Forward The first Russians came to the west coast as colonists rather than immigrants, exploring Alaska, the Pacific Northwest and California. Starting in the 1880s, political = and economic turmoil, coupled with government-sanctioned anti-Jewish riots called pogroms, caused millions of Jews to come to the big eastern cities of the United States. Non-Jewish immigrants of the time, mostly farmers, found work as laborers in mills, meatpacking, construction, and mining. The Bolshevik revolution in 1918 led to the creation of the Soviet Union and the emigration of most of the Russian aristocracy (the "first wave"). Joseph Stalin's brutal dictatorship (1926-1953) led to a large anti-Soviet army that allied itself with the Germans during the World War II and escaped to the United States after that war (the "second wave"). Finally, the partial opening of emigration policy in the late 1980s coupled with easy U.S. immigration for Soviet Jews, Ukranian Catholics, and Evangelical Christians formed the beginning of the third wave that extends through today. The life stories from this third wave illustrate the high levels of education, ambition and independence of Russian migrants. They also characterize the ethnic mix of Russian immigrants. In fact, while millions of persons have come to the US from Russia in the last 120 years, less than 20 percent of these were ethnically Russian. About half were Jews. Others were Catholics, Protestants, Latvians, Poles, and Armenians. While immersed in Russian culture and language, members of these groups suffered severe discrimination at the hands of the Russian Orthodox majority. As is evident in many of these interviews, Soviet citizens were proud of their ability to "make do" and enjoy a high standard of living in the Soviet Union despite discrimination, war, shortages and purges. Often, they became skillful manipulators of the system, achieving access to luxuries such as a car, consumer goods, a rich cultural life and the resources required to give life chances for their children. As Erving Goffman pointed out in Asylums, the sense of accomplishment a person derives from obtaining scarce privileges or goods through unconventional means is often more valuable than the actual possession of the good or privilege in itself. Russians' ability to cope with their environment is rooted in their families. Due to the shortage of housing endemic in the former USSR, it was common for extended families of 3 or 4 generations to reside together in very close quarters. Further, because the birth rate among urban, middle-class Russians was low, Soviet youth maintained close relationships with their parents and kin. Relatives provided young Soviets with political/bureaucratic influence (useful for securing school and career opportunities) as well as emotional support. The USSR adhered to socialist-inspired egalitarian ideology that called for women's involvement in the paid labor force. Further, because many men in the former Soviet Union served in the military or died in war, women's labor was in high demand. Before entering the US, Soviet women were accustomed to working outside of the home for income as well as taking care of their households. Having already adopted a practical and pragmatic approach to family and career prior to migration, Russian women have been better equipped at adapting to life in the States than their husbands. As these stories illustrate, men often mourn the careers they lost in migration, and spend months or even years in an effort to secure an equivalent position, leaving their wives to care for children and support the family. By contrast, women usually resolved to do what was necessary to care for themselves and their children. Further, Russian women often master English and became competent in American culture prior to coethnic men. Soviet women's pre-migration survival techniques appear to work well in the US, leaving them with a feeling of security, and a degree of optimism about their own and their children's futures.