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Word: exploitationism (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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But some 500,000 Mexicans are thought to have succeeded in slipping across the frontier and to have found low-paying jobs on farms and in cities. The Mexican Government has often complained that these illegal immigrants are subject to ill-treatment and unfair exploitation in the United States.

Author: By Jean-pierre Berlan, | Title: Who's Fooling Whom? | 10/29/1974 | See Source »

It is a mistake to assume that low profits for farmers do not mean that workers are not exploited. Farmers' low profits may be due to monopolistic control of the marketing or processing companies' high interest rates and high land rents. A better indicator of workers' exploitation is profits plus...

Author: By Jean-pierre Berlan, | Title: Who's Fooling Whom? | 10/29/1974 | See Source »

The fate of farm laborers in northern California--wages, health, housing--is better than in other states. Better, for instance, than on the eastern seaboard. This doesn't make that fate any better. Interstate migrancy has diminished due partly to mechanization, and partly to other forms of labor exploitation such...

Author: By Jean-pierre Berlan, | Title: Who's Fooling Whom? | 10/29/1974 | See Source »

I know what the "unionization privileges" (sic) of California and Arizona are. I have some knowledge of the history of agricultural developments in the Golden State, of its undemocratic system of land ownership and farming. The story of migratory labor from the early Chinese to the Mexicans is as old...

Author: By Jean-pierre Berlan, | Title: Who's Fooling Whom? | 10/29/1974 | See Source »

LUIGI PIRANDELLO'S Chee Chee, at the Loeb Ex tonight through Saturday, reminds us that brevity is sometimes the ghost of wit. Pirandello wrote this half-act play in 1920, a year before Six Characters in Search of an Author and two years before Henry IV. Chee Chee bears the...

Author: By Stephen Tifft, | Title: Pirandellian Calisthenics | 10/24/1974 | See Source »

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