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JUUUUWhNWiI wwrtwmiO' ••• •.•.•.•.•.'.vmwwni ODONTOLOG 76 Copyright 1976 John P. Grigger TEMPLE UNIVERSITY DENTAL • ALLIED HEALTH • PHARMACY LIBRARY 3304 N. BROAD STREET PHIIA., PA. 19140 Harold J.E. Lantz, friend and teacher, your life has been one of pursuit of academic excellence and dedication to sharing your knowledge with your students and peers. You have not only earned degrees at the bachelors, masters, and doctoral levels, but have expanded your expertise in your chosen profession as a Fellow of the American and International Colleges of Dentists, a Master of the Academy of General Dentistry, and a Diplomate of the American Board of Oral Medicine. You serve your dental alma mater with distinction as Professor and Chairman of the Department of Prosthodontics and as a member of numerous committees. You also volunteer your time and energy in large measure to your fraternity and to scores of dental organizations. During your quarter century in dentistry you have presented over 270 lectures and clinics to your dental colleagues in this country and abroad. Especially appreciated by your students is the boundless enthusiasm you bring to your teaching. You instill in even the least motivated student the honest desire for knowledge, and inspire the exceptional student to the attainment of further excellence. You build bridges between yourself and your students rather than fences. It is with thanks that the Class of 1976 proudly dedicates to you. Dr. Harold J.E. Lantz, this Odontolog. 3 4 5 6 8 10 11 12 13 16 SENIORS 17 NATHANIEL ROBINSON Saint Matthews, S.C.; Claflin College, B.S. I 18 H. CHRISTOPHER WHITHAM Glensidc, Pa.; University of Pittsburgh, B.S.; ZIP — Vice Pres.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASDC. TIMOTHY VV. CONWAY Harrisburg, Pa.; Shippensburg State College, B.S.; Delt — Vice Pres.; Gold Foil Study Club, Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASDC. 19 STEPHEN FARLEY HAGGERTY Ridgewood, N.J.; Fairleigh Dickinson University, B.A.; Psi O; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASDC, St. George Oral Cancer Soc., Stomatognathic Soc. 20 LANCE LORCH Brooklyn, N.Y.; Coe College, B.A. MICHAEL L. EISENBROCK Philadelphia, Pa.; Widner College, B.S.; SED; ASPD. 21 DENNIS E. LEBLANC Newport, Vt.; University of Vermont, B.A.; ASDC. St. George Oral Cancer Soc. 22 STEVEN I. MILLER Brooklyn, N.Y.; Brooklyn College, B.A.; AO; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASDC, ASPD, St. George Oral Cancer Soc., Odon-tolog. DWIGHT L. HERSHMAN Brooklyn, N.Y.; Brooklyn College, B.S.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Perio Honor Soc. — Treasurer, ASDC, ASPD, St. George Oral Cancer Soc — Executive Committee, Odontolog. JOE WILLIAMS Colorado Springs, Colo.; University of Pennsylvania, B.-A.j ZIP; Student Council — Pres., ASDA News — Assoc. Editor, Dental Student Magazine — Campus Editor, Temple Dental Review — Editor, ASDA — Rep., Professionalism Committee, Senior Class — Pres. LESLIE ELLIOT LAKIND Newark, N.J.; Rutgers University, B.A.; AO; Perio Honor Soc., Pacemaker — Editor, Odontolog. Temple Dental Review, Class Vice Pres. 24 JOHN P. GRIGGER Oreland, Pa.; Bucknell University, B.S.; Psi O; ASPD, St. George Oral Cancer Soc., Professionalism Committee, Temple Dental Review — Assoc. Editor, Odontolog — Editor. DAVID M. HAMILTON Cedar Grove, N.J.; Houghton College, B.S.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASDC, ASPD, St. George Oral Cancer Soc., Temple Dental Review, Odontolog — Assoc. Editor. 25 JOHN B. FONTANA, JR. Wilmington, Del.; University of Delaware, B.A.; Delt; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., All Dental Dance — Co-chairman, ASDC JOHN A. GRANADOS Levittown, Pa.; University of Maryland, B.S.; Delt — Pres.; ASDC. 26 THOMAS NELSON GOOD Chambersburg, Pa.; Grove City College, B.S.; Delt — Vice Pres., Pres.; ASDC. 27 JOHN P. FOORE Pleasant Gap, Pa.; Lock Haven State Co -lege, B.S.; SED; Perio Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC. EUGENE JAMES McCUIRE Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Kings College, B.S.; P 0; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. Geor) Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC. 28 GARY WAYNE McDOWELL Huntingdon Valley, Pa.; Lafayette College, B.A.; Psi O; Oral Surgery Honor Soc. 2 30 GEORGE EDWARD FRATTALI Groton, Conn.; University of Connecticut, B.A.; ZIP; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., All Dental Dance — Co-chairman. CHRISTOPHER D. MAURER Norristown, Pa.; Temple University, A.B.; Psi O; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., Stomatognathic Soc., ASDC. Books and Instruments Committee. 31 EUGENE JOSEPH MARIANI, JR. Worcester, Mass.; University of Massachusetts, B.S., M.S.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Perio Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc. — Executive Committee, Amer. Soc. of Microbiology, ASDC. GARY G. PETERS Hellertown. Pa.; Muhlenberg College, B.S.; Psi O. 32 CHARLES G. SANDILOS Ambler, I’a.; Temple University; ZIP; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC. 33 GENE IRA RUBIN Philadelphia, Pa.; Temple University, A.B.; AO; St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC, ASPD. t ’ I JOSEPH ALAN GLORIA Collingswood, N.J.; Seton Hall Universi B.A.; Psi O; Oral Surgery Honor Sc Stomatognathic Soc., ASDC, ASPD. 34 JOANNE 51DOT1 SCHMIDT Easton, Pa.; Chestnut Hill College, B.S.; SED — Sec'y; St. George Oral Cancer Soc., Stomatognathic Soc., American Soc. of Women Dentists, ASDC. JLD. SCHWARTZ i, Pi;Temple University, l, George Oral Cancer Soc., c5oc.,4SDC. 35 36 ALLEN ROSENTHAL Brooklyn, N.Y.; State University of New York; AO; Oral Surgery Honor Soc, ASDC. 37 ROBERT M. BLITZER Roslyn, N.Y.; Adelphi University, B.A.; Stomatognathic Soc. — Pres., ASDC. 38 VINCENT PETER DILORENZO Bergenfield, N.J.; Hofstra University, B.A.; ZIP; St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC. MICHAEL PERRETTA Bronx, N.Y.; Herbert H. Lehman College, B.S.; SED; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Perio Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC. RONALD PAUL PETROSKY Freehold, N.J.; Jacksonville University, B.S.; ZIP; Perio Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC. ASPD. v. RANDY QUING LIGH Berkeley, Calif; University of California, B.A.; AO; Oral Surgery Honor Soc. — Sec.-Treas., Perio Honor Soc., St. Goerge Oral Cancer Soc., ASPD. RONALD ALLAN SMITH Camp Hill, Pa.; Johns Hopkins University, B.A.; Gold Foil Study Club — Vice Pres., Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Stomatognathic Soc., ASDC. 40 ALEXANDER MICHAEL NEIDHARDT, III Pittsburgh, Pa.; University of Pittsburgh, B.S.; Golf Foil Study Qub, Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Perio Honor Soc. — Vice Pres., Stomatognathic Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc. ERNEST G. BARBIERI, JR. Philadelphia, Pa., Pennsylvania State Uni versity, B.S.; ASDC. 41 MICHAEL JOSEPH MULLEN, 111 Lowell, Mass.; St. Anselm's College, B.A.; AO; Oral Surgery Honor Soc.; St. George Oral Cancer Soc. 42 STEPHEN J. URAM Berwick, Pa.; Mount St. Mary's College, B.S.; ZIP; Oral Surgery' Honor Soc., ASDC. DOUGLAS J. HENSCHEL Pennington, N.J.; College of Wooster, B.A.; Delt — Treas.; Gold Foil Study Club, Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc. JACK ROSENBAUM Philadelphia, Pa.; University of Pennsylvania, B.A.; AO; ASDC. 43 I W ANDREW STEPHEN PROUSI Philadelphia, Pa.; Temple University, B.A.; Psi O; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Perio Honor Soc., ASDC, ASPD. STEVEN JOSEPH SANTUCCI Avondale, Pa.; Moravian College, B.S.; ZIP; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC. 44 WILLIAM BRERETON MUCKLOW Watertown, N.Y.; Syracuse University, B.S.; ZIP; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Perio Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC, Freshman Class Vice Pres., Sophomore Class Pres., Student Council Sec'y, AADS Delegate. WILLIAM K. TEEN, JR. Brooklyn, N.Y.; Hofstra University. B.A.; ZIP; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASDC 45 ANDREW H. WEBER Woodmere, N.Y.; Temple University, B.A.; AO; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC. ■J6 JEFFREY J. WIESNER Allentown, Pa.; Muhlenberg College, B.S.; ZIP; St George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC. ROBERT M. PELLEGRINO West Hempstead, N.Y.; State University of New York at Stonybrook, B.S.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASDC, ASPD. STEVEN BARRY BLACK Newton, Mass.; University of Rochester, B.A.; Rubber Dam Clamp Honor Soc. GEORGE V. GOFF Phoenixville, Pa.; Indiana University, B.S., M S.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASPD — Pres., Books and Instruments Committee, Curriculum Committee. LARRY S. FISHER Hesston, Pa.; Juniata College, B.S.; ZIP; Gold Foil Study Club — Sec.-Treas., Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., Stomatognathic Soc. — Vice Pres., ASDC, ASPD. FRANK A. DINOIA Freeland, Pa.; Ursinus College, B.A.; Psi O; Oral Surgery Honor Soc. — Vice Pres., Perio Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC, ASPD. MARK W. BRE1T New Hyde Park, N.Y.; Adelphi University, B.A.; ASDC, ASPD — Sec.-Treas. 49 LARRY KENNETH LITMAN Philadelphia, Pa.; St. Joseph's College, B.S.; SED. 50 ROBERT E. BRIGHTBILL Linglestown, Pa.; Villanova University, B.S.; ZIP; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc. STEPHEN T. KAZM1ERCZAK Brooklyn, N.Y.; Manhattan College, B.S.; Delt; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Perio Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., Odontolog. 51 STANLEY J. KORY AT Fairless Hills. Pa.; Drexel University, B.S.; ASDC. 52 CHARLES C. PITT Baltimore, Md.; Elizabethtown College, B.S.; ZIP — Treas., Pres.; St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC, Intrafraternity Council — Sec'y. ROBERT F. KELISEK New Hyde Park, N.Y.; Hofstra University, B.A.; ZIP; Perio Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC. 4 MATTHEW J. LEWAN Syosset, N.Y.; New York University, B.A.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASDC. THOMAS R. MENG, JR. Marlton, N.J.; Rutgers University, B.A.; AO; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc. 34 DENNIS D. DOUGHTY State College, Pa.; Pennsylvania State University, M.S., Wheaton College, B.S.; Gold Foil Study Club, Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASDC. JOHN SNIVELY Lansdowne, Pa.; Stanford University, B.A.; ASDC. 55 ANTHONY P. KOSSA Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; King's College, B.S.; Psi O; Oral Surgery Honor Soc JOHN STANLEY LAWRENCE Eddystone, Pa.; Ursinus College, B.S.; Psi O. 56 Bay Shore, N.Y.; United States Military Academy. B.S.; ZIP; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St George Oral Cancer Soc., Stomatognathic Soc.. ASDC. ASPD. 57 CHARLES D. WHITE Hatboro, Pa.; Indiana University of Pa.. B.S.; ZIP — Sec'y; Perio Honor Soc., ASDC. JOHN J. TAKACH, JR. Hazleton, Pa.; Pennsylvania State University, B.S.; SED; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Perio Honor Soc., Odontolog. 58 MARC R. FISHER Philadelphia, Pa.; Pennsylvania State University, B.A.; AO; St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC. KIRK ALLEN SPEICHER Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Bucknell University, B.A.; Psi O; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Perio Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC, ASPD, Pacemaker, junior Class President. Student Council Rep. MICHAEL HARRIS MYERS Philadelphia, Pa.; Temple University, B.A.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Odontolog staff. Table Qinic — 2nd prize, 1975. 60 RAYMOND C. AU Hong Kong; Temple University, ASDC. HARRY L. ESHBAUGH Levittown. Pa.; Ursinus College. B.S.; AO; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc. ROBERT WOOLERY Radnor, Pa.; Davis and Elkins College, B.S.; SED. 61 FREDERICK TROVATO Nutley, N.J.; Rutgers University, B.A.; A5DC, Temple Dental Review. 62 GREGORY P. MATHIEU Southbridge, Mass.; University of Massachusetts, B.S.; Psi O; Gold Foil Study Club. Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Perio Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc. JEFFREY B. ALLAN Westwood, Mass.; University of Massachusetts, B.S.; Psi O; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC. 63 IRA RUSSELL PARKER Pittsburgh, Pa.; University of Pittsburgh, B.S.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Perio Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC. WILLIAM ANDREW BODENSCHATZ, III Brooklawn, N.J.; Temple University, B.A.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC, ASPD. N STEVEN ALAN APPEL Brooklyn, N.Y.; Hofstra University, B.A.; AO — Vice Pres., Editor; Perio Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., Amer. Soc. for the Prevention of Dentistry for Children, ASPD. FRANCIS J. CHURGAI Spring City, Pa.; Villanova University, B.S.; ZIP. 65 DAVID JERRY RISING Indiana, Pa., Indiana University of Pa., B.S.; Psi O — Social Chrmn. 66 PAUL F. GETTY Upper Darby, Pa.; University of Delaware, B.A.; Delt; ASDC. NICHOLAS J. CIVILLICO Upper Darby, Pa.; Temple University, M.A., Villanova University, B.A.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDC, ASPD. 67 LARRY HAROLD SNYDER Perkasie, Pa.; Delaware Valley College of Science and Agriculture; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASDC. 68 GREG K. NAGANUMA Lihue, Hawaii; University of Missouri — Kansas City, B.S.; ZIP. 69 KENNETH YALE FISHMAN Oceanside, N.Y.; State University of New York at Albany, B.S.; AO; St. George Oral Cancer Soc. ROBERT D. HALL, JR. Frackville, Pa.; Lafayette College, B.S.; Dell. 70 DAN CHARLES McCAREL Canton, Ohio; Kent State University, B.A.; Psi O; ASDC. 71 JAMES J. HILL, JR. Philadelphia, Pa.; Villanova University, B.S.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Perio Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., Odontolog: MARK STEVEN SORIN Clifton, N.J.; Rutgers University, B.A.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc. 72 HARVEY EDWARD HELLERSTEIN Philadelphia, Pa.; Temple University, B.A.; SED — Vice Pres., Pres.; ASDC, Interfraternity Council — Pres. THOMAS VICTOR NASTASIA Lawrence, Mass.; University of Massachusetts, B.A.; Psi O — Historian; Perio Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc. 73 JOE WADE BROOKRESON Willow Grove, Pa.; University of North Carolina, B.A.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Curriculum Committee. WALTER I. MAYBRUCH Far Rockaway, N.Y.; Yeshiva University, BA. 74 MICHAEL ROBERT MARINCHAK Lansdowne, Pa.; Bucknell University, B.S.; Psi O; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc. 75 WILLIAM GRANT NICKLAS Hollidaysburg, Pa.; Washington and Jefferson College, B.A.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Perio Honor Soc., ASPD, St. George Oral Cancer Soc., Stomatognathic Soc. Fremont, Calif.; University of Calif., Davis, B.S.; ZIP; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASDC, St. George Oral Cancer Soc., Stomatognathic Soc. 76 JAMES E. DICKERT Yardley, Pa.; St. Francis College, B.S.; Psi O; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASDC, St George Oral Cancer Soc. 1 ROGER MARTIN PETERSON West Covina, Calif.; Citrus College, A.A.; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., Perio Honor Soc., ASDC, St. George Oral Cancer Soc. — Executive Committee 77 WALTER J. KAMINSKI JR. Wilmington, Del.; University of Delaware, B.A.; Dell. ANDREW MICHAEL BENJAMIN Brooklyn, N.Y.; Long Island University. B.S.; AO; Perio Honor Soc. — Pres.; ASDC — Pres., St. George Oral Cancer Soc., Table Qinic — First Prize. THOMAS WARD GAMBA Philadelphia, Pa.; Villanova University, B.A.; ZIP; St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDA — Delegate, Consultant, Pres. Local Chapter; Pa. Dental Assoc — Delegate; ADA — Student Consultant, Pacemaker, Chorus. DONALD R. BIFFEN Piscataway, N.J.; Temple University School of Pharmacy, Perio Honor Soc.. ASDC, St. George Oral Cancer Soc. — Vice Pres., Executive Committee. 