its the presidents job. the presidents job is chief of state, chief executive, chief administrator, chief diplomat, commander in chief, chief legislator, chief of party, and chief citizen.
"commander-in-chief" is what you are looking for.
Historical Events Calender of 1918:http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~carmita/argon/1918.pdf Chief Events Time Line 1914 - 1919:http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/rotogravures/rototime5.html
Commanders in chief.
America's first Commander in Chief was George Washington.
The chief motivation for the settling of New England was to challenge Spain. Spain was a hated country in those days.
Richard N. Ericson has written: 'Pay to prosper' -- subject(s): Chief executive officers, Employee motivation, Executives, Incentives in industry, Salaries, Stock options
Chief of State, Commander in Chief, Chief of Diplomat, Chief of Executive, Chief Legislature, Chief of Party, and Chief of the Economy
Chief of State, Commander in Chief, Chief of Diplomat, Chief Executive, Chief Legislature, Chief of Party, and Chief Guardian of the Economy
its the presidents job. the presidents job is chief of state, chief executive, chief administrator, chief diplomat, commander in chief, chief legislator, chief of party, and chief citizen.
1.chief of state2.chief executive3.Chief administrator4.Chief diplomat5.Commander in Chief6.Chief legislator7.Chief of party8. Chief citizen
chief of state chief executive chief administrator chief diplomat commander in chief chief legislator chief of party chief citizen i have no idea what they mean and there is 8 roles not 7
1.chief of state 2.chief executive 3.chief diplomat 4.chief legislator 5.chief of party 6.chief economic planner 7.chief citizen 8.commander in chief
1. Commander in Chief 2. Chief Executive 3. Chief of the State 4. Chief Legislator 5. Chief of Party
His father, Tuekakas, who was chief died making him chief.
"commander-in-chief" is what you are looking for.
If you mean F. Scott Fitzgerald, he did not actually fight in any war. He was an officer in the American army during WWI, stationed at Montgomery AL, but did not accompany his unit when it was sent overseas. Eventually, he did board ship, but the ship returned when the Armistice was signed. Fitzgerald considered his failure to see combat one of his chief regrets.