Talk:Republican Senatorial Medal of Freedom

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Republican Senatorial Medal of Freedom is part of WikiProject U.S. Congress, an attempt to build a comprehensive guide to the United States Congress.
??? This article has not yet received a rating on the quality scale.
The options are: "FA", "A", "GA", "B", "Start", "Stub", "List", "Disambiguation", "Template", or "Category."
??? This article has not yet received a rating on the importance scale.
The options are: "Top", "High", "Mid", and "Low."
??? This article has not yet been assigned a subject.
The options are: "Person", "People", "Place", "Thing", and "Event."

This site is inaccurate and not authorized.

I am removing the superlatives in the first sentence until a reference is given. Tom - Talk 06:03, 5 Nov 2004 (UTC)

Contents

[edit] Paste of irrelevant info from article

If this article is encyclopedic, the list of notable recipients and external links is surely not. I apologize for disrespecting all the work that went into composing this list. I just think the disrespect of listing Ronald Reagan as a notable recipient of this cheap token trumps in this case. Tom - Talk 06:14, 5 Nov 2004 (UTC)

Tom, I disagree with you on that point, because the degree of the Medal is different in degrees.

Look at the difference in the medal that is for Statesmanship * awarded Senatorial Medal of Freedom to Sonny Lee


"highest and most prestigious award United States Republican Party senators can bestow on an individual. Medals are given for contributions to the Republican Party either through statesmanship and/or economic contributions."

The statement that Duncharris worked on was clear and concise, because some members was awarded the Medal for the Contributions to the Republican party throught statemanship.

Ronald Reagan was awarded it for that reason, not for making a donation.

I was had worked very hard to establish this biography for this medal, and the awardees that I researched all was awarded for their statesmanShip.

I feel that we can make it clearer, under "Notable Recipients for Statemanship" would be clear and concise to show that Ronald Reagan, General Norman Schwarzkopf, Jr., The Baroness Thatcher, Charlton Heston and their other notable recipients with their biographies shows that they were awarded it clearly in their Statemanship in their biographies not for making a donation.

--Jimmyvanthach 12:06, 5 Nov 2004 (UTC)

[edit] Notable Recipients

  • President Ronald Reagan - Former President of the United States
  • General Norman Schwarzkopf, Jr. - Retired General of the United States Army
  • The Baroness Thatcher - Former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
  • Colonel Chao K. Nokham - Co-Chairman of the Lao Movement For Democracy And Human Rights in Laos
  • Sonny Lee - Chief Executive Officer Great American International Development Corporation
  • John Cruickshank - Instrumental in writing the Supreme Court brief in Rose v. McGarry
  • Daniel Yoder - Appointed to the United States Presidential Business Commission
  • Albert A. Boyajian - Philanthropist in Education
  • Israel Martinez - EVP for Athens Consulting Group, Inc.
  • Patricia McDonald - Founder of SAF-T-CO SUPPLY Company
  • Dr Al Farshchian- CEO of Genorthix and Medical Director For The Center For Regenerative Medicine.
  • Robert Michael Kershner - Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology at the University of Utah Medical Center
  • William Byers - Executive Producer/Creative Director & Co-Founder AN&I Multimedia, Inc.
  • Dr Shashi K. Agarwal - Board certified in internal medicine and cardiovascular diseases
  • William Byers - Executive Producer/Creative Director & Co-Founder AN&I Multimedia, Inc.
  • Diane A. Lenning - Owner of Family Accounting, Investing, & Consulting Business
  • Paul DeLong - Republican Write-in Candidate for U.S. Senate
  • Derek Comb - Youth Chairman of the Montgomery Co. Republican Party
  • Eugene L. "Gene" Smith - Appointed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower as an official liaison to the Hoover Commission

[edit] External links

[edit] dates of award

Prince Buu Chanh was awarded Republican Senatorial Medal of Freedom Medal of Freedom: March 18, 1994.

[edit] 207.197.157.127

Is this an official Republican person? I emailed them to see if I could get a list... Dunc| 19:11, 5 Nov 2004 (UTC)

[edit] accuracy

Well, I emailed the repulibcna party tosee if they had an official list. And I got no reply. I've tried talking to the anon user who disputes the accurac of this article, but they haven't replied. Guessing the approximate IQ of people who would vote republican however, I'm not surprised. Shall we remove this for being unverified? Dunc| 18:47, 15 Nov 2004 (UTC)

Come now, let's not resort to personal attacks. OCNative 07:41, 18 December 2006 (UTC)