70 PETER LLOYD BRYAN North Weymouth, Mass.; University of Massachusetts, B.S.; Gold Foil Study Club, Stomatognathic Soc., Temple Dental Review. STEPHEN SOBEL New York. N.Y ; New York University, B.A.; SED. 80 STEPHEN BERNARD OLLOCK Swoyersville, Pa.; East Stroudsburg State College, B.S.; Psi O; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASDA Representative. STEPHEN JOSEPH CANDIO Lyndhurst, N.J.; St. Peter's College, B.S.; ZIP — Vice Pres.; St. George Oral Cancer Soc., ASDA, Temple Univ. Board of Trustees — Student Representative. 81 BARRY R. KANTOR Englewood Cliffs, N.J.; Fairleigh Dickinson University, B.S.; AO; Perio Honor Soc., ASDC. WILLIAM TYSON KRING Reading, Pa.; Lehigh University, B.A., University of Calif, at Berkeley, M.B.A. 82 STEVEN FISHMAN Livingston, N.J.; Drew University; SED; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., ASDC, St. George Oral Cancer Soc MICHAEL DAMIAN O'LEARY Upper Darby, Pa.; Villanova University. B.A.; ZIP — Editor; Oral Surgery Honor Soc., St. George Oral Cancer Soc. — Executive Committee and Secretary, Stomatog-nathic Soc. JAMES A. RINEHIMER Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; Bucknell Univeristy, B.S.; Psi O. 84 ANDREW STUART PRICE Philadelphia, Pa.; Muhlenberg College, B.S.; AO; ASDC. 85 PIER JOSEPH CIPRIANI Trenton, N.).; University of Scranton, B.A.; Gold Foil Study Club, ASDC, St. George Oral Cancer Soc., Stomatognafhic Soc. Krnold Went attended Temple University School ot Dentistry with the Class ol 197 b. Vie died on Kugust 14,1975 alter a prolonged illness. His eyes smiled with cheer and enthusiasm. His manner was calm and conlident. Vie had begun to establish his place among us. It was a high place. In the fell clutch of circumstance. I have not winced nor cried aloud. Under the bludgeonings of chance My head is bloody, but unbowed. from Invictus by William Earnest Henley 87 88 DENTAL HYGIENE TERRI J. Cherry Hill, New jersey DOROTHYG. BAGNO Avondale, Pennsylvania 90 PAMELA L. BRAY York, Pennsylvania ELIZABETH J. BROPHY Philadelphia, Pennsylvania MARY ELLEN CHICCINE Pottsville, Pennsylvania 92 CHERYL DECKER Luthersburg, Pennsylvania BONNIE L. DEMAREST Toms River, New Jersey DEBORAH L. EBERSOLE West Lawn, Pennsylvania 93 94 MAUREEN E. GILDEA Dallas, Pennsylvania AMELIA K. GLATFELTER Lancaster, Pennsylvania 95 LYNN A. GRIMALDI Holland, Pennsylvania JEANNE E. HOLT Philadelphia, Pennsylvania r KAREN j. IVER5 Morrisville, Pennsylvania MARIA G. JADICO Philadelphia, Pennsylvania DENISE M. KNISELY Carlisle, Pennsylvania BARBARA A. KAKOS Pottstown, Pennsylvania KAREN L. KELLY West Chester, Pennsylvania ELIZABETH KRAMER Sellersville, Pennsylvania % JULIA D. LAPARE Philadelphia, Pennsylvania KATHERINE T. MAREN Harrisburg, Pennsylvania I PATRICIA A. KUTA Ft. Pierce, Florida GAIL N. LABATE Cornwell's Hts., Pennsylvania DENISE MAZZOCCHI Roslyn, Pennsylvania LOUISE A. MECAUCHEY Havertown, Pennsylvania 1 SUSAN L. MOORE Carlisle, Pennsylvania CINDY LEE MULLIGAN Lincroft, New Jersey CAROL S. NAYLOR Reading, Pennsylvania JANE A. NIEZGODA Dallas, Pennsylvania DENISE K. PAGE Doylestown, Pennsylvania r SUSAN E. REHM Clearfield, Pennsylvania ► LAURA A. PELLEGRINO Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 103 104 JANE A. ROTHERMEL Harrisburg, Pennsylvania PAMELA A. SABETTA Dunmore, Pennsylvania 105 JEANNE M. SARNOCINSKI Chester, Pennsylvania MARY KAY SAUSEN Wilmington, Delaware SUSAN F. SULLIVAN Newton Square, Pennsylvania WENDY A. THATCHER York, Pennsylvania 106 PATRICIA J. VECERE Cape May Court House, New Jersey 107 DONNA D. WALTON Jenkinstown, Pennsylvania Instructors and Staff Betsey A. A]den, R.D.H., B.S., M.Ed. Super ’isor Barbara K. Komives, B.Sc., M.Sc. Assistant Supervisor Joan G. Scranton, R.D.H., B.S. Shorn' Y. Dunbar, R.D.H., B.S., M.Ed. Sara E Henne, R DM., B.S. Angela Reddie, Clinical Assistant 10S Betty Granger, R.D.H., B.S. Susan Neal, R.D.H., B.A. Robin Gianson, R.D.H., B.S. Joan Membach, R.D.H., B.S. Eliza Pena, Secretary Mary Ann Candio, Secretary 109 110 HI 112 1 saw a cock . . . roach! My patient bit off the other three! 1 Ms. Fonz . . . Hey! What do you think about modified grasp? Minus 10, indirect vision Doctor, please! in Practicing the Roll Technique Conditioning the Obicularis Oris The Cheshire at her best What did you say you wanted? Studying for boards I wonder where he's taking me tonight I just consumed 47 times my weight in excess sucrose Oh, gee . . . my patient cancelled Do you think I could draw the X-ray in? Mot tonight dear, I have a headache. 116 Cram it! Please Sue. press my buzzer! 117 Class Officers Sigma Phi Alpha ACTIVITIES 119 Alpha Omega Fraternity Delta Sigma Delta Fraternity Psi Omega Fraternity Sigma Epsilon Delta Fraternity Xi Psi Phi Fraternity nSc3l Stomatognathic Honor Society Periodontal Honor Society Oral Surgery Honor Society Gold Foil Study Club American Society of Dentistry for Children American Society for Preventive Dentistry St. George Oral Cancer Society Student Council TUDS Chorus Temple Dental Review Odontolog rrti Omicron Kappa Upsilon V E. Gregory Bauer Joe YV. Brookreson Timothy W. Conway Robert C. Director Dennis D. Doughty Harry L. Eshbaugh Larrv S. Fisher Robert D. Hall Gregory P. Mathieu David M. Hamilton Dwight L. Hershman Lance Lorch Gary G. Peters 128 Christopher D. Maurer Alexander M Neidhardt Ronald A. Smith John Snively 129 Dr. Charles Howell Dr. Dale Roeck Dean, 1964-75 Dean I Dr. Kendrick Brookreson Assistant Dean Director of Clinics ADMINISTRATION Margaret Dous Administrative Assistant Arthur Young Assistant to the Dean for Administration Edward Sullivan Assistant to the Dean for Student Activities Joseph Nahas Dean of Lockers 130 m COMMUNITY DENTISTRY Dr. Merrick Furst Dr. Georgianne McVay Shirley Pyke Dr. Gerald Orner Dr. Louis Dubin Dr. Richard Mumma Chairman ORAL ANATOMY DENTAL MATERIA Dr. Stanley Iordan Dr Ralph Domanico Dr. Benjamin Patag Chairman 131 Dr. Barry Abrams Dr. Joseph Faltermayer REMOVABLE PF Dr. Joseph Wazney 1 Dr. Norris Smith Dr. Thomas Davis Dr. Kenneth Miller 132 Dr. Morton Spiegelford Dr. Harold Lantz Chairman OSTHODONTICS s Dr. William Fisher Dr. Wayne Morris Dr. Edward Brown Dr. Jerry Summers Dr. Joseph Shore Dr. Albert Rosett 133 ORAL MEDICINE m Dr. Louis Cahan Dr. Larry Geller Dr. Joel Weiss Dr. Norman Freeman Dr. I.L. Halpern Dr Thcvdcfe Simpton Dr Knlh Andrmxi ChJirnun 134 Dr. Jay Denbo +- Dr. Allan Schlossberg I Dr. Carole Hildebrand Dr. Frank Derenzis Dr. Alan Meltzer Dr. Irving Abrams PERIODONTOLOGY P Dr. David Litwack Chairman Dr. John Dombrowski 135 D. ™©D@MTieS FIXED PARTIAl Dr. Louis Zislis D' Peter Coste Dr. Theodore Kaczmar Dr. Paul Waicus Dr. Bernard Olbrys Dr Thomas Balshi PROSTHODONTICS Dr. Z. John Gregory 1917-1975 Dr. Robert Goldberg Dr. Richard Hochman Dr. Paul Archaki Dr. Ernest Mingledorff Chairman Dr. Ray Cleveland 137 3 MICROBIOLOGY D a [h Ltfoiuid r«km n t f Noimwi WillH! (hiuman Dr. Paul Farber Dr. Robert Baum ¥ PATHOLOGY s « Tr’M U LnJ Dr. Arthur Miller Chairman Dr. Dean White IH Jow-VehChm 138 Dr. Calvin Leifer Dr. John Martin Dr. Jacob Zabara Dr. David Innes Dr. Frank Hohcnleitner Df Fr«nct K mUB Dr. John Drees 3L®@T PHYSIOLOGY PHYSIOLOGY Dr. Robert Pollack Chairman GPI Dr. Robert Friedman Dr. George Schacterle Di lhiwl«f Rowil TOT BIOCHEMISTRY i 139 Dr. Augustine Chialastri Dr. Eugene Czarnecki Dr. Loretta Healy Dr. Anne McVVade Dr. Donald Berger Dr. Thomas Jenkins ORAL PEDIATRICS @EML PE0P HO Dr Jay Goldsleger Dr. Robert Moore Dr. James Bond Chrmn. Orthodontics Dr. John Macauley Dr.Miles Felix Dr. Joseph Meyer Dr. Joseph McCormack Df Robert Cifrfl Df Burton Nuuluum Or WiBum 8mn Chiuimn 141 3L@©Y ENDODONTOLOGY Dr. Donald Morse Jl ’ •' — 1 ’( Dr. Rufus Minor Dr. George Biron Dr. Samuel Seltzer Chairman Dr. Philip Wiegand Dr. Daniel Lasater Urn— Dr. Frank Williams DENTAL RADIOLOGY PEI Dr. Norman Riemer Dr. Paul Marcucci Dr. Frank Sammartino Chairman 143 ANATOMIC SCIENCES m h‘ Dr. David Aker Dr. Ernest Swanson Dr. Louis Caso Dr. John Volz Dr. Marion McCrea Chairman NUTRITION PHARMACOLOGY 144 Dr. David Mann Chairman Dr. Daniel Daley Dr. Paul Lang mf ORAL SURGERY D Dr. Jack Lignelli Dr. Bernard Rothman Dr. Alex Mohnac Chairman M5 Dr. Allen Fielding Dr. Gerald Kelly ! Dr. William Firth Dr. Albert Porecca Dr. Augustus Russo 0EIIITW OPERATIVE DENTISTRY Dt Robot Cormth Di Sai«di Dr. Egidio Torreti Dr. Angelo Costa Dr. Charles Bill Dr. Vincent Buggy Dr. Robert Hardy Dr. Bertram Siegel Dr. Vincent Lawlor - ©PHRMOWI Di, John Pomh Pt Sunlry Luom'iIu ChMtnun 147 Margaret Adam Myrtle Smith Y@y THANK YOU TUmK TOO TO 148 Tom Aspell Joann Smith, Gelsie Cipriano Carol Hunsperger. Micki Miller Marie Wright m Y@y tmmk ¥©y inm wy Gilda Segal Ramona Rivera Mary Havelin Sheryl Greene Reggie Brunk K I f Auxiliary Utilization and Management Program S1MINM YOU THANK YOU TOMMK Y© Terry Thompson Anna Czarkowski Tom Pratley Ethel Perkins Dolores Hobson TUmK Y@y tuamk Y@U Sobel Laboratory Technicians 151 Dorellen Dudo, Carol Beldecos, June Beale Library Staff rBMINM Y@y THANK YOU TIMI Y© Theresa Wyszynski Jill Korpowski Pat Gladden Meredith Richardson Herman Bryson Ethel Perkins VOL. MCMLXXVI ... No. 3223 — PHILADELPHIA. RECORD NUMBER OF SENIORS PASS GOLD EXAM Arrow shows location of discovery. Staggering Find At TUDS Excavation Site The truth can now be told. It has been months since the extraction of TUDS' first floor and full reconstruction has yet to proceed beyond the treatment planning stage. Despite repeated attempts by administraitors to blame the delay on mysterious and unnamed officials in Harrisburg. we at the Morning Cancellation have learned this is not the case. In reality the work is being delayed by TUDS administrators themselves, who believe they may have stumbled on an archeological find of staggering dimensions. The story began late one night last fall when an alert guard saw a Sophomore student sneaking out of the first floor. The guard easily overtook the student and was about to question him when he noticed a bone clenched firmly in the student’s mouth. Speaking softly to the student while patting him on the head, the guard removed the bone from the student's mouth. As the guard examined the bone, the panting student loped off. pausing by a fire hydrant. Shrugging the incident off. the guard buried the bone in a garbage can where it was found the next morning by John Bomber. Bomber, who had been looking for pieces of discarded gingiva to chew on. balanced the bone on his head, was heard to mutter. E is for eager. and went to the office of Charles Santnicholas who glanced at the bone and pronounced it to be between 4.116,382 and 4,116.386 years old. See “Bone p. 5 During the three month period Sept, through Nov. 1975 a record number of ten students passed the Operative Department's clinical gold examination, according to a report issued by Dr. Richard Hinson of Datadon-tia Processing. In fact, he stated the toll may be even higher, but if Form I0‘s were not properly filled out. credit may be lost forever among the transistors of our com-putors. But Dr. Angelo Costa, a spokeman for DIC, the devastating instructors’ committee. indicated that his figures were in close accord with those of Dr. Hinson. Commenting on the astounding 400% increase over the comparable period the previous year. Dr. Costa touched upon several notable points. • We've got them running scared. 1 guess, he sheepishly admitted. Last year we had one guy we flunked eight times, another six times. We have all kinds of ways we can do it. Take a Class V foil exam, for example. We’ll string him along until the end. I’ll sign off the restoration and then Stan (Dr. Stanley Lisowski) will come along and pick open a margin. He’s a real pro. Besides, it’s See Record Number p. 2 134 (UanttU thm THE WEATHER Chance of now turning to hull today; heavy fog tonight. Clearing with over-caM skies tomorrow Temperature ranges today 81-89, tonight 14-26. tomorrow 40-53. MAY 27. 1976 — NO CENTS PLOT UNCOVERED AT TUPS Bomba Tells All to Regain ADA Approval In an exclusive interview today Dr. John Bomba revealed the startling facts behind the ADA’s decision to place TUDS on provisional accreditation. According to Bomba there was a massive covcrup concerning the action. And the implications of the covcrup touch upon the lives of people the world over. Ostensibly the ADA action was taken after an inspection team reported that the clinic was deficient in size and that there were too few instructors. However. Dr. Bomba revealed several new and important facts to this paper. The first concerns Dr. I.. Harry Oswald, one of the members of the site inspection team, who was later found dead after mistakenly swallowing Ornasc capsules according to Bomba, was prepared to make a statement of her knowledge of her husband’s activities as an operative for the ADA. as well as a paid informer for the NDA. IRA. IRS, and FLF. At the time of his death. Oswald had been working undercover as a security guard at the dental school and was investigating the break-in and theft of gold from student lockers and cabinets, as well as the mysterious disappearance of used needles from the wastccans. The gold castings were apparently being fenced out to a dental lab which was selling the castings to dentists who would then prepare teeth to fit them. The income from this operation was used to finance See Plot” p. 2 NEW PINS FOR OLD . The pin restoration is far from dead.” states Dr. R. Cornish. Associate Professor of Pins at TUDS. Take the simple occlusal restoration for example. We can now' conserve a great deal of tooth structure by making the walls of the preparation parallel and simply placing 4 or 6 non-parallel pins in the depth of the preparation. In addition, pin research had led to several new advances in pin dentistry: Gold alloy pins have been developed for greater computability with gold foil restorations. enabling the dentist to promise the discriminating patient an allgold restoration. An additional advantage of this gold to gold technique is an end to the age old High Fidelity Molar Syndrome — that troublesome tooth that seems to pick up WFIL. Another recurrent problem — that of what to do with a pin amalgam whose margins have broken down has also been recently solved by the development of radioactive, self-cleansing pins. By using a specially developed geiger counter handpiece, the dentist may locate the pins as he is removing the old restoration. for his cold. Oswald’s wife. Patient Has Ortho; Feels Earth Move After receiving a frantic call from one of his patients at I AM last night. Dr. Alan Schlossberg rushed to the house of one of his patients. Not many doctors make house-calls anymore. said Dr. Schlossberg in an interview with our paper. It was this kooky lady. Mrs. O. he stated. She said her Hawley was killing her. Well I took one look and I could see she was in pain, so I got out my tools to make an immediate adjustment. Then all hell broke loose. First she bit me and the tongue crib