The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Unfortunately, your question is incomplete. Indeed, there is no question here. Just a series of statements.
What is your question? What do you want to know?
Doing some research we found that the part of the question that is lacking is: "All of these are describing what Georgia governor?"
So, we can comment on the following.
Reduced the size of the state government· Equalized state aid for public schools in rich and poor areas· Established community centers for mentally handicapped children· Governor for only one term. All of these are describing what Georgia governor?
Answer: Jimmy Carter.
Jimmy Carter is very well-known as the 39th President of the United States. But only a few people remember that he was also the 76th governor of the State of Georgia from January 12, 1971, to January 14, 1975.
One of the first things he did when he became the governor of Georgia was to firmly declare that there would be no more racist segregation in Georgia. He was s supporter of getting poor people and African American people to have an education and better jobs.
Answer:
The purpose of a treaty is to officially end the state of war between the hostile parties.
You can win or lose a war in many ways. It depends on the time in history. A nation can surrender after enough losses, give the territories to the winner or the whole country in some cases. But capitulation is not the only way to win a war. You can lose every single part of land a country owns but continue to fight with your allies like Serbia did in World War 1. And Germany surrendered in World War 1 not by losing territory but by realizing that there is no way to win the war. And in World War 2 they were fighting until the end. Even after the capitulation, some soldiers kept fighting.
So to win a war you need the other side to surrender. Casualties, territory, and length of war do not mean victory or defeat, only when one party concedes defeat.
England was the dominant commercial power in the Atlantic ocean in the mid-1700s. During this period, the English society contained a flourishing and more broad middling sector than any other western country. This provided a sturdy opportunity for commerce with, and settlement in, far-flung territories.