「Immigrants」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Immigrants

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  • pany would eventually be able to send 20,000 immigrants a year never came to fruition, but it spurre
  • 978 Macht had a big break as the lead in The Immigrants a syndicated miniseries about the rise of th
  • r in their community: a shelter for homeless immigrants; a cooperative daycare; a community organizi
  • On September 11, 1857, 120 immigrants aboard a wagon train bound for California we
  • ed to a noticeable increase in the number of immigrants about this time.
  • The Commonwealth Immigrants Act 1962 (c.
  • The Act, as with the Commonwealth Immigrants Act 1962, and that of 1968, restricted immig
  • e 1962, with the passage of the Commonwealth Immigrants Act 1962, not all CUKCs had the Right of Abo
  • introduction of the tendentious Commonwealth Immigrants Act (1962).
  • ch of a Mexican style, a design created when immigrants adapted their own style to that of the local
  • ant stop along the Oregon Trail, and passing immigrants added to the tension.
  • reduction of more than half of the number of immigrants admitted, which would be reduced to 20 000,
  • den, Colorado, established in 1873 by German immigrants Adolph Coors and Jacob Schueler, itself orig
  • on Flettner was of "the first regular German immigrants after the war".
  • sist him with the influx of Russian-language immigrants, after Milchstein's views became public, his
  • grated on the same ship as small children as immigrants after WWII (Joanna in 1950 from Grondingen a
  • ing West Estate, accommodating the influx of immigrants after World War II.
  • iel Brady or B. Gillick, both probably Irish Immigrants, after Cavan in County Cavan, Republic of Ir
  • f regulating immigration and for the care of immigrants after landing.
  • ous educational program geared towards young immigrants, ages 17-20, who arrive in Israel without th
  • legislation, SB60, that would issue illegal immigrants already living in Utah an "accountability ca
  • United States to protect the rights of those immigrants already arrived.
  • ve to look at" potential amnesty for illegal immigrants already living in the United States.
  • ish immigration to Britain, repatriate Irish immigrants already settled and deport Irish immigrants
  • hway" to citizenship for millions of illegal immigrants already in the country, provided they had jo
  • fruit orchards and dairy farms, and Italian immigrants also took up land in the area.
  • nty in the late 1840s (Morgan County's Swiss immigrants also included the grandparents of one of Gra
  • Hungarian and Polish immigrants also settled in the city, but in smaller num
  • as a significantly high population of Latino immigrants, also including neighborhoods along King Rd
  • a possibility that a percentage of Nepalese immigrants also help make up the estimated 8 million fo
  • More often, immigrants altered their own names to hide their nation
  • the city, indicating the manifold origins of immigrants, among them the Huguenots from France.
  • to a World War I flight engineer and German immigrants among both his mother's and father's forebea
  • ks where a large influx of English and Irish immigrants among others came to work.
  • The principal craftsmen at Val-Kill were immigrants, among them Frank Landolfa, Otto Berge, Arno
  • Tilbury was also a port of entry for many immigrants; among them being a large group of West Indi
  • This would offer immigrants an opportunity to learn to read and write En
  • God Needs No Passport: Immigrants and the Changing American Religious Landscap
  • hatred for Communists, Social Democrats, and immigrants, and dreamed about getting rich.
  • mark Herman Beiderbecke, was a son of German immigrants and was the owner of East Davenport Lumber a
  • ecame apparent, most of the tenants were new immigrants and as such were not eligible or not interes
  • an sources, was strongly influenced by Cuban immigrants and their habanera music.
  • Those historic immigrants and their descendants allowed to remain afte
  • a where he had reportedly been ranting about immigrants, and drove to the Chevron gas station owned
  • ithout certificates were regarded as illegal immigrants and chased by British police.
  • Her paternal grandparents were Croatian immigrants and her mother was of Irish descent.