really did a number on my hand, so I took it out. All of this new freedom is suddenly too much for her tongue to cope with and she jams it down my throat. Next she rips off the towel clips exposing two of the most perfect glands I 155 Could this man be Dr. I,. Harry Oswald? Sec “Pins” p. 3 Sec Earth p. 2 PACK 2 THE MORNING CANC (continued from p. 1) real child’s play with these loupes. For variety we'll nail them for ditching, but we don't want to do this too often because we know that the only effective way to prevent ditching is to lay a flap before you put the dam on. “As far as inlays go we get them mostly for overtime. Students are getting crafty and using these new quick set impression materials. Fortunately. most of them won’t flow into the reverse bevel like the old rubber so we’ll flag them for internal detail at precementation time. Or we’ll get them to finish down the margins so thin they’ll knock a piece off themselves just getting the casting out to cement it. Asked why he was so willing to reveal these seemingly sadistic tactics. Dr. Costa replied. Aw. we're really not all that bad We’re just doing it for fun. I mean there’s a serious side to it too. We’re making these boys better dentists. I mean we’re really proud of these kids. They’re trying harder ’cause they know we’re tough. Some of them have gotten to the point where they can put the dam on. prep the tooth, wait for us to write it up and fill it — all in 30 or 40 minutes and work like eager beavers for the next two hours burnishing the margins. And a lotta times, too, we’ll keep them from flunking by not approving their lesions as exam material, if we think they’re not ready. So then they go and screw themselves up by trading off lesions that we approve for someone else. But we’ll keep trying to make them the best dentists we know how. EARTH MOVES (Continued from p. I) have ever set eyes upon. I suddenly realized that this woman, who was bigger than I was and every inch a woman, was wild with frenzy. If I was to escape alive. I would have to accede to her demands. Anyway. it was quite a bout.” said the exhausted Schlossbcrg who was contacted the next morning at the rabies clinic. “I’ve been afraid of something like this for a long time, said the boyish Schlossberg. who resembles the actor Dustin Hoffman. Fortunately, my heart is in good shape. I finally managed to schedule her for a regular hours appointment. And the house call trip is tax deductible. MAXILLOFACIAL UNIT GETS NEW QUARTERS The internationally renowned Maxillofacial Department of TUDS moved to a new location this week and celebrated the event with a 2 for 1 special on plastic reconstruction. Inspecting the new clinic are Dr. Fred Glassman and Dr. Stan Koryat. along with a prospective patient. Dr. Glassman himself has been a frequent patient at his own clinic. I had my first nose transplant and chin implant done here years ago. he said. Of course we’re much more adept at these procedures today. Plot Discovered (continued from p. I) several counterrevolutionary movements throughout the world. The dirty needles were repackaged and shipped to dentists who gave indications of leaking information regarding the conspiracy Oswald was apparently also investigating the disappearance of the dental records of newspaper heiress and spoiled brat. Patricia Hearst. The disappearance was tied to the Symbionesc Liberation Army, militant wing of the NDA. which had recently declared an all-out attack on plaque. Dr. Bomba also revealed that the Temple clinic was being investigated as a possible locus for suspected Communist activity. It is believed. he stated, that the Russians are stealing mercury and reclaiming mercury- vapors from our clinic. The mercury is then being placed in tuna fish cans in order to slowly poison the western world. Thus the ADA is under pressure from the federal government to shut down this activity. Bomba, however, is attempting to counter this plan with one of his own. He has enlisted the entire junior and senior classes as undercover agents to police the operative clinic following each clinic session. Bomba hopes this move will result in immediate recognition by the ADA. 156 LLATION, MAY 27, 1976 NEW DEPARTMENT DEBUTS AT TUDS; HINSON NAMED Dr. Kendrick Brookrcson announced today that a new and innovative curriculum will he added to the clinical program. Over five years in development, the newly-created Department of Datadontology will have Mr. Richard Hinson as Chairperson. Mr. Hinson will have Executive Committee rank. “I am very pleased.” Hinson said, clearing the frog in his throat. “I feel it will catapult me to new levels of power which 1 only dreamed I could reach.” Mr. Hinson, affectionately called Hinny by the students, has been working diligently on the courses for the coming year. Already planned arc: Form 10 Corrections Made Easy, Patient Selection and Distribution Made Difficult, Interpreting Computer Print-Out Summaries of Requirements. The power of the computer is limitless when used properly.” Hinson observed. “Already this year we have produced printouts of certain students for special Promotions Committee meetings which list every patient visit and what exactly was done on the patient as well as the grades the student received. Hinson confided that he has already applied for a federal grant totaling $1.6 million to purchase a computer for the dental school. “With power like this, he commented, we could not only know what the student did at each visit but even such things as the type of See “Hinny p. 3 TEMPLE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY 0 l Invt • !♦« • tfW1 S« O— ta. ■ r II. o «. «• IW« I 1 • f i • «l It M Ii dm r :« MBS 1.1 fit las tie ‘suer Si srirm n:iq a -a Man « Q a m «T II K II U U u i « M U U M M M •T H a it m n a ii a a •1 •• C a m n k 14 u tr m M HU U U U u r ii M — ii i a « c o • a 1 41 m ii u u w u ti M ecmo« i coawia'i I |-, .1 (Ma. W M Kmh « ••••«. 1n 4 • • • -«« ,1 I, ... W. • •• '• - b. Form becomes focus of new course. Nutritionist Engelhart samples cherry flavored Cow-, ginate. Nutritionist Launches Palatability Study Ms. Paula Engelhart. Chairperson of the Department of Oral Nutrition, is launching out on a new study to investigate palatability of dental impression materials. To my knowledge this is an innovative study which w ill prove of invaluable assistance in future materials research and may set a precedent for an ADA standard of acceptability for impression materials” Ms. Engelhart candidly remarked. “Besides. I need something to do with all my spare time! It is suspected, however, that the actual reason for Ms. Engelhart's embarking on this new venture is Dr. Robert Carrel, instructor in the Department of Oral Kids. He is reported to have actually said, in fluent English, to a student. “We can’t give yousc guys eight points for just talking to a patient for three visits. Ms. Engelhart is hoping that her new study might better relate her field to wet fingers dentistry. Also proposed by Ms. En-gclhart. although not formally begun yet. is a study on the nutritional value of impression materials. Dentists should be aware of what nutritional value, if any. the patient receives from accidentally swallowed impression material.” An important spin-off of this study would be a short pamphlet entitled “Weight-Watching With Your Dentist” which would list caloric values of several commonly swallowed dental materials. 157 THF. MORNING CANC HINNY TO BE HEAD (Continued from p. 2) base used, the type of amalgam. the rpm speed of the handpiece, whether water was used or not. etc. This will require a little more work on the part of the student, filling out the proper forms and so forth, but that's life.” A special Form 10 typewriter will become part of the student's Bompadre cabinet. It will help the student achieve maximum efficiency in filling out forms. As we all know, that is the chief purpose of dental school. The typewriter unit itself should cost no more than $800. For the present the Department of Datadontology will increase the students' proficiency in filling out Form 10's by resorting to the exam. Mr. Hinson is currently planning a minimum of three exam Form 10's; one each in Crown and Bridge. Operative and Pedo. The exam will consist of correctly listing the procedures for one entire patient visit in ink. The exam, which will be completed in the presence of a qualified Datadontology examiner, will have an eight-minute time limit and must consist of at least 6 different procedure entries. Naturally, no errors will be allowed, but. the examiner may allow the students an additional 30 seconds to finish the exam if. in the opinion of the examiner, the student will be able to complete the exam in that time. One further note for those of you who have yet to find a Form 10 exam case. Mr. Hinson will be more than pleased to put you on his exam case waiting list. CU jf oup experienced 3+% Ajrte.r a { tl tiNcj ooitta EFC coMpAred Co a gonLao jftoup. AS Yes , UNOCfUL ASSMfcN , you TOO CAN EXPeiMtNCt FEwEIA DMFY roots your, ccas composite PHOTO USING NtV XFC G MPHOVuD WITH PftOTQlQL. I Anls l PINS FOR ALL (Continued from p. I) and after removing the greatest bulk of restorative material from around the pins, the handpiece can be aligned parallel with the pin and the old restorative material will fracture away, leaving a clean pin ready for a new restoration. Cornish added that the brightest star on the pin horizon is the recent development of auto-polymerizing epoxytitanium pins. The technique consists of preparing conventional pinholes in the tooth. Next the epoxy-titanium liquid powder system is mixed until it will draw approximately 5 8 inch with a spatula. The cement is spun down each hole w'ith a Icntulo spiral and the excess drawn 2-3 mm above the hole with the spiral. When the pin hardens in 30 seconds, the spiral easily separates from the pin and the procedure repeated for each pin loca- tion. Using an assistant four pins can be created in about five minutes. Dr. Cornish noted that the advantages of this system are the elimination of the need for different size pins, pulpal compatabil-ity of the material, less likelihood of fracturing tooth structure compared to screw type pins, and superior retention due to better adaptation compared to cemented pins. Dr. Cornish also heralded the introduction of Palatable Pins, flavored non-sucrose containing pins which can be used in conjunction with resin restorations and will serve as a pleasant reminder for the patient to visit the dentist when the resin begins to break down. Finally. Dr. Cornish noted that Temple will be host for this year's Pin Pageant, and that he and the members of the Operative Department will he judging photos of pin cavity preparations. Awards will be made for originality and esthetics of pin placement. Cornish encouraged Temple students to enter, as he feels that they have an excellent background in pin dentistry. I Got This Nifty Water Gun Through an Ad in (The ifliirntng Caitccllatinn 158 ELATION. MAY 27. 1976 PAGE 3 CAM-ADAM-DIV INC. Our Dedicated Staff Sits Ready to Serve You rug hooking embroidery needlepoint crochet knitting sewing reading catnapping low cost lessons offered Mon-Fri. 8:30-11:45, 1:00-3:30 by appointment only Arts and Crafts Unlimited OSHS HOLDS ANN’L AWARD MEETING UNIQUE PORTRAIT OBTAINED Morning Cancellation photographers were fortunate to catch this group portrait of the Oral Sex Honor Society viewing films of memorable past performances at their annual banquet. Shown are Les. the group patriarch and founder who now spends most of his time with a good book; Little John w ho prefers motherly types; the feel-no-cvil triplets Bill. Jeff and Kirk (note the hands and eyes). Also. Hyena Steve, so called because he laughs constantly at the climax of his performances; J.J. (“The Rug“) whose toupe always falls off when he is getting on; Ike the Spike; Dr. Rob (shown in straight jacket following a mad attack on the Dental Hygiene meeting in the adjacent room). Also. Steve the Grinder who followed Dr. Rob. but more successfully; and Steve Liquefy, society president, shown in his away uniform. Not pictured are Wolfman Bill, operator of the world's largest tongue; and Rich Id-lebrains. entertainment chairman. Highlights of the group’s activities include (Continued, see “Sex”, p. 0) 159 PAGE 4 THE MORNING GANCE DENTIST FILLS WHALE’S TOOTH Gala Caribbean Cruise Week Made Honorary Saint Dr. Charles Santangelo, international authority on dental development of lower life forms and chairman-elect of the TUDS Department of Classical Cavities, astounded listeners at the weekly TUDS Show-and-Tell luncheon with his account of saving a badly decayed tooth belonging to Spanky the Friendly Whale at the Philadelphia Navy Yard and Sea-quarium. The eminently qualified Santangelo. whose interest in whales is noted by his prolific publication in this area. described the peculiarities of performing a deep lingual cervical gold inlay restoration with pin retention on a lower fifth molar. Perhaps the most difficult aspect of the procedure was access. We placed Spankv's head inside a specially equipped moving van which was parked at dockside. We used a couple of large house jacks as mouth props. After all. if I was gonna be inside there. I just wasn't going to take a chance on being in the next testament of the Bible. As an additional precaution we had Dan Daley from Oral Surgery titrating an IV solution of Brcvital. Valium. and Atropine to put Spanky at ease during the lengthy procedure, and also to prevent me from drowning in Spanky’s saliva. We also used a one gallon car-pule of lidocainc w ith cpi in a right mandibular block. As far as cavity preparation goes, we followed Black’s principles to the letter. Redundant tissue was removed with a Johnson heliarc welder which also provided us with adequate hemostasis. A Black and Decker 199 chain saw was used to outline the preparation and develop the cavity floor. The preparation was refined with hatchets and hoes: bevels were placed with a Sears belt sander with medium fine grit. Holes for the pins were created with a Rockwell See Sparky” p. 9 TUDS Alumni Annual Event Norm Freeman. Cruise Director This year the S.S. Gelt, flagship of the Health-co fleet, has been chartered for a memorable 8-day cruise to the islands. The trip is open to all alumni and students who have satisfactorily completed the minimal requirements of the Department of Oral Medicine. Reservations can be made by contacting Norm via phone, letter, or mobile CB. i FOR THE SMILE OF CONFIDENCE TRUE ITE 160 LLATION. MAY 27, 1976 FT. DIES NEAR CHAIR Yesterday afternoon a patient died near a chair on the Operative floor. The patient, whose name is being withheld pending notification of next of kin. began to sputter shortly after the Class V exam final cavity preparation had been signed off. The student doctor (whose name is being withheld pending notification of Promotions Committee) was left distraught by the experience and repeatedly mumbled “where will 1 get another Class V by May? When it was clear the patient “was on the way out as one observing doctor noticed, he was rolled onto the floor. For medicolegal reasons a patient is never allowed to die in the chair. This is not the first time something like this has happened. commented one official. It s life. Doctor signs dead patient out of clinic. 2 signatures req’d. Patient is rolled onto floor before Damn shame,' Doctor declares, remov-death. “Never let someone die in your ing gauze from dead mouth. “Helluva chair, doctor says. nice prep.’ ASPD CHARTER MEMBERSHIP MTG. The newly formed American Society for the Prevention of Dentistry recently held a membership drive meeting at Temple University School of Dentistry. Society chairman Dr. Dale Rocck (not shown) was quite pleased with the large turnout and told reporters that he was proud that so many members were from TUDS. also his alma mater. Commenting on the group’s goals, Roeck promised a total assault on the institution of institutionalized dentistry as we know it exists today, has existed in the past, and definitely will not exist in the future. Contrary to what the public may have heard about our group, this is not a new or even different idea, but rather is a return to the values that such great world powers as (Continued. see Power p. 73) 161 THK MORNING CANCI Ms. Suzy Lunger Dr. Barry Abrams Dr. Steve Appel Dr. Sparky Anderson Dr. Ike Hershman Dr. Steve Fishman THE MORNING CANCELLATION’S M VWTO«M|NI I Today the Morning Cancellation takes you into the TUDS dental clinic through the eyes of our candid camera. Our only prop was Ms. Suzy Lunger, Qucucball of the Month. We paraded Ms. Lunger around the dental clinic clad onl in a dental hygienist's uniform (although for added effect Ms. Lunger did not wear a camisole, which is normally considered part of the uniform). Would the doctors at TUDS notice our ersatz hygienist? We think Dr. Barry Abrams did. Interviewed by our reporter. Dr. Abrams mem-tioned that he did have what he considered a superior eye for esthetics He also expressed an interest in making Ms. Lunger a new set of dentures. or as he put it. “I like her case Dr. Steve Appel was momentarily distracted from his racing form, certainly no easy feat. Dr. Sparky Anderson. an occasional member of the TUDS diagnosis department. apparently took notice of the new girl around town and was later overheard offering her a ride in one of his Cadillacs. Did Ms. Lunger have the same effect on some of the younger folks at TUDS? Our candid camera caught Dr. Ike Hershman in the process of drilling his finger. The rest of his body seemed rigidly fixed as Ms. Lunger paraded past his w'orkbcnch. But candid camera’s most memorable photo has to be that of Dr. Steve Fishman, noted mam-mologist. captured in the process of falling over from hormonal overload. Hello, I'm Chuck Howell, and I'd like to talk to you about something that could change your entire life. You can put that college degree of yours to work ... as a doctor. And I'm not talking about any doctor; I'm talking about a Doctor of Dental Surgery. That's right. As o holder of the coveted D.D.S. you will have unlimited income potential, a chance to be your own boss, and most exciting, the opportunity to keep your loved ones safe from the ravages of dental disease. Dentistry has always been and still is a vital field. We invite you to write your own ticket to the future. Invest a dime and give yourself a shot at the life you've always wanted. I'll be waiting for your call at (215) 221-2900. (Offer expires July 1, 1975.) 162 LLAT10N, MAY 27. 1976 PAGE 5 Student struggles to complete Perrier with less than fifteen seconds remaining. OPERATIVE EXAMS EASED BOMBA ORDERS NEW CADILLAC Effective today, the Operative gold exam can he performed on special rented mannikins available in the department chairman's office. “This should turn student opinion around.” promises a department spokesman. “We're really going out of our way now. a lot farther than we should.” The only stipulation is that only Class III Ferricr lesions arc acceptable on the mannikin and two lesions must be restored during the exam period. Rent for the mannikins is $5 per hour, three hours minimum. Checks should be made payable to Dr. J. Bomba. 3223 N. Broad Street This Property to be sold at Auction May 31. 1976 Owners short of cash Nostalgia Buffs! Here’s your chance! Genuine antique heating and cooling systems, ancient elevator, warehouse windows, reclining chairs, THOUSANDS OF TEETH WHICH MAY HAVE BELONGED TO ANY ONE OF SEVERAL FAMED PEOPLE! Bring friends and Family Something here for everyone! PATENT AWARDED TO FAMED TUDS PROF Well known for his lively wardrobe at TUDS. Dr. Arm Killer has just been granted U.S. Patent 1.611.852,051 for his Toticulator — the ultimate articulator. “On this machine.” Dr. Killer states, “every movement of the mandible from lateral excursions to protrusive to insane gnashings can be faithfully duplicated. “In addition the Toticulator responds to commands. if spoken in a firm yet friendly voice. It has all the positive points of the living patient without the drawbacks of a brain, systemic disturbances, etc.” I)r. Killer puls his arm around a female Toticulator. The Toticulator (cost $6800) will be testmarketed next year in the Freshman in-strument kit to determine if it has the potential for success. Toticulator of the future resembles a da ed patient. Killer is currently working on complex control boxes. BONE (Continued from p. I) Further study permitted him to deduce that the bone was, “Part of the mandible from a featherless biped who had a lengthy tail used to brush the teeth.” Radiological evidence led him to add that, Depending on occlusion factors, there appears to be a DO exam lesion on 14. Through a series of coincidences the sophomore was located and told to lead administrators to where he found the bone. He did this eagerly and was rewarded with additional golf foil requirements. Excavations were begun at the site, and within hours nothing was found other than a rusted Packard bumper. However, undaunted. Bomber believes his discovery may be of great importance. Noting a small pebble lodged in a carious tooth on the mandible, he chortled that, “if the assay shows this pebble to contain gold, we will have found the oldest foil on record. Excluding me. 163 PAGE 6 THE MORNING CANCE Secretary explains difficulties of dental school to po- Hunchbacked student finds deformity a help in pour-tential cripple. ing models. Spastic dentist accidentally injects finger. Such accidents rarely occur. CRIPPLED DENTISTS Once feared as potentially incompetent or dangerous, crippled people are making dramatic contributions to dentistry. Nowhere is this coming out” more apparent than at TUDS where for many years rumors have attributed the running of the school to mental boobs. We print here a number of photos of people once thought of as unemployable in the hope that they may serve as an inspiration to others. This student formerly had two heads. One has since been removed after an argument. Blind student works on calm patient. One would hardly guess this handsomely crossed leg is as dead as a fly in an icecube. 164 LLATION. MAY 27. 1976 4 minutes 17 seconds: Subject appears 8 minutes 19 seconds: First signs of gas-cheerful; no signs of GI disorder. trie distress observed. Following reports that numerous TUDS employees had become ill after eating fast-service food. TUDS staff dietitian Paula F.ngelhart conducted a carefully controlled experiment to ascertain the validity of those reports. Excerpts from her paper. '•The Soyburger Scandal are summarized below. We used facial expression as an objective monitor of visceral response. Our subjects were selected on the basis of time available to participate in the study and on the basis of the fact that they were chainsmokers. We were thus able to time the experiment since there were no clocks in the observation room. Photo I shows the subject 4 minutes and 34 seconds (note length of cigarette) after consuming a standardized fast-service portion consisting of two whole beef patties, special sauce. (Continued, see Sauce p. 77) NEW SOLUTION TO CLASS V DILEMMA The groundwork for an impressive step forward in clinical dentistry is being laid right here at TUDS by none other than perennial bad boy Loosits I.eKino. LeKino is exploring the possibility of placing Class V direct gold restorations in fingernails. Face it. LeKino says matter-of-factly. histologically speaking the fingernail is more closely related to the tooth than any other part of the body. This will solve the problem of finding Class V lesions forever. Hell, a right-handed student has five fingers on his left hand alone that he could do himself. If you're ambidextrous, you’ve got ten. And that doesn’t even count your feet. Currently LeKino is study- ing the body’s reaction to the direct gold. Amalgam is out. he says, we tested it on some guy and his goddamn finger dropped off a week later. Gold is definitely the material of choice. Asked about drawbacks. LeKino admitted that two patients had vomited when the anesthetic needle was inserted under the fingernail. LeKino explains. What‘s two patients? At least we didn’t light the needles, ha. ha. ha. LeKino has also noted some difficulty in getting a smooth subcutical finish line due to the 212 clamp’s tendency to slip. Gonna be some ditching if a goon does the work, so try to get someone good, he advises. LeKino performs routine oral exam as dental assistant Zor Schluss applies cavity varnish to Class gold preparation in index finger. COLD LOILS Your Ad Could Appear Here for Just Pennies _ a=on . DENTISTRY 2 IN THE ATOMIC ACE 165 THE MORNING CANCI SPORTS Tuds Prof To Spit for Record Dr. Henry Fonda, a teacher of Oral Pediatrics at TUDS has emerged as a surprising star in a rarely seen sport — sea shell spitting. The sport, which was founded by an Eastern European swimmer after a marathon swim, has been limited to European players until Dr. Fonda’s recent entry in the next world championship tournament. Insiders put Dr. Fonda’s odds of victory in the eighty-man tournament at about one in one hundred. Speaking for Fonda, his manager Dr. Doctor Farber pledges. “We’ll show those Wops. Fonda employs an unusual technique not found in other world-class players. After placing the shell in his mouth, he takes a large swallow of coffee and spews both coffee and shell ventrally. Asked how he avoids swallowing the shall. Fonda answered. “Accidents will happen.” Fonda's manager Dr. Fonda expectorates shell with blurring speed. Shell was inexplicably found to con-Farber in a jovial pose. tain ashes and cigarette butts. 166 LLATION. MAY 27. 1976 PAGE 7 FALTERMEYER FALTERS IN FORTY-FOUR CITES FAGS Gesturing continuously with his lighted cigarette. Joe Faltermeyer described his loss to Mort Spiegelford in the finals of the Retired Armed Forces Olympics held at IUDS during Spring break. Tm not quite as young as I used to be, Joe explained, I should have cut down on my smoking a bit while in training. Faltermeyer was referring to the Count to 1000 portion of the Tctrathalon. Kring Sets AAE Record Bill Kring. the TUDS Gusher, who last season appeared unable to find the handle on his slick really gave the turf a workout this year with his handpiece. Kring set the AAE game high average of .800. going 4 for 5. as well as tallying a season mark of 19 RBI's. The bashful Kring really blushed when informed that he was chosen as Sportsman of the Year at the annual AAE awards banquet in Las Vegas. whose other events included Occlusal Balancing. Gothic Arch Tracing, and Border Molding. ”1 was planning on catching up to Mort around six hundred sixty six or so. but he didn't slow his pace a bit. Maybe next time I'll start (Continued, see Fags page 83) Morse Whips Sargenti in Semis; Falls to Fishman in Finals Dr. Dan Morse, the often hot-headed and outspoken wonderboy of the TUDS Reamers put it all together to top Angelo “N2 Sargenti of the Zurich Paste Pumpers in a close battle before falling to Ken the Mouth Fishman in the championship round. Relying on his quickness and mastery of technique. Morse obturated Sargenti with stroke after stroke. The brilliance of his performance was masked only by the heavy barium fog which hung over the courts. The following day under clearer skies Ken the Mouth chewed Morse apart. The performance was nauseating as Fishman’s banter distracted both the crowd and the hapless Morse. PROMISING PROF TRADED TO COLO. FOR ZIONIST 1974 Rookie of the Year H Averback was traded to the Colorado University Dental Organization in a bargain where the TUDS club received a military strategist from the Suez Canals waivers roster, as well as two players from the Asia Minors. Seth Spritzer, manager of the TUDS Reamers, explained the surprise move this way: We had this reputation around the league of being easy going, you know , a little too mellow. Averback was a real crowd pleaser. He really had everything, but the rest of the team just had no guts. This trade will give us a man with the discipline and thunder we really need. 167 PAGE 8 THE MORNING CANC' LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Dear Sir, I recently received a request from OKU to submit to them a brief listing of my qualifications for membership. I understand these letters. requested of some 30 senior students, were never distributed prior to voting. I would appreciate it very much if your paper would print my qualifications, below. I am truly honored to be considered for membership on Omicron Kappa Upsilon. and I have prepared a brief summary to aid you in your decision. First of all. while it is true that I started off rather slowly in the clinic. I did not. as some have stated, take a leave of absence during my junior year. 1 did have some unfortunate luck with my patients, however. For example there is my 87 year old partial patient. Mrs. Matkovich. who mistook her husband's electric knife for her Broxident toothbrush and severed her jugular vein. Also, my 104 year old cigar-smoking operative patient. Mr. Nedwick. met with some misfortune. One day. I mentioned that it was too bad he didn’t have any gold foil lesions. Fie thought I said Gulf Oil lesions. went to look for some, and subsequently blew up half of South Philadelphia. Now. however. I have been progressing through the clinic at a rapid rate, and will easily finish my requirements by October or maybe December. Next. I would like to clear up some rumors concerning my character. My name was somewhat besmirched by the Rising-Rinehimcr Vacu-spat incident, simply because I sat between the alleged culprits and the victim. I remember it well. When Nate asked me. Where’s my Vacu-spat?” I thought he said. How’s the weather in Afghanistan? and told him I didn’t know. Secondly. I am not now nor have I ever been associated with John Grigger. Les Lakind. or Joe Williams, although I have lent them wax on occasion. Personally. I thought the Promotions Committee should have been commended for the decisions it made concerning the mid-July Massacre:” however. I feel there were some additional students (see above) who should have been disciplined. Thirdly, there is no truth to the rumor that I said I would like to clean out a certain department chairman’s vascular system with I.V. Liquid Plumber. Finally, when it comes time to leave the old Packard Paradise I will fondly think back on the instructors I admired and looked up to. and I sincerely hope neither one of them leaves. Sincerely. Robert Williams Dear Sir. 1 have reason to believe that a platoon of Prussian soldiers is being secreted on the first floor awaiting a change in the political climate. Do you know how I can join them? J. Lawrence Dear Sir. Is it true that Dave Hamilton moonlights as the high- diving horse at Steel Pier? Pier Cipriani Dear Sir. Each dental student should have at least 6 mirrors and a dozen explorers. How can we get our work done? With the few we have it just isn't possible