1. Woodrow Wilson and Immigration Laws
Commenting on the 90s, Wilson said: ''men of sturdy stocks of the north of Europe had made up the main strain of foreign blood Which was added every year to the vital working force of the country.... but now there came multitudes of men from the lowest class from the south of Italy and men of the meaner sort out of Hungary and Poland''. ... Gezea Kende told Wilson that many Hungarians considered him an enemy, referring to passages from A history of an American People, what Wilson said,'' I believe in the responsible restrictions of immigration, but not in any res...
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- Approx Pages: 13
- Has Bibliography
- Grade Level: Undergraduate