cmctJLAR ABD CATALOGUE of the ARIZONA TEBRITORIAL NORMAL SCHOOL Tempe, Arioona **** 1889-90 - 2 - LIST OF STUDEtlTS, 1888-9 Hattie Bryant • Belle Robson Dollie Lee • • Lulu Sampson • • • • • Maricopa • Maricopa • • Maricopa Maricopa Anna White • • • • • • • Mari copa Josie Carroll • • • • • • • • Maricopa Nanna Brown • • • • • • liaricopa Rosa Brown. • • .• • • Maricopa Cassie Porter • • • • • • • • Maricopa Jennie Steele • • • • • • • • Mariano Aguirre • • • • • • • Ida Empty • • • • • • • • • !" Russell White • • • •••• Frederick Webb • • • • • • • Fanny Hawley • • • • • • • • Edward Coughran • • • • Lena Coughran • • • • • • • • Emma Harrill • • Louis Corbell • Thomas Corbell Rosetta Pomeroy Clara Miller • Charles Wildes Katie Brown • • Jesse Hill • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Maricopa • • Pima • .Pinal Maricopa • Graham Maricopa Yavapai Yavapai Yavapai Maricopa Maricopa Maricopa Maricopa Cochise Yavapai Cochise - 3 - COUR<:iE o~· ;:,TUDY First Year hrith.Tlgebra, Elementary (Robinson) i'nglish Composition Zoology (bteele} Physics (~uackenbos) Reading ¥1ord Analysis--especially the Greek awl Latin elements of English (Swinton) ;:,econd Year Algebra (Robinson's University) Chemistry--Eleinents and their combinations Rhetoric (~uackenbos) English Liter&ture (Collier) Physical Geography (Appleton) Rhetorical \\ork--Orations and Lis<:ussions Civil Government (Andrews) 0chool Law Geometry (Robinson) Political E<:onomy Methods of Teaching (Brooks} General Review - 4 G:ENERAL INFORMATION The first term of the school year will commence on Monday, September 2, 1889, and continue sixteen weeks; the second term will open January 6, 1890, and continue twenty-four v1eeks. LOCATION The TERRITORIAL NORi.liJ, i:iCEOOL. is located at Tempe, Maricopa county, on the line of tbe Maricopa & Phoenix Railroad. Its situation is in a healthy locality, &nd in the midst of & farming corr...rnuni t:.r. The building is situated on a twenty-acre tract of land, and is a brick structure 60 x 70 feet in size anu one-story high. h ten-foot hall extends through the building from north to south. Four rooms are provided, each thirty feet square. The entrance to the hall at each end is by double doors; and French windows placed at regular intervals of a few feet around the rooms afford ample light and ventilation. The building is surrounded by a hip roof, leaving a space of about eight feet between the roof a.~d the ceiling. The entire structure is surrounded by a ver&nda twelve feet wide. Ventilators admit the paso<>.ge of air from every direction, thus providing as cool a building as can be devised for this climate. ~UALIFTCATIONS FOR nDMISSION Applicants for admission must not be less than fifteen yesrs of age, and will be - 5 admitted on examination only. They must be or good morals and industrious habits. They must be able to po.ss an exa1r.ination showing their ability to parse the words of any ordinary sentence; to solve any problem in arithmetic up to and including commoh and decimal fractions; in geography, to bound any State or territory, and locate the principal rivers, cities, etc., of the world; to write a legible hand, and to read intelligently. GRAfJUh.TION In oraer to graduate, tbe student ffiUSt be at least eighteen years of age; must have attended tee school for a period of t\venty-t¥10 weeks, and must _pss.s an exainination in all the studies of the required course in the following manner: When the class is ready ror graduation, the Principal will notify the Board; anc at least one member of said Board shall be present at tbe exu.:riination. The examination rNill be conducted in writing; and the Principal shall forward to the Board, for their consiaeration in June, all paeers containing the answers to all ~uestions propounded at the examination. lf it a;ipears rrom the papers that the applicants for e;raduation have passed the required examination 9.Ild possess the learning and other qualifications necessary to teach a good co111~on school, said persons shall receive certificates which shall be evidence of graduation, and which shall entitle the holders to teach a gra.T.ir.ar school in any county of the Territory for the period of rour years. Such certificates shall be dated rrom the time the Board meets in June of that year, and shall be signed by the President of the Board and attested by the Secretary. - 6 EJiPENSES Tuition is free to those who obtain an appointment from a member of the Legislature, and to those who sign a declaration that they attend the school for the purpose of preparing themselves for teaching in the public schools of Arizona. All others are charged four dollars per month. Board, including room, light, fuel, etc., can be obtained at from twenty to thirty dollars per month. A.PPARATU'=>, FTC. The school is supplied with most of tbe apparatus needed in illustratir.g the subjects taught. The Board has recently purchased a full set of the Encyclopaedia Brittanica, and also a nwnber of instrwnents for illustrating the laws of physics. DISCIPLIKE There should be no need to refer to the matter of discipline in a Normal School. Only those will be admitted who have v;ellformed and correct habits. This is in no sense a reform school; and young ladies and gentlemen who are not disposed to cheerfully submit to all the wholesome restrains found necessary for the good reputation of the school will be promptly dismissed. Those only who do the work of the class creditably, end show an ability to contirue, will be promoted with the class. No student will be permitted to pass over the work of any term more than twice. - 7 - The Principal of the School represents the authority of the Board, and is helci responsible for the enforcement of the regulations made by the Board for the government of the school. He shall havs control of the building, apparatus, books, etc. , as well as the grounds.