Congress in 1882, was doubtless the most important single factor in the history of American labor, for without it the entire country might have been overrun by Mongolian labor and the labor movement might have become a conflict of races instead of one... History of Labour in the United States - Halaman 253oleh John Rogers Commons, David Joseph Saposs, Helen Laura Sumner, Edward Becker Mittelman, Henry Elmer Hoagland, John Bertram Andrews, Selig Perlman - 1918Tampilan utuh - Tentang buku ini
| John Rogers Commons, John Bertram Andrews, Selig Perlman - 1918 - 648 halaman
...condensed and largely Cross, University of California, on the Hisquoted from the manuscript of Ira B. lory of the Labor Movement in California. the labour movement...approximately 150,000 immigrants from the East had entered the State. 2 Consequently, when the crisis came, in 1877, the usual number of unemployed, always to be... | |
| Selig Perlman - 1922 - 332 halaman
...American labor, for without it the entire country might have been overrun by Mongolian labor and the labor movement might have become a conflict of races instead of one of classes.1 The seventies witnessed another of those recurring attempts of consumers' cooperation already... | |
| 1962 - 656 halaman
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| 1985 - 668 halaman
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| William L. Abbott - 1967 - 132 halaman
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| Stanford M. Lyman - 1970 - 188 halaman
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| Amy Tachiki - 1971 - 378 halaman
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| Stanford M. Lyman - 1974 - 232 halaman
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