Joel Makovicka and Langston Coleman

    Hundreds of Nebraska's World War II
    veterans gathered at a dinner in Omaha
    to visit and share memories
. Watch "The
    Liberators" in our November episode.

The third episode (#103)
of Nebraska Stories
premiered on Nov. 16, 2009

Series overview:  Video preview

Nebraska Stories tells compelling personal stories of Nebraskans around the state, the life stories of Nebraska artists, and historical and contemporary stories.

Video and descriptions for future episode segments will be added as they become available.


Nebraska Stories
tells compelling personal stories of Nebraskans around the state, the life stories of Nebraska artists, and historical and contemporary stories. Video and descriptions for future episode segments will be added as they become available.

This half-hour “magazine-style” series presents new, short-form video segments, highlighting people, ideas and events that inform Nebraskans’ sense of place and their unique perspective on American life as it is lived on the Great Plains.

Nebraska Stories is NET Television’s plan to present audiences both on-air and online with a half-hour monthly series that will combine the best original production with selected excerpts from the wealth of material in the NET Heritage Library archive of programming about our state.

To watch the entire November episode online, click below.

    


The Liberators

The LiberatorsVideoWatch program clip

1500 Nebraska veterans were recently flown to Washington, DC aboard seven "Heartland Honor Flight" to visit the World War II monument.

Hundreds of these veterans gathered in Omaha at a dinner to celebrate and share memories.

Before the day is over -- a surprise reunion and rarely seen photographs of a haunting moment in time.

Visit the National WWII Memorial Web site
Visit the Institute for Holocaust Education Web site


The Greening of the Dust Bowl

The Greening of the Dust BowlVideo clipWatch program clip

Beginning with highlights from the legendary depression documentary "The Plow That Broke the Plains," we revisit the effects of the Dust Bowl on Nebraska. We then discover how the University of Nebraska College of Agriculture helped salvage the devastated land in the late 1930s.

Today, we see how the University is leading the world in groundwater research including new ways of “seeing” drought endangered areas through satellite infrared imagery.


Loren Eiseley’s Reflections on the Depression (from Reflections of a Bonehunter, 1992)

Loren Eiseley's Reflections on the DepressionVideo clipWatch program clip

In the 1930s the world turned dark with depression. Men without jobs became drifters. Loren Eiseley was just 19 years old when he became a vagabond hopping freight trains across America. Surprisingly, he found a special kind of “freedom” in this wandering lifestyle.

Visit the Loren Eiseley Society


White Buffalo Girl

White Buffalo Girl VideoWatch program clip

In May of 1877, hundreds of Ponca people—men, women and children—were forced to leave their Nebraska homeland and sent on a nightmare journey into Indian Territory. Four days into the journey a baby girl named White Buffalo Girl died.

Joe Starita, author of an acclaimed new book about Standing Bear, takes us to White Buffalo Girl's grave in Neligh – and tells her story.

Visit the Nebraska Commission on Indian Affairs Web site

(Note: We would like to thank the Nebraska State Historical Society for allowing us to make use of an archival photograph of Standing Bear and his family in this program segment.")


Giving Thanks at a One Room School (from Last of the One Room Schools, 1995)

Giving Thanks at a One Room SchoolVideo clipWatch program clip

A glimpse into America’s educational past worthy of Currier and Ives as we attend a holiday potluck dinner at one of the last one-room schools in Nebraska – Burr Oak School in Custer County.

Included in the festivities is a picture taking session with the grandparents – tough people who lived through both the Great Depression and World War II.


Piano in Tow

Piano in Tow VideoWatch program clip

Because of her passion for music and appreciation of how it has shaped her life, a UNL Piano Professor tows her nearly-1000 pound grand piano across Nebraska to share her love of classical music with audiences in rural communities who often have less access to live performance opportunities.

 

PROGRAM SEGMENTS
3RD EPISODE (#103)

Return to the home page
for Nebraska Stories



Make a Comment or Suggestion

ADDITIONAL LINKS


FUNDED IN PART BY:
Nebraska Arts Council
Nebraska Humanities Council
Nebraska Cultural Endowment