  • ford in 1852 among the first wave of Swedish immigrants and in 1876 was named secretary of the Union
  • present among the new generation of European immigrants and Oreopithecus faced quick extinction toge
  • Irish Immigrants and Scottish Society in the Nineteenth and T
  • own again, with the settlement of Vietnamese immigrants and other newcomers from all over the United
  • iently, alleviate wait times that keep legal immigrants and their families separated for years, and
  • "an opulent society, religious assistance to immigrants and relations with Christian of other denomi
  • ration Law Clinic provides legal services to immigrants and community groups throughout Massachusett
  • Berwind was the son of German immigrants, and he was born in Philadelphia in 1848.
  • and was a member of the Association of Greek Immigrants and Chairman of the Institute for Research o
  • Cahokians, farmers, immigrants, and even visitors).
  • re non-denominational, and the agency serves immigrants and refugees of all faiths or none.
  • ilable, this neighborhood was a favorite for immigrants and working-class citizens.
  • As of 2000, 27.5% of the residents were immigrants, and few of the buildings (1.9%) were condom
  • f Alexander and Elizabeth Morrison, Scottish immigrants, and was educated in Alwick and Chatham.
  • onument at the Indiana Statehouse donated by immigrants, and it was intended by the Italians to be a
  • the founders of the Association of Romanian Immigrants, and started work as the chief editor of The
  • ployed about 300 workers, some of them Irish immigrants, and many of whom lived in the stone terrace
  • and some other countries to arrest Pakistani immigrants and transfer them to the US.
  • She is the daughter of two Puerto Rican immigrants and grew up in Washington Heights.
  • eighborhood, which was built in 1956 for new immigrants and immigrants being moved out of the transi
  • d meetings and symposium of Palyam veterans, immigrants, and British Navy officers.
  • "Out of the Very Stone; Korean hibakusha," Immigrants and Minorities, Vol.
  • ed the "First German", was made up of German immigrants and descendants of local German settlers.
  • en further, excluding all classes of Chinese immigrants and extending restrictions to other Asian im
  • became a counselor at a boarding school for immigrants and troubled youth.
  • ociation whose members are veteran Ethiopian immigrants and former Mossad agents who took part in th
  • Opposite Poles: Immigrants and Ethnics in Polish Chicago, 1976-1990.
  • providing professional training to Ethiopian immigrants and that affirmative action be considered to
  • arty defined by its opposition to rights for immigrants and Roman Catholics.
  • ardy kiwi bushmen and their families, recent immigrants and a few others trying to keep clear of the
  • en born in Liverpool, England to West Indian immigrants, and to have graduated from Eton College.
  • He was born in Chennai to Vietnamese immigrants and settled down in Chennai.
  • His father was the son of Russian immigrants and his mother came from a Worcestershire fa
  • 6 inhabitants, 42% are native Danes, 37% are immigrants and 21% are Danes with immigrant parents.
  • ts in Mexico, they have sympathized with the immigrants and criticized the Arizona immigration law a
  • o a member of Norway's Contact Committee for Immigrants and the Authorities.
  • d for being too soft on the issue of illegal immigrants and for voting for expensive government prog
  • t is now known as St Lythans assimilated new immigrants and exchanged ideas of the Bronze Age and Ir
  • de of West Hollywood is dominated by Russian immigrants, and the park is a popular gathering place f
  • t. Adalbert has served generations of Polish immigrants and their American-born children; at its pea
  • Racism and Discrimination against Immigrants and Minorities in Greece: The State of Play
  • It was founded in 1886 by Russian immigrants, and moved several times to other locations
  • he son of Thomas Kelly and Mary Grace, Irish immigrants, and was educated in Charlottetown.
  • 100 years by farmers that were mostly German immigrants and their descendants.
  • Their primary duties were to deter illegal immigrants and protect local residents.
  • f ten years from the date of issue under the Immigrants and Emigrants Act, regardless of when the pr
  • mes McLaughlin and Mary Phillips, both Irish immigrants, and was educated there.
  • , all the while illustrating the dilemmas of immigrants and their offspring as they are confronted b
  • g to "Americanize" German and other Catholic immigrants, and was hostile to ethnic parishes such as
  • illiam Aird and Elizabeth McLean, were Scots immigrants and the family was proud of its heritage, th
  • in West Hartlepool, the son of Polish-Jewish immigrants, and initially studied the violin in Leipzig
  • ing programs and services for people who are immigrants and refugees, including settlement assistanc
  • atty McCleary and Matilda McCabe, both Irish immigrants, and was educated there and at Toronto.
