1. Georges Clemenceau - France
2. David Lloyd George - Great Brittain
3. Woodrow Wilson - United States
4. Vittorio Orlando - Italy
Answer:
No
Explanation:
I think that it should not be a compulsory subject because, although history is important, unless you are planning to be a historian, politician, judge, or any other profession that would require knowledge about history, compulsory history classes will continue to take much-needed time away from important things like home economics and writing. If history were to stop being a compulsory subject, though, I would recommend putting a list of jobs that history could help with in order to show students what jobs history would open them up to and that if they would like to do a certain job in the future, taking that class would help them to reach that goal.
All state governments are modeled after the federal government and consist of three branches: executive, legislative, and judicial. The U.S. Constitution mandates that all states uphold a "republican form" of government, although the three-branch structure is not required.
Heavy rainfall or violent wave activity can cause "floods", since if a particular area that is affected by these weather conditions lacks the drainage resources necessary to reduce the water build up then it has nowhere to go.