HOUSE JOURNAL
SPECIAL SESSION
ANNAPOLIS, MD., March 13, 1958.
STATE OF MARYLAND, to wit:
This being the day appointed by the Governor for a Special Session
of the General Assembly of Maryland at 10.00 o'clock A. M. Mr. George
W. Owings, Chief Clerk of the House of Delegates during the regular
session of February 1958, called the House to order and, after the offering
of the prayer by Hon. S. Fenton Harris, the Reading Clerk called the roll
and the following members answered to their names.
Messrs.—
Speaker, Combs, Raley, Harris (R. B.), Joiner, Kirkland, Melvin, Ridout, Tawney,
Wade, Whitmore, Dowell, Hance, Jenkins, Parran, Boone, Brewster, Culver, Jackson,
Maguire, State, Harrison, Latham, Lowe, Quinn, Riggin, Simpkins, Adams,
Bennett, Brinsfield, Corkran, Burkley, McCool, Mackie, Loveless, Machen, Nichols,
Sasscer, Sickles, Wilkinson, Eaton, Risley, Hickman, Polk, Stevens, Derr, Harris (S. F.),
Payne, Smelser, Utterback, Virts, Hatem, Hess, Moore, Tydings, Blades, Hughes (H.),
Dabrowski, Milanicz, Mrozinski, Nowakowski, Silk, Walters, Antonelli, Bartos, Be-
hounek, Hedrick, Mach, Urban, Acker, Brooks, Buffington, Culotta, Kenney, McNeal,
Abramson, Cole, Friedman, Hatchett, Pollack, Robinson, Bacharach, Cardin, Fitzgerald,
Mandel, Silver, Baynes, Corrigan, Hodges, Loose, Meyers (W. W.), Myers (W. J.),
Ankeney, Berkson, Bloom, Brewer, Huyett, Porter, Browning, Gude, Lee, Schweinhaut,
Wheeler, Woodward, Berry, Cook, Driscoll, Hughes (G. R.), Reed, Williams, Barnes,
Hahn, Six, Smith, Brown, Murray, Cannon, Hanna, Larmore, White, Ashby, Edwards,
Glotfelty. Total—94
PROCLAMATION BY THE GOVERNOR OF MARYLAND CONVENING THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF MARYLAND IN SPECIAL SESSION
AT ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND, THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1958,
AT 10:00 O'CLOCK, A.M.
WHEREAS, the 1958 session of the General Assembly was confronted
with pressing budgetary and financial problems which were difficult of
solution because of a number of factors; and
WHEREAS, in order ultimately to reach a majority accord to fulfill
the Constitutional obligations and duties of the Legislature within the
thirty day limitation of Section 15 of Article III of the Constitution of
Maryland, it was necessary to resort to an unprecedented degree to the
practice or custom of turning back the clock, accompanied by extended
recesses, is that legislative days did not keep pace with calendar days; and
WHEREAS, the Attorney General of Maryland has expressed some
doubt as to the validity of important and vital legislation enacted after
the lapse of thirty calendar days of the 1958 legislative session because
of extended recesses and thereby the possible unduly extensive resort
to the legal fiction of legislative days; and
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