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Nebraska Studies
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The Noble Experiment

With the passage and ratification of the 18th Amendment in 1919, law enforcement officials all over the nation were charged with stopping:

". . . the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States . . . for beverage purposes . . . "
Amendment XVIII The Prohibition Amendment Passed by Congress December 18, 1917

Congress and the states were left with the task of figuring out how to prohibit ... Read more

Web Page

African American Migration

African Americans were just one ethnic group who migrated in great numbers to northern cities like Omaha, Nebraska in the first years of the new century.
From the 1994 NET Television program A Street of Dreams


Between 1910 and 1920, the African American population of Omaha doubled from around 5,000 to 10,315. Those 10,000 blacks made up five percent of Omaha’s population. Blacks made up only around one percent of the population of the state. Even with these small numbers, the rate ... Read more

Web Page

The Reservation System

Under the reservation system, American Indians kept their citizenship in their independent tribes, but life was harder than it had been. The reservations were designed to encourage the Indians to live within clearly defined zones. The U.S. promised to provide food, goods and money and to protect them from attack by other tribes and white settlers. Also, some educators and protestant missionaries felt that forcing the Indians to live in a confined space would make it easier to "civilize the ... Read more

Web Page

Water Distribution

The Central District provides surface water irrigation service to more than 113,000 acres in Phelps, Gosper, Kearney, Lincoln, and Dawson counties. Another 110,000 acres served by several smaller irrigation projects receive supplemental water from Lake McConaughy. In addition, CNPPID’s project provides documented groundwater recharge to more than 310,000 acres in and around its service area, an area with extensive groundwater irrigation development.

The primary water supply for this system originates in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado and Wyoming. Water from the ... Read more

Web Page

War Bonds Bring Hollywood to Nebraska

There was a government savings bond program before the second world war began. It was a way for the federal government to borrow from its citizens to help finance the cost of preparing for war. After December 7th, savings bonds became "War Bonds." Individual citizens — even children — were encouraged to buy bonds. Nebraskans responded. Between the attack on Pearl Harbor and 1943, Nebraskans bought $240-million worth of bonds.

The state government also adopted a policy of investing all available ... Read more

Web Page

Horrors of War: Concentration Camps

One horrible by-product of war is that crimes against humanity sometimes occur away from the battlefields. A very sad example was the creation of concentration camps by Adolph Hitler’s National Socialist political party. Racist, nationalistic, imperialistic, anti-communist, and militaristic, the "Nazis" claimed that Jewish people were members of an "inferior race".

The Allies declared Victory in Europe (V-E Day) on May 8, 1945. Nebraskan Roy Long was one of the troops who helped liberate the Concentration Camps.
An NET Television’s THE WAR: ... Read more

Web Page

Flying with an A-Bomb

What was it like to fly a bomber with atomic weapons on board? What was it like to know your mission was to kill thousands and even hundreds of thousands of civilians?

Much is demanded of the SAC atom-bomber crews. Their lives are something new in military history. For the first time in peacetime, SAC bomber crews were prepared to fly their missions at a moment’s notice. SAC commanders had to be constantly available; before the era of cell phones, they ... Read more

Web Page

Missiles on Land & Sea

How does it feel to have your finger on the control of a nuclear missile?
Find out what it was like to work in an underground silo.
From the 1990 NET Television program, Cold Warriors Never Die

At first, SAC had airplanes with nuclear bombs. Their mission was to discourage another nation from attacking the U.S. by being ready to deliver a massive nuclear attack. But it was clear that rockets were the emerging weapon of the future.

The reason was speed. Bombers fly ... Read more

Web Page

The Family Fallout Shelter

When people are faced with frightening situations, they will take amazing precautions — even if the perceived threat never happens. People in coastal cities facing a possible hurricane will stock up on food, store water in their bathtubs and board up their windows. Just before the century changed to the year 2000, people were worried that computers around the world would shut down, bringing down power grids, ATM machines, gasoline stations, health care, transportation systems, financial and governmental services. Many ... Read more

Web Page

Bankers: Villains or Victims?

The resentment that many farmers felt against bankers reached the boiling point during the height of the farm crisis in the 1980s. Some bankers said they got the silent treatment on the street. A few were even assaulted by angry customers. Some farmers wore black armbands to protest foreclosures. Bankers became the target of bitter jokes making the rounds in Nebraska communities.

Question: What’s the difference between a dead skunk on the road and a dead loan officer?
Answer: There are skid ... Read more
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