4700 S. 19th Street
Lincoln, Nebraska 68501-0529
U.S.A.
Company Perspectives:
We are not comfortable just being the leader.
History of Nebraska Book Company, Inc.
With its headquarters in Lincoln, Nebraska, Nebraska Book Company, Inc. is involved in the college bookstore industry. Its college bookstore division operates more than 110 on-campus and off-campus bookstores, where in addition to books, other merchandise, such as apparel bearing a school's name and mascot, is sold. Nebraska Book's textbook division sells new textbooks to more than 2,500 college bookstores, and the division also buys and sells used textbooks. Finally, Nebraska Book's complementary services division offers several services and solutions for college bookstores, including Prism software for inventory control; CampusHub, an e-commerce solution that allows local college bookstores to sell over the Internet; specialty books used by students in distance learning and nontraditional courses; Connect2One, an alliance of independent college bookstores; marketing services geared toward independent bookstores; college store design, to help college bookstores better utilize space in an esthetic manner; and NBC graphics, which produces silk-screen and embroidered apparels for colleges as well as high schools, service clubs, and other groups. Nebraska Book is a private company majority owned by investment firm Weston Presidio.
Founding the Company in 1915
The origins of Nebraska Book date back to 1915 with the opening of a small college bookstore in Lincoln, Nebraska, home of the University of Nebraska. The owner was a young man named E.H. "Red" Long, who had learned the business by working in his brother's bookstore located in Columbus, Ohio, while attending The Ohio State University. Long's venture had an inauspicious start. After the first year, the store was hit by lightning and burned to the ground. Long replaced the structure with one made of brick only to have one of the sides collapse. Long made the best out of the situation by moving back the wall to increase the size of the building, which not only housed books and supplies but also the Silver Moon Luncheonette.
Long owned the bookstore until 1937, when he sold it to a former employee, Johnny Johnsen, who would transform Long's single bookstore into the Nebraska Book Company. Johnsen had worked part time for Long while attending college, then managed the textbook department for a year. At that point, Long suggested that Johnsen find employment with a textbook jobber that could afford to pay him the money he was worth. Heeding his mentor's advice, Johnsen took a position with the College Book Company of Ohio and furthered his education in the field. Three years later he returned to Lincoln and bought Long's business. Long, who would launch another store devoted to high school textbooks, along with his family would live above the Nebraska Bookstore building until his death in 1959.
Johnsen took over a store that was only 50 feet by 90 feet in size. One of his first moves was to open a wholesale department that dealt in used college textbooks. Then in 1939 he brought back the supply business that Long had sold seven years earlier. But just as the business was starting to grow, World War II intervened and Johnsen lost his most important employees. Nevertheless, Nebraska Book managed to survive, only one of three college textbook jobbers that would still be in business by the end of the decade. Because of the war, the production of new textbooks was curtailed, which led to a rising market for used textbooks, an area that Nebraska Book was quick to exploit. It was during the postwar years that the company really began to grow. Many returning servicemen used the G.I. Bill to attend college and Nebraska Book developed a strong business in providing books and supplies to them. Also during the final years of the 1940s the used textbook market experienced rapid growth, and in response the wholesale department began to expand beyond the area surrounding Lincoln, eventually covering the entire country. Nebraska Book would either purchase books directly from students, with buyers paying a two-day visit to a campus, or take over a bookstore's overstock or excess merchandise. Nebraska Book's most experienced buyers then gathered for a ten-day meeting to set the prices for used textbooks, which would be published in an annual buying guide. In 1964 Nebraska Book acquired California-based College Book Company, which became the West Coast extension of its used textbook business and gave Nebraska Book a national reach. The wholesale division outgrew its space in the Nebraska Book building, and in 1967 moved into a new 110,000-square-foot warehouse in Lincoln.
Launching Branch Store Operations in 1948
In 1948 a branch store operation, supervised by the wholesale department, was launched when Nebraska Wesleyan decided to lease its bookstore operations to Nebraska Book. Soon the company added other textbook stores at Nebraska colleges, including Doan, Hastings, and Dana Colleges. The addition of these bookstores increased Nebraska Book's buying power, which further fueled the growth of the company. Over the next few years, stores were added at Washburn University, Baker University, Union College, Concordia College, Norfolk Jr. College, and McCook Jr. College. In 1965 three stores were opened and the branch store operation became a separate division. A year later, three new stores were added, bringing the total number of textbook stores to 12. Before the decade closed, Nebraska Book added two more stores.
