Author Archives: Beth Goble

Local Level Data for Nebraska Released

The U.S. Census Bureau today released new, detailed demographic information from the 2010 Census for Alaska, Colorado, Connecticut, Nebraska and North Carolina.

Tables are available for states, counties, county subdivisions, places, census tracts, ZIP code tabulation areas, congressional districts for the 111th Congress and, where applicable, American Indian and Alaska Native areas and Hawaiian home lands. For most subjects, statistics for census block groups and blocks are also shown.

The Summary File 1 tables can be found on the Census Bureau’s American FactFinder website at <http://factfinder2.census.gov/>. A good place to start is the quick tables (noted as “QT” in the search results list), which show a summary of a particular topic for one geographic area at a time. The geographic comparison tables (noted as “GCT”) are a good place to start for a first look at a topic across geographies, such as all places within a state.

Click here  to read the full press release.

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The Flood of 1881

Flood of 1881

The Missouri river has flooded many times in recorded history. Floods levels this year may exceed even the record flood of 1952.  Although floodwaters were not that high in the flood of 1881, significant damage was done and lives were lost.   These two photos show floodwaters inundating the lumber yard and Union Pacific rail yard in Omaha in April 1881.

Missouri River Flood of 1881

According to this article  on the Nebraska Department of Natural Resources web site:
“The release of water, which was yellow with clay and debris from cornfields, trees, and houses, later flooded Omaha up to 9th Street. Several hundred yards of rip-rap “gave away like cheesecloth” before the floodwaters as they inundated the Union Pacific coal and lumber yards. The River reportedly remained high for several weeks and, during the height of flooding, was reported to have been five miles wide.”

This article from the April 11th 1881 Omaha Daily Bee Slowly Subsiding: The Demon of the Big Muddy Appeased records eyewitness accounts the morning of April 9th:
“At one o’clock this morning the water was rising gradually in the river and pouring into the basins surrounding the lumber and coal yards in overwhelming streams. The main current of the river seemed to diverge somewhat off its course ‘of the day before and to bear away toward the east shore. This was indicated by the action of the ice, which had heretofore pressed with dangerous force against the smelting works and government rip rap. The proprietors of the various lumber yards , the Chicago , Foster Gray and Hoagland , were on hand all night with gangs of men , endeavoring to construct booms around their yards … At six o’clock in the morning , the gauge showed an additional rise of nine inches above the measurement taken at twelve o’clock, making the total height above low water mark nearly twenty-three feet. By this time all of the lumber yards were filling rapidly ; the car shops and engine house belonging to the U. P. works were entirely surrounded and the aspect of affairs were most discouraging. Then , for some unexplained reason , the rise seemed to cease and it was hoped that the flood bad reached its limit. This condition of affairs continued for three hours , and the most active efforts were made to protect the pro0perty of the U. P. company , the smelting works and the lumber yards. At nine o’clock a rush came , and the side tracks which had up to that time acted as barriers to the progress of the flood began to show signs of weakness , and in a few minutes huge parts of the embankments had given away and the water was pouring into the last and remaining basins west of the smelting work . “

Click here to see more images in Nebraska Memories of the flood of 1881 in Omaha.

For more information about this year’s flooding visit this page on NebraskAccess.

Visit Nebraska Memories to search for or browse through many more historical images digitized from photographs, negatives, postcards, maps, lantern slides, books and other materials.

Nebraska Memories is a cooperative project to digitize Nebraska-related historical and cultural heritage materials and make them available to researchers of all ages via the Internet. Nebraska Memories is brought to you by the Nebraska Library Commission. If your institution is interested in participating in Nebraska Memories, see http://nlc.nebraska.gov/nebraskamemories/participation.aspx  for more information, or contact Beth Goble, Government Information Services Director, or Devra Dragos, Technology & Access Services Director.

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Nebraska Databook has a New Look

If statistics about Nebraska people, places and economics are something you often need,  you may already have been using a resource on the Department of Economic Development web site called the Nebraska Databook.   The agency web site has been redesigned and the old Databook link is inactive.   Don’t panic–it’s all still available via the  Data and Research Division  section of the site.  Topical headings on the left open lists of tables in the center of the page.    There is also a Get Help From Our Experts  link at the bottom linking to Business development staff and research consultants including two folks we contact frequently, Steve Williams and Mike Lundeen.

