<p>Shizzle, are you actually on track to get an 800 in Bio? If so, please give advice!</p>
<p>(possibly in a more relevant thread though)</p>
<p>Question:
Michael Harrington’s 1962 book, The Other America** adresses primarily the
A) growth of Communist Party membership
B) problems of migrant labor
C) failure of secondary education
D) increase in poverty
E) increase in gender inequaliy</p>
<p>What were the causes of the Great Depression?</p>
<p>High tariffs, too much buying on credit, too much overproduction exacerbated it…</p>
<p>Okay Mr Smart Guys, the significance of the Tenure of Office Act!</p>
<p>Tenure of Office Act:</p>
<p>Initiated by the radical republicans to try to get Johnson impeached. Wasn’t a very constitutional act, but it was passed anyway. Edwin Stanton (I believe) was impeached by Johnson as a challenge to the radical republicans. Because he went against the Act, he was impeached but not removed.</p>
<p>Wow, I remember a lot more than I thought.</p>
<p>lol I don’t. It’s not my priority currently, I’ll decide if I wanna take it when I get there. lolol</p>
<p>Charlie Brown: Yeah, I’m really nervous. I want an 800 no matter what. All I’ve done is read Barron’s and take notes on it. But I’m also going to read through the the sections that are harder (like anatomy) in and AP review book and take some PR practice tests at Barnes and Nobles. lol</p>
<p>Okay how about this one. Wade-Davis Bill</p>
<p>Oh snap… Wade davis bill… I think that was the bill that the radical republicans were trying to get passed that would increase the percentage of people that needed to take the loyalty oath before the state could join back into the Union. I’m pretty sure it didn’t get passed.</p>
<p>I’m still stuck in the Colonial Era in my review, which started today… I need to get an 800!</p>
<p>can someone explain Marbury vs. Madison? Plessy vs. Fergussen? Which case had to do with Maryland and taxing?</p>
<p>Marbury vs Madison- James Madison wouldn’t deliver Marbury his commission as a judge when Adams was appointing midnight judges. But the important thing is it established the power of Judicial Review which allowed the court to determines whether laws/legislation were constitutional. </p>
<p>Plessy vs Ferguson called “separate but equal facilities” constitutional (made segregation legal) Overturned by the case of Brown vs the Board of Education in 1954</p>
<p>Pinkstarcloud, I think you are referring to McCulloch v. Maryland.</p>
<p>What was the most controversial aspect of the Missouri Compromise?</p>
<p>does anybody know what the curve is?</p>
<p>powerbomb an 800 is having a raw score of 79 or higher which is like missing 7-9 but it varies every time</p>
<p>Other America refers to poverty.</p>
<p>Nine states to ratify Constitution I think?</p>
<p>Marshall Plan was to rebuild Europe’s economy after WWII.</p>
<p>Truman Doctrine was that the US would support any anticommunist faction/regime/government/military dictator.</p>
<p>@powerbomb prior to admitting Missouri as a state, there were eleven free and eleven slave states. The controversy was whether Missouri was admitted as a free or slave state, it would upset this balance. As a result Missouri was admitted as a slave state and Maine was added as a free state to maintain this balance.</p>
<p>Controversy: Would Missouri be a free or slave state. It would tip the balance so both North and South wanted it.</p>
<p>^^ that’s the gist of the Missouri Comp. but one particular aspect of it was most controversial… I was referring to the Fugitive slave act…</p>
<p>Ah I see. That made slaves property and even if they escaped to the North the slave owners could still take them back.</p>