In 1973 Nebraska Book was sold to George Lincoln, owner of Lincoln Grain, Inc., who had no experience in the textbook business. He was raised on a farm in Missouri and moved to Lincoln in 1959 to manage two grain elevators, which he would buy and merge in 1961 to form Lincoln Grain. While he built up this business he decided to take on Nebraska Book, which by this point owned or leased 42 bookstores. Lincoln closed all but the ten most profitable stores. In the 1980s the company began to build up the chain again, adding a dozen units to bring the number back up to 22. In 1987 Elders Grain, an Australian company, acquired Lincoln Grain, and George Lincoln devoted all of his time to the management of Nebraska Book, which was owned through another company he controlled, Lincoln Industries, Inc.
The bookstore business changed significantly during the time George Lincoln owned Nebraska Book, mostly due to technology, which replaced pencil and clipboard in filling orders. In the mid-1980s the College Book Company's Cypress, California, warehouse operation of College Book Company was restructured so that it mirrored the Lincoln operation, featuring the same inventory and systems so that customers around the country could expect to receive the same product and service from both facilities. To upgrade the business, Nebraska Book first automated the billing process. The next revolutionary step took place in the 1990s with the advent of online inventory sales, which led to a remodeling of the warehouse and shipping process automation. As a result of implementing these new technologies, Nebraska Book greatly reduced the amount of time it took to fill a customer's order, while achieving greater accuracy.
In 1985 Nebraska Book offered its first computer software product, PC Text, to help college bookstores automate their operations. Out of this effort emerged the company's current PRISM and WinPRism support software programs geared toward the specific management needs of a college bookstore, including the integration of inventory control with point-of-sale systems. Nebraska Book became involved in all aspects of college bookstore management systems, from design and development to installation, training, and support.
On the bookstore side of the business, Nebraska Book became increasingly involved in retail, focusing on "spirit" apparel featuring the local college's colors and logo as a way to make money between the peak periods of book buying that preceded the start of classes each semester and to prevent the store from becoming little more than a warehouse. Local managers were given a great deal of latitude in the planning of the store to suit the community. In universities with major football and basketball programs, for example, a store might devote more retail space to school apparel and souvenirs. In the early 1990s Nebraska Book began a push to expand its bookstore holdings, with the goal of opening five new stores each year for the next five years.
The expansion program would be continued by a new owner in 1995. In January of that year, Lincoln Industries announced that Nebraska Book was on the block. In August 1995 Olympus Partners, a private equity fund, bought the business for approximately $100 million. Based in Stamford, Connecticut, Olympus was founded in 1989 by Robert S. Morris, a former executive with General Electric Investment Corporation, where he managed General Electric Pension Trust's $1.6 billion private equity portfolio. Olympus took on a limited number of investments each year, ranging from $10 million venture capital deals to buyouts in the $150 million range.
Olympus owned Nebraska Book for little more than two years, during which time the company opened or acquired 17 new college bookstores, expanding its network of retail stores to 54. Cash flow during this period increased from $17 million to $29 million. The company also acquired Collegiate Stores Corporation (CSC), a buying service serving more than 500 independent college bookstores. In addition to textbook purchasing, CSC's programs included a supply program, providing some 3,000 school, office, computer, and art supplies that accounted for three-quarters of the inventory most college bookstores carried. CSC also offered reference materials, shopping bags, an apparel and giftware program, candy and nuts, credit card processing, security programs, store catalog production capability, and freight discounts. CSC would later be renamed Connect2One.
Acquired by Haas Wheat in 1998
Shortly after the CSC acquisition, in February 1998, Olympus sold Nebraska Book to Haas Wheat & Partners Inc. for $245 million, thereby realizing a sizable return on its initial invest- ment. Haas Wheat was a Dallas, Texas-based private equity firm founded by Robert B. Haas and Douglas D. Wheat in 1992. The new owners expressed a commitment to invest the funds necessary to expand Nebraska Book even further. In June 1999 Nebraska Book completed a major deal by acquiring TRIRO Inc., a College Station, Texas-based company that owned 18 bookstores in Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. Nebraska Book also broadened its business by becoming involved in e-commerce, establishing CampusHub to help independent college bookstores to sell books and merchandise online 24 hours a day.