  • anotea would take money from the prospective immigrants, and then use this money to buy German goods
  • Immigrants and Boomers: Forging a New Social Contract f
  • English as a Second Language program to help immigrants and other speakers of other languages learn
  • by a congregation of mid-19th century German immigrants and their descendants.
  • observed a street life composed of European immigrants and a prevalence of poverty and societal ill
  • r., Douglas J., For the Common Good: Finnish Immigrants and hithe United States: The Case of Finns a
  • st walls of the Tower, offering sanctuary to immigrants and to the poor.
  • ling abroad was the treatment given to Irish immigrants and to the Catholic Church.
  • the immigration status of suspected illegal immigrants and to enforce state and national immigratio
  • The majority of Turks are recent immigrants and mainly live in Catalonia (especially in
  • the 1960s and was mainly populated by Irish immigrants and their descendants.
  • ounty, Canada West in 1848, the son of Irish immigrants, and educated in Barrie.
  • gn recruits to the rebel cause, thousands of immigrants and mercenaries served in the Confederate Ar
  • GFM currently reaches out to refugees, immigrants, and international students in Atlanta, Geor
  • Stambolian's parents were Armenian immigrants, and he explored his Armenian heritage in a
  • the Union, although a significant amount of immigrants and mercenaries served with the Confederacy
  • urt, Germany, the son of a couple of Spanish immigrants, and was raised in Madrid, Spain.
  • l associations created by and for Andalusian immigrants and their descendants.
  • s that arise in relationships between Indian immigrants and Indian Americans who were raised in the
  • rganization which works on issues concerning immigrants and refugees.
  • unists, Communist sympathizers, good hearted immigrants and humanitarians and several confirmed Sovi
  • cted on federal charges of harboring illegal immigrants and conspiracy to distribute cocaine and met
  • ounty, Nova Scotia, a descendant of Scottish immigrants, and was educated at Dalhousie College.
  • can eras 'neighbors' and later Euro-American immigrants and historians.
  • Founded in 1764, to aid German immigrants and indentured servants, it now promotes the
  • In Athens more than 2000 immigrants and members of Greek anti-racist groups marc
  • They and later German immigrants and their descendants have made a significan
  • ires, film stars, migrant labourers, illegal immigrants and sailors.
  • Italian immigrants and the Italian American community are frequ
  • "The immigrants and the British are racially and genetically
  • ame well known as a benefactor to new German immigrants and acquired the nickname "father of the imm
  • and North America where it has been found in immigrants and travelers.
  • e unique place of nineteenth-century Chinese immigrants and their descendants in Mississippi culture
  • gh is known for its very large percentage of immigrants and second-generation immigrants, many of wh
  • ican English in the 19th century via Chinese immigrants and their descendants, and into British Engl
  • mately two-thirds of its members were German immigrants and most of the other third was composed of
  • in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, the son of German immigrants, and was educated there.
  • The Tarnished Door: The New Immigrants and the Transformation of America ISBN 97808
  • He supported increased programs for immigrants, and recommended in 1979 that the school boa
  • Although very popular among Portuguese immigrants and certain rural areas of the country, Pimb
  • van Township, Upper Canada, the son of Irish immigrants, and was educated there.
  • Tribunal to have encouraged violence against immigrants and visible minorities.
  • n years at a settlement organization for new immigrants and refugees at Maison Internationale de la
  • ne suburb of Collingwood to (Northern) Irish immigrants, and raised in Kyneton, Best was educated at
  • ien acts of 1798 were aimed largely at Irish immigrants and French refugees critical of the Adams ad
  • These immigrants and migrants became the basis of South Phila
  • aigned as an opponent of amnesty for illegal immigrants and has called for strict border security.
  • r security rooting out criminals and illegal immigrants, and being tough on drugs.
  • still owned by Macedonian, Greek or Albanian immigrants and other menu items include gyros and Greek
  • citizens) and the rest were Issei (Japanese immigrants and resident aliens, first-generation Japane
  • lsory biometric residence permits for non-EU immigrants and introduced greater powers for immigratio
  • s were historically associated with Jamaican immigrants and had a recognised stronghold in Brixton.
