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<p>Yes they were disillusioned writers of the 1920’s (e.g. Fitzgerald a la Great Gatsby) who moved to Europe</p>
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<p>Yes they were disillusioned writers of the 1920’s (e.g. Fitzgerald a la Great Gatsby) who moved to Europe</p>
<p>Marshall WAS a choice in the judicial review. it wouldn’t make sense to put marbury or madison because those were just the people involved with the trial. john marshall as supreme court justice was the one who established judicial review,</p>
<p>The War Hawks actually wanted to invade Canada…</p>
<p>For the Gulf of Tonkin v UN Resolution question, how many people picked the Gulf of Tonkin option? I was stuck between the two also …</p>
<p>btw i’m so proud of myself. i am confident that i got at least 20 of the questions right! OWNAGE!@!! plus i finished really fast. :</p>
<p>ya lost generation is right…its in my sparknotes list of terms</p>
<p>umm i put “overpopulation” then for imperalism, i think you are right (i cant beleive i missed this reading it over again)</p>
<p>for the one about WWI declaration, i swear that one of BDE was a good choice…because i know i didnt even consider the other choices. </p>
<p>are you sure there wasnt a choice about German unrestricted submarine warfare?</p>
<p>the lady and the sax players</p>
<p>nowhere in the UN resolution did it refer to President Truman, that’s why i picked the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution.</p>
<p>and yes, i agree with Monoclide. the war hawks wanted to invade canada.</p>
<p>i dont think you should base your answers on logic, RedCatharsis. after all, there are many events in history that aren’t exactly logical.</p>
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<p>It was considered a part of Asia when Roosevelt paraded the Great White Fleet, and unless that status changed prior to the 1920s, I disagree.</p>
<p>About China, that’s true–I thought about a cross-section of the world with China was the western edge of Asia, then extended this circle to contain all the islands. Which, like I said, was considered part of Asia in the Pacific at that time.</p>
<p>But you are right in that China observation. I’m just confused as to how that would work insofar that the Chinese Exclusion Act had not been repealed at the time. While my justification is faulty, my claim is still true.</p>
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<p>To be honest, matt, I agree.</p>
<p>Lol.</p>
<p>I’m just preaching to my own personal choir. Not that it exists. Still, I think that there’s an argument for what I did pick.</p>
<p>JFK, Nixon, and McCarthy did not get their START in politics because they were anti-communists. McCarthy got elected because he ran as a war hero, “Tail-Gunner Joe”, even though he never was a tail-gunner. Only when McCarthy had to get RE-elected did he make up the list of State Department employees who were communist ." JFK was a war hero as the head of PT-105; he won the purple heart as well as other awards. Nixon got two stars for his military service along with commendations. They all became anti-communists after they got elected and attending the HUAC meetings, etc. I remember the question asking how they STARTED.</p>
<p>Portugal began regular maritime exploration. They started the Age of Discovery through Henry the Navigator etc. Vasco de Gama among other famous Portuguese explorers made some of the most important initial discoveries.</p>
<p>also does anyone remember</p>
<p>an answe where they put</p>
<p>after WWI, many americans were disillutioned and wanted isolation or something?</p>
<p>also what rose as a popular trend in the 1920s?</p>
<p>consumerism?</p>
<p>and what in the 1920s DID NOT help consumerism?</p>
<p>I used to base my educated guesses on logic, but after several practice tests, I realized I needed to look for answers outside of the logical box. Mix the emotions of the time + the relative place of the person (a farmer is NOT going to be a scholar) and try to think of popular ideas/attitudes related to that group of people.</p>
<p>Fundamentalism</p>
<p>What was the women moral question, I don’t remember that?</p>
<p>the americans did not need to expand into new territories due to increasing population. that was the question for the LEAST incentive for imperialism.</p>
<p>it doesnt make sense since people from every country came to america. nowhere in history was there a large emigration in terms of america to other countries.</p>
<p>what’s the answer for the isolization question???</p>
<p>RedCatharsis, you definitely have a point to argue for that mandate of war question. </p>
<p>haha i think we should send this thread to collegeboard to let them know how vague and bad their questions are</p>
<p>dude it was southern and eastern europe…this was the time of the world wars, if you didn’t know</p>
<p>of course i could be mistaken, but i highly believe that it is so, not asia…although both were restricted but southern/eastern was more</p>
<p>there were a couple repeated/not on the list but it’s actually only 75…</p>
<ol>