In August 2002 Weston Presidio, a San Francisco-based investment partnership, acquired a 33 percent stake in Nebraska Book. Weston Presidio was founded in 1991 by Michael Cronin and Michael Lazarus. The firm's investments exceeded $2.2 billion, covering a range of opportunities, from venture capital for high-growth start-ups to buyouts of mature companies. Nebraska Book fell into the latter category, attracting the interest of Weston Presidio because it was the clear leader in its field. Moreover, with the number of college students increasing, Nebraska Book was well positioned to enjoy continued growth. The cost of textbooks also was rising, with the average price now exceeding $100. A primary reason for this increase was caused by publishers who now brought out new editions of a textbook more frequently. Some 20 years earlier, a textbook was updated every seven years, but now in some cases new editions were separated by as little as 18 months. Nebraska Book's used book buyers found their jobs more challenging but because of the high cost of new books, more students were interested in buying used books, which played to the company's strength.
In 2003 Nebraska Book posted sales of $370.5 million, a 9.3 percent improvement over the prior year, with all three operating divisions enjoying sales increases, while net income soared by 45.5 percent to $23 million. A year later, revenues approached the $400 million mark, as the company added three more bookstores. In March 2004 Weston Presidio bought out Haas Wheat's position and assumed majority control of Nebraska Book, with management owning an 11 percent stake in the business. Weston Presidio's managing partner, Michael Cronin, expressed his satisfaction with the acquisition and support for management's long-term vision for the business.
Principal Subsidiaries: College Book Company; Connect2One; The CampusHub.com; Speciality Books, Inc.; NBC Textbooks.
Principal Competitors: Barnes & Noble College Bookstores, Inc.; Follett Corporation; Varsity Group Inc.
Related information about Nebraska
pop (2000e) 1 711 300; area
200 342 km²/77 352 sq mi. State in C USA,
divided into 93 counties; the ‘Cornhusker State’; part of the
Louisiana Purchase, 1803; Bellevue first permanent settlement;
became a territory stretching to the Canadian border in 1854, but
its area was reduced in 1863; the 37th state admitted to the Union,
1867; the Union Pacific Railroad completed its transcontinental
line, 1869, resulting in a land boom; capital, Lincoln; other chief
cities, Omaha and Grand Island; Missouri R forms the E border;
Platte R crosses the state to empty into the Missouri; highest
point Johnson Township (1654 m/5426 ft); E region
undulating fertile farmland, growing corn; further W, on the Great
Plains, grass cover helping to stabilize eroded land; in the far W,
foothills of the Rocky Mts; agriculture dominates the economy;
cattle (second largest producer in the country), corn, hogs, wheat,
sorghum; food processing, electrical machinery, chemicals.
-->
Nebraska is a Great Plains state of the United States. Nebraska gets its name from a Native
American (Oto)
word meaning "flat water", after the Platte River that flows through the state.
Iowa and Missouri to the east, across
the Missouri
River; it also occupies the central portion of the Frontier Strip.
Nebraska is composed of two major land regions: the Dissected Till
Plains and the Great Plains. Omaha and Lincoln are located within this region.
The Great Plains occupy the majority of western Nebraska. The Great
Plains itself is comprised of several smaller, diverse land
regions, including the Sandhills, the Pine Ridge, the
Rainwater Basin,
the High Plains and the Wildcat Hills. locations given for the beginning
of the "West" include the Missouri River, the intersection of 13th
and O Streets in Lincoln (where it is marked by a red brick star),
the 100th
meridian, and Chimney
Rock.
Areas under the management of the National Park
Service include:
- Agate Fossil Beds National Monument near Harrison
- California National Historic Trail
- Chimney Rock National Historic Site near Bayard
- Homestead National Monument of America in
Beatrice
- Lewis & Clark National Historic
Trail
- Missouri National Recreational River near Ponca
- Mormon Pioneer National Historic
Trail
- Niobrara National Scenic River near Valentine
- Oregon National Historic Trail
- Pony Express National Historic Trail
- Scotts Bluff National Monument at Gering
Climate
Two major climates
are represented in Nebraska: the eastern two-thirds of the state
has a hot summer
continental climate, and the western third of the state has a
semiarid steppe climate. Average
temperatures are fairly uniform across Nebraska, while average
annual precipitation decreases from about 31.5 inches (800 mm) in the southeast corner of the
state to about 13.8 inches (350 mm) in the Panhandle. www.hprcc.unl.edu/products/atlas.html
Nebraska is located in Tornado Alley; The chinook winds from the Rocky Mountains provide a temporary moderating
effect on temperatures in western Nebraska during the winter
months. this is not really relavent to the state as a whole.
