Answer:
False (the Medal of Honor was awarded for their achievement but later records showed they never made it to North Pole)
Explanation:
Initially, it was considered that the co-pilot Floyd Bennett and explorer and navigator Richard Evelyn Byrd made it to the North Pole, a 1,545-mile trip, and back after a 15 hours and 30 minute flight. They were given Medal of Honor for their achievement and were considered national heroes until 1996 when a dairy was found of explorer Richard Evelyn Byrd in which it was stated that they turned back about 150 miles away from the North Pole due to an oil leakage. Hence, the first flight achievement was awarded to Umberto Nobile, Lincoln Ellsworth, and Roald Amundsen who made on May 12, 1926.
The correct answer would be The President.(Literally the answer. It's obvious.)
Hope this helps!
---JUSTAVERY
<span>leadership..............</span>
The three reasons for settlement were Charity, Economics, and Defense. 1) Charity: King George II had his prisons filled with people who didn't deserve to be there, and he needed a place to put them, because the place was overflowing. This made it easier for James Oglethorpe to convince King George II to let him use the new colony as a place for debtors. 2) Economics: If people went to the colony, not only would they be paying of their debts, but also, it goes into Mercantilism, where Great Britain could use Georgia and export all of the raw materials and use them for the wealth of Great Britain, because the small country simply did not have enough natural recourses to sustain everyone. 3) Defense: The English were worried about the Spanish who controlled Florida. They wanted to create Georgia as a buffer colony, to protect South Carolina, because it had a lot of recourses. With Georgia acting as a buffer colony, if the Spanish decided to attack, they would have to cross Georgia territory. The defenders would keep the Spanish at bay for as long as they could, and hope that British reinforcements would soon arrive to aid the defenders.
Intimacy versus isolation, generativity versus stagnation, and <span>identity versus role confusion</span>