Item Detail
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30901
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27
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1
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English
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Toil and Rage in a New Land : The Greek Immigrants in Utah
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Utah Historical Quarterly
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1970
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38
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2
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Salt Lake City, UT
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Utah State Historical Society
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97-206
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FROM THE DAYS BEFORE HOMER, the Greeks have been sojourners in foreign lands. As if in exile they lived in large Greek colonies throughout Europe, Australia, North and South America, or alone in isolated outposts of Africa and Asia. The word for foreign places, xenetia comes often in Greek conversation. It evokes loneliness in alien lands and nostalgia for Greek earth. From ancient times to the present, songs of xenetia are part of daily life.
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A History of Carbon County
A Struggle for Survival and Identity : Families in the Aftermath of the Castle Gate Mine Disaster
Being Different : Stories of Utah Minorities
City of Diversity : A History of Price, Utah
Connecting to the Nation : Utah and the U.S.A.
Fifty Years with a Future: Salt Lake's Guadalupe Mission and Parish
Folklore in Utah
Immigrants, Minorities, and the Great War
Immigrants, Minorities, and the Great War
Labor at the Beginning of the 20th Century: The Carbon County, Utah Coal Fields
Old Reliable : A History of Bingham Canyon, Utah
South Slav Settlements in Utah, 1890-1935
The Awkward State of Utah : Coming of Age in the Nation 1896-1945
The Development of the Smelting Industry in the Central Salt Lake Valley Communities of Midvale, Murray, and Sandy Prior to 1900
The Gathering Place : An Illustrated History of Salt Lake City
The Site of Fort Robidoux
The South Slavs in Utah : A Social History
Unionism, Communism, and the Great Depression : The Carbon County Coal Strike of 1933
Utah and the Great War : The Beehive State and the World War I Experience
Utah in the Twentieth Century
Utah’s Coal Lands : A Vital Example of How America Became a Great Nation
Utah's Ellis Island : The Difficult 'Americanization' of Carbon County
Utah's History
Utah’s Reaction to the 1919–1920 Red Scare
When Buffalo Bill Came to Utah
Who Tells Your Story? Analyzing a Century of Utah History
Women in Utah History : Paradigm or Paradox?