Monthly temperature and precipitation data for two cities in
Nebraska are shown in the tables below (source):
Lincoln
|
Month
|
Temperature
|
Precipitation
|
| Mean |
Maximum |
Minimum
|
| January |
-5.9 °C (21.3 °F) |
0.2 °C (32.4 °F) |
-12.2 °C (10.1 °F) |
14 mm (0.54 in)
|
| February |
-3.0 °C (26.6 °F) |
3.3 °C (37.9 °F) |
-9.4 °C (15.1 °F) |
18 mm (0.72 in)
|
| March |
3.7 °C (38.6 °F) |
10.2 °C (50.3 °F) |
-2.9 °C (26.8 °F) |
53 mm (2.09 in)
|
| April |
10.9 °C (51.7 °F) |
18.0 °C (64.4 °F) |
3.8 °C (38.9 °F) |
70 mm (2.76 in)
|
| May |
16.7 °C (62.1 °F) |
23.4 °C (74.2 °F) |
10.0 °C (50.0 °F) |
99 mm (3.90 in)
|
| June |
22.5 °C (72.5 °F) |
29.3 °C (84.7 °F) |
15.7 °C (60.2 °F) |
99 mm (3.89 in)
|
| July |
25.7 °C (78.2 °F) |
32.2 °C (90.0 °F) |
19.1 °C (66.3 °F) |
81 mm (3.20 in)
|
| August |
23.9 °C (75.0 °F) |
30.4 °C (86.7 °F) |
17.4 °C (63.3 °F) |
87 mm (3.41 in)
|
| September |
18.5 °C (65.3 °F) |
25.1 °C (77.2 °F) |
11.8 °C (53.2 °F) |
88 mm (3.48 in)
|
| October |
12.0 °C (53.6 °F) |
19.3 °C (66.7 °F) |
4.7 °C (40.5 °F) |
54 mm (2.12 in)
|
| November |
3.8 °C (38.8 °F) |
10.1 °C (50.2 °F) |
-2.6 °C (27.3 °F) |
32 mm (1.27 in)
|
| December |
-3.6 °C (25.6 °F) |
2.1 °C (35.8 °F) |
-9.2 °C (15.4 °F) |
22 mm (0.88 in)
|
| Annual |
10.5 °C (50.9 °F) |
17.0 °C (62.7 °F) |
3.9 °C (39.0 °F) |
718 mm (28.26 in)
|
Scottsbluff
|
Month
|
Temperature
|
Precipitation
|
| Mean |
Maximum |
Minimum
|
| January |
-3.9 °C (24.9 °F) |
3.3 °C (37.9 °F) |
-11.2 °C (11.8 °F) |
13 mm (0.50 in)
|
| February |
-1.0 °C (30.2 °F) |
6.4 °C (43.6 °F) |
-8.4 °C (16.8 °F) |
12 mm (0.47 in)
|
| March |
2.3 °C (36.2 °F) |
10.2 °C (50.3 °F) |
-5.5 °C (22.1 °F) |
28 mm (1.09 in)
|
| April |
8.1 °C (46.5 °F) |
16.3 °C (61.4 °F) |
-0.3 °C (31.5 °F) |
40 mm (1.58 in)
|
| May |
13.6 °C (56.4 °F) |
21.6 °C (70.9 °F) |
5.4 °C (41.8 °F) |
70 mm (2.77 in)
|
| June |
19.6 °C (67.3 °F) |
27.8 °C (82.0 °F) |
11.5 °C (52.7 °F) |
67 mm (2.64 in)
|
| July |
23.4 °C (74.2 °F) |
32.1 °C (89.7 °F) |
14.8 °C (58.7 °F) |
52 mm (2.06 in)
|
| August |
22.0 °C (71.6 °F) |
30.7 °C (87.2 °F) |
13.3 °C (56.0 °F) |
27 mm (1.07 in)
|
| September |
16.3 °C (61.4 °F) |
25.1 °C (77.2 °F) |
7.5 °C (45.6 °F) |
28 mm (1.10 in)
|
| October |
9.8 °C (49.6 °F) |
18.6 °C (65.5 °F) |
0.9 °C (33.7 °F) |
21 mm (0.81 in)
|
| November |
2.4 °C (36.3 °F) |
10.1 °C (50.2 °F) |
-5.3 °C (22.4 °F) |
16 mm (0.62 in)
|
| December |
-3.2 °C (26.2 °F) |
4.2 °C (39.5 °F) |
-10.6 °C (12.9 °F) |
14 mm (0.56 in)
|
| Annual |
9.2 °C (48.5 °F) |
17.2 °C (63.0 °F) |
1.1 °C (33.9 °F) |
388 mm (15.27 in)
|
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The National Wildlife Federation has found that global warming could have
a harmful effect on the Nebraska's ecology and economy,Global warming and
Nebraska (.pdf file) promoting the kinds of drought that led to the Dust Bowl conditions of the
1930s and increasing the population and active season of
disease-carrying mosquitos.
