I assume you are referring to the US Supreme Court. Each appointed two justices. Mr. Bush appointed Samuel Alito and John Roberts. Mr. Obama appointed Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan.
Barak Obama
yes
He didn't. George W. Bush did.
The current secretary is Tom Vilsack
He will resign from the position of Senator and the Governor of Illinois will appoint a replacement for him.
...wouldn't Obama LOVE that... It is not true.
Only if the current Chief Justice (John G. Roberts, Jr.) dies, retires, resigns or is impeached while President Obama is still in office.
43 different men have been president of the United States. The current president, Barack Obama, is usually called the 44th president because there been 44 administrations. Grover Cleveland served two non-consecutive terms and so is considered to have had two administrations.
No, there is no such law. America has a separation of church and state, which means religion and government are not supposed to mix. Of course, presidents can express their views about religious issues, (and clergy can express theirs about political issues) but it would be unconstitutional for any president, Mr. Obama included, to appoint members of the clergy. Each religion is responsible for that duty, and the government stays out of it.
The Bible contains no prediction of Barack Obama's Presidency. (Don't let fundamentalists or other crazies convince you otherwise.) There is an Israeli general named Barak in the Book of Judges, but President Obama was not named for him.
He was unable to get judges approved for the courts by Congress.
Barack Obama is no longer the President of the United States, so he does not appoint the Speaker of the House. The Speaker of the House is elected by members of the House of Representatives. As of my last update, Nancy Pelosi is the current Speaker of the House.