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FALL/WINTER 2003
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It was the custom for the
mowers to have their dinner in the field. The scythes were left beside the swath
last cut, and the hands gathered in the shade under a wide-spreading maple tree.
In every hayfield one big tree was left for that purpose. It was always called
"the mowers' tree."
—Sapphira and the Slave Girl |
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Robert Pinsky Addresses the 2003 International Cather Seminar
Kristin Bensen-Hause, Vermont College
WCPM Unveils Restored Opera House
Michael Schueth
An Autumn Walk Among the Trees of Willa Cather's Nebraska Novels
Heather Camp
Assessing Willa Cather Guy Reynolds
Preserving Cather Katherine L. Walter, Chair, Digital Initiatives & Special Collections
Poem Sheds Light on Reception of Cather's Bakst Portrait for the Omaha Public Library Vicki Martin
Clothing the Characters Kari Ronning
After the Keynote Address
Poem by Kristin Bensen-Hause
Cather Studies, Volume 5: Willa Cather's Ecological Imagination
Derek Driedger
Memories from the Cather International Seminar
Beth Burke
April 30-
May 1, 2004 |
Spring Festival,Red Cloud, Nebraska
Theme: "Obscure Destinies:
Aging and Dying in Willa Cather's Fiction"
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May 7, 2004 |
Debra Winger reads Cather at the
Lincoln City Library Foundation's
50th Anniversary at the Rococo.
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June 23-25, 2004 |
Willa Cather Scholarly Edition:
Scholar's Summit
CSE editors will present papers on the scholarly editing process.
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June 18-25, 2005 |
Cather International Seminar,
Red Cloud and Lincoln, Nebraska. "Violence, the Arts, and Cather." (June 16-18 in Red Cloud, June 19-23 at The University of Nebraska-Lincoln campus)
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Credits
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