<li> most English tobacco labor before 1680 was indentured servants</li>
<li> difference between Mass/VA and Spanish colonies: joint stock</li>
<li> local colonial affairs dealt with by: town meetings</li>
<li> Obligation to enforce court rulings: Eisenhower</li>
<li> led to depression: production v. consumption</li>
<li> 1880s and 1890s party agreement: no immigration from china</li>
<li> ICC and sherman antitrust: first one is regulatory, second is prohibitory</li>
<li> lost generation: writers who go off to europe who were disillusioned by the 1920s</li>
<li> reason for the second new deal: deepening recession still present, had to fix it, to quell critics (critics said Roosevely wanted to destroy capitalism?)</li>
<li>lowell picture: availability of factory work for men and women</li>
<li>first to be settled by europeans: FL</li>
<li>quote about segregated schools being unequal: brown v board</li>
<li>14th point: self-determination</li>
<li>helped french in french and indian war: Iroquois</li>
<li>saratoga: french support</li>
<li>bad farming conditions in quote: 1890s</li>
<li>book not matched with setting: farewell to arms and reconstruction</li>
<li>open door: interest in commerce in china</li>
<li>judicial review: john marshall (don’t think this was one of the options. the only relevant option was madison. it didn’t have marbury or marshall as choices)</li>
<li>jefferson and hamilton: j was strict construction, h was loose construction</li>
<li>nixon, mccarthy, jfk: anticommunists</li>
<li>carters unpopularity: iran hostage crisis</li>
<li>what didnt lbj do in great society: social security</li>
<li>vietnam war in us: caused division in unity on homefront</li>
<li>native american population loss: european disease and lack of resistance</li>
<li>picture of dots in south: good land in southern area for plantation farming</li>
<li>Roosevelt Corollary - intervene in Latin America</li>
<li>Dred Scott case - he is not a citizen and cannot speak for himself in court</li>
<li>JFK Soviet missiles in Cuba - naval embargo of Cuba</li>
<li>Walt Whitman poem questions - Rejecting Reason</li>
<li>What movement does the poem come from. Romanticism</li>
<li>1920s immigration stopped flow of- southern/eastern Europeans</li>
<li>first to have regular maritime voyages- Spain (? vs. Portugal!)</li>
<li>Era of Good Feelings was hindered by- issue of slavery in new territories</li>
<li>Missouri Compromise - led to Missouri as a slave state</li>
<li>Clay and Warhawks supported War of 1812 - To drive out British/Indians in the West</li>
<li>who did not support FDR in the 1936 election Industrialist</li>
<li>manifest destiny- spread to the Pacific Ocean</li>
<li>desegregation of military- Truman in Korea</li>
<li>Agibail Adams and John Adams letters - Women were interested in being politically equal</li>
<li>Indian Removal of the 1830s- Trail of Tears</li>
<li>19th Amendment- women can vote</li>
<li>Nixon policy of détente</li>
<li>Women -> Shape morals</li>
<li>Book about Cult of Domesticity</li>
<li>Populist Quote</li>
<li>Entertainment 1950s (The Organization man, davy crockett)Honeymooners, etc)</li>
<li>Statehood NW Ordinance</li>
<li>Graph - price of slaves rose sharply while price for cotton remained relatively constant</li>
<li>Isolationism definition - US not interested in European affairs due to the geographic distance (nonentaglement) </li>
<li>Sinclair and the Jungle</li>
<li>WWI Declaration - Mexico? (There is no superior answer…)</li>
<li>Labor during New Deal Gain collective bargaining</li>
<li>McCarthy Quote</li>
<li>Industrialism philosophy - Social Darwinism</li>
<li>Imperialism Least question - Counteracting European forces (4 other options all prioritized US first, which is what imperialism is about)</li>
<li>No Jury in Smuggler TrialsPower of Assemblies</li>
<li> in Colonies (Powerful then decreases, King imposes as you get closer to revolutionary war)</li>
<li>Monroe Doctrine</li>
<li>Graph of Imports v. exports Roughly same at start of both wars</li>
<li>Transportation Revolution - Steamboat/canals/railroad option</li>
<li>What did Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott do, they were in Seneca for Women’s Rights</li>
<li>Spain Didnt need manufacturing Outlet for its goods</li>
<li>Mercantilism - More exports than imports</li>
<li>Nixon, McCarthy, JFK - 3 anticommis</li>
<li>Massachusetts Bay - Dispels Dissenters</li>
<li>Jacob Riis - conditions in NYC</li>
<li>Vaccine in 1950- Polio</li>
<li>Washington Quote - “Farewell Address”</li>
<li>Cattle - Decrease in demand for beef</li>
<li>Which of the following did not happen 3 years into the great depression - Inflation or Increasing investments in capital market or increased production</li>
<li>Gulf of Tonkin v. UN Resolution - Unconcluded, both mandated war, one to Johnson with a blank check the other to the US but for a specific war (But Truman makes the suggestion so…).</li>
<li>Articles of Confederation Land</li>
<li>Washington dc conference 1921-naval arms limitations</li>
<li>malcom x</li>
</ol>
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<p>The very last passage. Questions 87-88.</p>