PLAN No. 944. LIST OF POSITIONS IN AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION SERVICE
- Extension staff:
- Director.
- Vice director.
- State leader.
- State leader, junior, extension.
- Assistant State leaders.
- Agricultural extension:
- Leaders.
- Assistants.
- Agronomy, specialist.
- Farm crops:
- Associates.
- Assistants (3 to 8).
- Soils:
- Associates.
- Assistants (3 to 6).
- Animal husbandry:
- Specialist.
- Associates (2 to 5).
- Assistants (3 to 7).
- Botany, agricultural:
- Associate.
- Assistants.
- Club work, assistants (2 to 4):
- Boys’ and girls’ clubs—
- Leader.
- Assistants.
- Canning clubs—
- Leader.
- Assistants.
- Pig clubs—
- Leader.
- Assistants.
- Calf clubs—
- Leader.
- Assistants.
- Garden clubs—
- Leader.
- Assistants.
- Crop pests:
- Specialist.
- Associate.
- Assistants.
- Dairy husbandry:
- Specialist.
- Associates (3 to 10).
- Assistants (2 to 7).
- Farm demonstration work, State leader:
- Divisional, each branch—
- Specialists (5 to 12).
- Assistants (5 to 10).
- Farm, advisory—
- County agents (1 each county).
- Assistants.
- Junior extension—
- State leader.
- Assistants.
- Farmers’ institutes, specialist.
- Farm management:
- Demonstrator.
- Assistants (several).
- Farm organization:
- Specialist.
- Associates (2 to 7).
- Assistants (2 to 8).
- Hog production, assistant.
- Horticulture, specialist:
- Demonstration—
- Assistants (3 to 8).
- Spraying—
- Specialist.
- Assistants.
- Market surveys:
- Associate.
- Assistant.
- Poultry husbandry:
- Specialist.
- Associates.
- Assistants.
- Management, associate.
- Farm poultry, associate.
- Publications:
- Editor.
- Assistants.
- Rural engineering, assistant.
- Short courses and exhibits:
- Superintendent.
- Associates.
- Assistants.
- Veterinary extension:
- State veterinarian.
- Associate.
- Assistants.
PHOTOGRAPHY, PHOTO-ENGRAVING, AND THREE-COLOR WORK
Acknowledgment
This monograph was prepared by Prof. David J. Cook, Demonstrator and Instructor, in the Bissell Colleges, at Effingham, Ill., under direction of Charles H. Winslow, Chief of the Research Division of the Federal Board for Vocational Education. Acknowledgment is due to Dr. John Cummings, of the Research Division, for editorial assistance.
In the field of photography, photo-engraving, and three-color work you can succeed and re-establish yourself in civil life as an independent worker, in spite of your handicap, provided you have natural aptitude for the work. You can do this even if you have lost your hearing, or lost a hand, an arm, a foot, or a leg, or both legs, or an arm and a leg.
In the best studies and shops of the country, from $25 to $75 a week may be made by competent men; or one may establish himself in business with pleasant surroundings and ideal working conditions. The photographer and photo-engraver meet people at their best, and the taking of a picture, or the making of an engraving becomes merely an incident in a pleasant business transaction. Much of the work may be done while seated, and the work as a whole requires but little strength.
Photography, photo-engraving, or three-color work may be practiced as an art, as a business, as a profession, or as a science, and one has a wide range of choice in electing just the kind of work suitable to one’s condition, preferences, and past experience.
PLAN No. 945. AIR BRUSH WORK
Air brush work pertains to the working-up of enlargements and contact prints in black and white, sepia, or color. Expert operation of the air brush is little less than magical in its delicate shading and color effects. Operators of the air brush command high salaries and are in great demand.