that is, a general feeling of dissatisfaction, unhappiness, unrest, and 

 perhaps despair. 



The art work in the second section was executed by Mr. Gustav 

 Dalstrom, Staff Artist. Mr. Dalstrom is well known for his paintings, 

 which have been widely exhibited, as well as his murals. Curators 

 Quimby and Collier, and Artist Dalstrom, planned and supervised 

 the installation of these ten exhibits. 



Four dioramas or scale models have also been planned for the 

 second section of Hall B. One of these has already been finished — a 



/ 



V 



1 



1 





reconstruction of a famous ruin, Mummy Cave in Canyon del 

 Muerto, Arizona, as it probably appeared in a.d. 1250 (see Fig. 5). 



Mr. Alfred Lee Rowell, Staff Artist and Dioramist, who is well 

 known for superior work in creating such exhibits, is responsible for 

 the model of Mummy Cave. He will also construct the other three 

 dioramas, two of which are now under way. 



Dr. C. Martin Wilbur, Curator of Chinese Archaeology and 

 Ethnology, prepared three new exhibits before he assumed his war- 

 time duties at the Office of Strategic Services in Washington. They 

 are: The Old Stone Age in China; The Prehistory of China; and 

 Early Cultures in North China. These exhibits represent a new 

 departure for George T. and Frances Gaylord Smith Hall (Hall 24) 

 in that they present ideas rather than objects. Photographs, 



41 



