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Page 28 text:
“
CLASS It ' s over — and yet just begun . . . and memories upon memories crowd in as we recall those four so long — so short years. ... A hustling-busting seething whirl of activity . . . those preliminary interviews . . . the first registration . . . actually dental students. . . . Gross anatomy and the first glimpse of our profession to be . . . herded into the anatomy lab and told in a matter of fact way to uncover our specimens and get to work . . . furtively watching the other fellow before attempt- ing anything ourselves . . . osteology and that fissure about the size of a crack which is distal to the posterior part of the lateral aspect of the anterior superior tubercle . . . the cavernous sinus thrombosis and its relation to hurriedly packing one ' s suitcase is expounded by Dr. Milch . . . do you get it? . . .Hamburg becomes a bespectacled billiard ball . . . the bahr ahrea . . . hunting for that elusive vagus while your partner croons out of Gray ... I can ' t identify it, so let ' s cut it out . . . the ever ready excuse — it ' s an anomaly! . . . the hermaphrodite at Sachs ' table . . . an old olympus ' topmost top . . . practicum after practicum . . . afternoons in histology . . . the eternal question — is it ligamentum nuchae or lens paper slyly substituted by our neighbor? . . . lines of Retzius . . . I ' m no artist, that ' s how it looked to me . . . the difficulty of defining Scott ' s tissue and naming its functions . . . Iggy, with, ironically enough, the biggest monocular microscope in captivity . . . we become surgeons, assistants, anaesthetists and scribes . . . the smell of ether is sweet . . . lookout! the cat is loose . . . kidneys have thresholds and the library is discovered and so are the O. H ' s. . . . unknown to McGannon the boys mark his physi- ology reports unacceptable — and does he fume! . . . Dr. Diamond carves teeth while standing on a chair with the entire class crowded around him . . . Garretson talks a good upper first molar . . . Dr. Stein insists that not even caries could have produced the misshapen pieces of wax we proudly call teeth . . . we remain undaunted . . . Dr. Erdreich ' s knives mysteriously begin and con- tinue to disappear . . . Biochem and the usual sugar is dumped into our sample . . . Ca and P have a ratio ... a walrus moustache stalks around the room . . . comes checking out day and we have more glassware in our locker than when we started . . . catching up on our sleep during Neuro . . . and Dr. Elwyn ' s pointer desending precipi- tously . . . the C.N.S. has tracts, centers, olives, pyramids, islands and what have you ... Dr. Lyons shows us that two reeler . . . Art bases and
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Page 29 text:
“
OF 1939.. President ROBERT MASON Vice-President WILLIAM KAPLAN Secretary-Treasurer SIMEON BLINN Student Council Reps LESTER FINKEL LOUIS HYMAN HARRY QUAIN MILTON WECHSLER weaseling begins . . . the gypsum market soars and floor H becomes white-washed . . . practical Wechsler resorts to a dignified and fitting white- wing outfit . . . Schoeneman runs out of plaster and cuts chunks out of the ceiling at home . . . we go social and run a never to be forgotten stag . . . Axelrod becomes renowned for his exposition of the ordinary tip . . . Peiser and Scheier have a contest to see who can smoke the most cigars — coming up! . . . We are saddened and shocked by the un- fortunate and tragic deaths of Dean Rowe and Dr. Wiberg. . . . 2 . Before we have time to shake the camphor balls out of our ' scopes Path starts . . . Greenberg diag- noses stomatitis as inflammation of the stomach . . . gumma or tubercle? . . . lectures in pitch black rooms again with everyone fighting for seats next to the slide projector . . . identifying slides by their chipped corners . . . autopsies . . . those confer- ences with Dr. Kesten . . . Schwartz photographing all the slides in his spare time — 3 to 4 in the morning . . . Dr. Rosebury ' s distinctly unknown unknowns . . . the diabolical delight with which cocci apparently turn into bacilli after we ' ve handed in our report . . . typhoid injections . . . Nonchalantly assuring our first prophylaxis patient that she was our fifty-ninth, no more and no less . . . we do our first extraction with a universal scaler . . . spilling iodine on our patient with Dr. Hughes looking on . . . we are introduced to the full upper and lower . . . kindly Mr. Cross bellows at us when we venture down to G floor to vulcanize our case . . . we wax up that upper ten times . . . Eisenberg running around my poor case, my poor case. If I only had another twelve months . . . everybody gathers around to watch some one mis-cast another crown . . . Has anybody seen my Paliney? . . . investing with pumice in- stead of gray investment and then wondering why it didn ' t cast . . . Watching, from the roof, the C B technic being marked ... A says yes. B say no. C disagrees with A and B . . . and with Oral Hygiene we rediscover the library . . . Axelrod enthusiastically crushing bacteria between his teeth . . . Wilson becomes a restaurateur . . . The National Association of Alopetic Dentists is formed . . . Dunn, Kaplan, Katz and Scheck are charter members ... Dr. Lieb demonstrates the proper method of holding Lepus Cunicilus . . . prescrip- tions and the advantages of a classical education . . . the game of rolling pellets and stroking the bunny . . . the efficient Dep ' t. of Sanitation that flitted around the lab. . . . discussing everything but pharmacology in those conferences with Dr. Lieb . . . heat treatment and the modulus of elasticity . . . elated when we all get exemptions in Dental Materials . . . Operative technic starts Scheier in the old gold business . . . we all conduct research on how to fill a ten rope cavity with six ropes . . . the class cheers when Dr. Hunt an- nounces that the class will go on the floor in operative . . . the first sophomore class to do so in the history of the school . . . We find it takes an hour to put on the rubber dam and another hour to find the instructor . . . State boards . . . 3 . Back from vacation and . . . Please, please Mrs. Amy can I have a patient? . . . Still trying to master the technique of applying the rubber dam . . . McCrossen ' s hair begins to turn grey as he pours new art bases in order to make his bridge fit . . . Dr. Rosebury gives his lecture course on dental caries and we stop eating pilot biscuits . . . Skolnick removes his orthodontic appliances and we find that he has teeth . . . Scheier pulls the plug from the X-ray machine while Mulhaus is giving a demonstration on taking radiographs. . . . Friedman makes the startling discovery that green teeth are not really green at all . . . Ellison makes a classic preparation and Dr. Hunt looks it over saying, now extend it into the dentine . . . In diagnosis one of the 55 discover queer eruptions on the tongue only to find out that they are the circumvallate pappilae . . . Kaplan leads the class in recasting and swears off class III inlays . . . Prosthetics, and the dentacoll resembles lava flow- ing out of a volcano . . . Schwartz makes class history as he finishes the first House case . . . and in only four months . . . Round wire technique and Mr. Cross finds that he hasn ' t any more time to himself . . . Dr. Gillett walks by and 51 pots are carried to the sink to be cleaned up . . .
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