to treat more than 3 patients at once. R. Petrosky Dear Sir. I am not the loudmouth. S. Fishman Dear Sir. Just because I like pins. I resent the implication that I am sharp. Cornish Hen Dear Sir. I was a Junior and then I became a Senior and then I was a Junior again and then I was a Senior again. Now OKU wants me. Who’s in charge here??? W.K. Teen Dear Suh. The South will rise again. E. Dingleberry Dear Sir, You imply that I am cagey, unreliable, conviction-less, a social climber, ruddy, ruthless. have trouble with t U TTotvvyUb. pnly.illabic_long words, two faced, unsteady, incontinent, and a sexagenarian. I am not a sexagenarian. Just ask my mistress. Chuck Dear Sir, In your feature article on dental breast examinations, you slated that Leslie Lakind is short. Leslie Lakind is not short. T. Balshi Dear Sir, I would like to know who Joe Williams is and why do I sec his name everywhere. J. Williams Dear Sir. Never refer to me as a has-Binns again if you want to graduate from my department. Billy Dear Sir. Call me a gun nut one more time and I’ll shoot you. R. Hall Dear Sir. Can you tell me why McCracken didn’t write McCracken’s and why Swenson didn’t write Swenson’s? Who do these guys think I am. anyway? G.V. Black 168 LLATION. MAY 27, 1976 IMPACTION LINE Dear Impaction Line: Last Tuesday I was on Oral Surgery duty. 1 was doing very well, or so I thought, having extracted five teeth in the morning. However, all credit for these teeth was taken away by Dr. Fielding because I had held my needleholder with my first and third lingers rather than with my first and fourth. It did not seem to matter to him that I am missing my fourth finger on that hand. Can you help? Perplexed Dear Perplexed: Relax! Help is on the way! We have contacted Rubber Novelties, Inc. of Phila. and a finger, complete with harness, is being rushed to you. We have also sent you. through the mail, a five-holed needleholder so that you may leave no doubt as to whether you are using the correct combination or not. 0 pp veni ve Perverse Evil f l j i Pc o tL or it aria h Tot a I i t a v I a r ♦ sensitive I e cr a lolc Dear Impaction Line: About a month ago 1 began an experience I shall never forget. I had finished a minimal occlusal cavity preparation for a gold foil in 30 when, while condensing. I fractured off a buccal cusp. Naturally, 1 had to abandon all hopes for a foil and changed the preparation slightly to become an OB amalgam. However, as I was preparing this time my arm was bumped by a female AUM instructor as she ran up and down the aisles repeating, ‘'Any foils or amalgams here? Any foils or amalgams here? Well, this untimely shove turned my conservative OB into a pin amalgam. Unfortunately as I placed the pin holes into the tooth I dropped into the pulp. After completing the endo I was going to place a crown over the now adequate (barely) pin amalgam. As luck would have it, however, as I was seating the crown with my Codesco mallet I vertically-fractured the tooth. I was able to get credit in Oral Surgery. My problem is this: I'm now concerned about my inadequacies as a dentist. Giant Step Backward Dear Giant: Hang out your shingle boy. you're ready to go to work! Dear Impaction Line: I had some dental work done a month ago and when I got home I found a silver filling in my thumb nail. A week later my whole thumb fell off. What gives? 9 Fingers Dear Fingers: You have obviously been the patient of Loosits LeKino and his glorious attempts to expand the number of Class V’s. Tough luck. LeKino showed Impaction Line your carefully forged signature on a release form allowing him to perform any irreversible act on your fingernails. Scmnde See if you are able to un jumble today's five Scram bles. Then unscramble the circled letters to give today's Scramble answer suggested by the cartoon. Q 169 THE MORNING CANC TV TODAY Richard Hinson featured in The Match Game. BEST BETS 3:00 29 THE MATCH GAME. Hinny has 'em and you've gol to get 'em. Join the excitement as guests try to match their needs with the computer. As time draws short watch the emcee squeal with delight as frantic contestants try to score. 8:00 29 GET SMART. Learn to beat the system the Pet-rosky way In the end. it may be the only way. 1:30 am 6 MOVIE. On His Majesty's Secret Service. A Crown and Bridge secretary is discovered searching through the files of the Dean search committee. MORNING 6:00 6 GIVE US THIS DAY. Join the Rev. D. Doughty in a shori prayer for mercy from our tormentors. 6:30 10 ORAL ROBERTS. Dr. Roberts lectures this morning on tonics and dominants. this interesting combination of dry gin and S.M. A real crowd plcaser. Colorful slides accompanying lecture arc a bonus. 7:00 29 LAMPOON TO MY FEET. Join Joe Williams today as he makes another department chairman look foolish. 12 SUNRISE SEMESTER. Part I: English as a foreign language with host Dr. Carrel. Part II: English for dentists. Today Dr S. Sobcl makes a cogent plea for an English language section on national boards, citing evidence that many dental students graduate with only 10th grade proficiency in English. 7:30 12 SESAME STREET. Billy Binns clowns for all you kids out there. Recommended for slow learners. 8:00 3 THE THREE STOOGES. Today our pals Artie. Eddie, and Joey take over a dental school. Joey Namath becomes the Dean of Lockers and immediately empties their contents into the first floor sanitary landfill. Graduation requirements arc changed to include daily locker changes. 8:30 10 MAGILLA GORILLA. A must for all Freshmen. Start your day with a good laugh with the crazy ape. 9:00 29 POPE YE. Today Popeye Faltcrmaycr lectures on his Mediterranean tour of duty. Dentures be dammed and full speed ahead. 10:30 3 BUGS BUNNY. Elmer Fudd decides to try to be a dental lab lech but his work is barely acceptable. Fudd is convinced it is the Cwazy Wabit and tries to catch him in the act. AFTERNOON 12:00 3 SEARCH FOR TOMORROW The continuing futile search for exam lesions and its impact on situation ethics. 1:00 10 GENERAL DENTISTRY. A successful spinoff of General Hospital. Today’s general is General Bomba who obviously wants to lake over the entire clinic aided by his strong man and bodyguard Teresa. Tess and the General’s plans include increasing requirements in all departments and kicking out half the student body. The spineless student body allows all indignities to be heaped on them and it is only the deus cx machina in the form of an M l. which restores the base level of sanity to the clinic for another day. 1:30 3 LET’S MAKE A DEAL. Join host Ed Sullivan on the links with Bill O’Brian, publisher of the '75 Odontolog. as they decide what to do with excess yearbook profits. 2:00 6 WHO DO YOU TRUST? Our panel this afternoon tries to discover which student cheated his way through school and still made OKU. Second guest. M. Eisenbrock. Last guest is a dedication to all you guys graduating with extra hand-pieces. 2:00 10 TO TELL THE TRUTH (Premieres next week). No one in the station administration knows how it's played. 3:00 29 THE MATCH GAME. See Best Bets. 4:30 17 TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES. Our panel of Bowell. Neck, and Sullivan will each offer a different version of the truth and we all take the consequences. 5:30 6 WORLD AT WAR. Bill Nicklas hosts tonight's episode on the life of Adolf Hitler Bill gives us his own unique view of Hitler's rise to power. EVENING 6:00 48 BOOK BEAT. Don Morse and Al Schlossberg appear tonight pushing their respective texts. 6:30 29 ROOM 222 Laugh with the zany Class of '76. 7:00 17 SEVEN O'CLOCK MOVIE. Stop the World I want to Get Off. Skip Knapp finally realizes that perhaps he's not the crazy one after all and gets off before its too late. 7:00 29 MAYBERRY RED. Andy Griffith's guest star tonight is Wild Bill Krungo playing a gambling narc bent on exposing a drug ring. Krungo exposes everything all right but even the conservative inhabitants of Mayberry find Bill's ideas too right wing and Bill is forced to move to Chile. 7:00 3 THE SAINT. The Saint forgets to take his medicine. Tonight we watch the effect of individual sickness on mass behavior. Projects due and the class is too beaten down in nine short weeks to have the nerve to ask just that is expected of them. Students hand in bits of wire, shavings of Ivory soap, anything to appease the Saint and try to ward off further irrational and antisocial behavior. 7:30 6 MOD SQUAD. Rock with the groovy residents of Brandywine Street as they radicalize whole segments of the population. Can you dig it. 7:30 10 ALL IN THE FAMILY. Ever notice that Lantz. Bomba, and Sam-martino are past presidents of the Alumni Association, 170 LLATION. MAY 27. 1976 PAGE 9 ► C-Jn Ihe tube In a guest appearance on Mike Chapman's “Dentistry Today Show seen locally on closed circuit TV (Channel 48. 6:45 am weekdays) Dr. Stanley Lisowski of the Temple Dental Operative Department discussed the development of an acrylic composite resin which remains in a mold-able state until polymerized by special UV light source. Dr. Lisowski's preliminary investigations have shown that the material is comparable to other composites and has some capa- bility of bonding to prepared enamel surfaces. In order to further investigate this material. Dr. Lisowski has persuaded the Operative Department to grant appropriate restorative credits to students whose patients wish to volunteer for the UV technique nicknamed NUVA. Dr. Lisowski forsees that in a few years following these extensive clinical tests, the NUVA technique will become available to and accepted by private practitioners. Santangelo an officer, and Litwack a board member? 8:00 10 M-A-S-H. Front line dentists. Kind, patient Trapper Dudley and sadistic, evil Hawkeyc Fucding arc at it again. 8:00 29 GET SMART. Sec Best Bets. 8:30 6 SIX Ml 1.1.ION DOLLAR MAN. A legend in his own mind. Tod Sampson struts his stuff for those lucky enough. 9:00 48 MISSION IMPOSSIBLE. Evil dental student tries to pass a Class III exam. The mission impossible team garner all their resources to foil this assault on their sensibilities. They pull out all the stops to thwart his plans. 9:00 6 NINE O'CLOCK MOVIE. The Godfather starring Angelo Costcllano. Costcllano plays a merciless patriarch who struggles to keep his family together at the cost of the hopes and dreams of the multitudes. 9:00 10 THURSDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES The Enforcer with Stan Kowalski. Stan is at his best in this one. He plays the heartless gunman of a murder hungry mob boss. Very believable. 9:00 29 MOVIE. The Dutchman starring Harold Lantz. 10:00 17 MONTY TUDSYS FLYING CIRCUS. Absur- dities pile on absurdities as we learn how an open ended program can be closed at both ends, how 8 doesn't equal 8, and how it takes more than 10 semesters to graduate from an 8 semester school. Tonight we see how a man kicked off the clinic floor for harassing a student is eventually made acting department chairman. We also catch a glimpse of students lining up at 5:30 a.m. to get chair appointments. 10:30 29 ONE STEP BEYOND. Tonight host John Lawrence tells what it feels like to be Emperor Franz Joseph. 10:30 12 GREAT PERFORMANCES. 'Stormin' Norman struts like a peacock, full of bombast and ego, ready to make any one-to-one learning experience a traumatic one. 11:00 3 MOVIE. Jaws. Charles Santangelo tries to find the existential meaning of a fossil mandible and ends up off the deep end. 11:00 6 MOVIE. Gone With the Wind. Colonel Minglcdorff tries vainly to preserve the honor of the South but all his lieutenants are gone with the wind. 11:00 10 PLAY OF THE WEEK. Metamorphosis. Gregor Sampsa awakes one morning to find to his horror that he has been changed into a dental student. He begins to become alienated from family and friends and loses contact with reality. He is surrounded by peers without pride and superiors who are little men with no use for the concepts of logic or humanity. The ultimate horror story from one of the world's great masters. 11:30 3 THF. TONIGHT SHOW. Johnny's guest host tonight is Woody Allen. |:30 6 MOVIE. On His Majesty’s Secret Service. Sec Best Bets. 2:20 3 MOVIE The Pit and the Pendulum. Starring “Hurry On Down and the Gold Foil Study Club. 3:10 6 MOVIE. The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Ed Brow n in the role he's been practicing a lifetime for. Answers to Scramble: ASH METAL DENTURE FLASK ELECTROMALLET JELENKO FLUX CASTING WAX What the unknowing dental student paid good money for: WORTHLESS JUNK Spanky (Continued from page 4) 3 8 drill with Vj bit to a depth of 2 inches. Finally the cavity was cleansed with a drum of Dr. Clean. Because of the messiness of most impression materials, we chose a high fusing compound: we got a great impression on the third try and poured it up with a bathful of Vel Mix. Uncle Fudd. working with technicians from Fort Knox, gave us a finished casting 90 minutes later, and it went in like a glove. Asked how a glove went in. Dr. Santangelo grinned and said to look it up. A mix of ZnPOq was made in a meat freezer to retard set and the inlay was cemented, after assistants had ’varnished the decks.’ Spanky apparently suffered no after effects, except sensitivity when swimming in Arctic seas. I Got My Job Through an Ad in (The jRormng (Cancel lati nu 171 PAGE 10 THE MORNING CANCELLATION. MAY 27. 