They come by the dozens, laborers swarm this vehicle hoping to be hired for the day. |
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In the next scene, performers are acting again, this time in the role of rural laborers. |
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Home to nearly 2 million people, the neighborhood is a gritty tapestry of mechanics, metal grinders, junkmen and laborers. |
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Prior to 1927, when county convict road gangs were sometimes used by the SHC, there is no explicit mention of the race of convict laborers. |
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They never mention whether our young people are recruited as white-collar workers or just underpaid, overworked laborers over there. |
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Irish dock laborers rubbed shoulders with the aldermen they helped elect in these dimly lit and male-dominated spaces. |
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They say the system is broken and it is creating hardship for day laborers and their families. |
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Authorities say the trio offered the day laborers work and then drove them to secluded areas to rob them at knifepoint. |
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This law excluded Chinese laborers, both skilled and unskilled, from entering the United States for ten years. |
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Most construction laborers learn informally on the job, but becoming an apprentice can really pay off. |
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The work of construction laborers is closely related to other construction occupations. |
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Also with the highest overall injury rate, the region's laborers were the most likely to face physical risk. |
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All that remains to Kaplan's industrial laborers is the nostalgia that blocks every aspect of anamnesis, even the capacity to forget. |
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Wild animals and tropical diseases claim the lives of thousands of laborers. |
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Teams of carpenters and laborers begin positioning column forms and setting up shoring for the floor above. |
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I drop my pack and lean against the roofless building and watch the laborers. |
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A big issue was the poor working and living conditions of migrant laborers. |
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It has similarities to English as well as to the Austronesian languages spoken by the plantation laborers. |
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Many of the inner-city poor of the United States descend from farm laborers and tenant farmers. |
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Working their own land gave laborers hope of a rise in status to that of the small tenant farmer. |
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In summer, many manual laborers take their tops off because they get sweaty, or like to saunter along the sidewalks topless. |
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In the wilderness, elite men like Roosevelt no longer donned the business suits that separated them from manual laborers. |
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His poems reflect the experience of manual laborers and the union men and women who built the United States. |
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Some work as manual laborers while others work as farmers, especially when the fishing is bad. |
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They tried to supplement their income by hiring themselves out as day laborers, textile workers or manual laborers. |
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Asian manual laborers who came to the United States in the nineteenth century were overwhelmingly male. |
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People working indoors do not get the sun exposure that their ancestors got as farmers and manual laborers. |
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These immigrants have come from positions ranging from low-level bureaucrats to manual laborers. |
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Many of them work as unskilled manual laborers, which confines them to low social and economic status. |
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These manual laborers, long accustomed to toiling in the fields, are good workers. |
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Most of the striking laborers are young people from Quebec and other provinces who come for the fruit picking season. |
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Women also work as farm laborers, but work in domestic service is more highly valued. |
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Instead, they established settlements on the outskirts of towns, where they worked as wage laborers. |
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The typical form of mutualist organization for English laborers was the friendly society, or mutual benefit society. |
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There are also 4.8 million landless families who survive as tenant farmers, sharecroppers, and casual laborers. |
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The Air Service shipped some 3,000 carpenters, bricklayers, and laborers to England to prepare these facilities. |
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On Maryland's Eastern Shore, day laborers show up to shuck oysters, no questions asked, no documents needed. |
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Assume that the number of laborers and the number of monopolistically competitive firms is divided evenly between the regions. |
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Even though it has been illegal for 70 years, there are an estimated 25,000 bonded laborers in Nepal. |
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Tucker and Ganeson estimate the number of bonded child laborers in India at 15 million. |
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They came to work in the large industrial cities of the Northeast and Midwest as factory laborers, peddlers, busboys, and bootblacks. |
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Without it, the job would require an entire day and five laborers using a skid-steer loader with a bucket. |
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Most of these worked as domestics and laborers in urban areas, although some toiled on rural farms and haciendas. |
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Initially the sugar planters hired native Hawaiians to work as contract laborers on the plantations. |
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Wal-Mart, which also hires day laborers as store cleaners and shelf stockers, has a contract with Labor Ready. |
