10 



TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY 



BY-LAWS 



Revised to July, 1922 



"The Corporation is constituted for the 

 purpose of increasing the efficiency and 

 influence of the profession, and to foster 

 good fellowship among its members, and 

 to promote the public welfare." — From 

 Agreement of Association. 



Article I 

 MEMBERSHIP 



Sec. 1. The membership shall con- 

 sist of Members, Fellows, Associates, 

 Corresponding, and Honorary Members. 



Sec. 2^. Members shall be landscape 

 architects, at least twenty-one years of 

 age, of all-round technical training and in 

 good professional standing, whose ca- 

 pacity, attainments, aims, and character 

 are judged to be such as will promote the 

 objects of the Society. "All-round tech- 

 nical training" is to be understood to in- 

 clude technical training in respect to 

 plants and the making and execution of 

 planting plans, in respect to grading and 

 the designing and direction of engineer- 

 ing work incidental to landscape archi- 

 tecture, and in respect to the designing 

 of architectural structures incidental to 

 landscape architecture, as well as train- 

 ing in design in the solution of problems 

 involving all or any of these. "Good 

 professional standing" implies that the 

 candidate for membership is one who 

 practices the art of fitting land for humin 

 use and enjoyment, and whose compen- 

 sation is received directly from clients or 

 employers for professional services ren- 

 dered and not in the form of a commer- 

 cial or speculative profit on materials or 



labor nor from persons supplying materi- 

 als or labor to said clients or employers. 



Sec. 3. Fellows shall be landscape 

 architects of at least two years' standing 

 as Members and of not less than 30 years 

 of age, who have been active in the pro- 

 fession for at least ten years and who 

 have been in independent practice for at 

 least five years, and who have produced 

 work sufficient in amount, in range, and 

 in quality, to afford conclusive evidence 

 of their attainment to a high degree of 

 professional competence. 



A landscape architect in independent 

 practice is one whose practice of the pro- 

 fession is conducted wholly or mainly 

 under his own name and upon his own 

 financial and professional responsibility 

 or under the name and upon the financial 

 and professional responsibility of a firm 

 of which he is a member ; provided, how- 

 ever, that for the purposes of this section 

 the Board of Trustees may, in their dis- 

 cretion, classify as in independent prac- 

 tice a landscape architect, in the employ 

 of a corporation, firms or individual en- 

 gaged in the practice of landscape archi- 

 tecture, of whom it is indicated on the 

 letterhead of his employer and stated in 

 writing to the Board by his employer 

 that he is habitually charged with pro- 

 fessional responsibilities on behalf of his 

 employer equivalent to those assumed by 

 a partner in a firm. 



Sec. 4. Associates shall be persons, 

 other than landscape architects, who 

 have performed notable service in ad- 



\ancing the interest of the profession. 



