Yes. Tom Mortenson served as a youth advisor to President Nixon and was instrumental in working with the youth in support of many of the President's policies ranging from his efforts on creating the endanged species act to voting rights for eighteen year olds.
Kaylen Larson
Mr. Nixon was raised in the Quaker religion; his mother was especially devout. However, it isn't clear if he continued to attend church in that denomination in his later years. He did continue to express religious beliefs: among his friends were mainstream Protestant pastors like the Rev. Billy Graham, and he often seemed more aligned with mainstream Protestantism than with the Quakerism of his youth.
Makiki
He is leading youth congress leader and close aide of aicc vice-president rahul gandhi
The President never lived in Kazakhstan.
Theadore Roosevelt or uncle teddy
Abraham Lincoln is given this name because as a youth he split rails.
Lola was a Temptess who was owned by the devil. April Nixon played an old lady given youth again by Ray Walston, and conived into doing his ill will.
His responsibility is to set the example to the youth just as Christ set the example for all men. He is to teach from the scriptures when prompted by the Holy Spirit, or from the prescribed teaching manuals of the church. The responsibility of the youth is to look after their peer group and to strengthen the weaker ones.
William Howard Taft was the first Honorary President of the Boy Scouts of America in 1911. John F. Kennedy was the first president who had been a Scout as a youth.
Since January 2011 Silva Rouseff is the president of Brazil. She is the first woman to be president of Brazil. During her youth she has joined several guerilla groups that fought the Brazilian military dictatorship.
Not as easy as it sounds this one. For a start she was born Norma Jeane Mortenson, but was baptized as Norma Jeane Baker. Her Mum was Gladys Pearl Baker and her fathers name was given as Edward Mortenson but they were allready separated before the prgnancy. It seems she used his name to avoid the stigma of illigitimacy Marilyns mum had told her as a youth that the real father was a Charles Stanley Gifford, showing her a photograph. Her mum put Marilyn with foster parents, Albert and Ida Bolender, and for the first part of her life she believed them to be her parents.