the red stands for bravery the white stands for freedom and the blue stands for the 13 colonies
country
To the right of the word "ONE" on the reverse. D stands for Denver. The S stands for San Francisco.
Look to the right of the word "ONE" on the reverse. D stands for Denver. The S stands for San Francisco.
OAU stands for the Organization of African Unity.
The site 'POTUS' is all about the President of the United States. 'POTUS' stands for 'President of the United States'. So, the site 'POTUS' has information on the presidency, including past presidencies.
Rick Perry is much shorter and stands accused of being a felon. As a governor, he wields little power as compared to the Presidency of the United States of America.
He stands for treating everyone equal and creating a better place for you and me!
It stands for every president.
The President Pro Tempore of the U. S. Senate stands in when the President of the Senate (the Vice President of the United States) is not there.
The President Pro Tempore of the U. S. Senate stands in when the President of the Senate (the Vice President of the United States) is not there.
James Madison.
VP stands for Vice President.
The vice president is the presiding officer the US Senate. He has to be ready to take over as president if needed. He also takes on assignments that the President gives him and may serve as special representative for the President.He/She stands ready to assume the Presidency in the event that the President can no longer perform his/her duties (or no longer wishes to). Until then, he/she presides over the U. S. Senate.
Pretty much depending on where he stands as president or vice president
Michael D. Higgins is the president of Ireland. The D stands for Daniel.
Nelson A Rockefeller, 1974-77 was appointed to the Vice-Presidency following the resignation of Richard Nixon and the succession of Gerald Ford to the Presidency. His predecessor, Gerald Ford, was also appointed to the Vice-Presidency, but did succeed to the Presidency on Nixon's resignation. In 1836 the U. S. Senate had to elect the Vice President because none of the candidates received the minimum required number of electoral votes. Most Americans have never heard about this because there was nothing controversial about it. The Senate chose Richard M. Johnson, the candidate who had almost twice as many votes as the second place finisher but ended up one vote short of the required absolute majority.