The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Volume 86, July 1982 - April, 1983 Page: 416
This periodical is part of the collection entitled: Southwestern Historical Quarterly and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Texas State Historical Association.
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Southwestern Historical Quarterly
will be held on March io, 1983, at the University of Texas at Arling-
ton. The theme of the 1983 lectures will be "The Postbellum South-
ern Economy: New Meanings," and the speakers will be Thavolia
Glymph (University of Texas at Arlington), Barbara Fields (Univer-
sity of Michigan), Armistead Robinson (University of Virginia), and
Harold Woodman (Purdue University). For further information con-
tact: Webb Lectures Committee, Department of History, Box 19529,
University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, Texas 76019.
The West Texas Historical Association will hold its annual meeting
April 8-9 in Abilene.
The Western Social Science Association will meet in Albuquerque,
New Mexico, April 27-30.
The College of Liberal Arts at the University of Texas, Austin, in
conjunction with the U.T. Centennial Committee, is sponsoring a sym-
posium March 24-26, 1983, on "The Texas Literary Tradition: Fic-
tion, Folklore, History." Thirty speakers, including Larry McMurtry,
Ronnie Dugger, A. C. Greene, John Graves, Americo Paredes, and
Shelby Hearon will participate in six sessions: "The Old Guard:
Dobie, Webb, and Bedichek," "The Old Order: Porter, Goyen, Hum-
phrey, Owens, Perry, and Brewer," "The Vanishing Frontier: McMur-
try, King, Kelton, Graves, Vliet, Capps, and Lea," "The Texas-Mexican
Perspective: Paredes, Hinojosa-Smith, Rivera," "Update: The Eight-
ies," and "The Texas Mystique: A Discussion." The conference will be
held at the LBJ Auditorium on campus and is free and open to the
public.
Accessions
The Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library, at the Alamo, San
Antonio, Texas, announces the opening of two collections: the collec-
tion of the Cassiano-Perez family (1741-1979) of San Antonio, includ-
ing papers of the Spanish and Mexican periods in Texas, land surveys
and field notes, and genealogical material on the Canary Islanders (547
folders, 145 books, and 200 photographs); and the collection of Leo
M. J. Dielmann (c. 1900oo-1969), San Antonio architect and civic leader,
including papers, photographs, maps, architectural drawings and blue-
prints (192 folders, 35 maps, 90 drawings).416
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Texas State Historical Association. The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Volume 86, July 1982 - April, 1983, periodical, 1982/1983; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth101209/m1/464/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Historical Association.