which in reality is probably just a person, or perhaps a student, dressed in a bobcat costume. That was just as well, since we forgot to take the advice offered by the Reunion organizers, who sent a letter to parents suggesting that we warn our children beforehand that there could be a seven-foot-tall bobcat lurking about over the weekend, and that it should be considered extremely dangerous.

But none of that mattered once we got there and discovered, to our delight, that there were goats present.

The goats came with the Class of 1951, celebrating its 50th Reunion. They (the alumni, not the goats) wore bright, yellow T-shirts that read “hot diggity dog” on the front and “we can still cut the mustard” on the back. During the parade, they held signs that had similarly clever puns making use of the words “ketchup” and “relish.” How the goats fit with the overall hot dog theme, I dared not ask.

In any event, the goats were a big hit, especially at 10 o’clock that night. That’s when the goats were being taken around campus to do their goat business. They came up to us while we were hanging around outside, making sure not to stray too far away from the official class keg.

The day had already been eventful for most of my wife’s classmates — especially for the ones who hijacked the tour trolley. (A tour trolley is a bus disguised as an old-fashioned train trolley, and is thus not constrained by such things as tracks.) This trolley was commissioned by the Class of 1941 for the parade and to give campus tours. My wife’s classmates convinced the driver to forgo the official route and instead race the trolley several times around the Garcelon Field track. Joggers and bicyclists using the track scattered as if suddenly finding themselves in the middle of a NASCAR time trial for trolley-class stock cars.

I don’t know if it was the heat or the beer, but when the goats wandered up to us, it seemed like a perfectly natural occurrence. We were standing around talking and someone said, “Hey, look, goats.” The goats came up to us, and had we been plant life, they would have tried to eat us. See, that’s a goat’s thought process. A goat looks at something and thinks, “Can I eat that?” Sensing that we were not green and leafy, the goats ignored us and instead ate the shrubbery. After chomping on that, the goats took on a tree.

To see a goat eat a tree is a strange sight, even by college reunion standards. The goats stood on their hind legs, stretched their necks, and bit off the lower leaves. Seeing the work a goat does to eat gave me an idea of how insatiable their appetite is. This behavior, combined with their apparent ability to treat adults as an irrelevancy, makes them the animal-kingdom equivalent of a teen-ager.

Lee Ostaszewski, a humor columnist living in the Boston area, attended Reunion with his wife, Beth Landry Ostaszewski '86, and their children Christopher (5) and Kevin (7). Lee says the goat dreams have finally stopped.

blank image


Little Big Band: The time and place was 1941 Bates, and the Bobcats were as hip as they knew how.
Affording Bates: Paying for Bates is possible - if you decide it is.
Bates Reunion 2001: As it turns out, you can get there from here
In Their Own World: Students from abroad change the Bates horizon as much as the College transforms them.



Letters: Dan Stockwell '64 is an "everyday hero," and John Tagliabue remembers a student in verse.
Round Table: Goats at Reunion. Need we say more?
President's Column: A new academic year means a coming together of new perspectives and experiences.
Sports Notes: Super K and the rest -- Bates softball coach Gwen Lexow untangles the "other" pitching motion
On & Off Campus: "Can't buy me love," said Robert Reich (in so many words) at Bates' 135th Commencement.
Editor's Note: The Bobcats dance band were a Saturday night fixture.
Vital Statistics: The chonicles of Bates lives, including weddings, births, and obituaries
Class Notes: What are your friends doing these days?
blank image