50 



CAENKGIE INSTITUTION 



Scientific staff — Continued. 



YEAR. 



:hird. 



Fourth 

 and fol- 

 lowing 

 years. 



PERMANENT STAFF. 



TEMPORARY STAFF. 



Director 6,ooo-S,ooo 



Mathematician 3,oc!0-6,ooo 



Physicist 3,000-6,000 



Ph5'sicist 3,ooa-6,ooo 



Physicist 3,000-6,000 



Chemist 3,000-6,000 



Analyt. Chemist. ..... 2,000-3,000 



f Director 6,000-8,000 



Mathematician 3,000-5,000 



Physicist 3,000-6,01^0 



Physicist 3,000-6,000 



Phy.sicist 3,000-6,000 



Physicist 3;000-S,ooo 



Chemi.st 3,000-6,000 



Analyt. Chemist 2,000-3,000 



Cotnputor , 1,000-1,500 



Ass't Phys T ,ooo-T,8oo 



Ass't Phys 1,000-1,800 



Ass't Phys 1,000-1,800 



A.ss't Chem. .... 1 ,000-1,800 



Ass't Chem 1,000-1,500 



Computor 1,000-1,500 



Ass't Phys 1,000-1,800 



Ass't Phys 1,000-1,800 



Ass't Phys 1,000-1,800 



Ass't Phys 1,0^^0-1,800 



AvSs't Chem 1,000-1,800 



Ass't Chem... 1,000-1,500 



Total salaries of scientific staff. 



First year. . . 

 Second year. 

 Third year. . 

 Fourth year 



Permanent pay roil. 



$15,000-26,000 

 15,000-26,000 

 23,000-41,000 

 26,000-47,000 



|i,ocx)-i,5oo 



3,000-5,100 



6,ch:)o-io,2oo 



7,000-12,000 



116,000-27,500 

 lS,oou-3i,ioo 

 29,000-51,200 

 33,00' --59,000 



33,000-59,000 



The reasons for the segregation by years are as follows : 

 The mathematician, requiring no apparatus beyond an arith- 

 mometer, cannot begin his labors too soon. 



The services of the director, a physicist and a chemist will be 

 needed in planning the laboratory and initiating steps for its e«j[uip- 

 ment. These men will therefore be needed from the commence- 

 ment of the enterprise. During the second year some facilities 

 should be available for research work for the physicist and the 

 chemist, though only certain lines of inquiry would be open to 

 them. It is estimated that at the end of two years the building 

 would be sufficiently completed to permit of the employment of nearly 

 the whole staff, partly in installing the fiual equipment and partly 

 in research. 



In estimating for the mechanical and clerical force required I 

 have also supposed that employes will be engaged only when 

 needed, as shown in the following table: 



