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Show Women's Income and Earnings 154 for administrative officers, deans of women received the second low salary ($8,216). Also low were the salaries of registrars ($8,142) and head librarians ($8,883). Among deans of professional and graduate schools were deans of home economics ($15,250) and of nursing ($13,000)-two posts usually held by women. All admin istrative salaries covered a full 12 months (1963-64). Junior college teachel's.-Junior colleges also were surveyed for salary information in. 1963-64. The 3,991 women teachers employed by public junior colleges had a median salary of $7,522; the 1,005 women teachers in private junior colleges, $5,346. With salaries computed on the basis of 9 months of service in 1963-64, women's medians were lower than men's by $393 in public junior colleges and by $685 in private junior colleges. PSt median 73. Salaries of Professional and Technical Workers in Private Industry A survey of selected professional, administrative, technical, and clerical salaries paid by private industry, made by the Bureau of Labor Statistics in February-March 1964, indicated variations in salaries among different occupations." In all these occupations women were a relatively small proportion of the total employed at the most between 30 and 34 percent of tracers and :at the least less than 10 percent of class I directors of personnel and class II account ants, engineering technicians, land managers of office services. The median was received directors of highest salary ($9,732) by personnel (class I) ; the lowest ($4,275), by tracers. Job analysts (class I), of whom women constituted from 20 to 24 percent of those employed, had median salary of $6,828. Job analysts (class II), of whom constituted from 10 to 14 percent of those employed, had a median salary of $7,380. a women 74. Salaries in Professional Hospital Nursing Occupations Hospital occupations cover a wide range of skills and functions. Full-time registered professional nurses and other professional and technical employees accounted for about one-fifth of all hospital personnel in mid-1963 About one-tenth were office clerical em ployees; and, as shown in section 71, about one-half were other non professional employees. The remainder were part-time workers and those employed in executive and administrative positions." "National Survey of Professional, Administrative, Technical, and Clerical Pay. Febru Bull. No. 1422. Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of ary-March 1964." II Labor. 1964. "Industry Wage Survey-Hospitals, Mid-1963." Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor. ;June 1964. 10 BUll. No. 1409. Bureau of Labor |