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Search results 191 - 200 of 330 matching essays
- 191: New Orleans - Before The Civil War
- ... and Germany. In certain neighborhoods, their descendants' dialects would make visitors feel like they were back in Brooklyn or Chicago. From 1820 to 1870, the Irish and Germans made New Orleans one of the main immigration ports in the nation, second only to New York, but ahead of Boston, Philadelphia, and Baltimore. New Orleans also was the first city in America to host a significant settlement of Italians, Greeks, Croatians, and ...
- 192: The World's Longest War
- ... Moslem countries with subsidies and debt cancellations to appear on the White House lawn and sign papers. The consequences will appear only after the American incumbents are safely out of office. The sixth front is immigration, legal and otherwise, into most of the Western democracies. How We Got Here Please examine this brief resume of the continuing war and then let us consider our options. The war started with the explosion ...
- 193: Welfare
- ... about 75,000 applications a year. Last year, we ran about 175,000, and we're looking at about 300,000 this year," says Richard Rogers, who works in the Los Angeles branch of the Immigration and Naturalization service. Thanks to The Personal Responsibility Act, hundreds of thousands more non-citizens are applying to officially be a member of our country, and in turn contribute towards it. Many crybaby liberals believe ...
- 194: Hippie Culture
- ... cards to resist the draft. For those who went to Canada, they received assistance from the Committee to Aid American War Objectors. The committee helped the young immigrants with advice and aid on the Canadian immigration laws. For those who didn’t flee, life was full of harassment from the Government. Popular music and literature help display this message of repression. Jimi Hendrix released a song titled "If 6 was 9 ...
- 195: Labor And Unions In America
- ... members. By January 1919, it had 3,260,000 members. RED SCARES AND DEPRESSION As the 1920s began, organized labor seemed stronger than ever. It was successful in getting Congress to pass laws that restricted immigration to the United States. Unions believed that a scarcity of labor would keep wages high. But events that took place in Europe were already threatening labor's gains. In 1917, a communist revolution overthrew the ...
- 196: Confused In America
- ... brothers and sisters to America now. If they get the news that I am in Mexico, they will think differently, maybe conceiving me as an illegal immigrant being beaten up by the clubs of the immigration officers. This shallow guessing I once had of others, now I can feel contented on basis of the shallowness of others. If what we seek is only this contented life in America, it is better ...
- 197: Notes: Americanization or Candaisnism?
- Notes: Americanization or Candaisnism? -Many labours now had cars, radios, gramaphones etc. The railways had reached their golden age and lots of hotels were built. -Immigration flowed as steady as ever. -Prosperity came from U.S and their many companies and workers. -Canada impoted and exported much more to the U.S rather than Britain. -Companies found that they were needed ...
- 198: Facism
- ... points of the Nazi party that had to be followed. These Twenty Five points of Hitler's party were enforced by these militia groups. A few of the points made by Hitler are as follows: immigration of non-Germans must be prevented, no individual shall do any work that would I any way hurt the interest of the community for the benefit of all, a creation of a national (folk) army ...
- 199: Slavery - Causes
- ... The indentured servents were running away from their temporary masters, to find a job where he could become more independent. Indentured servents were also dying of many diseases, which was caused by harsh conditions. The immigration of servents thus declined, becuase of the people in England being informed of the harsh treatment in the colonies. The society was where the land was easy to find, while the labor was most scarce ...
- 200: Nazism
- ... wishfully believed that Hitler's venom was reserved for the Eastern Jews who had begun flooding into Germany after World War I. A few Jews, thinking of themselves of labor, Friedrich Syrup, to stop further immigration of Eastern Jews on the grounds that their presence stirred up anti-Semitism. Not until 1936, with Hindenburg dead and Hitler in sole command, was persecution seriously escalated. On September 13, during the Nuremburg party ...
Search results 191 - 200 of 330 matching essays
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