<p>Other presidents saw themselves as the leader of their parties. They saw their job to be that of a chief executive to carry out the laws of the land. It was Congress that made policy by passing laws.</p>
<p>All of the following were examples of that type EXCEPT
(A) Grover Cleveland
(B) Calvin Coolidge
(C) Ulysses S. Grant
(D) Herbert Hoover
(E) Benjamin Harrison </p>
<p>I disagree with answer choice A. We’re looking for the president who DIDN’T see their job as a chief executive who carried the laws of the land. Cleveland definitely enforced the laws of the land: Cleveland used federal troops to quell a strike on the basis that it was ‘interfering with federal mail’.</p>
<p>I think the question is far too subjective for the SAT. Is that from a practice test?</p>
<p>Yes Jakeus, that interpretation is completely valid, which is the problem with the question because so many other interpretations are valid too. The question could also be asking for a president who proposed laws and shaped policy himself; for example, Wilson’s ‘triple wall of privilege’ attack or FDR’s ‘New Deal’.</p>
<p>ok so i’m scheduled to take 3 SAT subject tests on Saturday … idont know why the maximum… it might be too many </p>
<p>but i’m registered for Math 1, Spanish, and Us History</p>
<p>Tomorrow is my last day of junior year and it has been really hard and I have really been trying to focus on my school grades this last quarter and stuff… so i really haven’t studied at all for these SAT subject tests </p>
<p>i have all the prepration books to study from but do you think i can pull off 600/700s with three days of intense studying where all i do is eat, sleep, and study???
Or am i totally busted for studying 3 days before the test like this</p>
<p>Here’s the explanation from Barrons
A grover Cleveland had won a reputation for honesty and stubborn integrity as mayor of Buffalo and as governor of New York. As president, he compelled cattle ranchers and lumber companies to return land they had illegally taken. He forced railroads that had received land grants from the government to open millions of acres to settlement to return the land to the federal government. He vetoed 200 private pension bills passed by Congress for Civil War veterans because he found the claims to be fraudulent.</p>
<p>Sorry for late reply it’s not east typing on an iPhone.</p>
<p>The compromise tariff of 1833 was the tariff that satisfied the south after the whole nullification crisis issue over the tariff of Abominations.</p>
<p>^^ Did you take AP or Honors. Honors courses at my school are a joke; they literally are graded on coloring in Honors US History. But if your class covered it pretty in depth you should be fine. It’s not all in depth questions, but it will ask some specific ones.</p>
<p>1st great awakening focused on religious revival and membership of churches whereas the second great awakening focused more on social reforms and self-liberation?</p>
<p>All of the following are true of the Second Great Awakening EXCEPT</p>
<p>(A) it fueled social activism among its followers
(B) it urged followers to reach a personal, emotional understanding of God
(C) its meetings were more animated on the western frontier than in New England
(D) it emphasized gradual and systematic spiritual growth
(E) it increased the popularity of Methodism</p>