321,304 research outputs found
Staff of Senate Committee on the Judiciary, 84th Congress, Report on Presidential Inability
Considers various problems connected with presidential inability.https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/twentyfifth_amendment_congressional_materials/1011/thumbnail.jp
Report on Presidential Inability and Vacancies in the Office of Vice President, S. Rep. No. 89-66
Considers proposing an amendment to the Constitution relating to the succession to the presidency and vice presidency.https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/twentyfifth_amendment_congressional_materials/1013/thumbnail.jp
Report on Constitutional Amendments, Senate Report No. 88-1017
Considers presidential inability and residence requirements for voting in presidential elections.https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/twentyfifth_amendment_congressional_materials/1012/thumbnail.jp
Confirmation of Nelson A. Rockefeller as Vice President of the United States
Report issued by House Committee on the Judiciary following its hearings on the nomination of Nelson Rockefeller to be the 41st Vice President of the United States. President Gerald Ford had nominated Rockefeller pursuant to Section 2 of the Twenty-Fifth Amendment following Ford’s succession to the presidency upon President Richard Nixon’s resignation.https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/twentyfifth_amendment_watergate_era/1013/thumbnail.jp
To Meet Tomorrow: The Need For Change
Your Advisory Commission recommends to you in the report transmitted herewith that the superior, municipal and justice courts of each county of this state be merged into a single trial court--the countywide superior court. Under this proposed unification, all supporting personnel attached to these new courts (including the clerks, marshals and reporters) would be placed under the exclusive control and supervision of the courts. The new courts would be administered courts and would follow generally uniform procedures and practices. They would be exclusively state financed; therefore, all revenues generated by them, such as fines and filing fees, would go to the state alone. There would be but one class of judges in these courts. The advantages of a completely unified trial court system are many
Staff of House Committee on the Judiciary, 84th Congress, Report on Presidential Inability
Considers various problems connected with presidential inability.https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/twentyfifth_amendment_congressional_materials/1015/thumbnail.jp
To Meet Tomorrow: The Need For Change
Your Advisory Commission recommends to you in the report transmitted herewith that the superior, municipal and justice courts of each county of this state be merged into a single trial court--the countywide superior court. Under this proposed unification, all supporting personnel attached to these new courts (including the clerks, marshals and reporters) would be placed under the exclusive control and supervision of the courts. The new courts would be administered courts and would follow generally uniform procedures and practices. They would be exclusively state financed; therefore, all revenues generated by them, such as fines and filing fees, would go to the state alone. There would be but one class of judges in these courts. The advantages of a completely unified trial court system are many
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