PHKTKW iwo Enrron's Taiii.k. Vol. vii. 4 ! I 'tl I " ll in: -li I' I ,H t 1,1 I'l'tl .11, III! hiiWl : , school Inws, is intended to inclltdo nil tho counties in ll:o stuto, and county superin tondonts will see that the law makes it thoir duty to attend. S. H. TllOMP.sO.V, Stnto Supt, Pub. Ins. EDITORS TAHL13. The Unircrniti lb port er criticises the Studknt tor occupy ing so lnncli space with conli ibulions, and our intention was iininedialcly given lo'Iln make-up of the Hoportcr, in which we expected to find a rnrc.eoinbinntion of editorials, locals, per sonals, exchange notes, with an occasion, ul contribution their ideal of a college paper. Well,. we were disappointed lor we found one page of locals, one and a half of editorials, and ni.r of abstract prosy, uninteresting law mutter, with department. We would suggest that the Jioporter practice what it preaches; still, if it reaches the true end of a college paper it .should not onlj chronicle the events of the University, Inn it should be a faithful exponent of the literary ability and talents of the students The ambitious lul of interesting facts concerning lltera. tine and education. One may find in ii nut shell, as it were, all tho important, uselul and interesting events that Iran spire in the world of letters, together with many entertaining facts and a newsy do. piirtmcnt devoted to the Stale. It has re ceived many encomiums from the pi ess of the Stale, all of which it rightly hut. its. May the Lit. and lid. live long ami prosper. The High School, edited and published by.J.F. McCartney, is a paper in which''' egotism is the chief characteristic. Tine, the paper has reached its tilth year, hut that does not necessarily make it the first paper of the West. Still tho High Scliool can lay claim to much that is oxcellent, especially the selections. Tho editor has been contemplating Murk Twain, and passes most terrible judgment upon him, advising him, very kindly, to retire from public life. Poor .Mark I how ho will talco it to heart and weep even as he wept at the grave of Adam. Although Mr. Editor assumes so much knowledge- concerning the management of a paper, lie evidently does not understand the duties of ediior. in chief, since he gives tho entire supervi- editor-in-chief secnis fond of lame words and in an cincrgciicv coins the motion ' si.n of the Sit dk.nt to the local editm ions one, reasonubilitv He mixes up, (This muy be accounted for by the editor indiscriminately, adjectives and advents being chief cook etc. of his paper, and ill the modification of a erb. and violates .therefore he cannot be exnected to know the simplest rules of syntax to such an , the d liferent duties that devolve upon dif- oxtent that the article, which is a very good one in its thought, is badly marled. The Ibpurlor plainly shows, as we have heard remarked by repiesentalives of the University, that the students take no inter est in the paper, there being home who scarcely know of its existence. The od itors should put more life in the paper, which they can never do as long as they continue to publish poems two pages long, and fail in making each and every depart mont interesting and up to the times,. Tho literati I'ud a want, that lias long boon fell, supj ed by Jlegont Fi field's new papoi, Lit. and Ed. Xutcs. It is brim- ferunt inembeis of the editorial stall. The tndt uttt' Journal unt n wel come visitor to our table, and wo enjoy reading its well written articles and sensi ble editorials. The local dopartmonl is not as lively as is usually expected from a wide awake local editor, for tlioro is no school of any note but can furnish" mate rials for three or four pages of interesting items, while to this department tho stu dent, following the bent of the human mind, turns first, and ho should not bo turned away hungry for some sauce to iiven up the solid diet. The uuthor of "Nature and the Human Mind" has u