Personal Papers: Travel
Audio-visual materials
1810 Finding Aid results for Audio-visual materials
Personal Papers: Travel
Personal Papers: Travel
Personal Papers: Travel
Personal Papers: Travel
Personal Papers: Travel
Personal Papers: Travel
Personal Papers: Travel
Personal Papers: Travel
Personal Papers: Travel
Personal Papers: Travel
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Personal Papers: Wayland and Watertown, South Dakota
Viaggi di Pietro della Valle il Pellegrino . . . Descritti da lui medesimo in 54. Lettere familiari . . . All'erudita . . . suo amino Mario Schipano, diuissi In tre parti, cio'e la Turchia, la Persia, e l'India
Bologna: G. Longhi, 1672-1677
Italian author, poet, and composer, Pietro della Valle set off on a lengthy journey in 1614 to the East, visiting Turkey, Egypt, Palestine, Persia, and India. He recorded the story of his travels upon his return in 1929.
The President’s Office Records document the administrative, academic, and strategic functions of South Dakota State University from the early 20th century through the early 21st century. The records include correspondence, reports, committee minutes, planning documents, speeches, memoranda, and audiovisual materials produced by or related to university presidents and their offices. Topics covered include accreditation, budget planning, academic programs, institutional governance, state and federal relations, student life, campus facilities, faculty affairs, strategic planning initiatives, and major university events. The collection also contains materials related to presidential inaugurations, annual reports, and university outreach, including relationships with the Board of Regents and external stakeholders.
This collection offers comprehensive insight into the leadership and institutional development of South Dakota State University across decades. It reflects evolving administrative structures, academic priorities, and university responses to local, state, and national challenges. The records are valuable for understanding higher education governance, policy formation, and SDSU’s role as a land-grant institution. The inclusion of strategic initiatives such as the “Lead Forward Land Grant” and “Impact 2018” planning frameworks highlights long-term visioning and institutional advancement.
South Dakota State University. Office of the PresidentA description of the East, and some other countries
London: Printed for the author, by W. Bowyer, 1743-1745
Richard Pococke, an inveterate traveler, made extensive trips to the Middle East, Egypt, and Europe in the 1730s, 40s, and 50s, visiting many relatively unknown regions. He published detailed narrative accounts of his journeys which were highly regarded by contemporaries.
v. 1. Observations on Egypt -- v. 2, pt. 1. Observation on Palaestine or the Holy Land, Syria, Mesopotamia, Cyprus, and Candia -- v. 2, pt. 2. Observations on the islands of the Archipelago, Asia Minor, Thrace, Greece, and some other parts of Europe.
The South Dakota Humanities Council Records document the administrative, financial, and programmatic history of the organization from its founding as the South Dakota Committee on the Humanities through the early twenty-first century. The records illustrate the Council’s mission to promote public engagement with the humanities, support community-based programs, and manage federally funded initiatives in partnership with the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH).
Materials include administrative correspondence, meeting files, financial records, grant proposals, publications, program documentation, and audiovisual materials. Correspondence features communications with Council members, partner institutions, public officials—including Governors George S. Mickelson and William J. Janklow—and representatives of the NEH. Meeting records document the activities of the Council, Executive Committee, Membership Committee, and Program Committee, with sessions held across the state in cities such as Pierre, Sioux Falls, Chamberlain, Mitchell, Rapid City, and Aberdeen.
Financial records form a substantial portion of the collection and include audits, ledgers, balance sheets, vouchers, receipts, and statements of receipts and disbursements. These materials document the Council’s fiscal management, including re-grant activity, Reading Series and Resource Center expenditures, and accounting for the affiliated South Dakota Humanities Foundation. Audit reports and NEH compliance plans demonstrate adherence to federal and state grant requirements.
Grant and project files comprise a major component of the collection, containing proposals, applications, reports, correspondence, fiscal records, and publicity materials. Topics represented include Native American language and cultural preservation, South Dakota history, literature, women’s studies, rural depopulation, arts, and media. Projects include “Lakota Language Project,” “Lost Bird of Wounded Knee,” “Living Roots of Music,” “Oscar Micheaux Film Festival,” “Barn Again!,” “Choices for the 21st Century,” “Vietnam War: A Season of Remembrance,” “Yesterday’s Tomorrows,” “Staking a Claim: The People, Places, and Stories of Mining in the Black Hills,” and “Text, Discourse, Grammar: A Summer Institute for Lakota Language Teachers.”
Program files document the Speakers Bureau, Reading Series, Chautauqua, and other statewide initiatives. These include funded and rejected proposals, correspondence, scholar and coordinator packets, study guides, evaluation forms, and promotional materials illustrating the Council’s efforts to expand public access to the humanities. Later program records include files for Prime Time Family Reading, Key Ingredients, Farm and Ranch Stories, Between Fences, We the People, One Book South Dakota, The Big Read, and the South Dakota Festival of Books. Publications such as The Human Adventure, What’s Up, Perspectives on South Dakota, Report to the People, and the South Dakota Humanities Council Newsletter document Council outreach, publicity, and communication with the public.
The collection also includes audiovisual and photographic materials depicting Council programs, community events, and participants from approximately 1980 through 2005. These visual records provide evidence of public engagement through lectures, exhibits, and cultural festivals sponsored by the Council.
This collection offers a comprehensive record of the South Dakota Humanities Council’s growth from a state committee to a central public humanities organization. It reflects the Council’s collaboration with the National Endowment for the Humanities, its role in administering grant funds, and its leadership in advancing humanities programming throughout South Dakota. The materials document the Council’s influence in promoting cultural preservation, education, and civic dialogue, particularly within rural and Native American communities, and serve as an essential resource for studying the development and impact
South Dakota Humanities Councilhe collection documents environmental advocacy, public policy development, and citizen engagement related to natural resources in South Dakota, primarily from the 1970s through the 2010s. Records are arranged largely by topic and include background research, media coverage, regulatory and legislative documentation, and technical materials such as environmental analyses and impact statements. Significant concentrations address energy production and transmission, rural electric cooperatives and the Public Utilities Commission, air and water quality regulation, irrigation and water development projects, and the environmental impacts of agricultural and extractive industries.
Also included are organizational and administrative files that trace the operations of the sponsoring group(s), including governance records (minutes, bylaws, board and committee files), financial records, membership and outreach materials, and newsletters and public communications. Together, the materials document how environmental issues were researched, debated, communicated, and pursued through public testimony, coalition work, educational programming, and legislative action at local, state, and federal levels.
South Dakota Resources Coalition