October 2009 SAT II - US History

<p>i put transfer of women to like political and social rights. the marching picture was coxeys army look it up on google images you will find the picture that they used.</p>

<p>theodore roosevelt blocked japanese immigration see the gentlemans agreement 1908 i think it was. oh and the hudson river school specialized in landscapes.</p>

<p>1.‘puritan-except question’
For this question, my view is that the only thing that does not suit the description is the establishment in the colony, since they themselves were the people in 1629 who were supposed to set it up.</p>

<ol>
<li><p>‘drawing on hudson river’
Anyone knows this? I cant remember it,i think on of the answer is abstract expressionism or sth…</p></li>
<li><p>‘way that women gather strength in the early 20th century’
I put down moral obligation too. I think they did work on other issues, such as slavery, in the mid 19th century, but early 20th, it’s more of moral obligation. Voting bloc comes later, since suffrage passed in 1919.</p></li>
<li><p>Maching Picture
I think it’s not the grangers, since they don’t dress up in suits and that the people seem to support gold standard in the marching. </p></li>
</ol>

<p>I feel terrible after the test…but i still am not cancelling no scores, i wanna see how bad i did it.</p>

<p>Gentlemen’s agreement? OK. And the NACCP one…</p>

<p>Hey anybody do the international version of the u.s history? post replies how did it go…?</p>

<p>Didn’t we have a question about the Land Ordinances, in which choices included promise of public education and so on?</p>

<p>International and U.S version of this subject are the same, as far as I know.</p>

<p>“Gulf of Tonkin Resolution enabled President Johnson to escalate rapidly during 1964 and 1965.” </p>

<p>excerpted from Barron’s</p>

<p>LBJ believed in domino theory or not? The book doesn’t exactly say that he did, but doesn’t say that he didn’t, either.</p>

<p>I don’t know… the u.s take it a day before… so i think they probably change it for security…</p>

<p>I put sharecropping for the question with the South and cotton.</p>

<p>what was the conservative criticism of lbj great society? welfare or state and local government power. ?</p>

<p>Welfare, if I’m not mistaken. Funny thing that the memory already begins to fade.</p>

<p>I just read that cotton eroded all the lands after the civil war. The answer for the cotton one was the opening of new lands because that wasnt true and it was an except question.</p>

<p>For the conservative opposition to LBJ…I dont even remember welfare being a choice. However, I am certain republicans would have wanted greater local and state power as they hated large, centralized government</p>

<p>the cotton question was not an except question</p>

<p>was the answer to the 1920’s except question that men and women joined the workforce. I dont remember women joining the workforce as much as just being flappers and ****.</p>

<p>i don’t remember it very clearly, but that picture of the marchers didn’t seem like it would be coxey’s army. </p>

<p>also, i have no idea where you’re finding coxey’s army on google images, but if the people in the picture were a part of coxey’s army, then they would have been in D.C. petitioning to the president and federal government for food/jobs/wages, because they were all jobless. </p>

<p>on the other hand, if it the answer said something like: “people protesting against free silver (which is what coxey and his ‘army’ would have wanted).” Then that would have worked, because free silver would cause inflation and give debtors an easier time paying back their debts. Hence, ‘sound money’ would not want inflation and would be dressed nicely and would want to protest against free silver.</p>

<p>idk i found pictures of the same thing on google images…type in coxey army march on washington. I put something about the bonus army. Coxey’s army was protesting for free silver.</p>

<p>i still can’t seem to find it on google. but yeah, i typed that kind of ambiguously. Correction: “people protesting free silver” would have worked, and ‘free silver’ was an idea that Coxey’s army would have supported. </p>

<p>bonus army would have been in D.C. too. but for some reason, i felt as though the picture took place in new york…</p>

<p><a href=“Royalty-Free Stock Photos, Creative Images & Vectors | News, Fashion, and Entertainment imagery - Getty Images”>Royalty-Free Stock Photos, Creative Images & Vectors | News, Fashion, and Entertainment imagery - Getty Images;

<p>this is very similar, they are wearing the same suits.</p>