EDUCATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS 355 



Francisco), the College of Agriculture occupies two 

 main buildings of concrete and granite, three frame 

 buildings of considerable capacity and numerous out- 

 buildings including greenhouses and barns. From 

 its headquarters at the University seat, the College 

 of Agriculture and Experiment Station direct their 

 work of instruction, research and extension which 

 is pursued in all parts of the State. 



University instruction in agriculture is carried 

 on at Berkeley by seventy-three professors and 

 instructors, teaching their subjects in 1921 to 611 

 regular students enrolled in agriculture, 450 students 

 enrolled in other colleges, and to 5625 students in 

 correspondence courses. The Experiment Station 

 published in 1920, 850,000 copies of bulletins and 

 circulars, and pursued in the laboratories fifty-eight 

 research projects. At Berkeley also are the head- 

 quarters of the Agricultural Extension work with a 

 large local staff administering the service of county 

 agents in thirty-seven counties (in twenty of which 

 there are also assistant agents) and of home demon- 

 stration agents in twelve counties. 



On the University Farm at Davis comprising 779 

 acres (with 100 acres additional leased), there is 

 an outfit of thirty -one instructional and housing and 

 farm buildings. Forty-seven instructors and assis- 

 tants give instruction to 87 University students from 

 Berkeley; to 727 Farm School students taking 

 instruction of high-school grade (chiefly in agricul- 

 tural and horticultural practice) for one to three 

 years as they may elect; to 497 students in short 



