Roland W. Brown, a paleo- 

 bolanist with the U.S. Geo- 

 logical Sun>ey, at his desk in 

 "Stone Hall" in December 

 1958. The wooden desk and 

 gooseneck lamp were stan- 

 dard equipment of the time; 

 above are Sears Roebuck 

 catalogues into which Dr. 

 Brown pasted newspaper 

 clippings op interest. Brown 

 owned only a single pair of 

 shoes, shown here, which he 

 cobbled himself. The manu- 

 script of his book The 

 Composition of Scientific 

 Words is on the windowsill. 



S.H. Mantay, a paleobotanist with the U.S. Geological 

 Suniey, u>orki)ig in "Stone Hall," probably in the mid- 

 1950s. Behind him are three-foot wooden cases atop six-foot 



steel cases. Stone slabs about two inches thick and up to 

 eight feet long are attached to the wall and extend above the 

 top of the cases. 



52 



The Structure 



