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Finding Aid
David B. Doner Scrapbook
SDSU-Archives UA 053.034 · Scrapbooks · 1939-1971

The David B. Doner collection is comprised primarily of a scrapbook documenting Doner’s career in higher education administration, alumni relations, and civic service. The scrapbook includes numerous newspaper clippings and approximately twenty certificates related to his professional and public roles. Photographic content consists of black and white photographs, including approximately eight images of South Dakota State University, eight images documenting alumni activities, thirty six personal snapshots, and a group of nine large format and thirteen smaller glossy photographs depicting public figures and events. Identified individuals represented include Governor Foss, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Senator Karl Mundt, and Christy Christesen. Additional materials include five menus or programs, two letters, one telegram, the publication Stadium for State dated circa 1959, and approximately eight photographs documenting travel and sightseeing. The collection also includes five loose black and white family photographs taken on March 19, 1949, in Iowa City, Iowa.

The collection documents David B. Doner’s professional life and public service, particularly his long tenure at South Dakota State College and South Dakota State University. It offers evidence of mid twentieth century university administration, alumni relations, civic engagement, and institutional culture, as well as visual documentation of university events, public figures, and Doner’s personal and family life. The scrapbook reflects Doner’s prominent role in the history of SDSU and his connections to state and national leaders.

Doner, David B.
Lotto Underwood Papers
SDSU-Archives MA 083 · Scrapbooks · 1905-1913

This collection consists primarily of the scrapbook The Girl Graduate, Her Own Book, compiled by Loto Rollinstahl Underwood to document her college experience. The scrapbook captures a range of social and academic life through pasted and interleaved materials, including invitations, class listings, programs, dance cards, commencement publications, and newspaper clippings. Spanning 176 numbered pages, the volume features few written entries and no photographs, but offers insight into early 20th-century collegiate customs and women’s student life. Its significance lies in its value as a personal and cultural artifact reflecting women's higher education experiences of the period.

Underwood, Lotto Rollinstahl, 1888–1968