<p>tehcake: the laissez-faire question was already addressed. the answer was about the unregulation</p>
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<p>What one are you referring to? is this the one about the power of the assemblies? if so, it was the 17th century</p>
<p>mass bay was joint stock</p>
<p>about legislatures
“Resistance centered in colonial legislatures, claimed right to tax, approve appts, pass laws. Saw themselves as little parliaments, checked governor power”
i said the finance answer</p>
<p>what was the chinese fence cartoon?</p>
<p>also, what was the answer exactly for the roosevelt second new deal question? was it that the depression was deepening and democrats supported it (same choice I think?) or was it something else?</p>
<p>the chinese fence cartoon was on a practice test, not the real thing</p>
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<p>That’s he had to pass it because the depression was deepening so he had to quell critics.</p>
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<p>I mean at that point they were stronger than the governors (17th century) then as you get closer and closer towards the Revolutionary war their powers go down.</p>
<p>Initially, colonists had much more self-rule, it all goes downhill from there.</p>
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<p>That’s the problem. Are we considering their politically “relevant” careers (prominence) or their LITERAL start of careers? I’m pretty sure lots and lots of courses did not bother to go in-depth about the WWII activities and impacts that such activities had for JFK, Nixon, or McCarthy.</p>
<p>D:</p>
<p>what was the mercantilism one?</p>
<p>oh yea and for the lost generation writers, wasn’t the answer that they wrote because they were disillusioned with society?</p>
<p>^^yup so they moved to europe</p>
<p>_xxr92, I do believe the Chinese cartoon was on the actual test. Unfortunately, I don’t remember the question.</p>
<p>sjt, I really don’t have any clue about a chinese fence cartoon. Do you remember anything else at all?</p>
<p>asha, I’m afraid I really don’t remember anything about the question. The cartoon, however, had a lot of chinese men piled on the left side, with the fence in the middle of the page. I don’t know if that helps? </p>
<p>I’m pretty sure it wasn’t on a practice test, seeing as how I only took 2…heh.</p>
<p>Hmm…I’m pretty sure that wasn’t on there, since I remember nearly all of the other questions and this one has me completely blank. You’re sure it’s not a practice test?</p>
<p>it was 100% on a practice test; not sure if it was on the real thing</p>
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<p>Then please finish the list compiled.</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 d</li>
</ol>
<p>you might want to add that one that asked about what DIDN’T happen during the second world war. I don’t see it on the list, though I could be mistaken. One of the choices was about migrating from south to the north and west. forgot what was the right answer, so I don’t want to post. maybe someone here remembers that?</p>
<p>btw, i totally don’t remember anything about a fence and I am pretty certain of all the diagrams/pictures. maybe it was a practice test? lol</p>
<p>The Chinese fence cartoon was on a Sparknotes practice test.</p>
<p>but xxr92, there was an answer choice that said that the lost generation people wrote because were disillusioned with society.</p>
<p>The Lost Generation did both become disillusioned about the consumer society of the 1920’s and some did flee to Europe…</p>