The Argo

The hand-drawn masthead of the newly-named student-run newspaper in 1971.
The hand-drawn masthead of the newly-named student-run newspaper in 1971.
The 1971 staff of The Argo included students, faculty and staff of Stockton State College.
The 1971 staff of The Argo included students, faculty and staff of Stockton State College.
Members of The Argo staff in 2016 at the 45th anniversary of the paper.
Members of The Argo staff in 2016 at the 45th anniversary of the paper.

The Argo newspaper first hit stands on October 29, 1971. Although The Argo has been around since the University鈥檚 inception, it did not have a name when it was first released. In an effort to involve the community in the naming of the newspaper, The Argo staff held a contest featured in the first issue where potential name ideas could be submitted. The eventual winner, however, was not a student, but Professor Demetrios Constantelos. His prize? A lifetime subscription to the non-subscription student-run paper.

With social media dominating lives today, the digital age has had a severe impact on the motivation to read traditional, in-print journalism. However, Stockton students have kept The Argo afloat with their unabashed passion for sharing news, events, and creative stories with their community. Stockton 尝颈产谤补谤测鈥檚 Special Collections has of The Argo to make information accessible to researchers and for the reading pleasure of the Stockton community.

In addition to upcoming events and information pertaining to the University, The Argo also showcases significant events in national politics, allowing today鈥檚 students to see the ways that events like Richard Nixon鈥檚 Watergate scandal, the threat of nuclear war with Russia, and poverty rates under the Bush Administration, to give three examples, influenced the nation and Stockton alike.

Thanks to The Argo, readers can experience these events for themselves as students and faculty once did and will continue to do. Learn more about The Argo in Stockton Stories.