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Articles 61 - 71 of 71
Full-Text Articles in Law
Birch Bayh To John D. Feerick, Birch Bayh
Birch Bayh To John D. Feerick, Birch Bayh
Correspondence
Letter from Senator Birch Bayh to John D. Feerick, confirming Feerick's testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on Constitutional Amendments on February 28, 1964.
Louis C. Wyman To John D. Feerick, Louis C. Wyman
Louis C. Wyman To John D. Feerick, Louis C. Wyman
Correspondence
Letter from Representative Louis C. Wyman to John D. Feerick in which Wyman endorses the ABA's recommendation for a constitutional amendment. Wyman asks for Feerick's support for an interim statute.
Birch Bayh To John D. Feerick, Birch Bayh
Birch Bayh To John D. Feerick, Birch Bayh
Correspondence
Letter from Senator Birch Bayh to John D. Feerick, regarding Senate hearings on presidential inability and succession.
John D. Feerick To James C. Finlay, S.J., John D. Feerick
John D. Feerick To James C. Finlay, S.J., John D. Feerick
Correspondence
Letter from John D. Feerick to James C. Finlay, S.J., regarding American Bar Association Conference on Presidential Inability and Succession.
John D. Feerick To The New York Times, John D. Feerick
John D. Feerick To The New York Times, John D. Feerick
Correspondence
Letter from John D. Feerick to the New York Times in which Feerick discusses the recent meeting of a special panel organized by the American Bar Association. The ABA panel recommended a constitutional amendment on presidential succession and inability.
John D. Feerick To Leonard F. Manning, John D. Feerick
John D. Feerick To Leonard F. Manning, John D. Feerick
Correspondence
Letter from John D. Feerick to Fordham Law Professor Leonard F. Manning. Feerick informs Manning that their article will be referenced in the New York Times Sunday Magazine and that their same article is being cited by the New York City Bar Association in its study on presidential inability.
Lyndon B. Johnson-John W. Mccormack Letter Agreement, Lyndon B. Johnson, Norbert A. Schlei, United States. Department Of Justice. Office Of Legal Counsel, United States. President (1963-1969: Johnson)
Lyndon B. Johnson-John W. Mccormack Letter Agreement, Lyndon B. Johnson, Norbert A. Schlei, United States. Department Of Justice. Office Of Legal Counsel, United States. President (1963-1969: Johnson)
Executive Branch Materials
Agreement between President Johnson and Speaker McCormack. Because there was no vice president following Johnson's succession, McCormack was the next official in the line of succession. Includes memorandum from United States Attorney General's Office.
John D. Feerick To Nathan Siegal, John D. Feerick
John D. Feerick To Nathan Siegal, John D. Feerick
Correspondence
Letter from John D. Feerick to Nathan Siegal in which they differentiate between impeachment and presidential inability. Feerick wishes for the declaration of inability to remain within the executive branch.
Louis C. Wyman To John D. Feerick, Louis C. Wyman
Louis C. Wyman To John D. Feerick, Louis C. Wyman
Correspondence
Letter from Representative Louis C. Wyman to John D. Feerick. Wyman discusses the legal mechanism and procedure for declaring presidential inability contained in a recent House statute.
John D. Feerick To The New York Times, John D. Feerick
John D. Feerick To The New York Times, John D. Feerick
Correspondence
Letter from John D. Feerick to the New York Times. Feerick comments on a recent column and highlights the issue of vacancy of the Vice Presidency.
The Year We Had No President, Richard Hansen, Estes Kefauver
The Year We Had No President, Richard Hansen, Estes Kefauver
Books
Foreword by Senator Estes Kefauver. Book discusses the history of presidential inability and succession and the legal gap affecting these issues. Author Richard Hansen belonged to the American Bar Association Conference on Presidential Inability and Succession. This group helped draft the Twenty-Fifth Amendment.