Administrative burdens are not by themselves sufficient obstacles to prevent progress in Government.
I intend to go more than halfway to accommodate Congressional concerns.
I believe now is the time to preclude the Freedom of Information Act from disclosing information harmful to the privacy of individuals.
I simply cannot accept a provision that would risk exposure of our military or intelligence secrets and diplomatic relations.
I share your concerns for improving the Freedom of Information Act.
I have doubts about the appropriateness of diverting the direction of litigation from the disclosure of information to career-affecting disc...
I must take care to avoid seriously impairing the Government we all seek to make more open.
Neither the best interests of Government nor the public would be served by subjecting an employee to this kind of personal liability for the...
This is an objective I can support as long as the means selected do not jeopardize our national security interests.
I appreciate the time you have given me to study the amendments to the Freedom of Information Act.
I am concerned with any provision which would reduce our ability to effectively deal with crime.
The time for ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment has come just as surely as did the time for the 19th Amendment.
We, the American people, are the beneficiaries.
This new Treaty represents a substantial modernization with respect to the procedural aspects of extradition.
It is probably . . . the most important legislation on community development since the passage of the Housing Act of 1949.
The Treaty will make a significant contribution to the international effort to control narcotics traffic.
I fully support these efforts to eliminate discrimination based on race or sex.
That document right there will, I think, write new pages of history in community development and housing production.