<p>western europeans, i believe</p>
<p>No it was southern and eastern europeans. Ive probably seen that question about 3-4 times this year (it was on our test in class plus it was in almost all of practice tests i took). For some reason they love ot ask about the 1924 quota.</p>
<p>"the answer choice which said most colonial cities had populations less than 25,000 i believe is wrong and is the right answer to the except question"</p>
<p>Ok, for the last time people, most colonial city populations did not exceed 25,000 (so that is not the right answer). This has been looked up and confirmed by multiple people.</p>
<p>how many questions do u guys think we covered? 55-60??</p>
<p>the land ordiance question... i think it was an except question, and i put that it did NOT give away free land to settlers, correct?</p>
<p>I thought it was something with slavery.</p>
<p>The land ordinance did ban slavery in the area but it said above the ohio river which I thought was wrong</p>
<p>Yeah I thought that was wrong as well.</p>
<p>The answer is giving free land.</p>
<p>Vanillaextract, I put the free land choice too. I looked it up today and they totally didn't give away free land. </p>
<p>By the way, does anyone know how many you can omit and still get an 800? My Kaplan book says 9 questions, but that seems too generous to me.</p>
<p>For the Monroe doctrine one werent there two good answers?</p>
<p>both: executive order and unilateral declaration of values</p>
<p>can someone explain why everyone is saying executive order is wrong? the monroe doctrine was introduced by president monroe and submitted by the executive branch......</p>
<p>it was the northwest ordinance of 1787, i said it didn't establish land for public education. becz that was the land ordinance of 1785.</p>
<p>
[quote]
For the Monroe doctrine one werent there two good answers?</p>
<p>both: executive order and unilateral declaration of values</p>
<p>can someone explain why everyone is saying executive order is wrong? the monroe doctrine was introduced by president monroe and submitted by the executive branch......
[/quote]
</p>
<p>I still want to know how it wasn't a "codification of international law." This question was terrible.</p>
<p>it could be that too. AMBIGIOUS </p>
<p>this question should be thrown out.</p>
<p>everyone write to collegeboard and complain. it works.</p>
<p>arghh...collegeboard is crazy.</p>
<p>for the Dustbowl one was it drought?</p>
<p>Would complaining REALLY help? If so, how would we go about doing it? I guess an 'en masse' thing would have to take place?</p>
<p>the problem is i think u have to file a formal complaint which will delay ur scores and they proobably wont do anything so im not gunna bother. Ill just hope executive order is the answer.</p>
<p>does anyone remember what the last few questions on the test were about?</p>
<p>please and thank you !</p>
<p>On the Monroe Doctrine question:
NOT EXECUTIVE ORDER - the Monroe Doctrine was just something James Monroe said in front of congress as a proclamation. It was never officially issued as an "executive order" or else it would have an Executive Order number.</p>
<p>NOT CODIFICATION OF INTERNATIONAL LAW - the Monroe Doctrine had no legal power at all. All the Monroe Doctrine did was tell Congress, the public, and the world what the US would do if someone tries to colonize the Western Hemisphere. </p>
<p>Therefore, the only correct answer is a unilateral proclamation of principles. Britain was not part of the deal, they just inadvertently helped the US succeed in keeping the West free from further colonization with some naval blockade or something of Europe so other Europeans couldn't go.</p>