Investigation Committee, Senator Edward
T. Hall, a member of the Legislative Liai-
son Committee for the General Assembly,
and Mr. Jerome Framptom, Jr„ President
of the State Board of Education.
THE PRESIDENT: Delegate Kiefer?
DELEGATE KIEFER: Mr. President,
the Committee on Personal Rights and the
Preamble will continue its hearings on the
questions involving due process and equal
protection. Tomorrow morning we have the
honor of having with us Mr. Jack Green-
berg, From New York City, who is a very
well-known constitutional lawyer and who
has argued many cases before the Supreme
Court. He is actually General Counsel to
the NAACP Legal Defense Educational
Fund. As I say, he has appeared many
times before the Supreme Court. We wel-
come anybody who would like to hear him.
THE PRESIDENT: Delegate Mudd?
DELEGATE MUDD: Mr. President, the
Committee on the Judicial Branch will meet
again immediately following this session.
We had today a meeting at 1:00 P.M. with
the clerks of the courts of the State of
Maryland, and I am happy to report at the
roll call that all of my members apparently
returned unharmed; so I therefore hope all
will be here assembled after this hearing.
Tomorrow morning, we continue on Dele-
gate Proposals 81, 105 and 107, which have
been referred to our committee. For the in-
formation of those delegates who may not
be entirely familiar with Delegate Proposal
81, introduced by Delegate Scanlan and
Bamburger, I might inform the delegates
that that proposal has been characterized
as the proposal to reduce the scope and
length of the judiciary article from the
conventional length of the judicial rule to
administrative level, so it may be an inter-
esting hearing tomorrow.
THE PRESIDENT: Delegate Sherbow?
DELEGATE SHERBOW: Mr. President,
the Committee on State Finance and Taxa-
tion will meet immediately after this hear-
ing. We have scheduled hearings con-
stantly from now on on proposals that have
been referred to this committee, and we
are notifying the sponsors so that they will
be able to appear and present their views.
We are also posting these as fast as we
can so that the public will have knowledge
of these particular areas.
I would like once again to remind those
who are interested in two subjects which
have a general public interest, that the
dates for the lottery hearing and the dates |
for the hearing on the agricultural assess-
ment have been posted; and if anybody is
interested, will they please write to the
committee so we will know how to handle
the session on those days?
THE PRESIDENT: Are there any fur-
ther announcements by committee chair-
men? Delegate Boyer?
DELEGATE BOYER: Mr. President,
the Committee on General Provisions will
meet this evening at 8:00 P.M. and hear Dr.
Harold Reese, State Department of Educa-
tion, at 8:00 P.M.; Father Sellinger, Loyola
College, 8:30 P.M. Monsignor Klein, Mount
St. Mary's, 9:00 P.M. Tuesday, October 3,
1967, Dr. Daniel Gibson, President of Wash-
ington College; also Mrs. John Loizeaux,
ex-President, Maryland Congregation of
Parents and Teachers at 10:30 A.M.; Dr.
William G. Shannon, Associate Executive
Director, American Association of Junior
Colleges, 3:30 P.M.; Dr. Leo Pfefer, Long
Island University, 7:30 P.M.
THE PRESIDENT: Delegate Moser?
DELEGATE MOSER: Mr. President,
the Committee on Local Government will
commence hearings tomorrow at 10:00 A.M.
The general subject will be Metropolitan
and Regional Government and Intergovern-
mental Cooperating Arrangements. The
witnesses will be Walter Scheiber, Execu-
tive Director of the Metropolitan Washing-
ton Council of Governments, Delegate
Sickles, Mr. Robert Young, the Executive
Director of the Baltimore Regional Plan-
ning Council.
The schedule shows a hearing tomorrow
evening at 7:00 P.M. I want to announce
that this has been cancelled, and will be
scheduled at another time.
THE PRESIDENT: Are there any fur-
ther announcements by committee chair-
men? Delegate Scanlan?
DELEGATE SCANLAN: Mr. President,
the Committee on Rules will meet at 12:00
noon tomorrow to consider Resolution No.
8, a proposal that would limit the time
within which delegate proposals would
have to be introduced; and Resolution No.
9, a proposal that would not require a
committee to give notice and an opportunity
for hearing with respect to any delegate
proposal introduced after October 23. All
the delegates having an interest in this
matter are invited. A special invitation is
extended to Delegate Finch.
THE PRESIDENT: Are there any fur-
ther announcements by committee chair-
men? Delegate Beall? |