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More U.S. Statutes at Large Online

The U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO) has released volumes 95-115 of the United States Statutes at Large, which spans from 1981 through 2002 (97th-107th Congresses). FDsys now provides access to all available United States Statutes at Large content from 1951 through 2007 (82nd – 110th Congresses).  

The United States Statutes at Large is the official source for the laws and resolutions passed by Congress. Publication began in 1845 by the private firm of Little, Brown and Company under authority granted by a joint resolution of Congress. In 1874, Congress transferred the authority to publish the Statutes at Large to the Government Printing Office, which has been responsible for producing the set since that time. Every law, public and private, ever enacted by the Congress is published in the Statutes at Large in order of the date of its passage. Until 1948, all treaties and international agreements approved by the Senate were also published in the set.

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New White House Report on Women

A new report providing a statistical picture of women in America was released in March.  This report, Women in America: Indicators of Social and Economic Well-Being, was prepared for the White House Council on Women and Girls and presents selected indicators of women’s social and economic well-being currently and over time. The report is intended for a general audience with the hope that it will be useful to policymakers, policy analysts, journalists, policy advocates, and all those interested in women’s issues.  By presenting a quantitative snapshot of the well-being of American women based on data compiled from varying Federal statistical agencies, the report greatly enhances our understanding how far American women have come and the areas where there is still work to be done.  It presents this data in five critical areas: demographic and family changes, education, employment, health, and crime and violence.

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Keystone Pipeline Controversy Heats Up

On the final day for comments the EPA announced that it had filed a comment letter stating that it had placed the project in a category headed “Environmental Objections” and that the Impact Statement is based on insufficient information.

The same day the State Department announced that it plans to host more public meetings within the first 30 days of the 90 day comment period that will follow issuance of the final Environmental Impact Statement. The meetings are intended to give the public an opportunity to voice their views on economic, energy security, environmental and safety issues, and will be held in Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Oklahoma,Texas, and Washington D.C. The Department expects to make a decision on whether to grant or deny the permit before the end of 2011.

A print copy of the Supplemental Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the Keystone XL Project is available for loan from the Library Commission. Call number S 1.2: K49/2011 To request a loan contact the
Reference Desk

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Water Water Everywhere

floodValley.jpg

The flooding along the Missouri is worse than it’s been in many years. Water is being released from Lake McConaughy. There seems to be too much water everywhere. Nebraskans have experienced flooding in the past, of course, and some of them were photographed. This photograph of two houses in Valley shows flood waters from the Platte and Elkhorn Rivers that merged in March of 1912 and inundated the town. Flood waters up to four-feet deep left homes full of mud and silthttp://goo.gl/NDSmC

More photographs of the flood in Valley and other floods in Nebraska can be viewed by following this link
http://goo.gl/VZbrr

Visit Nebraska Memories to search for or browse through many more historical images digitized from photographs, negatives, postcards, maps, lantern slides, books and other materials.

Nebraska Memories is a cooperative project to digitize Nebraska-related historical and cultural heritage materials and make them available to researchers of all ages via the Internet. Nebraska Memories is brought to you by the Nebraska Library Commission. If your institution is interested in participating in Nebraska Memories, see http://www.nlc.state.ne.us/nebraskamemories/ for more information, or contact Beth Goble, Government Information Services Director, or Devra Dragos, Technology & Access Services Director.

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Remembering Black Elk

sittingbull3.jpg

The 29th annual Neihardt Spring Conference will be held at the John G. Neihardt State Historical Site in Bancroft on April 30th, 2011. Many of us have read Black Elk Speaks, the story of the life of the Oglala holy man told to Neihardt in 1931. Black Elk lived through and participated in many of the events spanning the Battle of the Little Big Horn in 1876 to the massacre at Wounded Knee in 1990. He was a cousin to Crazy Horse and knew many Lakota leaders of those times.

