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Mad Cow

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[[Category: Groups]]The Mad Cow is Williams' premier humor magazine, and its second third oldest student publication ([[Lit after The Williams Record, founded in 1885, and Literary Review]] being the oldest). It puts out issues once a semester, hopefully before finals, and can be picked up for free at a dining hall near you!
History:
<i>It started in 1907 with a group of literary gents and that infamous poem. The [[Purple Cow]], the original Williams humor magazine with the harlequin and holstein cover, was loved proudly for half a century. Somewhere in the 40s, it paused for WWII, and somewhere in the 50s picked up a few colors of ink beyond the original purple. In 1960, all vestiges of a humor magazine at Williams mysteriously went extinct. They stayed that way into the early 90s, which priefly briefly served up the spoof magazine Beeph.
Jump ahead a few years to [[Winter Study]] of 1998. Inspired by Paul Park's parody class, an intrepid band of idealistic young whippersnappers with time on their hands decided to try and bring back the glory days of old. Sure enough, later that spring, an elite cadre Scotch-taped their idea of a humor magazine over the depths of cyberspace. And there was much rejoicing, among the three people who read it.</i>
These words come to us from the ancestors who lived through the historical days of the inception and birth of the first Mad Cow. The Spring 1998 issue was published only on the internet, and the first printed issue was published in Winter 1998. After that, there has been an issue published on nice shiny paper every semester, with perhaps one exception. We can’t can't really figure out which semester went Cow-less, because some issues have the unfortunate tendency to print years on the cover that don’t don't necessarily match those on the title page. [[Dan Bahls '04|Dan Bahls]] thinks it was Spring 2002, though.
It was for the Mad Cow that the word “derecognize” "derecognize" was coined in 2001. In the Spring of that year, the magazine published a list of departmental pick-up lines that were of questionable taste. The staff worried that campus would not take kindly to this crude humor, and to some degree they were right. However, most concentrated on an article (written by the ‘Hans Oji’s’ article, which now-infamous 'Hans Oji') that satirized the then-new post position of CC College Council MinCo representativeRep. For this, CC threatened to derecognize the whole organization. The editors realized While the magazine continued the need to be more sensitive to next year, it began publishing a disclaimer in the feelings front of the campus communityevery issue. From that issue forthIn addition, the Mad Cow has asked began seeking volunteers to ‘testtest-read’ read its articles for things that may be hurtful, and publishes a disclaimer in the front of each issue. Volunteers If you would like to test-read can be made by emailing for the Mad Cow, please e-mail the editors' listserver at madcow@wso.williams.eduto volunteer.
The Mad Cow has gone through several editorial dynasties, beginning with the reign of David Ramos '99, who soon turned the reins over to [[Seth Brown ]] and Art Munson (both ’01'01), . Their illustrious reign was followed by [[Josh Ain]], Rachelle Hassan, and Jenny McElroy (‘03s'03s). In 2003/2004, who passed control was placed on to the ’04 '04 triumvirate of Neil Anderson, Al Gordon, and Dan Bahls. Upon their graduationin Spring 2004, responsibility passed to [[Amanda R. Van Rhyn '06]] and [[Katherine L. Dieber '07]], who will soon add some names to their administration. Watch this space for exciting editorial developments!
And please contribute The Mad Cow accepts submissions from the entire campus: articles, illustrations, funny quotes from professors, and anything else original and funny . Submissions should be e-mailed to madcow@wso.williams.edu for consideration. Any and all students are welcome to join the Mad Cow staff and help in writing and formatting of the final publication. You can find the current issue online at [http://mad.cow.magazine.googlepages.com].
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