tion, and one be sent to the bereaved parents of the deceased. ATTEST L. RAY. MORGAN, Recording'Sec'y SCIENTIFIC AND TE CHNICAL • SCHOOLS. BY GEN. FRANCIS A. WALKER *Address of General Francis A. Wrikor, LL. D., President of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, on the occa sion of the formal opening of the new Engineering Building of The Pennsylvania State College, February 92, 1893. The opening of a new building, dedicated to the work of education, under whatever name, in whatever grade, cannot fail to be an occasion of interest to every teacher and to everyone deserv ing the name of scholar; and should not fail to excite pleasure in the breast of all citizens, let• tered or unlettered, who regard the wel'are of the Commonwealth. But a celebration like this of to-day, where a large and commodious building for instruction in engineering, both theoretical and experimental, is dedicated to its uses, in the presence of .the Executive .and members of the Legislature of a great State, is an event especially to attract and delight those of us who have devot ed ourselves to what we deem a reform in educa tion, by, which many of the traditional studies and exercises of the College shall be replaced by cours es not only more immediately and practically use ful to the student and to the community, but also, as we conceive them, more truly educational, in the sense of more fully calling forth and develop ing the powers of observation, reflection, judg ment, and self-determination ; in the seine, more over, of more completely arousing the interest of, the pupil and commanding the exertion of all his faculties and energiesin congenial work. As one who has, for full twenty years, been connected THE' FREE LANCE. JOHN FOSTER. JESSE J. WALL. GEO. C. BUTZ. Cominillee with scientific and technical schools, schools, standing in the same relation as this is to the State and the Nation, I do, with all my heart, congratulate the President and Trustees of the Pennsylvania State College, and the Governor, Legislature, and citizens of this great common wealth, upon the completion of this noble and commodious structure, conceived and built tinder the inspiration of the new education. The growth of scientific and technical schools, during the past thirty years, has savored of the marvelous. BAore the war there were, indeed, a few institutions which boldly departed from the college type and essayed to educate their students in science and the technical applications of sci ence. First of these in point of time, and still of high rank amid a host of schools of similar aims, one.must name the Rensselaer Polytechnic Insti tute of Troy. Then came, simultaneously, in 1846-7, the Scientific School of Yale, now known as the Sheffield School, and the Lawrence Scien tific School of Harvard, the latter destined to re main through a long term of years chiefly a school of research ; the former, from the first, important alike as a school of research and as a school of in struction. Your own institution came into exist ence in the later years of this period, though un der a less pretentious name. The school with which I have the honor to be connected, was chartered by the legislature of Massachusetts four days before the firing on Sumter. . The close of the Great Rebellion marked the beginning of a new epoch in our national life, in more than the particular of the extinction of hu man slavery. Those four years of tremendous conflict had wrought the nation up to the appre ciation of a greatness which does not manifest it self in. fine phrases and moving utterance. If the war had done nothing else for our people, it would have done much simply in teaching them that deeds are greater than words. The American people, through those long days of anguish and suspense, learned how much higher and nobler is. the power that can do and dare and endure, than