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Is it wise to run a saloon and a cathouse in a town filled with prison laborers? |
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Generally, women are important in farming and the local food trade, while cattle herders and wage laborers are usually men. |
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It then seemed to the classicists that the real wages, or means of subsistence, had to be advanced to the laborers. |
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After all, they are hiring themselves out on a daily basis for minimum wage to perform defined short-term jobs as unskilled manual laborers. |
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African Americans, Hispanic Americans, women, and laborers all can attest to this fact. |
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The firm's field employees, including superintendents, project managers, carpenters, and laborers, are scattered on jobsites. |
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Spanish-speaking peon laborers from Venezuela arrived in the nineteenth century to clear forests and work in cocoa cultivation. |
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Many factories illegally disregard the minimum wage and frequently pay their laborers much less. |
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To keep supplies and equipment flowing into the theater, local laborers were hired and combat troops were commandeered to offload ships. |
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People from different parts of India, now called Indo-Fijians, came to work as indentured laborers on sugar plantations. |
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The cost of hiring local caregivers could not be too high to be able to compete with the rates of foreign laborers. |
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The laborers effectively replant and rebuild their plots of land or pigsties. |
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They were the last large group of agricultural laborers brought to Hawaii by the sugar planters. |
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The laborers tell him that Ching was teaching a newly hired farmer the right way of holding the flail, but it was too much on the old man. |
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Half were cottagers, landless farm laborers, or vagrants, and one-seventh worked exclusively in textiles, mining, and other village industries. |
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As a result, large groups were excluded from politics, such as wage laborers, poor peasants, cottagers, land workers, and women. |
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Lower-paid workers include manual laborers, skilled craftsmen, and manufacturing and construction workers. |
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Inmate laborers were used to build the wood formwork, set 13,270 pounds of reinforcing steel, and place 59.6 cubic yards concrete. |
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The Creoles, the black people of the Caribbean region, are the descendants of colonial-era slaves, Jamaican merchants, and West Indian laborers. |
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These laborers included samurai, cooks, sake brewers, potters, printers, tailors, wood workers, and one hairdresser. |
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The Dalits, typically farmers and laborers, were sometimes forced from refugee camps. |
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They were employed as deckhands and laborers on European ships plying the coast. |
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At the end of the last Congressional session, a legalization program for undocumented farm laborers was proposed. |
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The plantation administrator also hired day laborers at times to work the demesne, the fields directly exploited by the owners. |
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Yet another valuable source on the laborers of timberyards are the descriptions of sawyers left by writers and diarists. |
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They dare not assert directly that the same laborers that have been discharged find situations in new branches of labor. |
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Belonging mostly to the gentry, they had no intention of becoming dirt farmers or laborers in America. |
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Most of the population is employed in agriculture and herding or works as expatriate laborers. |
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Unlike the majority of the pioneering Indian population in South Africa, most Gujaratis did not arrive in the country as indentured laborers. |
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These were a doorkeeper, four seated scribes with their document boxes, an overseer and his assistant, and three laborers. |
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Many South Asians are employed in the construction industry as day laborers and an injury can be double jeopardy for the worker, because without work, he doesn't get paid. |
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Sayyed, who never went to school, was one of the laborers hired by organized gangs to loot. |
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The Asian immigrant laborers were lured by the false promise of gold and wealth, only to sweat, work and die for pennies in the fields, mines, fish canneries, and railroads. |
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Traditionally, such service jobs were the recourse of unskilled and untrained American laborers and formed an income foundation for the lower middle class. |
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Concentrated primarily as laborers, teamsters, deliverymen, waiters, servants, maids and laundresses, they held many of the lowest paid and least skilled jobs in the city. |
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Such a quid-pro-quo method, Arnold complained, turned school inspectors into wage laborers mechanically examining each student on his or her passive retention of knowledge. |
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To stretch a manufacturing analogy, unsalaried bloggers represent low-cost Chinese laborers, professional journalists the well-paid-with-benefits American workers. |
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Among women, common occupations included servants and waitresses, and seamstresses or laundresses, with smaller groups of laborers and factory workers. |
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The Alentejo has traditionally been a region of low population density, latifundia that originated in the Roman estate system, and landless day laborers. |
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What better place to put our unneeded and unwanted laborers? |
