The super continent was named Pangaea.
Ronald Reagan was the U. S. president from 1981 to 1989. Franklin D. Roosevelt was also a U. S. president. He served from 1933 to his death in 1945.
Both presidents had an interest in serving for more than 8 years, the currently-accepted maximum length for a presidential term. Franklin D. Roosevelt was president four times, due to his popularity and success in restoring the economy after the Great Depression. Serving for two four-year terms had been an unwritten rule since George Washington, but it was not a law, which enabled FDR to stay in power for longer.
After his death, Amendment XXII was passed, limiting the time a president could serve to two periods of four years. However, in 1987, Reagan made public his interest to get rid of this amendment. He argued that the change would not apply to him, but to leaders from then on.
Answer:
B Jackson held that the nation's interests must come first is the correct answer.
Explanation:
The ordinance of nullification was passed on November 24, 1832, it declared the Tariffs of 1828 and 1832, a convention of south Carolina had declared that the tariff act of 1828 and 1832 were not supported by the constitution and and favoured the northern states over the southern ones. The proclamation issued by president disputed the states right to nullify a federal law. Soon after the proclamation Congress also passed the Force act allowing the federal government to use force act against the states that were resisting the tariff acts. Later a compromise was reached with the states and slowly the tariffs were lowered over the next decade.
Manifest Destiny
John O'Sullivan coined the phrase "Manifest Destiny" to describe what he saw as the God-appointed duty of the United States to expand across the North American continent and to lead the world by the example of its values. O'Sullivan was editor of the <em>Democratic Review</em> and of the <em>New York Morning News</em> when editorials in both publications (in July 1845) put forth arguments for annexing Texas and the Oregon Territory. US public policy in the years that followed did essentially pursue the sort of territorial goals O'Sullivan had described, even if not always with his same spiritual ideology in mind.