The answer is Percival Noel James Patterson. He is a
former Jamaican politician who helped as the sixth Prime Minister of Jamaica from
1992 to 2006. He was the trailblazer of the People's National Party from 1992 to
2006. He openly endorse republicanism. And now, Portia
Simpson-Miller has seemingly pledged to alter Jamaica into a republic as part
of the 50th anniversary of the island’s freedom.
Answer:Match the president to his description.
1. Millard Fillmore: the last president not to be affiliated with either the Democratic or Republican party
2. Franklin Delano Roosevelt the only president to serve more than two terms
3. Grover Cleveland: the only president to serve two nonconsecutive terms
4. Woodrow Wilson: the only president with a Ph.D.
Explanation:
1. Millard Fillmore was the last president who was a member of the Anti-Masonic Party and the Whig Party. He was also a candidate for the American / Nativist Party for the presidential elections of 1856.
2. Franklin Delano Roosevelt was an American politician and lawyer who was the thirty-second president of the United States from 1932 until his death in 1945 and has been the only one to win four consecutive times in that nation: the first in 1932, the second in 1936, the third in 1940 and the fourth in 1944.
3. Stephen Grover Cleveland was the twenty-second (1885-1889) 1 and twenty-fourth (1893-1897) president of the United States and the only president to have two non-consecutive terms. In addition to being the only Democrat who reached the presidency in an era of greater republican inclination in the government between 1860 and 1912, and the first Democratic president after the Civil War
4. Woodrow Wilson:
Thomas Woodrow Wilson was an American politician and lawyer, twenty-eighth president of the United States, from 1913 to 1921.
They were made trustees over the land.
Steeplechase became an Olympic sport in 1920
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By the time World War II ended, most American officials agreed that the best defense against the Soviet threat was a strategy called “containment.” In his famous “Long Telegram,” the diplomat George Kennan (1904-2005) explained the policy: The Soviet Union, he wrote, was “a political force committed fanatically to the belief that with the U.S. there can be no permanent modus vivendi [agreement between parties that disagree].” As a result, America’s only choice was the “long-term, patient but firm and vigilant containment of Russian expansive tendencies.” “It must be the policy of the United States,” he declared before Congress in 1947, “to support free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation…by outside pressures.” This way of thinking would shape American foreign policy for the next four decades.