1976 CLASSIFIED WANTED: Dean for large urban dental school. No experience necessary REAL ESTATE: First floor available immediately. Fully equipped auditorium. morgue, and hygiene clinic. Buyer must be able to move floor out discreetly. EYE PATCH: For sale Once worn by model for Arrow Shirts. Excellent excuse for skipping out on exams. One size fits all. T. Gamba GOLD! Crowns, bridges, inlays, excellent selection. Also hand-pieces articulators and other dental equipment. Typewriters, office supplies, etc. For complete list call TUDS Security. If we don't have it, we can get it1 WANTED: Dean for large urban dental school. No ironing. RENT: 1.2.3 bedroom apts close to dental school Good security Newly painted and furnished Reasonable. Call Dr. Soakasse TANKS FILLED: No service charge. Limit- 2 per customer Whitey's tank service. IOST. Vicinity Screening Department. One white screening sheet, name unknown of pt. requiring four Class V foil restorations. If found please return to R. Hinson. YEARBOOKS: This same yearbook available at much higher cost' Instant status for you and your loved ones O’Brien Publishers or ask tor '•Sully . DECORATE vour favorite cubicle with this full-size replica of a TUDS lavatory door. Includes sample graffito and mounting brackets Fan-Hog Enterprises Inc. LIVE on scenic Godfrey Ave. with ail the other married dental stu- dents Beautiful modern apartments. Social events include pot parties, mate swapping, and a fantastic divorce rate. MY BODY iv yOU.rs. Anytime. Anywhere. Call Dial-a-body. G. Kaye. prop. BID REQUEST. Committee on Physical Plant oi TUDS request that bids for construction of Phase I of the dental school project be subnutted to the Dean's Office before Dec. I. 1976. Construction is expected to begin June 1983. PITS, PITS. PITS. We have all size pits for foils. Can easily be removed from patient's mouth after restoration WANTED: Dean for large urban dental school. Newly renovated office suite. CLOSEOUT SALE. Selected dental instruments, some still in original boxes. Everything must go. Write for list. S. Knapp. Box 88. Minneapolis, Minn. CARS, CARS, CARS. Cadillac sale Contact Prosthetics Department. SITUATION WANTED: Deanship of large urban dental school. Previous employment 14 years as bagger. Atlantic Pacific Tea Company. Academic experience: 6 yrs. security guard, Wellesley College. Good refs. Own car. DON'T RENT from Soakasse. He's a thieving pig. The Park Ave Tenants and Roach Killers Association. SALE: One Vacuspat-type investing apparatus. Barely used. Com- GOLD FOILS COVERED WAGON DENTISTRY r - IN THE ATOMIC AGE plete except tor hose. D Rising LOSE WEIGHT FAST. Let us do your next jaw resection. You'll look and feel like never before. Alex's bone shop. WANTED: Patent attorney Inventor wishes assistance and counsel in obtaining patent for mechanical throat. Contact Di M. Eisen-brock FOUND: Denture patients are now available for the following doctors: linguiti, Graff. Christian. Collins, and Belcastrn Please see Mr Hinson. LOST: Entire contents of one locker. Some items bear name of S. Candio. Report any information m confidence to J. Namath. Dean EVEN THE FLDI RAt GOVERNMENT WAS SMART ENOUGH TO GET OH THE GOLD ST NDARD AND ME ALL KNOW HOW SMART THLGOVI RNML.NT IS of Lockers. STILL FILLING OUT THOSE LITTLE MATCHBOOK COVERS? You can attend a conditionally accredited dental school in a decaying urban area for six or seven years OR you can get a dental equivalency degree from us. WANTED: Dean for large urban GOLD FOILS KILL TEETH dental school. Call 2845. SOPHS LOOK! Prepared den-toform teeth! Inlay, Onlay, pin, resin, direct gold. We have them all. Be prepared for any practical with these pre-prepared teeth Insert with any screwdriver in seconds. Unlimited assortment. M. Eisenbrock. EFFIGIES. Start your collection now Available now in Dental GOLD FOILS WERE GOOD...... BACK IN THE DAYS WHEN THEY DIDN'T HAVE A CHOICE Educator Series. Many in authentic naval uniforms. Stuffed. Twelve inches high, except San-tangelo doll. Binns doll available as wind-up Forth coming — Dean Bomba doll. BID REQUEST. Committee on Physical Plant of TUDS request bids for construction of new Dean's office to be located on first floor of the structure at 3223 N. Broad St Demolition complete, project to begin immediately. LOST: Forms 1 thru 9. Contact R. Hinson. Reward. WANTED: Dean for large urban dental school. Only present staff need apply. WANTED: Search Committee for Dean of large urban dental school Must be able to follow-orders. $2 50-hr. Contact Alumni Association. TUDS. WANTED: Director of Public Relations for Biochemistry- Dept, of large urban dental school Fully-developed personality not necessary. Will tram. LOSE WEIGHT FAST Be the first in your department to have a myocardial infarction Fully conditionally accredited. LOST: Stainless steel pin wrench. Vicinity AUM clinic. Contact Dr. W. Roberts. GOLD FOILS Kit I. FI)LI 172 Queue the magazine supplement to The Morning Cancellation IN THIS ISSUE Practice Management Quiz I Fell for My Perio Surgery Patient Loretta Tells All on Al How to Get Those Endo Chairs Fashion Flash: Class II Hems Hiked Above Gingiva r j- 173 C-AVvty VVpARfttiONS (ptfSe? avt. OetK€Pt£s Fops. Ofe AtoPxj $Le. .%liZJS? cq 1 )c£ L- Abow, Aio mipes of j t jntd abst - seo Jh Fort. LAv Atort jets Hick af ocdoei j erifeS S«eflt+J Jee5 cie Aj Fort. H Mcis rtwA t Ails OKvjoz jo . olo de.¥ K s i i'5t - jtl j fifths f)omin ija t of debris I cleRNei . ea v uji 11 cle a n aNi our cubicle ev crutWi s ibat ikj 174 National Board Review For those readers who arc in dental school, or arc the parents of dental students. Queue Magazine offers this brief sample of National Board questions in the hope that the Queue readership will be well prepared for upcoming board examinations. SECTION I. Operative Dentistry. Dental Terminology. Dental Materials. 1. Iatrogenic includes which of the following? a. Pins b. Extension for prevention c. Restoring centric relation d. Direct gold e. 3rd molar extractions f. None of the above; they are all dcntistogenic 2. According to the ADA Council on Dental Materials and Devices, composite resins arc; a. Provisionally acceptable in Class III and V restorations b. Too rough for Class V restorations c. Acceptable in Class II restorations where esthetics is of primary importance d. The restorative material of the future 3. Convenience form refers to which of the following? a. Open contacts between patient’s teeth. b. Dr. Bill as a row instructor c. A patient whose mandible disarticulates at will d. An assistant whose uniform has a front zipper. 4. Auxilaries make: a. good gophers b. good beavers c. good mates d. good yentas c. good excuses for not working SECTION II. Oral Pediatrics I. Which of the following techniques is arc correct? a. NiO is an effective space maintainor b. Roundhouse SSC’s prevent proximal and occlusal caries c. The Nussbaum hand to mouth technique for management of noisy patients d. Using extra needles if patient is uncooperative SECT ION III. Endodontics I. Which of the following responses correctly pairs in- struments with their function? a. Reamers arc actually Operative instructors in disguise b. Files are where Gilda stores her gossip. c. Finger pluggers are what assistants call overly aggressive dental students. SECTION IV. Oral Surgery and Pain Control I. Precautions in using elevators include: a. Elevate only tooth to be extracted b. Elevate patient’s chair to proper height before using forceps. c. Extract using only elevators if Dr. Fielding is looking d. Only instructors and hired help may use service elevator In suturing, the needlcholder is held between the thumb and fourth finger because: a. the second finger can help balance the instrument b. the third finger is a finger rest c. the third finger is free to point at Dr. Fielding d. the second and third fingers are free to hold a cigarette e. try holding the needleholdcr with the second and third fingers. SECTION V. Prosthodontics I. Your long-span casting is short a margin on one of the abutments. You should: a. commit suicide b. cut abutment, rewax, reseat, and resoldcr c. have Frank solder on a new margin d. increase vertical angulation of the X-ray beam c. restore defect in acrylic SECTION VI. Pharmacology 1. Which of the following is not usually associated with N2O? a. Patient occasionally reaches excitement stage. b. Doctor occasionally reaches excitement stage. c. Causes excitement at parties. d. Results in “Nitrous Crisis” when source runs dry. 2. A vasoconstrictor is: a. parasympatholytic by virtue of its antimuscarinic activity b. able to stop secretions in a single bound c. a snake found in southern Venesuela d. undershorts that are too tight 3. Hormones are: a. funny little things that go bump in the night b. line to an old joke c. the salvation of mankind d. the curse of womankind 4. Cocaine, a compound once extensively used in dentistry. is rarely used today. Which of the following is the most likely reason: a. Coca-cola machines were long ago taken out of dentists’ offices because of the cariogcmcity of coke. b. Cocaine is too expensive. c. The patients have a corner on the market. d. Cocaine has lost its placebo value. SECTION VII. Oral Medicine 1. According to Dr. Halpern marijuana: a. is used excessively by dental students b. has never been found occurring naturally in the oral cavity c. intoxication may be diagnosed by observing response of patient to question “reason for this visit” on emergency OD form d. is a green peduncle of 0-200 mm having paired adnexa of exophytic character 2. All of the following are true according to Dr. Freeman. a. submandibular nodes are palpable 100% of the time. b. All patients have a centric slip, except edentulous. c. “Breaker, breaker, this is Dr. Midnite. 10-4. d. 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SB Y AT IWlNf St EE CVtAN6E IAW NOT M MET KOV6 _L BACK 4PfiC£_ Dr . Fieu N6 S IN TODAY eB( CK A SPACES SD ■RESSloM BACK i£aS£S Gill |0«R AWCAD y ficii VOVO M C.PNAL or OpREA 2. MOL A R BACK J -spr«s NMN CAhSRoS VNUADCS frunzi s BACK —1 SPACE. Ron Pttrosky Cot LAST FNDO CMOVR A40IA Kcwe BACK -2 SPftcrs B lu V S«CR C IURLI.S V «cowvt ON instructor KOVC AHEAD -2 SPACES PaRTlCiPBTFO N DOG E 9RRlMi£NTS Use ZTWs CUK C closes due To 'll INCH or snow BACK L-l?i cr OiTCWED CeNENTUfA ? BACK - SPRtfS O.D. Ooty VO Trt LfiRRY GELI-ER AttCAD 2 SPACES Dr. Frkkbm Gvors Itrcvjin oh fcoPTS G + KVC4CD ON fcROAD StRffr BACK ■KspfKiS VSCAST i-urnr GE Ju N Y Ovj DO HOT NOVO HOW TO PELC St pHillis 7® BACK SPftCF B'U night, AT FRUHIIS LAST RIGHT V6 BACK Lfrpqcc RADl0LO4 Out v BACK 2 SPACES Dr. lo«i s VJoW I N O.D. SEE First Day LOITH THE SAiMT NOME O PEN Contact on Amalgam EUAM Lose Torn BACK SPACF SoUe Lob Crowofo PGAIN BACK 2 SPACE ? I OLM roi?6' BACK pgces Hypnosis class louc ?edo ?RT £NTIS A UTTLET GPS sylc 'f B«CK SPACC -4 Hr. O.T . -RRT. tU STORfAX vV HORMvAo back Giuiug i.V.’a uihoo v ou £. bocrD “°ot BACK SRACg- ArrEZHooti Kovfcs (Queue Kelueiu of J ooks The One True Path Toward Saving Teeth. Dr. I). Doughty (1.169 pp.. $2.00 donation). An oral surgeon's innovative approach to preventive dentistry. Dr. Doughty believes that prayer and outright belief in the good Christian God offer the greatest hope for saving teeth. Noting that dental disease chiefly affects atheists, communists, infidels, and non-virgins. Dr. Doughtj. offers numerous examples of miracles God had performed in my office. Among the miracles are cases of regenerating necrotic pulps, spontaneous resorption of supernumerary teeth, and mandibular resections accomplished through a quick blow to the knee. Not to he missed is Dr. Doughty's exciting description of a week spent exorcising the devil from the lower left quadrant of a patient able to vomit split pea soup at will. To make his massive tome more accessible. Dr. Doughty had divided it into books, chapters, and verses. An Old Testament version is currently being prepared for Jewish dentists. How to be in Two Places at Once When You Really Aren't Supposed to he Anywhere at All. Dr. R. Petrosky (28 pp.. $169.69). A concise introduction to the metaphysical aspects of dentistry. Dr. Petrosky begins with an engaging misinterpretation of the seminal dental metaphysics of Dr. Joe Williams (whom Dr. Petrosky claims to have once glimpsed in an airport near Toledo) and launches into his own labored suggestions for extracorporeal activity. According to Petrosky. adoption of his theories may one day result in entire clinics being staffed by a single person. An interesting and timely work in this age of the team approach to patient management. Richard Nixon: Life and Times of a Class III Flipper. Dr. J. Lawrence (269 pp.. illus.. $79.69). Noting what he feels is a deliberate lack of political-dental biographies. Dr. Lawrence moves quickly to fill the gap. Elaborating upon the link between dental development and the growth of political thought, the reader follows Mr. Nixon's dentition from birth through his ascent to power and brilliance and his rapid descent therefrom. In a pert chapter Dr. Lawrence traces the cause of Nixon’s fall from grace to a 5 mm pocket caused by a slight amalgam overhang. Particularly striking arc several full page photographs of Kaiser Wilhelm. Rather inexplicably included, they are nonetheless worth the price of the book alone. Duco in Dentisry. Dr. R. Eidelson (6pp., $43.69). An intuitively inexpert pamphlet by a former automobile mechanic loaded with ingenious solutions to age-old problems. Dr. Eidelson (who could himself be called loaded) claims to have passed state boards in all those citrus fruit states bailing himself out of tough situations by employing his personal motto. When the gold won't stick, the Duco will. In a revolutionary chapter Dr. Eidelson dismisses pul-pal considerations by asserting that. The pulp is born to die. and. Endodontists have to eat too. Included is a handsome fold-out of a 1972 Vega. A must for the practitioner w ho does not mind a little saliva under his nails. How to Develop a Winning Smile. Dr. K. Fishman (77 pp.. 169 illus.. $68.75). Dr. Fishman's book deals with the physiological mechanisms of the smile, control of the smile through self-hypnosis, and the psychological impacts of various smiles. Although the text has a tendency toward rambling monologues about Dr. Fishman's sexual and sports feats, a number of interesting points arc raised in the book — including Dr. Fishman's revelation that he learned to smile in utcro. Included with the volume is a short tape of Dr. Fishman shouting incohcrcncies. Best Seller List 1. Odontolog 1976. Grigger. et al 2. Modern Techniques in Crown and Bridge Lab. Dr. F. King 3. Musical Analgesia. William Perry Roberts 4. Boring Lectures I Have Given. Ronnie Rickshaw 5. Boring Lectures I Have Missed. Tom Gamba 6. The Art of Kissing. Tim Conway 7. Eilenberg's Practical Guide to Passing Practicals. 8. Bleaching Non-Vital Teeth. Ken Brookreson 9. I Was Framed. J. Rinehimer 10. Happiness is a Warm Gun. Linnit Pakman 1st Annual Awards DOESN’T LEAVE A SINKING SHIP Dean Charles Howell resigned his post a! Temple July 1. 1975. 179 PROSTHETICS INSTRUCTOR ACCEPTED IN GRADUATE ENDO PROGRAM Dr. Samuel Selt er announced lo ihc Class of '76 during leciurc. I could teach a chimpanzee to do root canal therapy. It might take six months.” HOW LONG WOULD IT TAKE HOUDINI TO ESCAPE? It took a full 17 minutes for the emergency evacuation of the dental school during the bomb scares of 1974. And now one of the stairways is gone. NOBODY LOVES YOU BUT YOUR MOTHER Dr. Michael Salkin told the class during lecture that. “I honestly hate each and every one of you.” USEFUL PROCEDURE OF THE YEAR AWARD To the Department of Endodontology for their clever and ground breaking requirement that all teeth extirpated in their department be pulp tested before being cleared for full endo. THE FLASH SPEED FREAK AWARD To Mrs. Margaret Dous who. with the help of her computer-like mind and lightning fingers, sometimes managed to distribute grade reports to students as quickly as two months after the end of the semester_____________________________ SO THAT’S WHY 49 SENIORS DIDN’T GRADUATE ON TIME LAST YEAR The official dental school calendar for Spring 1975 did not list commencement day. THE I’LL BE FINISHED IN A MINUTE AWARD To Fernie King. In addition to this handsome notice in Odontolog 1976. the winner of this award also receives a glass slab. THE XEROX AWARD FOR CREATIVE USE OF THE PHOTOCOPIER To Dr. Stanley Toplan. editor of the TUDS Alumni Newsletter, who stole and reprinted in his publication without permission an article by a Temple student which originally appeared in the Temple Dental Review. BIRD FANCIER OF THE YEAR AWARD To AUM assistant Sheila Segal who is said to have the biggest parakeets in North Philadelphia. SELF-FULFILLING PROPHECY AWARD To Dr. John Bomba, who in a conversation with a member of the Class of 1976 declared. ”Wc never said dental education would be fun.” I’M GOING NOWHERE IN A HURRY BLUES AWARD To Joe Williams who while working in the Oral Pediatrics Department called over an instructor to check off a Class I amalgam preparation. “This is fine.” the instructor said, “but sharpen up the angles a little. After sharpening the angles Joe called over a second instructor. “This is fine. the instructor said, “but it's too shallow. Make it a millimeter deeper. After making the prep a millimeter deeper. Joe called over a third instructor. This is fine. the instructor said, but these angles are too sharp. Round them off. After rounding off the angles Joe. who was beginning to wise-up. called over the third instructor again. This is fine. the instructor said, “go ahead and fill it. But first put in a base. You made it too deep. THE DON’T RUSH ME I’M THINKING AWARD To Dean Chuck Howell who told a class representative in 1973 that it was school policy that all exams were to be returned and he would see that the most recent Microbiology exam was returned. Contacted three weeks later he was still working on the problem. Contacted a month after that, he was still working on the problem. Presumably he is still working on the problem from a new vantage point in Columbus. I 11 I MAY NOT BE DEAN, BUT I’M STILL BOSS At the December 18. 