<p>^ yep, it was like “which of the following did not occur during wwii?”</p>
<p>Yes…there were two desegregation of the army questions.</p>
<p>One was that it did NOT happen during WWII. The other was that Truman desegregated the army.</p>
<p>Northwest Ordinance was the answer to the letting states in equally question.</p>
<p>Have we reached a consensus on the question about the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 vs. the Sherman Antitrust Act? Also, was “organization man” the same question as “the Honeymooners” and “Davey Crockett”?</p>
<p>what were the other answer choices for the joint-stock company question about england and spain</p>
<p>Yeah, I’m pretty sure Organization Man was in the same question as Honeymooners because it was a long list of things from a time period, and the only one I recognized was the Honeymooners from the 1950s. The consensus for ICC vs. Antitrust one seems to be prohibitory/regulatory, which I got wrong. :(</p>
<p>same… BUT according to wiki :</p>
<p>“The Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) was a regulatorybody in the United States created by the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887”</p>
<p>sooooo idk i put it was E.</p>
<p>The ICC was regulatory, but the Clayton/Sherman (I forgot which one was in the question) was prohibitory against trusts and monopolies. I should have read the choices more carefully haha, I don’t even know what I put.</p>
<p>Also, for the question about the similarity between JFK, McCarthy and Nixon, I thought it was pretty clear that they were all anti-Communist, but I check Wikipedia now and it seems they all served in WWII? Which is correct?</p>
<p>But even if it were flipped:</p>
<p>“The Sherman Antitrust Act (Sherman Act,[1] July 2, 1890, ch. 647, 26 Stat. 209, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1–7)requires the United States federal government to investigate and pursue trusts, companies, and organizations suspected of violating the Act.”</p>
<p>Still regulatory. remember how TR invoked it to break up Northern Securities… not prohibitory. I still think its E which is that one was enforced by Supreme Court and the other was not at first.</p>
<p>Direct Hits said that those three were anti-communist, so I’m pretty sure that’s the answer.</p>
<p>was there a question on court injunction pullman strike? or am i thining about something else.</p>
<p>Can someone please add to the consolidated list?</p>
<p>What was the answer to the question “Which of these was the least likely justification for American imperialism”? The choice that Americans were looking for new lands to settle as the population increased?</p>
<p>what was the colonial government thing can anybody clarify the consensus here???</p>
<p>look through the thread ppl…</p>
<p>and someone got a consolidated?</p>
<p>^ You’re as capable as anyone of making one.</p>
<p>Hey guys, check this out:</p>
<ol>
<li>George Washington’s Farewell Address discouraged political involvement with other nations</li>
<li>Cattle ranching did NOT decline due to decreased demand for beef in the East</li>
<li>During FDR’s second run for presidency, industrialists opposed him</li>
<li>Eisenhower enforced Supreme Court’s decision on school integration</li>
<li>The Organization Man, the Honeymooners, etc. epitomize 1950’s culture</li>
<li>FDR started the 2nd New Deal because the Depression persisted and radical critics were becoming more popular</li>
<li>Smugglers were tried under admiralty courts with no trial by jury</li>
<li>Walt Whitman opposed reliance on reason </li>
<li>“Learn’d astronomer” poem is Romantic</li>
<li>John Marshall established doctrine of judicial review</li>
<li>The Iroquois helped the British in the French and Indian War</li>
<li>A Farewell to Arms was set during WWI, not Reconstruction</li>
<li>Excess population was the least used argument for American imperialism</li>
<li>The ICC was regulatory and the Sherman Antitrust Act was prohibitive</li>
<li>1/4 of the Cherokees died on Trail of Tears</li>
<li>Industrialization did NOT cause a reduction in the gap between rich and poor</li>
<li>Manifest Destiny was opposed by New England abolitionists</li>
<li>Henry Clay and others called for War of 1812 because they were expansionists who wanted land from Britain and Native Americans</li>
<li>Magazine cover with flapper girl, jazz musicians was representative of Roaring Twenties</li>
<li>The Articles of Confederation was successful in land policy</li>
<li>Both political parties wanted to limit Chinese immigration during the Gilded Age</li>
<li>The Monroe Doctrine was a unilateral declaration of principles</li>
<li>JFK, Nixon, and McCarthy all gained fame as anticommunists</li>
