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From stray to stardom: A cat is a celebrity at UTA

In front of the Chemistry and Physics Building, he welcomes the sun’s warmth on his face. He gently closes his eyes, feeling the balmy air of early spring. His ears twitch as students move between classes. Days like these are usual for Microwave, UTA’s well-known campus cat. His origins are unknown. His oldest documented photo was taken in 2014. Since then, the gray and white stray cat has become one of the most prominent UTA figures. Posts about the short-haired feline on UTA’s Reddit garner hundreds of likes and dozens of comments. “He’s very iconic,” said McKayla Mellen, Campus Cat Coalition president. “So many people know about him more than they know the other cats or even about us.” Microwave’s popularity has helped the Campus Cat Coalition grow its influence, which the club uses to educate the UTA community about cats, Mellen said. He’s also a model. The club has sold stickers of Microwave for fundraising. A couple of semesters ago, Microwave had a wound on his back. Donations poured in to pay for his vet bills. Once healed, the extra money supported other cats, Mellen said. The Campus Cat Coalition doesn’t benefit from any donations or sales as they go directly back to the animals, said Caroline Carter, alumna and an original member of the club’s third iteration in 2019. Microwave accompanied Carter throughout her bachelor’s to master’s degree journey at UTA. She would meet him at the UTA Planetarium to walk to Science Hall or the University Center. Even if it was raining. “I pulled up my umbrella, and Microwave and I would walk,” she said. “He’d walk me to and from my building or to the UC so I would grab his breakfast.” Microwave’s previous name was Buddy. When the club became more active, it began naming the campus cats officially. He and other cats were named after appliances. These days, he’s sometimes referred to as Dr. Wave. He’s a man of honor. Microwave has doctorate degrees in chemistry and physics. “Because of the Chemistry and Physics Building right there,” Mellen said. He’s a multidisciplinary scholar. He possesses an honorary doctorate in English. “Because he’s also beloved by the English department,” she said. Microwave has a small, beige plastic house with a blue, slanted top. Above the entrance, a small string of photos of him is attached. A sticker on the front reads “Microwave’s House.” A sign nearby asking passersby not to feed him. “Some people will feed him anything and everything from the cafeteria,” Carter said. She appreciates people’s kindness, but the club manages Microwave’s weight and health. “We have to tell them, ‘Please do not feed him corn casserole. Do not give him Panda Express chicken.’ He will eat it, but do not give it to him,” she said. Microwave gets fed about once a day any time between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., said aerospace engineering freshman Miranda Lee, who’s part of the Campus Cat Coalition feeding and PR teams. Last semester, Lee asked him to wish her luck before a chemistry lab. “It depends on how much you studied, if his luck will work for you or not,” she said, laughing. Mellen attributed Microwave’s location and approachability — allowing people to pet and seek him out — to helping him become well-known on campus. “It’s like seeing a celebrity,” she said. The daily campus life involves lots of foot traffic. Microwave bathes in the sunlight by his house. His front legs extended. His back legs slightly bent. His head tilted toward his chest. And that was enough for people to stop in their tracks and capture photos of him. Snap. @DangHLe news-editor.shorthorn@uta.edu

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