1975 Executive Committee meeting, it was decided that normal clinical activities would not be curtailed the day before the Christmas holiday. At the direction of Dr. Ernest Minglcdorff and after protest by the Presidents of the Junior and Senior classes, utilization of the Crown Bridge clinic was severely restricted before and even the day after the vacation. IF MY ZIPPER HAD OPENED I WOULD HAVE CUT THAT OFF TOO Dean of Lockers Joseph Nahas resolutely cut the locks off every senior's locker when the Senior Class refused to move to new lockers at his behest. NUTRITION IS WHAT IT’S ALL ABOUT The 4th floor vendeteria for six months in 1975 stocked only soft drinks and snacks high in sucrose and carbohydrates. 181 1 CARLISLE burner-Bunsen 115 2.25 1 BOMPADRE CaLinet-Instrunent C Trays Air Syringe, New Control Box 291.00 1 MIZZY Cenent-Flecko (P E L 2.50 1 IVORY Clamps, Rubber Dam 6 Plastic Clamp Boards, 00,1,1A, 2A, 14, 14A, 27, 7B, W8A.28 21.SO 1 S.S.W. Clamps, Rubber Dam 212 2.25 1 CAULK Cloths-Squcezc (100 per box) 2.25 1 BUFFALO Chuck Lathe Arbor 100P 2.50 1 BUFFALO Chuck Lathe 1595-5,595-8, 595-18 6.30 1 KERR Compound Ped-Stick 1.90 I DON’T NEED A PRICE LIST TO KNOW W HAT THIS STI FF IS WORTH. Skip Knapp, during his denial equip- hallway festivities, Hey. wanna buy ment liquidation sale, called to Dr. any of this worthless junk? Cornish who was walking past the NAACP INTERRACIAL HARMONY AW ARD To theTUDS Chorus for their heartwarming 1973 rendition of that old classic. Darkies in the Cornfield. FOUR-HANDED DENTIST AW ARD To Joe Williams. President of Student Council. President of the Senior Class. Editor of Temple Dental Review. and Associate Editor of ASDA News. No single person had ever held more than one of these positions previously. HOW ELSE DO YOU ATTRACT A NEW DEAN? The very first phase of the dental school renovation was construction and decoration of new administrative offices. Cost: $65,000. MAY THIS DENTAL SCHOOL BE SAFE FROM FIRES The pre-clinic laboratory has no fire extinguishers. I ALW AYS FORGET IT’S THERE AWARD To Paula Engelhart for never quite managing to fasten the top button. CUT-THROAT OF THE YEAR Ronald Pelrosk once managed to work on three patients simultaneously. Warned not to be caught doing it again, he wasn’t caught again for nearly a month. As punishment for working several chairs at once, treating patients during the lunch hour, and wholesale cutting of classes to work in the clinic. Ron was graduated early and given a paying job in the clinic. HE SHOULDA HUNG AROUND PETROSKY MORE ORAL DIAGNOSIS AW ARD To Dr. Frank Sammartino for telling the Class of '76 that, Many times the diagnosis depends on the insurance coverage the patient has. 182 ED SULLIVAN DEMONSTRATES HIS SOLIDARITY WITH THE CLASS Oh ’76. II. Ml’ I I INI VI: K S I I Y March • . i 75 Mr. .liinon 'lunlcr. Sales NaiM ;or Hunter Publishing Company P. 0. nox 5lir.7 Winston-Salem. Ji. C. 77101 Dear Mr. Hunter: I have boon told by Mr. John Grlgger, a dental student in his Junior year at Temple rjnlverolty School of Dentistry, that ho has signed a contract with Hunter Publishing Company, to publish n yearbooV sometime in 1976, The contract signed by your agent, on your behalf, and signed by Mr. Grlgger dooa not have the approval of Temple University School of Dentistry or any employee of the Uni ver: Uy. We want you, your agent, and Hunter Publishing Company, and any and all Interested parties, to fully recognise and be aware of the fact that Temple University assumes absolutely no financial responsibility, nor editorial responsibility, nor do we. nor will we. attest to the accuracy of statements which may be contained in the booV. Purthor, it is the ronponnibi1ity of Mr. Grigger, your agent, and Hunter Publishing Company to obtain the necessary releases allowing the naaes and or pictures of groups or individuals to uppoar in the yearbooV. Thin lotter l a disclaimer of any and all responsibilities pertaining to the contract and Includes, but is not limited to, Kunbor 4 under miscellaneous, and all statements un-ler the caption Deadlines'. £gsi bc1 C.Ci John Crigger Miss nctsey Alden Very truly yours. Edward 0. Sullivan Assistant to Dean NEATNESS COUNTS The windows at TUDS were washed once and only once during our stay — in November, 1973, one week before the Site Visit of the ADA Council on Dental Education for accreditation evaluation. MAYBE THEY WEREN’T CLEAN ENOUGH The school's accreditation classification was dropped from approval to conditional approval.” A I ISN'T THE ONLY PLACE WHERE PRICES HAVE CHANGED On January 5. 1976 the cost of a gold crown at TUDS went up 38%. Premolar endo skyrocketed 100%. NEXT SLIDE Department Chairman Dr. Robert Pollack fell asleep during freshman Biochemistry lecture while he was operating the slide projector for Dr. Robert Friedman. MONEY DOES STRANGE THINGS AWARD To Dr. Harold Lantz for his comment that. Paid dentures fit like crazy.” THE ARNOLD PALMER DEAN OF GOLFERS AWARD To Dean Chuck Howell who. in the face of a threatened student boycott, told the student council. It’s alright with me if they boycott. I’ll just lock the door and go play golf.” CLEAR CONCEPTS ARE THE BEST CONCEPTS Dr. Paul Marcucci of the Department of Radiology told the Class of '76 in a lecture that, “static electricity is a problem in dry humid weather.” THIS WILL GET YOUR GOAT Dr. Martin Tansy told the Class of '76 that he could understand students objecting to the use of dogs in the physiology laboratory, but that no one could reasonably object to the use of goats. 183 The Student as Nigger Students are niggers. When you get that straight, our schools begin to make sense. It's more important, though, to understand why they’re niggers. If we follow that question seriously enough, it will lead us past the zone of academic bullshit, where dedicated teachers pass their knowledge on to a new generation, and into the nitty-gritty of human needs and hangups. And from there we can go on to consider whether it might ever be possible for students to come up from slavery. First let's see what's happening now. Let's look at the role students play in what we like to call education. At Cal State L.A.. where I taught, the students have separate and unequal dining facilities. If I take them into the faculty dining room, my colleagues get uncomfortable, as though there were a bad smell. If I cat in the student cafeteria, I become known as the educational equivalent of a nigger-lover. In at least one building there are even rest rooms which students may not use. Students at Cal State are politically disenfranchised. They are in an academic Lowndes County. Most of them can vote in national elections — their average age is about 26 — but they have no voice in the decisions which affect their academic lives. The students are, it is true, allowed to have a toy government run for the most part by Uncle Toms and concerned principally with trivia. The faculty and administrators decide what courses will be offered; the students get to choose their own Homecoming Queen. Occasionally when student leaders get uppity and rebellious, they're either ignored, put off with trivial concessions, or maneuvered expertly out of position. A student at Cal State is expected to know his place. He calls a faculty member Sir” or Doctor” or Professor — and he smiles and shuffles some as he stands outside the professor's office waiting for permission to enter. The faculty tell him what courses to take (in my department, English, even electives have to be approved by a faculty member); they tell him what to read, what to write, and, frequently, where to set the margins on his typewriter They tell him what's true and what isn't. Some teachers This essay was written by a California college professor during the early sixties. It's message, however, transcends geography and time. insist that they encourage dissent but they're almost always jiving and every student knows it. Tell the man what he wants to hear or he'll fail your ass out of the course. When a teacher says jump, students jump. I know of one professor who refused to take up class time for exams and required students to show up for tests at 6:30 in the morning. And they did, by God! Another, at exam time, provides answer cards to be filled out — each one enclosed in a paper bag with a hole cut in the top to see through. Another colleague once caught a student reading during one of his lectures and threw her book against the wall. Still another lectures his students into a stupor and then screams at them in a rage when they fall asleep. Just last week during the first meeting of a class, one girl got up to leave after about ten minutes had gone by. The teacher rushed over, grabbed her by the arm, saying, This class is NOT dismissed! and led her back to her seat. On the same day another teacher began by informing his class that he does not like beards, mustaches, long hair on boys, or capri pants on girls, and will not tolerate any of that in his class. The class, incidentally, consisted mostly of high school teachers. Even more discouraging than this master-slave approach to education is the fact that the students take it. They haven't gone through twelve years of public school for nothing. They’ve learned one thing and perhaps only one thing during those twelve years. They've forgotten their algebra. They've grown to fear and resent literature. They write like they've been lobotomized. But, Jesus, can they follow orders! Freshmen come to me with an essay and ask if I want it folded, and whether their name should be in the upper right hand comer. And I want to cry and kiss them and caress their poor tortured heads. Students don't ask that orders make sense. They give up expecting things to make sense long before they leave elementary school. Things are true because the teacher says they're true. At a very early age we all learn to accept two truths, as did certain medieval churchmen. Outside of class, things are true to your tongue, your fingers, your 184 stomach, your heart. Inside class things are true by reason of authority. And that's just fine because you don't care anyway. Miss Wiedemeyer tells you a noun is a person, place or thing. So let it be. You don’t give a rat's ass; she doesn't give a rat's ass. The important thing is to please her. Back in kindergarten, you found out that teachers only love children who stand in nice straight lines. And that's where it's been at ever since. Nothing changes except to get worse. School becomes more and more obviously a prison. Last year I spoke to a student assembly at Manual Arts High School and then couldn't get out of the goddamn school. I mean there was NO WAY OUT Locked doors. High fences. One of the inmates was trying to make it over a fence when he saw me coming and froze in panic. For a moment I expected sirens, a rattle of bullets, and him clawing the fence. Then there's the infamous code of dress. Boys in high school can't be too sloppy and they can't even be too sharp. You'd think the school board would have been delighted to see all the black kids trooping to school in pointy shoes, suits, ties and stingy brims. Uh-uh. They're too visible. What school amounts to, then, for white and black alike, is a 12-year course in how to be slaves. What else could explain what 1 see in a freshman class? They’ve got that slave mentality: obliging and ingratiating on the surface but hostile and resistant underneath As do black slaves, students vary in their awareness of what's going on. Some recognize their own put-on for what it is and even let their rebellion break through to the surface now and then. Others — including most of the good students — have been more deeply brainwashed. They swallow the bullshit with greedy mouths. They honest-to-God believe in grades, in busy work, in General Education requirements. They're pathetically eager to be pushed around. They're like those old-grey-headed house niggers you can still find in the South who don't see what all the fuss is about because Mr. Charlie treats us real good. College entrance requirements tend to favor the Toms and screen out the rebels. Not entirely, of course. Some students at Cal State L.A. are expert con artists who know perfectly well what's happening. They want the degree or the 2-S and spend their years on the old plantation alter- nately laughing and cursing as they play the game. If their egos are strong enough, they cheat a lot. And, of course, even the Toms are angry down deep somewhere. But it comes out in passive rather than active aggression. They're unexplainably thick-witted and subject to frequent spells of laziness. They misread simple questions. They spend their nights mechanically outlining history chapters while meticulously failing to comprehend a word of what's in front of them. The saddest cases among both black slaves and student slaves are the ones who have so thoroughly introjected their masters' values that their anger is all turned inward. At Cal State these are the kids for whom every low grade is torture, who stammer and shake when they speak to a professor, who go through an emotional crisis every time they're called upon during class. If there really is a Last judgment, then the parents and teachers who created these wrecks are going to bum in hell. So students are niggers. It's time to find out why, and to do this we have to take a long look at Mr. Charlie. The teachers I know best are college professors. Outside the classroom and taken as a group, their most striking characteristic is timidity. Just look at their working conditions. At a time when even migrant workers have begun to fight and win, most college professors are still afraid to make more than a token effort to improve their pitiful economic status. They mumble catch phrases like professional dignity and meaningful dialogue. Professors were no different when I was an undergraduate at UCLA during the McCarthy era; it was like a cattle stampede as they rushed to cop out. And in more recent years, I found that my being arrested in demonstrations brought from my colleagues not so much approval or condemnation as open-mouthed astonishment. You could lose your job! Now, of course, there's the Vietnamese war. It gets some opposition from a few teachers. Some support it. But a vast number of professors who know perfectly well what's happening, are copping out again. And in the high schools, you can forget it. Stillness reigns. I'm not sure why teachers arc so meek. It could be that academic training itself forces a split between thought and action. It might also be that the tenured security of a teaching job attracts timid persons and furthermore, that teaching, like police work, pulls in persons who are unsure of 185 themselves and need weapons and the other external trappings of authority. The classroom offers an artificial and protected environment in which teachers can exercise their will to power. Your neighbors may drive a better car; gas station attendants may intimidate