The Wesleyan Argus Explained

The Wesleyan Argus
School:Wesleyan University
Type:Student newspaper
Chiefeditor:Caleb Henning ’25
Carolyn Neugarten ’26
Maneditor:Phoebe Robinson ’25
Foundation:1868
Headquarters:45 Broad Street
Middletown, CT
Website:www.wesleyanargus.com

The Wesleyan Argus is the student newspaper of Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut, United States. Established in 1868, The Argus is the nation’s longest-running twice-weekly college newspaper, and is published every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year. Each issue of The Argus includes the news, features, arts and culture, opinion, and sports sections, while Tuesday issues also include articles from the satirical Ampersand section.

History

The Argus was founded in 1868 and has been published bi-weekly since. The Argus does not run in exam periods and has paused publication during wartimes and the COVID-19 pandemic.[1]

The Argus is named after Argus Panoptes, a many-eyed giant in Greek mythology.

In 1975, The Argus ran its first advertisement for a campus queer group.[2]

In 2015, The Argus made headlines after a student wrote an opinion piece questioning the tactics of members of the Black Lives Matter movement.[3] In response to student outrage, the President of the Wesleyan Student Assembly called for The Argus to be defunded. However, school leaders defended the right of students to freely write in The Argus and funding was never cut.

Notable alumni

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About The Argus . 2022-04-28 . The Wesleyan Argus . en.
  2. Web site: Wesleyan history you’ll definitely read here first. 2022-05-23 . The Wesleyan Argus. en.
  3. Web site: Reporters flocked to a campus controversy but missed its surprising conclusion . 2022-05-22 . Columbia Journalism Review. en.