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Page 22 text:
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ANATOMY Drs. Snodgrass, Butz, Holland, Beller and Whitcomb The course in General Anatomy, consisting of sixty-four hours of lecture supplemented by one hundred and ninety-two hours of work in the anatomical laboratory is given throughout the entire freshman year. The laboratory work is devoted to gross anatomy of the entire body with particular emphasis on the head and neck. Students learn that all the perfumes of Araby will not remove the inescapable, cadaver-like aroma. ORAL ANATOMY Drs. Herman, Faggart, Mervine and Klein This course involves the study of the teeth from the eruptive stage until adult life. The anatomy of the teeth of lower forms of onimol life is considered prior to a detailed study of the human dentition. Primary consideration in the laboratory is given to horizontal ond longitudinal dissections and drawing of natural teeth, along with carvings' in plaster and wax. An identification test of the human dentition finds that characteristics of first molars are now found in third molars and extra cusps appear on cuspids and bicuspids alike, along with a few deciduous teeth added for further confusion during the examination.
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Page 23 text:
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BIOCHEMISTRY Mr. Rowen, Drs. Githens and Schacterle A comprehensive study of the properties of solutions in relation to protoplasm together with the physical and chemical laws governing their behavior is undertaken in this course. Articles of diet such as carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, vitamins, salts and water are studied in groups and separately. Various chemical tests are applied to distinguish, that is to say differentiate between them and to identify them. A laboratory course is correlated with the lectures to study the reactions and behaviors of such materials as amino acids, urea, protein, carbohydrates and fats. The last ditch comparison of the color of the unknowns serves to confirm or deny qualitative as well as quantitative results obtained by each student in the laboratory. MATERIALS USED IN DENTISTRY Mr. Rowen, Drs. Githens and Shacterle A study is made of the basic materials used by the dental profession in fabrication of restorative and corrective appliances of all types. Not the least among these materials is plaster of paris, with its variable water-powder ratio. The physical and chemical properties of all materials are explained in lecture and further studied in the laboratory. Robert sor Material » Rowen, B.S., Ph.C., Profct-of Biochemistry and Dental rials George S. Schacterle, B.S., D.S.C. 19 Robert Rowen, B.S., Ph.C. George R. Schaterle, B.S., D.S.C.
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