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135838686
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JGR/National Archives and Records Administration Act of 1984 (2 of 2)
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135838686
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document
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JGR/National Archives and Records Administration Act of 1984 (2 of 2)
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485
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Records of the Office of Counsel to the President (Reagan Administration)
John Roberts' Subject Files
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135838686
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1986-12-31
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1986
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1982-01-01
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1982
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Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Digital Library Collections This is a PDF of a folder from our textual collections. Collection: Roberts, John G.: Files Folder Title: JGR/National Archives and Records Administration Act of 1984 (2 of 2) Box: 33 To see more digitized collections visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library To see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection Contact a reference archivist at: [email protected] Citation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing National Archives Catalogue: https://catalog.archives.gov/ THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON April 11, 1985 MEMORANDUM FOR RICHARD A. HAUSER FROM: JOHN G. ROBERTS 026 SUBJECT: Archivist Letter to Administration Officials This has been "on hold" on my desk for some time. You will recall that we held it up in light of Nixon library concerns and the establishment of the new National Archives and Records Administration (independent of GSA). At this point I think any effort to obtain personal papers of Administration officials should be coordinated with the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation. Accordingly, this particular item should be closed out. Attachment ID #. CU WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENCE TRACKING WORKSHEET o - OUTGOING H INTERNAL I INCOMING Date Correspondence Received (YY/MM/DD) / / Name of Correspondent: Marie allen MI Mail Report User Codes: (A) (B) (C) Subject: Memo to Jean Lamb asking for approval of out going form letter for the personal papers of administration officials ROUTE TO: ACTION DISPOSITION Tracking Type Completion Action Date of Date Office/Agency (Staff Name) Code YY/MM/DD Response Code YY/MM/DD WHOLL ORIGINATOR 84,02,08 / / Referral Note: WATI8 A 84,02,08 / / Referral Note: / / / / - Referral Note: / / / / I Referral Note: / / / / Referral Note: ACTION CODES: DISPOSITION CODES: A - Appropriate Action I - Info Copy Only/No Action Necessary A Answered C Completed C - Comment/Recommendation R Direct Reply w/Copy B - Non-Special Referral S Suspended D Draft Response S For Signature F - Furnish Fact Sheet X Interim Reply to be used as Enclosure FOR OUTGOING CORRESPONDENCE: Type of Response = Initials of Signer Code = "A" Completion Date = Date of Outgoing Comments: Keep this worksheet attached to the original incoming letter. Send all routing updates to Central Reference (Room 75, OEOB). Always return completed correspondence record to Central Files. Refer questions about the correspondence tracking system to Central Reference, ext. 2590. 5/81 THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON April 17, 1985 MEMORANDUM FOR RICHARD A. HAUSER FROM: JOHN G. ROBERTS off SUBJECT: Archives Issues You requested that I prepare a list of issues to discuss with the candidate for appointment as Archivist of the United States. This list follows: 1. What is your understanding of the position of the Archivist in the Government? The National Archives and Records Administration Act of 1984 provides that the National Archives and Records Administration is "an independent establishment in the executive branch." What is your understanding of that provision? 2. Do you consider the Archivist to be subject to the direction and control of the President? By law, the President may remove the Archivist, but must communicate his reasons for doing so to Congress. Do you view failure to follow instructions as a justifiable reason for removal? What sort of Presidential instruction would you decline to follow? 3. Are you familiar with the Presidential Records Act of 1978? That Act gives to the Archivist custody and control of Presidential records -- the most sensitive Executive branch documents. 4. Do you recognize why the Archivist must be completely within the Executive branch and subject to Presidential control, if he is to have custody and control of the most sensitive Presidential records? 5. Many Presidential records -- and many non-Presidential records from throughout the Executive branch departments and agencies -- are subject to executive privilege. What is your understanding of the doctrine of executive privilege? 6. The constitutionally-based doctrine of executive privilege recognizes that the President must be able to receive candid and unfettered advice if he is to discharge his constitutional duties, and that to preserve the free-flow - 2 - of such advice some information must be protected from disclosure, not only to the public but to Congress as well. As the Archivist, would you consider executive privilege in reviewing records for public access? 