INDEX TO VOLUME CXV
THE
AMERICAN ARCHITECT
239 WEST 39TH ST., NEW YORK JANUARY TO JUNE, 1919
EDITORIAL COMMENT
Figures refer to text pages
—A— Architect of Tomorrow, 97.
Architect President of Royal Academy, 310. Argument, A False, 678.
Art, A Leadership in, Needed, 167.
—B—
Build Now, 269, 373. Building Conditions Improving, 881. Building, Speed Up at Once! 575. Building Work Reviving, 547.
Busy, Why Not Get (Farm Building), 785.
—C—
Circular of Advice, Revision of, 373. Convention at Nashville, 609, 645. Convention, Before the, 609.
—D—
“Democratizing the Institute,” 515, 575.
Design and Fitness, Conflict Between, 457.
—E—
Education, A Report on, 167. Educational Measure, A Comprehensive, 232. Efficiency Test, An, 270.
—H—
Housing Problems m New York, Solving, 882. Humanities in Educational Curricula, 576.
—I—
Industrial Welfare Bill, 309. Institute, Democratizing the, 515, 575. Iowa’s Housing Law, 677.
—K— Kohn’s, Mr., Review, 749.
Labor Value Measured by Production, 786.
License Engineering Profession, Movement to, 202.
—M—
Market, What an “Open” Means to Building,
750. Memorials, and the American Academy of
Arts and Letters, 202.
Memorials in New York, 131. Memorials, War, 98.
Money More Available for Mortgage Loans, Making, 815.
—N—
Nashville Convention, 609, 645. New York State Association, 881. Nineteen-Nineteen, 1.
—o— Opportunities, Wasted, 489.
Opportunities Wasted, Recovered, 851.
Opportunity, Conserving an Architectural, 309.
—P—
Plan Service by Institute Chapters, 851.
Post Office Building in City Hall Park, 882.
Post-War Committee, Co-operating with
(Architectural Education), 415.
Post-War Committee, Program of, 339.
Post-War Committee, Relationship of Architect
to Public, 489. Post-War Program, Relation of the Institute
to Other Professional Societies, 457. Profession, Safeguarding the, 678.
Public Works, Planning Department of, 490,
552, 646.
Publicity Methods, Illegitimate, 416.
—S—
Safety and Sanity, 70.
Shadows and Straws, 69.
Specification, The Definite, 131, 374. Sport of Chance or Master of Destiny, 231. State Societies, 69, 340.
—T—
Teaching History by Pictures, 310. Thousand in 19-19, 677.
—W—
What Could Be Done, 709.
ACCORDING TO SUBJECT
Figures refer to text pages
Architects and Engineers. By Willis Polk, 6. Architects, Registration of. By D. Everett
Waid, 738.
Architectural Causerie, 878.
Architectural Competitions. By Thomas Crane
Young, 311.
Architectural Criticism, 707.
Architectural-Engineering Practice, Looking
Forward to, 4. Architectural History of a Western Town.
By Thomas E. Tallmadge, 443.
Architecture After the War. By C. H.
Blackall.
Architectural Education, 7. Organization, 89. Efficiency, 331.
What Is an Architect, 481. Architecture, Analyzing Development in Amer
ican. By David J. Varon, 405. Architecture and Engineering. By Thomas
Crane Young, 403.
Architecture, English Review of American, 784.
Army Educational Commission, 844.
Art in Industry, England Revives, 783.
—B—
Bank, People’s National, of Brooklyn. Koch
& Wagner, Architects, 705. Beauty and Economics. By Harvey Wiley
Corbett, 11.
Build Now, Why Not? By J. C. Murphy, 485. Build, We Are Going to. By Willis Polk, 6. Building Costs and Earnings:
The Office Building Outlook. By William
Marshall Ellis, 17. How Office Building Managers Have Met War Conditions. By Edwin S. Jewell, 19.
Building for Health. By Woods Hutchinson,
121. Buildings a Factor in Production Costs. By
F. E. Davidson, 810.