SPEEDY... VERSATILE r For the rapid transporta- tion of orders between de- partments in factory, office, or hospital . to speed a "hot" sample from mill to laboratory. deliver- ing a cannister of oil from tanker to test lab before unloading .... nothing-but nothing, is as versatile as a Grover Transitube installa- tion. Whether you specify the conventional type system with but four or five sta- tions, or decide on the new- est electroncially controlled Dial-A-Matic installation of fifty or more stations, you'll be serving your client best by using Grover equipment, backed by 43 years of con- stant application in this field alone. May we be of service to you anywhere in Florida? ASSOCIATED ELEVATOR & 'SUPPLY COMPANY 501 N. W. 54th St., Miami 6 AIA Meeting Notes . (Continued from Page 4) thus do everything possible to keep proper legal form in contract relations; to intensify P/R programs to explain architects' positions in such cases. Another: Various Chapter Affairs Committees in Florida should get an Architect-in-Training Program under- way. The Institute's staff in Wash- ington has much helpful information on this program. Still others: Mem- Eight Florida Architects Win AIA Design Awards Florida can be proud of the quality of her residential architects. Of the eighteen firms accorded honors at the New Orleans Convention Homes for Better Living program, eight were from our own Sunshine State. Over 200 firms submitted designs in the program to promote good residential design co-sponsored by the AIA, House 6 Home and McCall's Mag- azine. Florida award winners were: VIc- TOR A. LUNDY, Sarasota, honor award bership may be broadened at national level soon. Possibilities of a national student membership and a national associate membership were discussed. And, relative to membership, a new national directory will be published in 1960. Finally, the 1960 National Con- vcntion will be in San Francisco, starting April 19, 1960. See you at the Office Practice Seminar Meeting in Palm Beach, August 7! in the custom-built category; ROBERT C. BROWARD, Jacksonville, honor award in the merchant-builder cate- gory; PAUL RUDOLPH, Sarasota, two merit awards, and ALFRED B. PARKER, in the custom house ( ikg:riTr, '' ID TUDEEN, St. Petersburg, and RORERT B. BROWNE, Miami, merit awards in custom-built category; and EDWARD J. SEIBERT, Sarasota, and GENE LEEDY, Winter Park, merit awards in the merchant-builder category. Publication of the award-winning designs of these Florida architects is scheduled for early future issues of The Florida Architect. Memphis Architects Are Doing It Too Memphis is the most recent among a growing number of cities throughout the country to benefit by the collaborative talents of architects. Above, in model form are the results of an urban renewal study made by the League of Memphis Architects, Inc., a working body which grew out of preliminary research activities of the Memphis AIA Chapter's Civic Design Committee. This project is similar in character to those which architects have initiated in Baltimore, Md., and in Tulsa, Okla. Florida cannot use Federal Uurban Renewal funds as can these other states. But what is preventing Florida architects from working with officials of their city governments toward local rehabilitation on a well-planned, long-range basis? THE FLORIDA ARCHITECT . .