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Competition numbers on bibs of competitors in the 1980 Olympic 5000m. In many sports, a competition number is used to identify and differentiate the competitors taking part in a competitive endeavour. For example, runners in a race may wear prominent competition numbers so that they may be clearly identified from a distance.
The area grew throughout the last half of the 1800s as Omaha's suburb, with the first streetcars running up and down its main thoroughfares of 24th and 30th Streets. After the Trans-Mississippi Exposition occurred just north of the area in 1898, Kountze Park was developed to serve the area's widely varied racial and ethnic populations.
Covering 4,407 square miles (11,410 km 2) and with a population of 967,604 (2020), [2] the Omaha metropolitan area is the most populous in both Nebraska and Iowa (although the Des Moines–West Des Moines MSA is the largest MSA centered entirely in Iowa), and is the 58th most populous MSA in the United States.
This is a list of telephone area codes in the state of Nebraska. 308: Western Nebraska, including Grand Island and Kearney. 402/531: Eastern Nebraska, including Omaha and Lincoln, overlaid in 2011 [1] Under the original North American Numbering Plan of 1947, area code 402 covered all of Nebraska. Area code 308 was split off in 1954, and ...
The village was established as a water-station on the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha Railway and named for early settler William Stewart Craig, who in the early 1880s donated the land on which the town was built. [5] Craig was laid out in 1881. [6]
This is a list of streets in Omaha, Nebraska. Founded in 1854, today Omaha's population is over 400,000, making it the nation's 40th-largest city in the United States. There are more than 1.2 million residents within a 50-mile (80-km) radius of the city's center, forming the Greater Omaha area.
It was a mortuary and social hall before becoming home to the historic Omaha Star. 2319 Ogden Street Pearl Memorial United Methodist Church: 1926 2412 Ames Avenue Druid Hall: 1915 Home of Nebraska's last Prince Hall Masons chapter. 2118 North 24th Street Fair Deal Cafe: Once known as Omaha's "Black City Hall" 2416 Lake Street
Omaha Chronicle – Omaha (1933–1938) Omaha Daily Bee – Omaha (1872–1927; Omaha Bee-News, 1927–1937) Omaha Guide – Omaha (1927–1958) Omaha Sun – Omaha (1951–1983) The Omaha Whip – Omaha (1922) OzvÄ›na západu – Clarkson (1914–1917) [21] The Plattsmouth Daily Herald – Plattsmouth (1883–1892) The Plattsmouth Herald ...