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Its writers were not able to assuage our memory of the minstrel with black characters who, without a full range of emotion, were no more than highly skilled laborers. |
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Immigrant day laborers, domestics and gardeners have built independent organizations, even without labor law protection or support from local unions. |
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Last month, Thai laborers working on construction of the city's mass rapid transit system rioted in protest of poor working and living conditions. |
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As expected, the results show a clear-cut hierarchy with the upper class on the top rung of the ladder and the unskilled laborers on the bottom rung. |
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Trucks loaded with illegal liquor pulled through the gates, met by laborers who spent hours hauling crates of Scotch, bourbon, rum, and Benedictine into the building. |
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The illegal laborers were identified as Lao, Cambodian and Burmese. |
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How can we as teachers educate students to be more sophisticated laborers? |
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Although the plantation setting was crucial for the emergence of pidgins in both areas, in the Pacific laborers were recruited and indentured rather than slaves. |
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Many were skilled artisans, but some were compelled into service as forced prison laborers. |
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The cramped units with rollout beds and sleep-in porches had served as crash pads for generations of beachcombers and laborers looking for a cheap place to lay their heads. |
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With the Supreme Court's 2002 Hoffman decision, undocumented immigrant laborers have no legal standing to sue for back pay when fired for attempting to unionize. |
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How had a white dancer in blackface captured a rowdy crowd of laborers? |
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And the lumping together of DREAMers with farm laborers is a bizarre decision. |
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Those brick-laying years chumming it up with calloused day laborers in Sydney are finally paying off. |
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The organization counts scientists, journalists, lawyers, laborers, and businessmen among its members and supporters. |
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Planters often charged usurious interest rates on credit extended to their laborers, arguing that these were necessary because of the high risks involved. |
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Around him, the Company laborers were dynamiting a rock face in an attempt to build a rail line, and others sat under the shade of trees, overwhelmed by the heat. |
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Here at the launch site they were just a few dozen engineers and laborers in the deep wilderness, every blessed thing brought in piece by piece on balsa wood rafts. |
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All in all, approximately 13,000 allied POWs and 90,000 Asian laborers perished while working on the railway. |
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Industrial progress in Chicago produced loud sounds, whether the thrum of machinery, the clangor of busy loading docks, or the cries of brawny laborers. |
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Napoleon offered liberal monetary rewards to soldiers and laborers who could perform difficult portages in a timely fashion. |
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The adscription system tied rural laborers to their place of birth and required them to rent farms on the estates. |
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To understand the new London, I lived it. I slept rough with Roma beggars and touted for work with Baltic laborers on the kerb. |
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Between 1411 and 1415 a total of 165,000 laborers dredged the canal bed in Shandong and built new channels, embankments, and canal locks. |
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Yet Myanmar s laborers are undereducated and underskilled to take advantage of the opportunities. |
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The age of Springfield's lowest groups corresponds well with the age Innes gives for laborers in Springfield, be they recent inmigrants or not. |
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The mechanization of agriculture in the 1930s had sharply cut the need for laborers. |
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Most of their ancestors arrived in the 19th century as indentured laborers. |
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Noninheriting children had less security but more freedom. They became landless laborers on other farms or moved to cities looking for work. |
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In 1904, the Herero and the Nama revolted against the colonists in Southwest Africa, killing farm families, their laborers and servants. |
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This along with the influx of Italians and laborers was the major cause of rapid growth during this period. |
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Also in the seventeenth century, colonists started importing African laborers. |
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Below that stood skilled laborers, maids, servants, sailors, and other persons employed in the service industry. |
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After the Suez Crisis, the British and French laborers left while the Greeks stayed. |
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In 2007, the Brazilian Government freed more than 1,000 forced laborers from a sugar plantation. |
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By 1750 Georgia authorized slavery in the state because they had been unable to secure enough indentured servants as laborers. |
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People enslaved in the North typically worked as house servants, artisans, laborers and craftsmen, with the greater number in cities. |
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As laborers, if not as soldiers, they will be allies of the rebels, or of the Union. |
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Most families owned slaves as household servants and laborers, and even poor families might have owned a few slaves. |
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This created a great surplus of labor and gave capitalists plenty of laborers who could be hired for extremely low wages. |
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Former slaves tended to be absorbed into the peasantry and some became laborers in the towns. |