This composite image Sitting Bull, Gall, White Bull, Rain in the Face is part of the Nebraska State Historical Society Collection in Nebraska Memories. Photographer John Alvin Anderson was commissioned as a civilian photographer for the U.S. Army to record life on the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota north of Valentine.

shirts2.jpg Shirts worn in the battle at Wounded Knee Nebraska State Historical Society Collection, 1890s. This photograph shows three animal hide shirts on display at the Sioux Indian Museum in Rapid City.

More photographs of Native Americans can be viewed in Nebraska Memories.

Visit Nebraska Memories to search for or browse through many more historical images digitized from photographs, negatives, postcards, maps, lantern slides, books and other materials.

Nebraska Memories is a cooperative project to digitize Nebraska-related historical and cultural heritage materials and make them available to researchers of all ages via the Internet. Nebraska Memories is brought to you by the Nebraska Library Commission. If your institution is interested in participating in Nebraska Memories, see http://www.nlc.state.ne.us/nebraskamemories/ for more information, or contact Beth Goble, Government Information Services Director, or Devra Dragos, Technology & Access Services Director.

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Statewide Conservation Planning Meetings

Staff and volunteers of Nebraska museums, libraries, and archives are invited to join your colleagues at one of four regional meetings and workshops to review a statewide collections preservation draft plan and add your perspective on how to best save our heritage and to gain practical hands-on experience in caring for your own collection. The meetings are free with lunch provided.

Events will run from 9:30 a.m.-3:00 p.m. Morning discussion will be followed by 2-hour workshops offered by experienced professionals on four different topics:

Chadron: digitization and preservation of documents and records
Kearney: photographic collections care and preservation
Norfolk: disaster preparedness planning
Omaha: working with conservators

Registration, travel reimbusement, agendas and maps are available at http://www.nebraskahistory.org/connect/

The CE Activity reporting form is available at

http://nlc.nebraska.gov/ce/CEFormPrint.asp

Partners are Nebraska State Historical Society, Nebraska Library Commission, Nebraska Library Association, Nebraska Museum Association, Nebraska Arts Council and Nebraska Humanities Council with project funding provided in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services.

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A Skunk in the Library: UNL Visiting Scholars Lecture

The UNL Libraries' Academic Activities Committee invites interested librarians around the state to attend the Visiting Scholar lecture on April 21st, 2011 from 9:00-10:30 in Room 202 of the Jackie Gaughan Multicultural Center on the University of Nebraska – Lincoln campus. Bethany Nowviskie, Director of the Scholars’ Lab at the University of Virginia Library, will give a talk entitled “A Skunk in the Library; the Path to Production for Scholarly R&D”. Nowviskie will use the example of the Scholars’ Lab at the University of Virginia to talk about a possibly rosy future for “skunkworks” operations in academic research libraries. She will discuss their relationship to scholarly R&D, the digital humanities, and the wider open source community. Her address will illuminate a host of broader issues, including the challenges to open source engagement within higher education and the age-old struggle in library IT between development and operations.

For more information contact any of the persons on the committee:

Brett Barney (bbarney2@unl.edu)
Deb Pearson (dpearson1@unl.edu)
Kay Logan-Peters (klogan-peters1@unl.edu)

Sue Ann Gardner (sgardner2@unl.edu)

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Getting a Little Culture on a Winter’s Day

Rosa Ponselle
When it’s March and it just keeps snowing…and snowing… many of us look for something to get us out of the house and keep the winter blahs away. Activities meant to enrich our lives, such as musical events , have been a popular choice over the years.
Great artist course presenting Miss Rosa Ponsell Polley Music Library Collection, 1923.
This dreamy-eyed beauty (“Sensational Prima Donna , Dramatic Soprano, Metropolitan Opera Company, New York”) appears on the cover of the program for her March 6, 1923 performance at the Lincoln City Auditorium. Rosa was a featured artist for that year’s Great Artist Course series.

