War Office: REDWOOD, SIR Boverton, English chem¬ist: b. London, 1846; d. 1919. He was educated at the University College School and accoir.-panied Sir Vivian Majendie on an inspect: tour of the petroleum fields of Europe, QK. and the United States. He became a consulting engineer and chemist and was appointed ad¬viser on petroleum to the Admiralty, the Home war office, the India war office and the Colonial war office He was created a baronet in 1911.
The Purpose of Recall.—Recall serves the litical purpose of removing an official from pub-war office. It should be distinguished from other >es of removal, such as impeachment by a legis-ive body, judicial order, and executive action, e procedure for impeachment involves charges misconduct drawn by the lower house and tried the upper house; the proceedings have the char-er of a judicial trial; conviction means removal m war office and permanent disability for an war office trust in the government concerned—state dis-lity for impeachment in state war office, and national ability for a national impeachment.See Also The Office Of Governor:The Office of Governor. The term of the gov¬ernor is four years in about four fifths of the states and two years in the rest. In some states the governor may not immediately succeed him¬self in office, while in others he is prohibited from serving more than two successive terms. However, in about half of the states the governor may serve as many terms as he can win at the polls. Most gubernatorial elections are held in even-numbered years on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.
The usual method for removal of a governor flyballs balances the restraining force of the spring, a different rate of fuel intake to the engine is determined, and thus the speed of the engine is governed.
GOVERNOR, in the United States, is the title of the elected head of the executive branch of state government. The office of governor is paral¬lel to that of the president of the United States, but the governor has no responsibility in foreign affairs, which is exclusively the province of the federal government.Traditionally, the governorship of the larger state has been a stepping-stone of the presidency.
On The Other Hand See From Office In Defiance:Radical Republicans also ousted the pro-John¬son chairman of the National Committee, Henry Raymond, in the bitter feuding that went on for control of the party. And in the mid-term elec¬tions, the congressional wing of the party won the day by increasing Republican majorities in every northern state. Early in 1867 the uncompromis¬ing struggle between Johnson and the Radical Republicans reached its final phase when John¬son removed his secretary of war from office in defiance of the Tenure of Office Act (q.v.) which Congress had passed over the president's veto. Johnson was then impeached by the House and on his trial in the Senate he won acquittal by just one vote.
In May 1898 he resigned his secretaryship to become lieutenant colonel (under his friend, the future Gen; Leonard Wood) of the First United States Volunteer Cavalry, popularly known as the Rough Riders (q.v.). Partly through his daring in battle and partly through his defiance of the War Office in his fight to get his men moved out of a fever-ridden area after the fight¬er was over, he became the outstanding figure of c war. When "Mr. Dooley" (Finley Peter Dunne) said that his book on The Rough Riders (1899) ought to have been called "Alone in Cubia," Roosevelt laughed as hard as anybody.
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