History
The Kansas-Nebraska Act became law on May 28, 1854; it established the U.S. territories of Nebraska and Kansas. The territorial capital
of Nebraska was Omaha.
In the 1860s, the first
great wave of homesteaders poured into Nebraska to claim free land
granted by the federal government.
Many of the first farm settlers built their homes out of sod because they found so few trees
on the grassy land.
Nebraska became the 37th state in 1867, shortly after the American Civil War.
At that time, the capital was moved from Omaha to Lancaster,
later renamed Lincoln after the recently assassinated President of
the United States Abraham Lincoln.
Arbor Day began in
Nebraska, and the National Arbor Day Foundation is still
headquartered in Nebraska City.
Prohibition in the
U.S. was adopted in 1918, with Nebraska as the thirty-sixth state
necessary to make the Eighteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution www.rootsweb.com/~neresour/OLLibrary/Journals/HPR/Vol06/nhrv06pc.html.
Immigration from outside the United States resulted in a net
increase of 22,199 people, and migration within the country
produced a net loss of 26,206 people.
As of 2004, the population of Nebraska included about 84,000
foreign-born residents (4.8% of the population).
The five largest ancestry groups in Nebraska are German (38.6%), Irish (12.4%), English (9.6%),
Swedish (4.9%),
and Czech
(4.9%).
Nebraska has the largest Czech-American population (as a percentage
of the total population) in the nation. Thurston County (comprised
entirely of the Omaha and Winnebago reservations) has a Native
American majority, and Butler County
is one of only two counties in the nation with a Czech-American
plurality.
Rural flight
Nebraska, in common with five other Midwest states (Kansas, Oklahoma, North and South Dakota, and Iowa), Eighty-nine percent of the
cities in those states have fewer than 3000 people; Per capita
personal income in 2004 was $31,339, 25th in the nation.
Once considered part of the Great American Desert, it is now a leading
farming state.
Nebraska has a large agriculture sector, and is a national leader in the
production of beef,
pork, corn (maize), and soybeans. Other important
economic sectors include freight transport (by rail and truck), manufacturing, telecommunications, information
technology, and insurance.
Nebraska has 4 personal income tax brackets, ranging from 2.56 percent to 6.84
percent. The Union Pacific Railroad, headquartered in Omaha, was
incorporated on July 1,
1862, in the wake of the
Pacific Railway
Act of 1862.
Roads and highways
The Interstate Highways in Nebraska are:
- 76, 80, 129, 180, 480, 680
The U.S.
Routes in Nebraska are:
- 6, 20, 26, 30, 34, 73, 75, 77, 81, 83, 136, 138, 159, 183, 275, 281, 283, 385
Law and government
Nebraska's government operates under the framework of the Nebraska
Constitution, adopted in 1875 and is divided into three branches:
executive, legislative, and judicial.
The head of the executive branch is the Governor
Dave Heineman.
Other elected officials in the executive branch are the Lieutenant Governor
Rick Sheehy (elected
on the same ticket as the Governor), Attorney General
Jon Bruning,
Secretary of
State John A.
Gale, State
Treasurer Ron Ross,
and State Auditor
Kate Witek. All
elected officials in the executive branch serve four-year
terms.
Nebraska is the only state in the United States with a unicameral legislature; Nebraska's Legislature is
also the only state legislature in the United States that is nonpartisan.
The Nebraska
Legislature meets in the third Nebraska State
Capitol building, built between 1922 and 1932.
For years, United States Senator George Norris and other Nebraskans encouraged the
idea of a unicameral legislature, and demanded the issue be decided
in a referendum.
Nebraska's unicameral legislature today has rules that bills can
contain only one subject, and must be given at least five days of
consideration.
Finally, in 1934, due in
part to the budgetary pressure of the Great Depression,
Nebraska's unicameral legislature was put in place by a state
initiative.