Symphony Program
Lincoln Symphony Orchestra, 1928-1929, third season, fourth concert Polley Music Library Collection, 1929
This gorgeous Art Deco cover appears on the March 24, 1929 program of a Lincoln Symphony Orchestra concert. The lengthy program includes biographical information about composers. Then, as now, programs often included ads from sponsors. This one includes an ad for a Steinway Piano for $1425!
To see more March concert programs from the Polley Music Library at Lincoln City Libraries, go to March Programs
Visit Nebraska Memories to search for or browse through many more historical images digitized from photographs, negatives, postcards, maps, lantern slides, books and other materials.
Nebraska Memories is a cooperative project to digitize Nebraska-related historical and cultural heritage materials and make them available to researchers of all ages via the Internet. Nebraska Memories is brought to you by the Nebraska Library Commission. If your institution is interested in participating in Nebraska Memories, see http://
nlc.nebraska.gov/nebraskamemories/
for more information, or contact Beth Goble, Government Information Services Director, or Devra Dragos, Technology & Access Services Director.

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GPO and LOC Launch Digital Projects

One of the goals of the Government Printing Office is to digitize the “legacy” collection of key Congressional publications. This week Mary Alice Baish, the new GPO Superintendant of Documents, announced that GPO will be collaborating with the Library of Congress to digitize portions of the Statutes at Large and Congressional Record, and to provide enhanced online access to the Constitution of the United States: Analysis and Interpretation (CONAN).
From the announcement:
” The digitization project will include the public and private laws, and proposed constitutional amendments passed by Congress as published in the official Statutes at Large from 1951-2002. GPO and LOC will also work on digitizing official debates of Congress from the permanent volumes of the Congressional Record from 1873-1998. These laws and documents will be authenticated and available to the public on GPO’s Federal Digital System (FDsys) www.gpo.gov/fdsys and the Library of Congress’s THOMAS legislative information system www.thomas.gov.
The other project will provide enhanced public online access to the Constitution of the United States: Analysis and Interpretation (CONAN), a Senate Document that analyzes Supreme Court cases relevant to the Constitution. The project involves creating an enhanced version of CONAN, where updates to the publication will be made available on FDsys as soon as they are prepared. In addition to more timely access to these updates, new online features will also be added, including greater ease of searching and authentication.
GPO authenticates the documents on FDsys by digital signature and these authenticated documents are also available on the Library’s THOMAS system. This signature assures the public that the document has not been changed or altered since receipt by GPO. This digital signature, viewed through the GPO Seal of Authenticity, verifies the document’s integrity and authenticity.”

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You are What You Eat

Today the Food and Drug Administration relased Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2010. The entire 112 page document and a 4 page summary are available at the FDA site
http://www.cnpp.usda.gov/DGAs2010-PolicyDocument.htm
Executive Summary
The press release notes:
“The 2010 Dietary Guidelines are being released at a time when the majority of adults and one in three children is overweight or obese and this is a crisis that we can no longer ignore,” said Secretary Vilsack. “These new and improved dietary recommendations give individuals the information to make thoughtful choices of healthier foods in the right portions and to complement those choices with physical activity. The bottom line is that most Americans need to trim our waistlines to reduce the risk of developing diet-related chronic disease. Improving our eating habits is not only good for every individual and family, but also for our country.”
More consumer-friendly advice and tools, including a next generation Food Pyramid, will be released by USDA and HHS in the coming months. Below is a preview of some of the tips that will be provided to help consumers translate the Dietary Guidelines into their everyday lives:
• Enjoy your food, but eat less.
• Avoid oversized portions.
• Make half your plate fruits and vegetables.
• Switch to fat-free or low-fat (1%) milk.
• Compare sodium in foods like soup, bread, and frozen meals – and choose the foods with lower numbers.
• Drink water instead of sugary drinks.
Good advice for all of us.

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The FDLP has a Librarian in Charge

The Federal Depository Library Program now has one of it’s own in charge of the program. Public Printer Bill Boarman has named librarian Mary Alice Baish as Superintendent of Documents for the U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO).
http://www.fdlp.gov/component/content/article/19-general/880-libraryadvocatesudoc
Mary Alice will oversee GPO’s Library Services & Content Management unit, Publication & Information Sales unit, and the management of GPO’s Federal Digital System (FDsys). She will work with 1,200 Federal depository libraries through the FDLP to ensure Government information is available in all forms to the public.
I see this as good news for the future of the program.

