The revolutions in Cuba and the Philippines in the 1890's were very important for the US. Both revolutions for freedom were successful, so the Spanish influence was removed. The two newly independent nations though were weak after the revolutions, so with the Spanish out of the way, the US saw an opportunity to easily increase its influence in these territories. The US was quick to act, and it started to infiltrate and sponsor people that were going to work for its cause, resulting in spreading out of their influence in two territories of great strategic importance.
As far as I remember, if it determines that there is enough evidence to go to trial, a grand jury makes <span>an indictment</span>. I'm sure it's correct.
What do you think of a girl who wan fight her to get her out here for ya girl bye
Football as all other are basically mentioned in The great Gatsby haha
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Alexander Hamilton's letter to John Jay (March 14, 1779) both confirm and complicate our understanding of Alexander Hamilton as he is portrayed in the musical in that in the letter we can read that Alexander Hamilton was against slavery. Hamilton was a severe critic of slavery in the United States and favored abolitionism. In that letter that Hamilton wrote to his close New Yorker friend John Jay, he supported the recruiting of black slaves to enroll in the Continental Army, an idea proposed by a South Carolina's colonists, Colonel John Laurens.