All three nations are currently suspended from the 15-nation body - which imposed strict economic and financial sanctions on Mali in January - and is threatening to do likewise to Burkina and Guinea. Sunday’s comment came a day after the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) met in the Ghanaian capital Accra to decide how to deal with Mali, Burkina Faso and Guinea, where the military has seized power with no plans to return to civilian rule for several years. Saturday's meeting failed to come to a decision on the suspended countries, with the issue set to be addressed at the next Ecowas summit on 3 July. A lot of animals besides humans have called the White House home over the past two centuries plus. A badger: Theodore Roosevelt (No. 26, 1901-1909) had a zoo's worth of animals. President Theodore Roosevelt officially gave the White House its current name in 1901.) The alligator - whose name seems to be have been lost to time - was a gift from the French military officer Marquis de Lafayette, who fought with the U.S.
The stables caught fire in 1864 - President Abraham Lincoln tried to help put out the fire - and finally were dismantled in the early 1900s. Zachary Taylor (No. 12, 1849-50) was among many presidents who took a warhorse - his was named "Old Whitey" - with him to the President's House. King Tut was President Hoover's German shepherd. Those gators supposedly were allowed to roam the White House grounds which, as the folks at the Presidential Pet Museum also point out, probably kept King Tut on his toes. The most famous, perhaps, was Josiah, a badger, who often was carried around the White House grounds by young Archie Roosevelt. The most famous, probably, was Fala, who was so close to Franklin Delano Roosevelt (No. 32, 1933-1945) that the little Scottish terrier attended his funeral and is forever memorialized at the FDR museum in Washington. And that's a good thing, probably, considering the work that goes into keeping one as a pet.
Old JQA kept his gator in a bathtub - so the story goes - and enjoyed scaring guests by springing the big fella on them. According to the Presidential Pet Museum, the story goes that John Quincy Adams (John Adams' son and the sixth U.S. Caroline Kennedy, the daughter of John F. Kennedy (No. 35, 1961-1963), was often photographed on the pony, who was kept on a nearby farm, not at 1600 Penn. Of all the presidential pets throughout all the presidential administrations - ever since John Adams, the second U.S. Even if the alligators in the White House tales are to be discounted, the presidential digs still have housed more than a few nontraditional pets through the years. They talk about redecorating - and whether that's really white (or one of the 15 variations of "eggshell"), and they share their lives with cats, dogs, guinea pigs and all sorts of household pets.
Horses of all sorts: The White House at one time had a stable big enough for 25 horses and a living area for coachmen and stable hands. Another famous equine to spend time at the White House was Macaroni. Whatever the case, the alligator allegedly lived for some time in the presidential digs, where he ostensibly grew both in stature and as a bit of Washington lore. Phifer says. The bears lived in an enclosure on the lawn of the "President's House" before being moved to Philadelphia. Many others qualified as a president's Best Friend: Warren G. Harding (No. 29, 1921-1923) gave his dog, Laddie Boy, a hand-carved chair to sit in during meetings. The comments appeared a year after Twitter revealed that it plans to double its revenues to $7.5 billion by the end of 2023, raising hopes that Musk’s 100% ownership of the company would have it facilitate its future sales through an additional DOGE payment option. The whole idea of a reptile in the people's house would have been unique, too.
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