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Governor’s Budget Recommendations Released

Today Governor Heinemann delivered his State of the State Address to the Nebraska Legislature. His budget recommendations for the 2011-2013 biennium have also been released. The entire budget document and summary documents are available at the Department of Administrative Service Budget Division web site.
http://www.budget.ne.gov/
This just one step in the budget process. Legislative hearings will be held, the Appropriations Committee will release it’s recommendations, and the final document will be approved before the Legislative session ends in May or June.
More information on how the budget process works is available on the Unicameral web site
http://nebraskalegislature.gov/about/budget_process.php

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Using the Census to Find Your History

Today CNN posted a heartwarming story telling how a granddaughter helped her grandmother find a long-lost brother by searching Census data on Ancestry.com and other genealogical web sites.
What the census can teach us about ourselves
Basic population statistics are released soon after each census is tabulated. However, for privacy protection, documents with names and personal details of respondents aren’t released for 72 years. The latest information available was gathered in 1930.
Nebraskans can search historical Census forms using HeritageQuest Online, a database purchasedby the Library Commission with funds provided by the Nebraska Legislature. To logon go to NebraskAccess.
Click on the blue LOGIN button on the right. Passwords issued to Nebraska libraries and media centers can be used, or a Nebraska driver’s license number.

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Rockin’ Roadies

Who knew roads, viaducts, and bridges were this cool? The Nebraska Department of Roads has posted a 3 1/2 minute rock video on their web site called On Ramp
http://www.vimeo.com/17765904
The video was produced entirely within the NDOR, without spending extra funds. On Ramp features “John O and the Roadtones”, AKA employee and composer Zach Broshears dressed in work gear and hard hat, playing guitar. Photos and video clips of road projects like the Blair Roundabout, Columbus Viaduct, Platte River Bridge, and Yankton Bridge accompany the music. The videographer is fellow NDOR employee Clint Mangen.
The NDOR plans to use the video for promotion and recruiting. Rock on!

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State Budget Cut Options Report Released

A 69-page Legislative report, titled LR 542 Listing of Options was released in December and is available on the Nebraska Legislature’s web site http://nebraskalegislature.gov/pdf/reports/committee/select_special/lr542final.pdf

LR 542, adopted by the Legislature on April 13, 2010, created an ad hoc committee chaired by the Speaker of the Legislature, and comprised of the Executive Board Chairman and the chairs of the Legislature’s fourteen standing committees to review all programs of state government and each agency’s budget authority. Each committee was charged with identifying programs within their subject-matter jurisdiction that should be considered for reduction or elimination during the Legislature’s enactment of a budget for the following biennium during the 2011 Session.

Speaker Mike Flood notes in his introduction to the report that
“these lists are not recommendations of the committees, but, just as their title implies, are “options”—items that the committees believe need to be carefully considered when the Legislature crafts a budget during the 2011 session”.

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Federal E-Books

The U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO) and Google have entered a partnership to offer the public, for the first time, Federal Government titles in an e-book format. The titles will appear on Google’s recently launched Google ebookstore http://books.google.com/ebooks
which can be searched, purchased and read on any connected device with a capable browser. Currently the public can search for titles such as the appendix for the “Budget of the United States, Fiscal Year 2011”, “Remembering the Space Age”, and “Borden’s Dream” (a history of Walter Reed Army Medical Center). GPO has about 100 titles in the catalog and will continue to add titles in the next several months.
Read more about GPO’s partnership with Google on the FDLP Desktop http://www.fdlp.gov/component/content/article/19-general/864-gpogoogle

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Facts about Nebraska Communities–finally!

The American Community Survey is a wonderful thing. Annual surveys are taken in every community and rural area of the country. Because it is sample data, results have been rolled out gradually for the past five years, starting with state and county level data. Finally after 5 years we have detailed estimates for the smallest communities, which is most of our towns in Nebraska. The reason for the wait is the need to have years of data to make results more accurate and preserve confidentiality.
The quickest way to get a profile for your community is to go to the American Factfinder site
http://factfinder.census.gov/
In the Get a Fact Sheet for your Community box type the name of your community and choose Nebraska. You will get a profile of social, economic, housing and population estimates. And here’s the really cool part. If you click on any of the show more links it will bring up more data, still for the town you specified.

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