<li>Wilson’s Fourteen Points were based on self-determination</li>
<li>The Lost Generation was a group of writers that moved to Europe</li>
<li>Fundamentalism was an anti-liberal, anti-secular movement during the 1920’s</li>
<li>First European nation to systematically explore the New World was Spain (Portugal was still exploring the Old World at the time; I got screwed by this one)</li>
<li>Florida had the first established colony (St. Augustine; this one too)</li>
<li>WWI led to disillusionment and isolationism</li>
<li>Quote about uniting with blacks against big business was from a populist leader</li>
<li>The New Deal resulted in increased labor union membership</li>
<li>A vaccine for poliomytelis reduced child diseases in the 1950’s</li>
<li>Line graph: imports did not outpace exports</li>
<li>Immigration restrictions in 1920’s targeted southern and eastern Europeans</li>
<li>Jacob Riis helped the poor urbanites</li>
<li>Colonial assemblies controlled “money bills”(?) and increased in power at the expense of the governor</li>
<li>Spain colonized for all these reasons EXCEPT finding new markets for industrialized goods</li>
<li>Colonists in 17th century made local decisions through town meetings</li>
<li>Abigail Adams and other women hoped to gain from the Revolution’s ideals of liberty and such</li>
<li>Puritans kicked out many dissenters from their colonies</li>
<li>Malcolm X opposed “turn-the-other-cheek” nonviolent protest</li>
<li>The Maryland Toleration Act protected religious rights of Catholics</li>
<li>Difference between English and Spanish colonists was that English expeditions were financed by joint-stock companies</li>
<li>Catherine Beecher wrote the thing about woman’s moral qualities influencing their husbands to act more virtuously</li>
<li>The above passage was representative of the Cult of Domesticity</li>
<li>Bar graph: blacks voted more because of voting rights legislation passed in the 1960s</li>
<li>The Dred Scott decision held that slaves were property and not citizens</li>
<li>The Missouri Compromise admitted Missouri as a slave state</li>
<li>Lowell mills gave both women and men the opportunity to work in factory system</li>
<li>Kennedy responded to the Cuban Missile Crisis by securing a naval quarantine of Cuba</li>
<li>Nixon practiced detente with the Soviet Union</li>
<li>An international convention held in Washington in 1921-1922 wanted to limit naval arms</li>
<li>Textile production moved from the home to the factory in the 1820s</li>
<li>Harry Truman integrated the military during the Korean War</li>
<li>Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle and the Meat Inspection Act showed the link between muckraking and progressive reform</li>
<li>Columbus wanted to find a faster route to Asia</li>
<li>Inflation did NOT increase in the first three years of the Great Depression</li>
<li>Great Depression was partly caused by production outpacing consumption</li>
<li>Increased agricultural exports did NOT contribute to prosperity in the 1920s</li>
<li>Guy who wanted immigrants to leave their old culture behind was arguing for assimilation</li>
<li>Spread of slavery was NOT due to slaves having experience picking cotton in Africa</li>
<li>Social Darwinism asserted that the economy followed an evolutionary process that could not be changed</li>
<li>All of these things happened during WWII EXCEPT integration of military</li>
<li>Majority of the workers in the colonies before 1675 were white indentured servants</li>
<li>Tonkin Gulf Resolution gave the president a mandate to conduct war</li>
<li>Vietnam War resulted in deep political divisions</li>
<li>Foreign policy following WWII was based on containment</li>
<li>Northwest Ordinance established policy of admitting states on an equal basis</li>
<li>Most Native American deaths were due to lack of immunity to European diseases</li>
<li>Map of South: slaves were concentrated in productive agricultural areas</li>
<li>Freight discrimination, high tariffs, banking interests, etc. were all problems faced by farmers in the 1890s</li>
<li>Iran Hostage Crisis helped Reagan defeat Carter in 1980</li>
</ol>
<p>There was one passage with Ford pardoning Nixon as one of the choices. Was Ford correct?</p>
<p>Yesss. consolidated list is awesome.</p>
<p>So far I definitely got 6 wrong. Some of these questions I don’t remember so at most I have 13 blank right now. What would that get me? </p>
<p>Does it hurt to take it twice or should I cancel scores? I don’t think I did well in math either…</p>
<p>@bigdream: wasn’t that the one that also had Eisenhower desegregating schools as a choice? If so, that choice is on the list as correct.</p>