Preface 1
Chapter 1 Iowa
Chapter 2 Oregon
Chapter 3 Stanford University
Chapter 4 Start of Engineering Life in the United States
Chapter 5 Engineering in Australia
Chapter 6 Engineering in China
Chapter 7 Engineering over the World
Chapter 8 International Free-Lance Engineering
Chapter 9 Family Living and Extra-Curricular Activities
Chapter 10 Living with the British
Chapter 11 The Profession of Engineering
Chapter 12 The Coming of the World War
Chapter 13 The American Committee in London
THE BELGIAN RELIEF—1914-1920
Chapter 14The Belgian Relief
Chapter 15 Financing the Relief and International Trouble
Chapter 16 Pioneering the First Food Administration in History
Chapter 17 Troubles with Ships
Chapter 18 Troubles Crossing War Frontiers
Chapter 19 Living with the Germans
Chapter 20 Trouble in the United States Senate
Chapter 21 Some Personages in the Relief
Chapter 22 Some Family and American Diplomatic Matters and
Colonel House
Chapter 23 America Goes to War and the C.R.B. Shifts Its Base
Chapter 24 The Belgian Relief Picture Changes Again with the Armistice
Chapter 25 Interlude Twenty Years After
UNITED STATES FOOD ADMINISTRATION—1917-1919
Chapter 26 Policies and Organization
Chapter 27 Food and Military Strategy—The Food Blockade—The Great Food
Crisis Which Never Came
Chapter 28 Washington War Organization—The War Council—And
Various Matter
Chapter 29 Some Results of the Food Administration
Chapter 30 Family Life in Washington During the War
Chapter 31 Transforming the Food Administration into a New Mission
THE RELIEF AND RECONSTRUCTION OF EUROPE—1918-1920
Chapter 32 At the Dawn of the Armistice
Chapter 33 Some Disagreeable Surprises
Chapter 34 Setting Up Organization
Chapter 35 More Efforts to Cooperate
Chapter 36 Some Down-to-Earth Problems: World Supplies, Finance, Accounting,Communications, Passports, Government Contracts
Chapter 37 More Down-to-Earth Problems: Ships, Railways, Ports and Canals,Coal, Barter of Internal Supplies
Chapter 38 Child Feeding—Pestilence—Prisoners of War—The Stanford
War Library
Chapter 39 Breaking American Food Price Guarantees—the Continuing Blockadeof Europe
Chapter 40 The Allies, the Neutrals, Belgium and Poland
Chapter 41 Finland and the Other Baltic States
Chapter 42 Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and Armenia
Chapter 43 Germany, Austria, Bulgaria and Turkey
Chapter 44 Hungary and Roumania
Chapter 45 Russia
Chapter 46 Approaching the End
Chapter 47 Some Results
Chapter 48 There Was Idealism
THE AMERICAN CRUSADE AND THE HALLS OF PEACE
Chapter 49 The American Crusade and the Halls of Peace
Chapter 50 Difficulties Confronting Wilson—and Some Personalities
Chapter 51 Some Incidents of Peace-Making
Chapter 52 The Peace Treaties
Chapter 53 What Happened to the Fourteen Points and the Additional
Eleven Points
Chapter 54 Why America Cannot Make Peace in Europe
Chapter 55 Living in Paris—and Leaving for Home