The best answer is "was not part of the Eastern Bloc",
although this answer is misleading.
Yugoslavia was indeed part of the Eastern Bloc in the sense that it was an Eastern European communist country, but it was the only one that did not align itself with the USSR after 1948. It also did no ally with the United States, choosing non-alignment instead.
This answer is the best answer simply because it is less false than the other answers, which are completely wrong. Yugoslavia never joined the USSR, choosing to split from Stalin in 1948, and never became a satellite nation of the US, and isn't located anywhere near the Baltic.
<span>The necessary and proper clause, as stated in Article 1, section 8, clause 18 states that “the congress shall have Power – To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.” </span>
The possible rewards were plenty, both material and immaterial. A person who would discover something could become rich from finding things and taking them for the King, and be rewarded for it. The immaterial things would be fame, or things like knight hood, or they could become nobles which would also entice fortune besides fame. They would be celebrated forever as discoverers, and many other things.
John Rolfe came to the Virginia colony by sailing from England with his "crew" on a boat. P.S IDK if this is correct
How did it feel to have to fight for something as simple as basic human rights?
During the war were their any people part of the union that still treated you as less then an human individual?