THE EXHIBIT 489 



average proportions of 100,000 white soldiers at demobilization as deter- 

 mined by the United States War Department. 



5. Table with announcements of books and magazines on eugenics, with 

 pedigree charts and blank schedules issued by the Eugenics Record Office. 

 The latter were provided on application to the attendant. 



6. Wall Panel. Protestant Episcopal Marriage Ceremony — with sug- 

 gested eugenical revision. 



7. Stereomotorgraph (constantly in operation) showing selection of hu- 

 man pedigrees and other eugenical and genetical subjects. 



Exhibited by: Kodascope Editing and Titling Service, 350 Madison 

 Ave., New York, N. Y. 



8. Pictures (20) showing fundamental principles of heredity. 

 Exhibited by: Buffalo Academy of Natural Science, Buffalo, N. Y. 



IN THE HALL OF EDUCATION. MAIN FLOOR. BOOTHS 1 TO 14. 

 BOOTH 1 — ANTHROPOLOGY 



Theme-sign. 



(a) Races are distinguished by groups of hereditary characters. 



(b) Eugenics is applied anthropology. 

 Exhibits: 



1. Chart with radiographs of gorilla's hand. Dorsal aspect. Growth 



of a young female gorilla in the New York Zoological Park. 

 Exhibited by: Dr. Charles V. Noback, N. Y. Zoological Park, Bronx, 

 New York. 



2. Enlarged photographs (24) showing evolution of facial musculature 



for lower primates to man; embryological development of facial 

 musculature in man; and racial differences in facial musculature. 

 Exhibited by: Dr. Ernst Huber, Associate Professor of Anatomy, 

 Johns Hopkins Medical School, Baltimore, Md. 



3. Statistical charts (9) with pictures of Kenya natives, describing pre- 



liminary inquiry into the causation of racial backwardness in na- 

 tives of East Africa. 

 Exhibited by: H. L. Gordon, M.D., P. O. Box 950, Nairobi, Kenya 

 Colony, East Africa. 



4. Life masks (14) showing African racial types prepared by a new and 



accurate process. 

 Exhibited by: Hans Lichtennecker, Roststrasse 3, Gotha, Germany. 



5. Facial masks of South African Negroes — 30. 



Exhibited by: Dr. Lidio Cipriani, Museo Nazionale di Antropologia, 

 University of Firenze, Florence, Italy. 



