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"Wallop, Malcolm"
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Press Conference Celebrates the American Soldier: 'America is the World's Most Generous Nation in the Cause of Freedom'
2004
Frontiers of Freedom Chairman Senator Malcolm Wallop will appear tomorrow, Tuesday, Feb. 24 at a Capitol Hill press conference celebrating the Veterans History Project, a joint venture between the National Foundation for Women Legislators (NFWL), the U. S. Department of Veterans Affairs, the Disabled American Veterans, and the American Folklife Center of the Library of Congress. The Washington, D.C. press conference will be supported by satellite press conferences hosted by NFWL women legislators in all 50 states to honor the men and women from all branches of the service, both past and present, who have served our country often paying the ultimate cost. Speakers will be joined by NFWL legislators, leaders from several Native American tribes and veterans representing those who served in America's military conflicts.
Wyoming's Senator Wallop Won't Run in '94
1993
Senator [Malcolm Wallop], 60, would be eligible to serve two more terms because the law did not go into effect until this year. but he said voters in the state had spoken. \"If you believe in democracy and 74 percent of the people of the state say there should be term limits, I think you have to respect that,\" he said here on Thursday. Mr. Wallop ran for Governor in 1974, and he did not rule out a future bid for the office. \"I don't think the only place to fight for freedom is in the halls of Congress,\" he said. State Senator Gene Watts and Lieut. Gov. Mike DeWine, both Republicans, are also running for the seat. No Democrat has announced a candidacy, but Senator [Howard M. Metzenbaum]'s son-in-law, Joel Hyatt, a founder of the Hyatt discount legal clinics, has been campaigning.
Newspaper Article
Wallop Easily Renominated In the Wyoming Senate Race
1988
With 61 percent of the precincts reporting, Mr. [Malcolm Wallop] amassed 30,161 votes, or 83 percent. In the Democratic primary, State Senator John Vinich had 12,458 votes to 8,938 for Prof.
Newspaper Article
THE MEANS TO WAR
by
Gordon, Michael R
,
Michael R. Gordon is a correspondent in the New York Times Washington bureau who reports on national security issues
in
Codevilla, Angelo
,
CODEVILLA, ANGELO M
,
GORDON, MICHAEL R
1988
''The Arms Control Delusion,'' by Senator [Malcolm Wallop], a conservative Republican from Wyoming, and his former aide, [Angelo Codevilla], was published before the new missile treaty was signed by President Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev. But this highly polemical work provides a general introduction to the strategic visions and military analyses of staunch conservatives, along with their attack on the national security bureaucracy. Perhaps the most intriguing aspect of the book is its subliminal message, which is one of bitterness and betrayal. The authors indict the Reagan Administration for failing to keep faith with what they deem to be the conservative tradition. It is not enough for them that President Reagan has transformed the strategic debate, moving to test and develop anti-missile defenses through his Strategic Defense Initiative. Senator Wallop and Mr. Codevilla want the United States to abandon the arms control process altogether and start deploying space-based laser weapons immediately. With such condemnations they are attempting to settle some old scores with the Administration for its failure to act on Senator Wallop's ideas. But they fail to display the aptitude for compromise and consensus building that would truly advance their agenda.
Book Review
'Star Wars' Is Still Only a Castle in Space
1986
Thank you for the plea by Senator Malcolm Wallop and Representative Jack Kemp to push President Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative through to completion as soon as possible (''Perils of Deferring S.D.I.,'' Op-Ed, Aug. 12). More effectively than the harshest critics of the ''Star Wars'' plan, this piece exposes the carelessness and superficiality that weakens the debate about the most complex technological, military and political issue of the postwar era.
Newspaper Article
Letters to the editor
2005
\"It were doubtless to be wished, that the power of prohibiting the importation of slaves had not been postponed until the year 1808, or rather that it had been suffered immediate operation. But it is not difficult to account, either for this restriction on the general government, or for the manner in which the whole clause is expressed. It ought to be considered as a great point gained in favor of humanity, that a period of twenty years may terminate forever, within these States, a traffic which has so long and so loudly upbraided the barbarism of modern policy; that within that period, it will receive a considerable discouragement from the federal government, and may be totally abolished, by a concurrence of the few States which continue the unnatural traffic, in the prohibitory example which has been given by so great a majority of the Union. Happy would it be for the unfortunate Africans, if an equal prospect lay before them of being redeemed from the oppressions of their European brethren!\" Mr. [Malcolm Wallop] relies on controversial information supplied by Dr. Brad Rodu, a researcher at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, but he forgot to mention that a big chunk of Dr. Rodu's research was paid for by a $1.25 million grant from U. S. Tobacco. That coupled with a request by the senator for financial support from tobacco companies for his Frontier of Freedom organization in a 1996 letter makes you wonder about his position. I'm with you on one thing, Malcolm. It is time to shed some light on the smokeless tobacco issue, and the message in my little candlelight reads, \"Wyoming issues, and the health and lives of Wyoming's young people should not be dictated by the tobacco industry.\"
Newspaper Article
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
2005
Indeed, Source Watch, a project of the Center for Media and Democracy, claims on its Web site that Mr. [Malcolm Wallop]'s Frontiers of Freedom has received money from the tobacco companies R.J. Reynolds and Phillip Morris. This raises the question \"Is there a financial connection between Mr. Wallop, his policy organization, Frontiers of Freedom, and the smokeless tobacco industry?\" If so, this link should be disclosed in the article. Or, the article should just be printed as a paid advertisement for the smokeless tobacco industry. Please contact the members of the Joint Corporations, Elections and Political Subdivisions Committee. They are: Sens. Curt Meier, R- LaGrange; R-Cheyenne; Wayne Johnson, R-Cheyenne; Jayne Mockler, D- Cheyenne; Charles Scott, R-Casper; and Reps. Pete Illoway, R- Cheyenne; Bruce Barnard, R-Evanston; Ross Diercks, D-Lusk; Keith Gingery, R-Jackson; Frank Latta, R-Gillette; Marty Martin, D-Rock Springs; Del McOmie, R-Lander; David Miller, R-Riverton, and Monte Olsen, R-Daniel.
Newspaper Article