Jester of Columbia
The Jester of Columbia, or simply the Jester, is a campus humor magazine. Legendarily founded on April Fool's Day, 1901, it is one of the oldest such publications in the US. Revived in 2001 after a 12-year lapse in publication and again in 2004 after a shorter one, Jester has once again begun to produce magazines as well as sponsor comedy events on Columbia's campus. It is widely acclaimed as "somewhat funny every now and then," a major achievement for any college humor publication.
During the 2006-2007 school year, Jester was embroiled in a bizarre (and possibly one-way, i.e., as a Jester-only prank) feud with the Columbia Undergraduate Science Journal.
Jester covers
The Jester has occasionally been known for its artistically sophisticated covers, a trait which reached its peak during the 1930s, when Ad Reinhardt, later a notable abstract expressionist painter, was one of its editors. The cover art of the Jesters of this period was considered comparable to that of The New Yorker.
1934 cover featuring the crew team, by Ad Reinhardt
Left: Columbia Lion by Ad Reinhardt, Right: A 1934 issue featuring stories by football captain Cliff Montgomery and Arnold Beichman
Covers from, top left, 1931, featuring a New Years' party in John Jay Hall; right, 1933, by Ad Reinhardt, which served as the program for that year's Varsity Show; bottom, the 1936 Commencement edition, also by Reinhardt
2008 cover satirically depicting the revelation of the Manhattanville campus plan as a stained glass window
Jester alumni
- I.A.L. Diamond, Hollywood comedy writer
- Allen Ginsberg, poet of the Beat Generation
- Gerald Green, writer
- Tony Kushner, playwright
- Robert Lax, poet
- Joseph L. Mankiewicz, screenwriter
- Thomas Merton, author and monk
- Ted Rall, political cartoonist
- Ad Reinhardt, artist
- Ed Rice, journalist
- Ralph de Toledano, journalist, co-founded the National Review and edited Newsweek
- Lynd Ward, artist
- Herman Wouk, writer
- Ed Koren, cartoonist