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Nursery stock --- Seeds --- Vegetables --- Catalogs --- Nebraska --- Omaha
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Nursery stock --- Seeds --- Vegetables --- Catalogs --- Nebraska --- Omaha
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African Americans --- Omaha (Neb.) --- Nebraska. --- Nebraska
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"The Women Who Built Omaha explores the important contributions of women to Omaha while placing those contributions in the context of social history. Wirth describes the activities of local women in numerous fields from the 1850s to the modern women's movement in the 1970s, bringing to life those who have been overlooked throughout history"--
Women --- Social conditions. --- Omaha (Neb.) --- History.
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Architecture, Domestic --- My Omaha Obsession (Website) --- Omaha (Neb.) --- History --- Buildings, structures, etc.
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Journalists --- Authors, American --- Peattie, Elia Wilkinson, --- Nebraska --- Omaha (Neb.) --- Omaha City (Neb.) --- City of Omaha (Neb.) --- State of Nebraska --- Nebraska Territory --- Social life and customs.
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In the spring of 1968, the Omaha Central High School basketball team made history with its first all-black starting lineup. Their nickname, the Rhythm Boys, captured who they were and what they did on the court. Led by star center Dwaine Dillard, the Rhythm Boys were a shoo-in to win the state championship. But something happened on their way to glory. In early March, segregationist George Wallace, in a third-party presidential bid, made a campaign stop in Omaha. By the time he left town, Dillard was in jail, his coach was caught between angry political factions, and the city teetered on the e
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Painting --- Joslyn Art Museum [Omaha, Neb.] --- Boston Athenaeum