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The Structural Engineer, Volume 3, Issue 4, 1925
CLARKSON, JAMES SHAND, 20, Shandon Place, Edinburgh; FOURIE, GIDEON FRANCOIS, c/o Dept. Mines and Industries, P.O. Box 99, Pietersburg, Transvaal, South Africa; SHUTER, WILLIAM FRANCIS SMYTH, 1, Shandon Road, Edinburgh; THOMAS, EVAN JAMES, 10, Grange Street, Port Talbot, Glamorgan.
THE columns of a building are of greater importance than any other parts of the construction. At first blush, it may strike one that all parts of a building are equally important; but there is a double, or, in fact, a triple duty on the columns of a building, and hence the stability and integrity of a structure depends in a larger degree on the columns than on any other elements of a structure. Edward Godfrey
The object of the present paper is to show a method of finding the areas of reinforcements in a rectangular member subjected to bending and compression when the stresses are known. Harry Zimmerman