the publication of the Alumni Record every five years and will, in the very near future, be devoted to the maintenance of scholar ships for worthy students. The Alumni Record is not, as the writer of the letter claimed, a mere repetition of the matter per taining to the alumni which is published in the annual catalogue. It is far more than that; it gives a complete outline of the entire life of each and every alumnus of the institution, which cannot be found elsewhere. An entirely unwarranted attack' is next made by the writer upon the attitude of the professors towards the Colloge and the alumni. He claims that they do not, through the FREE LANCE or other means, keep the alumni informed of the various happen ings in their respective departments, and that they do not take a sufficient interest in the College to occasionally write articles on technical subjects for publication in the FREE LANCE. The FREE LANCE does keep the alumni informed of all " progress in the various departments, the number of students taking the various courses, a brief description of any new apparatus, trips made to points of interest, etc.," in brief, to he sure, but we make it a specialty to omit nothing that can in any way prove of interest to the alumni. In the annual report of the College can each year be found a more complete description of such matters. The FREE LANCE is itself responsible for the fact that technical articles written by the professors seldom appear in it, The FREE LANCE, was originally constituted to be published and still is published " by the students of The Pennsylvania State College," and judg ing from the statements which we have received during the past few years, both verbal and written, from alumni as well as pro fessors and students, and time and again through the exchange columns of our contemporaries, we feel that we have no reason to be ashamed of it as a student publication. A student publica tion it is, and when, if such a time should ever come, the students will be compelled habitually to resort to persons other than them selves and occasionally to the alumni for material for publication, it will be high time for the LANCE to retire upon its past reputa tion and to disappear entirely from the field of College journalism. We agree with the writer, nevertheless, in regard to one phase of the matter as stated by him—that the professors should at times send communications to the 'technical papers to be published in