7. How would you reconcile a statutory obligation to open records to the public with a direction from the President or Attorney General to withhold such records on grounds of executive privilege? 8. Do you think executive privilege can protect even old documents from disclosure? Older than twelve years? 9. What role should consideration of personal privacy have in reviewing the possible release of a document? Should individuals discussed in a record be given notice of the intended release and an opportunity to object? [ THE WHITE HOUSE 4/23/85 WASHINGTON TO: JOR FROM: Richard A. Hauser RAY Deputy Counsel to the President FYI: For Filer COMMENT: ACTION: THE NEW YORK TIMES, TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 1985 A24 WASHINGTON TALK Briefing The Archivist Race O n April 1 the National Archives shed the General Services Ad- ministration as its parent and became an independent agency, the National Archives and Records Ad- ministration. But the restructured agency still lacks a permanent head. Under the revised structure, an Ar- chivist of the United States is to be ap- pointed by the President and con- firmed by the Senate. The job, which pays $73,600 a year, is considered by historians, librarians, researchers and others to be one of the most pres- tigious professional appointments in the country. So far, four men who want the job have had White House inverviews, ac- cording to historians and Govern- ment officials keeping track of the ap- pointment. The four are: John Agres- to, the deputy chairman of the Na- tional Endowment for the Humani- ties; Charles Blitzer, a former Smith- sonian Institution official now at Duke University's National Humani- ties program; Theodore Carter, who heads the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia, and Peter J. Duignan, the head of the African pro- gram at the Hoover Institution for War, Revolution and Peace at Stan- ford University in Palo Alto, Calif. In recent days, some historians in the capital say, Mr. Duignan has be- come the front-runner. And expecta- tion is growing, with some misgiv- ings, that Mr. Duignan will be named by President Reagan. The misgivings stem from concern that Mr. Duignan is identified as an outspoken political conservative who once used the word "swine" to describe Anatoly F. Do- brynin, the Soviet Ambassador to the United States. Meanwhile, the archives are being supervised by Frank Burke, who re- placed Robert W. Warner when he re- tired this month. Mr. Warner held the Archivist's job under the old system, before it became a Presidential ap- pointment. PRESERVATION COPY THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON April 17, 1985 MEMORANDUM FOR RICHARD A. HAUSER FROM: JOHN G. ROBERTS off SUBJECT: Archives Issues You requested that I prepare a list of issues to discuss with the candidate for appointment as Archivist of the United States. This list follows: 1. What is your understanding of the position of the Archivist in the Government? The National Archives and Records Administration Act of 1984 provides that the National Archives and Records Administration is "an independent establishment in the executive branch." What is your understanding of that provision? 2. Do you consider the Archivist to be subject to the direction and control of the President? By law, the President may remove the Archivist, but must communicate his reasons for doing so to Congress. Do you view failure to follow instructions as a justifiable reason for removal? What sort of Presidential instruction would you decline to follow? 3. Are you familiar with the Presidential Records Act of 1978? That Act gives to the Archivist custody and 3 control of Presidential records -- the most sensitive Executive branch documents. 4. Do you recognize why the Archivist must be completely within the Executive branch and subject to Presidential control, if he is to have custody and control of the most sensitive Presidential records? 5. Many Presidential records -- and many non-Presidential records from throughout the Executive branch departments and agencies -- are subject to executive privilege. What is your understanding of the doctrine of executive privilege? 6. The constitutionally-based doctrine of executive privilege recognizes that the President must be able to receive candid and unfettered advice if he is to discharge his constitutional duties, and that to preserve the free-flow - 2 - of such advice some information must be protected from disclosure, not only to the public but to Congress as well. As the Archivist, would you consider executive privilege in yss was unton N reviewing records for public access? 7. How would you reconcile a statutory obligation to open records to the public with a direction from the President or Attorney General to withhold such records on grounds of executive privilege? exec, nal and 8. Do you think executive privilege can protect even old documents from disclosure? Older than twelve years? mand 9. What role should consideration of personal privacy have in reviewing the possible release of a document? Should individuals discussed in a record be given notice of the intended release and an opportunity to object? not over open European trade his never are personnel Cries seen by anyone believerin amiting of secess