JohnB wrote:
I wonder if the Stearman is the same one that is now...or at least the last time I was there... displayed on its nose?
The plane displayed on it's nose is a North American BT-14..or Yale..or something along those lines. Seems like there's been some argument about it's exact pedigree.

They had a blue and yellow Stearman hanging from the ceiling for decades. The fabric was falling off, so they recently re-covered it, and finished it in silver as the centerpiece of the new Tuskegee Airmen exhibit.
Here's the Stearman in the restoration shop in 2013, looking rather tired..

And here it is today..

JohnB wrote:
Is the DWC still there (IIRC, the old museum guide book said it belonged to the LA County museum)?
From Wikipedia: "Beginning in 1957, the New Orleans was displayed at the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Dayton, Ohio.[23] The aircraft was on loan from the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History and was returned in 2005. Since February 2012, the New Orleans is to be a part of the exhibits at the Museum of Flying, Santa Monica, California." This is interesting, because I don't recall seeing the DWC at the USAF Museum after my first visits in the late 70s/early 80s. Seems like it was gone by the time I started visiting again around 1990.
When I was a kid, they had the Loening Amphibian on display in the Early Years gallery. It's now at Udvar-Hazy. Same with the P-26. In fact, back in the 90s I was chatting with a docent about the Fw-190D, and why they had never done much restoration work on it. He told me that it's owned by the NASM, and they have a policy not to put their restoration resources into NASM-owned aircraft, since they spent a lot of time, effort and money on the P-26, only to have the NASM repossess it.
SN