  • 1933, Clifford Pier was a landing point for immigrants and other sea passengers.
  • Many saw this as a means of attacking German immigrants and on April 21, the move sparked the Lager
  • who is very segregationist and looks down on immigrants and those of poor pedigree.
  • He became a spokesman for recent Ontario immigrants, and forged a political alliance with John C
  • he Dutch/German border as the son of Turkish immigrants and spent part of his teens living in South
  • (Auckland, Auckland University Press, 1993); Immigrants and citizens: New Zealanders and Asian immig
  • It provides a variety of programs for immigrants and immigrant communities in the province, a
  • t, the Aliyah Bet, responsible for smuggling immigrants, and the police intelligence forces.
  • was born in Kendallville, Indiana to German immigrants and later apprenticed under prominent archit
  • in which their literature attacked Jews and immigrants and proclaimed loyalty to Nazism, led to som
  • atrick Morrissy and Rose Farrell, both Irish immigrants, and entered business as a livery stable ope
  • % were from Ohio, 18% Pennsylvania, 11% were immigrants and 8% were from other U.S. states.
  • ish community, explicitly wanted Anglo-Saxon immigrants, and New Orleans, a thriving urban center wh
  • imberti grew up in Rosario as son of Italian immigrants and came back to Milan after the First World
  • oping "youth at risk" programs, services for immigrants, and helping to found the Canadian Immigrant
  • a has been important for Irish Working Class immigrants, and recently this has been supplemented by
  • Castellani is himself the son of Italian immigrants and was raised in Wilmington, Delaware.
  • She was born to Jewish immigrants and grew up in northeast Portland, at the po
  • rand River, Nova Scotia, the son of Scottish immigrants, and married Maria S., the daughter of Josia
  • s affirmative action and amnesty for illegal immigrants, and, while he says he is otherwise pro-choi
  • 2000 there were 1.642 people descended from immigrants Angolans in the U.S. Angolan immigration in
  • Veranis was born to first generation Italian immigrants Anthony Sr. and Theresa from Nuoro in Sardin
  • It was founded in 1854 by Italian immigrants Antonio Arighi and Antonio Bianchi who origi
  • These immigrants appeared as a new band of conquering people,
  • Armenia, wanted exclusion of all illiterate immigrants, applauded gains in women's rights and pledg
  • in Elmont, New York, where many of the early immigrants are buried.
  • February - Thousands of German immigrants are stranded at port of disembarkation India
  • "The early immigrants are now honoured at the Toronto waterfront p
  • The German immigrants are mostly Lutheran, however many have conve
  • ew book, God Needs No Passport, is about how immigrants are changing the American religious landscap
  • many of the new places where Latin American immigrants are settling, including Rupert, Idaho, Grand
  • Most of the songs on her album Mehagrim ( Immigrants) are her own work.
  • Their attitudes to immigrants are also depicted ironically.
  • Immigrants are to be absorbed from other states and eff
  • y claim that because the children of illegal immigrants are often U.S. citizens, the cost of treatin
  • Approximately 200 Scottish artisan immigrants are brought to the Cape Colony by Benjamin M
  • “So they [ immigrants] are forced to offer solidarity although som
  • w we choose to define or label them [illegal immigrants] are hard-working, taxpaying workers.”
  • g trend in rural Ireland where multinational immigrants are diversifying the rural population as Iri
  • Scores of illegal immigrants are also exposed as they use the river to en
  • Proponents also pointed out that the illegal immigrants are already living in the city, and are the
  • l, an anarchist community founded by Italian immigrants around the turn of the century in the southe
  • hborhood, but the area was settled by German immigrants around 1849.
  • With the arrival of Germans immigrants around 1850, massive production began.
  • ional change that would deny bail to illegal immigrants arrested for some felonies and serious drunk
  • When immigrants arrive, they may find that they are not free
  • In 1903, 5,310 Jewish immigrants arrived at the port of Philadelphia.
  • got its start after large numbers of German immigrants arrived in Davenport in the 1850s.
  • Most of the immigrants arrived in the late 1940s after riots in Ale
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