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They were accompanied by 300 Lithuanian and German slave laborers, whom the Stroganovs had purchased from the tsar. |
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The inhabitants of New Netherland were American Indians, European Colonists, and Africans, the last chiefly imported as enslaved laborers. |
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However, in modern India, Pakistan and Nepal, there are millions of bonded laborers, who work as slaves to pay off debts. |
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As English settlers died from harsh conditions, more and more Africans were brought to work as laborers. |
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Most of the English colonists arrived as indentured servants, under contracts to work as laborers for a fixed period to pay for their passage. |
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Contractors hired gangs of Irish immigrant laborers to build levees and sometimes clear land. |
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By 1920, the third generation after freedom, most African Americans in Mississippi were landless laborers again facing poverty. |
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The state depended on agriculture, but mechanization put many farm laborers out of work. |
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Chinese came to Mississippi as indentured laborers from Cuba during the 1870s, with others coming from mainland China in the later 19th century. |
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The end result, Evans recognized, was a low quality product that took too many laborers to make. |
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An electric overhead crane replaced 36 day laborers for moving heavy loads across the factory. |
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The immigrants filled the ranks of factory workers, craftsmen and unskilled laborers. |
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Last month, Cambodia rescued 230 trafficked laborers from Thai fishing vessels operating from the Indonesian island of Ambon. |
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Albanian immigrant and cafe owner Ramazan Celikoski grouches but extends credit to the Hispanic day laborers in Albany Park. |
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One Mumbai leatherworker has a shop where a team of 22 laborers turns out thousands of custom-made briefcases for big companies. |
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Hayes's study applies Morgan's reasoning to slavery in colonial New York, where Europeans, Africans, and Native Americans coexisted as unfree laborers. |
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This mechanization made some factories an assemblage of unskilled laborers performing simple and repetitive tasks under the direction of skilled foremen and engineers. |
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The majority entering the state immigrated directly from China to Mississippi between 1910 and 1930, when they were recruited by planters as laborers. |
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As the flow of indentured laborers to the colony decreased with improving economic conditions in England, more slaves were imported for labor and the caste lines hardened. |
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In the early years the line between indentured servants and African slaves or laborers was fluid, and the working classes often lived closely together. |
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As the Roman Republic expanded outward, it enslaved entire populations, thus ensuring an ample supply of laborers to work in Rome's farms, quarries and households. |
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American settlers began to establish cotton plantations in north Florida, which required numerous laborers, which they supplied by buying slaves in the domestic market. |
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However, two maneless lions terrorized the campsites shortly after his arrival in March, killing 135 African and Indian laborers, by Patterson's account. |
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Most laborers came from Britain as indentured servants, having signed contracts of indenture to pay with work for their passage, their upkeep and training, usually on a farm. |
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In 2001, however, the Brazilian government freed more than 1,400 slave laborers from many different forced labor institutions varying throughout the country. |
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North Dakota was a known popular destination for immigrant farmers and general laborers and their families, mostly from Norway, Sweden, Germany and the United Kingdom. |
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Workers and laborers were generally paid better than in most of Europe, and enjoyed relatively high living standards, although they also paid higher than normal taxes. |
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Nothing could surpass the nonsensity of trying to run so complex and so concentrated a machine by southern and western farmers in grotesque alliance with city day laborers. |
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Some immigrants who just arrived purchased farms and shared in this export wealth, but many poor German and Irish immigrants were forced to work as agricultural wage laborers. |
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The great majority of people in our mills in 1960 were unskilled workers who filled jobs like scarfers, handgrinders, buggy drivers, hookers and laborers. |
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The effect is a class division between conceptual and manual laborers, and ultimately managers and workers, and a de facto labor market for conceptual workers. |
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Under the authority of Karl Hermann Frank, German minister of state for Bohemia and Moravia, some 350,000 Czech laborers were dispatched to the Reich. |
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In general, in Marxist terms, wage laborers and those dependent on the welfare state are working class, and those who live on accumulated capital are not. |
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The mechanization of agriculture also reduced the need for laborers. |
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Under the plan, the AFL-CIO and network will pursue minimum wage campaigns, safety at construction sites and legislation to criminalize employers who stiff day laborers. |
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Before the invention and current widespread adoption of automated machinery, all paper was made by hand, formed or laid one sheet at a time by specialized laborers. |
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Trams, automobiles and town planning encouraged the separate development of industrial suburbs and residential suburbs, with laborers commuting between them. |
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