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Council Bluffs, Iowa . . . Photo shows Red Cross Volunteer, Mrs. Verna Davis, as she serves lunch to flood victims in the Red Cross disaster office in this city.

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Council Bluffs, Iowa -- Television in Red Cross centers in Council Bluffs, Iowa during the flood threat helped break the long hours of semi-confinement for young evacuees.

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Council Bluffs, Iowa -- Red Cross nurses and nurses aids from the Pottawattamie County Chapter of the American Red Cross were on duty at 21 shelters during and after the evacuation of thousands of homes in the residential section of this city. Here…

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Council Bluffs, Iowa -- The aged, as well as younger evacuees, received aid during the flood threat to this city. Elderly evacuees were housed in a special shelter set-up in Eagles Hall. Here Red Cross nurse Mrs. Mae Owens, places a blanket over Mrs.…

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Council Bluffs, Iowa -- Evacuees from the low-lying area of Council Bluffs, who are being housed in Red Cross shelters while the threat of a dike break is still imminent, are all checked for possible illnesses before they are placed in centers. Here,…

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Council Bluffs, Iowa . . . Photo shows Red Cross volunteer Winona Coker, of Council Bluffs, Iowa, as she reads and amuses some young flood victims. Photo was taken in the Abraham Lincoln High School, which is now serving as a Red Cross emergency…

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Council Bluffs, Iowa -- School age evacuees at Red Cross shelters in the Council Bluffs flood threat are proved with recreation to help them pass the time while they await the outcome of the flood. Planned recreation includes baseball for the boys.…

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Council Bluffs, Iowa -- The problem of shelter and feeding evacuees in flood embattled Council Bluffs rests on the shoulders of these four men, three of whom are volunteers of the Pottawattamie County Chapter of the Red Cross. Left to right are…

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There's continuous activity in the Red Cross Evacuation Control Center at Council Bluffs, Iowa - heart of the Red Cross operation to care for the temporarily homeless residents of the threatened Iowa city. Here, evacuees are registered and plans made…

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Council Bluffs -- To care for children who had measles, mumps and whooping cough, the Red Cross established an isolation shelter for Missouri River flood evacuees. Here, Red Cross nurse Frances Zimmerman, a volunteer Red Cross nurse, who in normal…

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Water stretching Bluff-To-Bluff is no idle phrase. This lonely road a half-mile south of Highway 275 ends in flood water, has only one vehicle - an army engineer truck- at its end. Lt. Gen. Lewis A. Pick calls it the greatest flood ever seen by the…

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Silhouette Of Power on the city's levees is this giant diesel-powered earth mover. One of 10 on the job, it hauls 30 cubic yards of dirt at a time, is used to tear down a high bluff and spread dirt for city's emergency secondary levee system.

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The women also serve and not only in relief agency kitchens. These women are right there with the men, filling sandbags at the 'factory' near the South Omaha Bridge Road. Working are Jean Crawford of Omaha, Alfred Coffelt, Marjorie Smith, Wilma Moore…

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Twenty-Two Dozen Doughnuts are fried in deep fat every hour for levee workers at Dodge school. Workers are Mrs. Ralph C. Russell and Mrs. Frances Lewis.

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All's Quiet And The Levees Hold but the raging Missouri has driven some machinery to high ground. Ralph Den of Bellevue looks over some stranded equipment as he goes by boat to a Northern Natural Gas Company station south of Iowa School for the Deaf.

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Last Missouri River Devastation in Southwest Iowa is at Hamburg. Water rushed onto the town from a break in the Plum Creek levee 15 miles to the north. Here residents keep just ahead of the creeping water as they place last-minute bulwarks against…

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City officials consulting with Red Cross workers on April 20, 1952

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Don Palmquist on the phone discussing sandbagging efforts on April 18, 1952

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City officials checking the Missouri River water depth on April 17, 1952

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City officials at the Red Cross Communicaitons Center on April 17, 1952
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