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Beast in Show
A sensational late-summer tale turns out to be just an odd- looking dog

A sensational late-summer tale ended with a whimper when the so-called beast of Turner turned out to be just an odd-looking dog. On Aug. 16, the Lewiston Sun Journal ran a front-page story, “Mysterious Beast,” telling of a stinky carcass found in nearby Turner. Could it, asked concerned locals, be the legendary beast long rumored to have inhabited the Turner wilds? By late August, the news story and its photos of a dark-haired, blunt-faced carcass had hit the wire services, the Internet, and the worldwide media.

But in mid-September, DNA tests sponsored by the Sun Journal indicated the animal was 100 percent dog, and the story was dead. The human side of the story was perhaps more fascinating. Anthropology professor Elizabeth Eames, quoted in the Bangor Daily News, noted the fear-love relationship we have with anything unfamiliar. “Things not familiar to us become...unsettling,” she said. “But there is a certain level of pleasure in that.... Fear is exciting.”

Coincidentally (or was it?), the Bates Museum of Art was hosting Cryptozoology: Out of Time Place Scale. Cryptozoologists study animals rumored to exist (e.g., the Loch Ness Monster), and the Bates exhibition showcased artists whose work deals with the vivid weirdness of the field. As the real cryptozoological drama played out in Turner, museum director Mark Bessire explained how the artists in his exhibit have the power to focus and redirect the public’s interest in shadowy creatures toward “better stewarding of our environment and at-risk species that actually exist.”

More pointedly, though, the exhibit explored how people “continue to have a need for the existence of beings outside our realm of existence,” he said.

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Say It with Flour: At King Arthur Flour, twin passions of baking and writing get a rise out of Susan Reid '79
Why 9/11 Stories Matter: Far from being just an optimistic spin on life, stories of redemption sit at the very intersection of self and American society
New Prof, New Place: Jonathan Skinner's zeal to explore his new surroundings reflects more than just practical considerations
Water Power: Poland Spring's plans for expansion in Maine make key players of Tom Brennan '83, Andy Tolman '70, and Keith Taylor '82
Time in His Hands: Frank Glazer's musical light shines undimmed 70 years after his New York debut



Postcards from Bates: A few picture stories from the print issue
Quad Angles: A selection of news stories from the College
PreAmble: Truth or Consequences
Your Page: UNCOMMON DINING — For civilian students during World War II, mealtime memories were created off campus at Mrs. V's
Bates Matters: HOW DO YOU DO? Informal traditions and the formal ones, like Convocation, introduce the incoming class to Bates
Open Forum: Opinions from the readers of Bates Magazine
Scene Again: 1970 — Eshoeing a tradition
Sports Notes: RICKY'S MOMENTS — Squash All-American Ricky Weisskopf '08 brings a new show to Bates
Connections: CULTCH, KATRINA, AND TRUTHINESS — On the road for The Campaign for Bates thank-you events, Associate Professor of French Kirk Read connects the Bates dots
Vital Statistics
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