Professionals: Their Availability in North Carolina Communities (Progress Report SOC 68)

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Item information

Title:
Professionals: Their Availability in North Carolina Communities (Progress Report SOC 68)
Topics:
Community and Extension
Subjects:
Agricultural extension work -- North Carolina
Sociology
Original Format:
Publication (Document)
Extent:
101 pages
Item identifier:
NCSU505350_20220912_46496
Publisher:
North Carolina Cooperative Extension Service more info on North Carolina Cooperative Extension Service 
Created Date:
Genre:
Extension publications
Progress reports
Names:
North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service more info on North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service 
Location:
North Carolina
Digital Project:
Project CERES: Project Ceres digitizes historical publications of the North Carolina Cooperative Extension Service, making materials electronically accessible and more easily discoverable so researchers can find how agricultural education was represented in the latter half of the 20th century.
Progress Report SOC: Issued by the North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station and North Carolina State College's Department of Sociology and Anthropology.

Source information

Repository:
Special Collections Research Center at NC State University Libraries
Collection:
Agricultural Experiment Station Progress Report RS (Rural Sociology) (HN79 .N8 A3) held by Special Collections Research Center at NC State University Libraries
Note field:
Not all materials from the physical collection may have been scanned. Images may have been enhanced for web access.
Rights:
For questions regarding copyright or permissions, please refer to our Reproduction, Use, Citation, and Copyright page (http://d.lib.ncsu.edu/collections/about).
Funding:
Project Ceres is a collaboration between the United States Agricultural Information Network (USAIN), the Agriculture Network Information Collaborative (AgNI]), and the Center for Research Libraries (CRL). It supports ongoing preservation and digitization of collections in the field of agriculture, and it supports small projects that facilitate the retention and preservation of print materials essential to study of the History and Economics of Agriculture that were published between 1860 and 1988 and to make those materials accessible electronically through digitization.