Another former Lincoln Police officer is leveling allegations of years of on-the-job sexual discrimination and the systematic ousting of those who report it in a lawsuit filed this week.
Operation Snowbound helped provide aid to remote properties that were stranded because of the large amounts of snow.
Journal Star file photo
Houses west of Imperial were almost completely covered in snow. Occupants of this house tore the screen off the window in order to get in and out of their home.
Journal Star file photo
A. small town in western Nebraska looks likes a ghost town after the entire population made a mass exodus before roads were blocked.
Journal Star file photo
Unable to get around by automobile, Lorene Hickok, Mrs. Hickok and brother Verne Hickok used a horse-drawn wagon to make their milk deliveries.
Journal Star file photo
Bulldozers participating in Operation Snowbound cleared patterns on the Nebraska landscape in an attempt to reach and save stranded people and cattle.
Journal Star file photo
Captain Tanski of the U.S. Army interviews Carl Belzer regarding conditions of neighbors who had been isolated for several weeks.
Journal Star file photo
Almost 2 million head of cattle survived thanks to Operation Snowbound, which airlifted an estimated 35-40 tons of feed a day.
Journal Star file photo
Farmers in western Nebraska had to uncover their chicken houses from a blanket of snow that hit the state in 1948.
Journal Star file photo
Pilot Don Higgins perches atop the chimney at the Lester Goodrich farm home, where he answered a distress call.
Journal Star file photo
Two locomotives that attempted to open the railroad line were temporarily lost as snow drifts began to cover the locomotives.
Journal Star file photo
As part of rescue and relief efforts carried out by the Red Cross, a tunnel was dug to the pump houses of this windmill as snow drifts of about 30 feet enveloped the area.