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Page 92 text:
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ii -J-X ' ?I 'Co'1JfIJ.:B- HEIQDHTIU' '1yIILIfrE-II AYEICUIDEMY- JUNIOR SCHOOL I I I I I MAJOR J. S. COVERDALE Principal Junior School ARITHMETIC If are pleased to announce that the Junior School of Castle I-Ieights, inaugurated six years ago, has grown to such an extent as to require larger quarters. We have recently purchased the magnificent stone mansion, adjoining our present campus, together with one hundred seventy-Iive acres of land. This addition to our equipment, pictured in the colored section of the catalogue, cost over S'IO0,000 to build and is luxurious in every appointment. This will accommodate seventy-Five boys in a beautiful home on a separate campus wholly apart from the Senior School. We wish to emphasize the fact that we have a real Junior School, separate from the Senior School, and as distinct a unit of the Academy as is the latter. Its new buildings are located on a campus at some distance from the Senior School campus and the little boys do not come into contact with the older. Castle I-Ieights Junior School is one of the Iew distinctive Schools for little boys in the Country and has perhaps the most superbly appointed quarters. 1'ir'I'fr'ir .Iunior School Faculty MAJOR J. S. COVERDALE Principal Junior School ARITHMETIC CAPTAIN A. R. ROCI-IELLE GEOGRAPHY AND HISTORY 1 CAPTAIN L. R.-'I-ILJDSON SCIENCE AND MANUAL TRAINING CAPTAIN W. I. KRIEG ENGLISH MISS GLENN CARTER I-IOUSEMOTI-IER MRS. I-I. J. CHAPMAN NURSE
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Page 91 text:
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'Cc91cffI'.T.vB'HfQlq-HJTJT'fYIILIJI'olI I'xY-dICdIDEMY- 1100 ' ...,.:g:L...s1....,,,.....,..,Z.......v..L.Z..Q..L.LZZii1ZLW.Z.iT.,sZ,.L..1L.Z .... s.1,:tLZJLi:LL::,L.Z.m..M .,,, .....,......,,.,.IZL....g. .,.. Mp44...E...iLgZ.sgiZ .,,, Ll N,N,, ggi...LZ,...s.....g.,,Af,.W.W.,w.t.i4..,.60i' AVIATION GROUND SCHCJCL Jr-il: Ji. HE AVIATION INDUSTRY Ioolcs almost entirely to the trained young men of America for its present and future personnel. Aside from the ever-increasing program of expansion in our systems of military and naval defense, aviation is destined to become the major carrier in the field of transportation. There are now twenty-seven major airlines operating within the United States, five in the West Indies, Mexico, Central and South Amer- icas, one in Alaslea, one in the Hawaiian Islands and seven in Europe, Africa and Asia, with many auxiliaries contemplated. The combined aeronautical industry rep- resents an investment in excess of three billion dollars, and in all branches employs approximately four hundred thousand slcilled executives, pilots, co-pilots, me- chanics, designing engineers, superintendents of con- struction, slcilled laborers, traffic managers, salesmen, airport managers, and operative personnel. Realizing the interest in this field Castle Heights Military Academy has, with the guidance and coopera- tion of the Naval and Military Air Corps, the United States Department of Commerce and the Parlts Air Col- lege of East St. Louis, Missouri, installed a ground course directed by Maj. W. B. Estes, World War flier, and covering the following subjects: 'I. Qccupations in the Aviation Industry. Q. Balloons and Lighter-than-air Craft. 3. Principles of Flight. 4. Construction of Airplanes and Autogiros. 5. Aircraft Propellers. 6. Aircraft Engines--Theory and Construction. 7. Instruments. 8. I-Tarachutes and Radio. 9. Navigation and Meteorology. 'IO. Air I.aw and Regulations. Emphasis is placed upon the fundamental principles. The general textboolc used is A General Text on Aeronautics by Hilton B. Luslc. Adequate reference boolcs are provided for use by the Flying Cadets. Each cadet is furnished with the latest pamphlets and bulletins published by the United States Department of Commerce and manufacturers of motors, airplanes and instruments. The leading aeronautical magazines are maintained in the library for reference. T Excepting textboolcs, there is no extra charge for the Ground School Course. It is not a credit course but is talcen as an extra curriculum activity. In the main, the ground course is coordinated with the academic curriculum, thus affording the 'flying Cadets an opportunity to apply in a practical manner the mathe- matical and scientific theories studied in their regular courses. In addition to the laboratory at the Academy, the' famous Slcy Harbor field and Nashville Municipal Airports afford an opportunity for observation of flying in its most modern phases, and with the written per- mission of the parents, cadets are permitted to malte short flights in a licensed United States Department of Commerce plane, piloted by competent, licensed pilots.
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Page 93 text:
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