Federal government representation
Nebraska's two U.S. senators are Chuck Hagel (Republican) and Ben Nelson (Democrat).
Nebraska has three representatives in the House are: Jeff Fortenberry (R, 1st District); and Tom Osborne
(R, 3rd District).
Nebraska is one of two states (the other being Maine) that allow for a split in
the electoral vote. Since 1991, two of Nebraska's five electoral votes
are awarded based on the winner of the statewide election while the
other three go to the highest vote-getter in each of the state's
three congressional districts. Republicans have carried the state
in all but one presidential election since 1940—the 1964 landslide election of Lyndon Johnson. only
Thurston
County, which includes two American Indian reservations,
voted for John
Kerry.
Despite the current Republican domination of Nebraska politics, the
state has a long tradition of electing centrist members of both
parties to state and federal office;
Largest cities
100,000+ population
|
10,000+ population
|
- Omaha - 409,416
- Lincoln - 236,146
|
- Bellevue - 47,347
- Grand Island - 44,287
- Kearney - 28,640
- Fremont - 25,272
- Norfolk - 24,072
- North Platte - 23,944
- Hastings - 23,404
|
- Columbus - 20,881
- Papillion - 19,497
- Scottsbluff - 14,767
- La
Vista - 14,685
- Beatrice - 12,963
- South Sioux City - 12,142
- Lexington - 10,056
|
Urban areas
Metropolitan areas
|
Micropolitan areas
|
- Omaha-Council Bluffs - 683,705 (Nebraska
portion), 813,170 (total for Nebraska and Iowa)
- Lincoln - 275,820
- Sioux
City, Iowa - 26,722 (Nebraska portion)
|
- Grand Island - 69,685
- Kearney - 50,286
- Norfolk - 49,964
- Hastings - 37,691
- Scottsbluff - 37,393
|
- North Platte - 36,213
- Fremont - 36,066
- Columbus - 31,245
- Lexington - 26,566
- Beatrice - 23,436
|
Other areas
- Grand Island, Hastings and Kearney comprise the ?Tri-Cities?
area.
- The northeast corner of Nebraska is part of the Siouxland region.
Education
Colleges and universities
University of Nebraska system
- University of Nebraska-Lincoln
- University of Nebraska at
Kearney
- University of Nebraska at Omaha
- University of Nebraska Medical
Center
- Nebraska College of Technical
Agriculture
Nebraska State College System
- Chadron State College
- Peru
State College
- Wayne State College
|
Private colleges/universities
- Bellevue University
- Clarkson College
- College of Saint Mary
- Concordia University
- Creighton University
- Dana
College
- Doane
College
- Grace
University
- Hastings College
- Midland Lutheran College
- Nebraska Christian College
- Nebraska Methodist College
- Nebraska Wesleyan University
- Summit Christian College
- Union College
- York College
|
Nebraska Community College
Association
- Central Community College
- Little Priest Tribal College
- Metropolitan Community College
- Mid-Plains Community College
- Nebraska Indian Community
College
- Northeast Community College
- Southeast Community College
- Western Nebraska Community
College
|
Sports teams
-
Professional
sports
- Lincoln
Capitols – American Association (independent minor league
baseball)
- Lincoln
Thunder – American Hockey League (affiliate of the Calgary
Flames)
- Omaha Beef
– affiliate of the Kansas City Royals)
-
NCAA Division I college sports
- Creighton Bluejays
- Nebraska Cornhuskers
- Nebraska at
Omaha Mavericks – ice hockey (in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association)
only
- Junior-level sports
- Lincoln
Stars – United States Hockey League
- Omaha
Lancers – United States Hockey League (home games played
in Council Bluffs, Iowa)
- Tri-City
Storm –
Nebraskans are called "Cornhuskers."
Kool-Aid was
created in 1927 by
Edwin
Perkins in the city of Hastings.
The world's largest train yard, Union
Pacific's Bailey Yard, is located in North
Platte.
The Vise-Grip was
invented and is still manufactured in De Witt.
Arbor Day was
founded by J. The National
Arbor Day Foundation has its headquarters near his home
in Nebraska
City.
The swing in the Hebron, Nebraska city park at 5th and Jefferson
streets is claimed to be the world's largest porch swing,
long enough to fit 18 adults or 24 children.
Memorial Stadium on the campus of the University of
Nebraska in Lincoln holds over 80,000 people.
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