you; your wife may dominate you; but in the classroom, by God, students do what you say — or else. The grade is a hell of a weapon. It may not rest on your hip, potent and rigid like a cop's gun, but in the long run it's more powerful. At your personal whim — any time you choose — you can keep 35 students up for nights and have the pleasure of seeing them walk into the classroom pastyfaced and red-eyed carrying a sheaf of typewritten pages, with title page, MLA footnotes and margins set at 15 and 91. The general timidy which causes teachers to make niggers of their students usually includes a more specific fear — fear of the students themselves. After all, students are different, just like black people. You stand exposed in front of them, knowing that their interests, their values and their language are different from yours. To make matters worse, you may suspect that you yourself are not the most engaging of persons. What then can protect you from their ridicule and scorn? Respect for authority. That what. It's the policeman's gun again The white bwana's pith helmet. So you flaunt that authority. You wither whisperers with a murderous glance. You crush objectors with erudition and heavy irony. And worst of all, you make your own attainments seem not accessible but awesomely remote. You conceal your massive ignorance — and parade a slender learning. The teacher's fear is mixed with an understandable need to be admired and to feel superior — a need which also makes him cling to his white supremacy. Ideally, a teacher should minimize the distance between himself and his students. He should encourage them not to need him — eventually or even immediately. But this is rarely the case. Teachers make themselves high priests or arcane mysteries. They become masters of mumbo-jumbo. Even a more or less conscientious teacher may be torn between the need to give and the need to hold back, between the desire to free his students and the desire to hold them in bondage to him. I can find no other explanation that accounts for the way my own subject, literature, is generally taught. Literature, which ought to be a source of joy, solace and enlightenment, often becomes in the classroom nothing more than a source of anxiety — at best an arena for expertise, a ledger book for the ego. Literature teachers, often afraid to join a real union, nonetheless may practice the worst kind of trade-unionism in the classroom; they do to literature what Beckmesser does to song in Wagner's Meistersinger. The avowed purpose of English departments is to teach literature; too often their real function is to kill it. You can add sexual repression to the list of causes, along with vanity, fear and will to power, that turn the teacher into Mr. Charlie. You might also want to keep in mind that he was a nigger once himself and has never really gotten over it. And there are more causes, some of which are better described in sociological than in psychological terms. Work them out, it's not hard But in the meantime what we've got on our hands is a whole lot of niggers. And what makes this particularly grim is that the student has less chance than the black man of getting out of his bag. Because the student doesn't even know he’s in it That, more or less, is what's happening in higher education. And the results are staggering. For one thing damn little education takes place in the schools. How could it? You can't educate slaves; you can only train them. Or, to use an even uglier and more timely word, you can only program them. I like to folk dance. Like other novices, I've gone to the Museum and laid out good money in order to learn how to dance. No grades, no prerequisites, no separtate dining rooms; they just turn you on to dancing. That's education Now look at what happens in college. A friend of mine recently finished a folk dance class. For his final, he had to learn things like this: The Irish are known for their wit and imagination, qualities reflected in their dances, which include the jig. the reel and the hornpipe. And then the teacher graded him, A,B,C,D, or F, while he danced in front of her. That's not education. That's not even training That's an abomination on the face of the earth. It's especially ironic because he took that dance class trying to get out of the academic rut. He took crafts for the same reason Great, right? Get your hands in some clay? Make something? Then the teacher announced a 20-page term paper would be required — with footnotes. At my school we even grade people on how they read poetry. That's like grading people on how they make love But we do it. In fact, God help me, I do it I'm the Commandant of English 323. Simon Legree on the poetry plan- 186 ration. Tote that iamb! Lift that spondee! Even to discuss a good poem in that environment is potentially dangerous because the very classroom is contaminated As hard as I may try to turn students on to poetry, I know that the desks, the tests, the IBM cards, their own attitudes toward school, and my own residue of UCLA method are turning them off. Another result of student slavery is equally serious. Students don't get emancipated when they graduate. As a matter of fact, we don't let them graduate until they've demonstrated their willingness — over 16 years — to remain slaves. And for important jobs, like teaching, we make them go through more years just to make sure. What I’m getting at is that we're all more or less niggers and slaves, teachers and students alike. This is a fact you might want to start with in trying to understand wider social phenomena, say, politics, in our country and in other countries. Educational oppression is trickier to fight than racial oppression. If you're a black rebel, they can't exile you; they either have to intimidate you or kill you. But in high school or college they can just bounce you out of the fold. And they do. Rebel students and renegade faculty members get smothered or shot down with devastating accuracy. Others get tired of fighting and voluntarily leave the system. This may be a mistake though. Dropping out of college for a rebel is a little like going North for a Negro. You can't really get away from it so you might as well stay and raise hell. How do you raise hell? That's a whole other article. But just for a start, why not stay with the analogy? What have black people done? They have, first of all, faced the fact of their slavery. They've stopped kidding themselves about an eventual reward in that Great Watermelon Patch in the sky. They've organized; they've decided to get freedom now, and they've started taking it. Students, like black people, have immense unused power. They could, theoretically, insist on participating in their own education. They could make academic freedom bilateral. They could teach their teachers to thrive on love and admiration, rather than fear and respect, and to lay down their weapons. Students could discover community. And they could learn to dance by dancing on the IBM cards. They could make coloring books out of the catalogs and they could put the grading system in a museum. They could raze one set of walls and let life come blowing into the classroom. They could raze another set of walls and let education flow out and flood the streets. They could turn the classroom into where it's at — a field of action And believe it or not, they could study eagerly and learn prodigiously for the best of all possible reasons — their own reasons. They could. Theoretically. They have the power. But only in a very few places, like Berkeley, have they even begun to think about using it. For students, as for black people, the hardest battle isn't with Mr. Charlie. It's with what Mr. Charlie has done to your mind. 187 MERIN STUDIOS, INC 2981 Grant Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. 19114 Portrait Photographer for Odontolog 1976 188 We take pride in the job we do, so you can take pride in the job you do. At Jelenko, we understand how you feel as you enter dental practice. Because it’s the same feeling we have every day. The urge to excel...the demand for quality. We take pride in the job we do, so you can take pride in the job you do. Now, there are two ways to put Jelenko's expertise to work for you: First, call our toll-free number. (800) 431-1785, to get in touch with a Jelenko expert. For technical assistance. For gold price quotations. For ordering. For scrap pickup (we’ll even give you free containers and labels). Second, take advantage of the educational courses at Jelenko's Regional Service Centers. Most are free; for a few. there is a modest fee. We’re working hard to keep Jelenko the leader in consistent, high-quality alloys for crown and bridge restorations and partial dentures. And we’re proud to be serving your profession, .we hope we’ll be serving you soon. Pewjwlt 2 JELENKO DENTAL HEALTH PRODUCTS 189 Heinsheimer Dental Supplies, Inc. 10 West Coulter Street Philadelphia, Pa. 19144 Est. 1935 VI9-9000 DENTOFORM MODELS for fVERY PURPOSE Flossing, Brushing, Case Presentation, Auxiliary Training, Patient Education. Catalog on Request Columbia Dentoform Corporation The House Of A Thousand Models 40 East 21 st Street, New York, N Y 10010 SUPERIOR DENTAL LABS INC, A full-service laboratory DEDICATED TO QUALITY 311 S. Broad Street Philadelphia, Pa. 19107 BRANCHES Allentown, Pa. Cherry Hill, N.J. FR S FINANCIAL RESOURCES SERVICES CD C j J? Joseph M Super Raymond D. Loewe Consulting to Professionals ri in r; Personal and Business Insurance Independence Square 530 Walnut Street Philadelphia. Pa. 19172 Please Patronize Our Advertisers They Supported Your Class Philadelphia Denture Casting Service 4822 North Broad Street Philadelphia, Pa. 19141 CL7-3371 190 Missing page at the time of digitization Missing page at the time of digitization Wherever you’re headed, Healthco can help. Mitchell Utz. your student representative from Healthco. What's next? Graduate school? Government service? An associateship? Your own practice? Wherever you'e headed, chances are you'll be near one of the 61 well-staffed, well-stocked, well-known Healthco dental supply centers. You'll find knowledgeable people like Mitchell Utz who can help you select merchandise and equipment from all the major lines. As a Healthco customer, you get benefits available only from a well-staffed organization — including unrivalled expertise in selecting a location, merchandise, equipment, office management, office design and practice management. The prices? Competitive! The service? Superior! Before you make a move, contact Mitchell Utz and tell him where you're going. Yours for the asking... 10 Practice Management monographs, written by the professional staff of Healthco. Check those you'd like, and forward this ad to Mitchell Utz. (If you don't want to cut up this book, give Mitchell a call and he'll rush the brochures to you.) □ What’s the Best Location for Your New Dental Practice? □ How to Collect What Patients Owe You □ Malpractice Warning Signs □ Solutions to Your Most Difficult Foe Problems □ Safeguards for a Successful Dental Partnership □ Your Strategic Plan to Build the Perfect Dental Facility □ How to Maximize Your Assistant's Assistance □ How to Hire Superior Dental Holp Q Ways to lowor Ovorhoad Waste □ Considerations In Setting Up a Dental Practice -HEALTHCO t Dental Supply Philadelphia Dental Supply, 2130 Arch St., Philadelphia. PA 19103, (215) 568-7450 Healthco Dental Supply, South Long View Drive, Turnpike Industrial Park. Middletown, PA 17057, (717) 939-0483 Deeley Dental Supply, 6308 Blair Hill Lane, Baltimore. MD 21209, (301) 828 0300 193 i; You Lose! When it comes to selecting a dental laboratory to fulfill your prosthetic requirements, don't gamble. The risk is too great. Years of hard work, self discipline, self denial and a considerable financial investment in your education have made it possible for you to embark upon a career in Dental Medicine. Consider this! Ar. average of 20 per cent of your yearly gross will involve fees for dental appliances. In many instances this percentage will be higher. Can you really afford to leave this large a financial responsibility to chance? If you select a dental laboratory on the basis of price, that's a bad bet. But if you do. add up the extra hours you spend with chairtime adjustments and tack that on to the bill. There is a simple way to beat the system . Entrust your prosthetic cases with confidence to the experts at Muth Mumma. We don't run our business on the whims of lady luck . For information regarding our services please contact us. Division of Heritage Laboratories P O Box 1626 100 North Cameron Street Harrisburg. Pennsylvania 17105 Phone 717-233-6461 194 CONGRATULATIONS to the class of 1976 Temple Dental Alumni Society PREMIER TRADEMARKS Means Quality Since 1913 1. “Premier” • lor all products 2. Premierlite • Operative Instruments 3. “Fluorident - Liquid or Gel - Acidulated Phosphate Fluoride 4. R-C Prep” A Chemo-Mechanical Preparation ot the Root Canal 5. Durelon” - the Adhesive Cement 6. “Carbidized” • Scalers. Excavators. Chisels 7. Hemodent” - Hemostatic Solution - Gingival Retraction Cord 8. “Red Dot” - Diamond Instruments 9. Scutan • for Temporary Crowns and Bridges 10. “Ela” • Carbide and Steel Burs 11. Striptite” - Matrix Retainer 12. “Cavlt - Ready Mixed Cavity Seal 13. Beutelrock” - Plastic Handled Endodontic Instruments 14. Topicale” - Topical Anesthetic 15. Strip-Aids • lor Sell Adhering Bands 16. “Stanide • Stannous Fluoride 17. Retra-Rings” - tor Gingival Retraction 18. Wedges and Wedge Positioner” 19. Never-Clog Delrin Amalgam Guns 20. Temple Composite Instruments • lor Placement ol Composite Materials 21. Impregum • Polyether Rubber Impression Material 22. Cavilax” - Cleaning, Drying and De-Oiling Solution 23. “Ziroxide - Prophy Paste Ask Your Supplier for Premier Products PREMIER DENTAL PRODUCTS COMPANY Norristown, Pennsylvania 19401 195 Put it all together with Codesco's planning service. As your full-service supply center and equipment dealer, we can help you put it all together. Give us a call and let’s talk soon. CODESCO SUPPLY CENTERS Philadelphia Wilmington Easton Lancaster Falls Church, Va. 460 No. Sixth St. 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. 3606 Nicholas St. 1520 Commerce Dr. 5852 Columbia Pike (215) 923-9400 (302) 658-4158 (215) 258-0855 (717) 569-0471 (703) 820-9181 Temple University 3224 N. Park Avenue Philadelphia (215) 223-1756 University of Pennsylvania 4001 Spruce Street Philadelphia (215) 382-2085 196 Bioblend. A little extra insurance Dtntsply IrUrrnjfionil, Yorli Prnntylvjni. C ' ' 0 ip nwmra uk M IIMIM that your denture patients will like the way they look. A denture patient's attractive natural smile speaks volumes about the dentist—his care, his skill, his total concern for the patient's physical and psychological well being. And that same smile says something important about the teeth, too. Trubyte' Bioblend’Anteriors. Available in porcelain and plastic. TRUBYTE’ KARL SCHUMACHER DENTAL INSTRUMENT CO., INC. Mailing Address: P.0. Box 11628 Philadelphia, Pa 19116 Offices: 2727 Philmont Avenue Huntingdon Valley, Pa. 19006 We specialize in instruments for ORAL SURGERY EX0D0NTIA PERIODONTIA ORTHODONTIA GENERAL DENTISTRY Our instruments, through constant new development, fulfil the requirements of modern dentistry; they conform with their original designs dedicated to the continued advancement of health through drug research McNEIL LABORATORIES, INC. FORT WASHINGTON. PA pharmaceutical manufacturers (McNEIL) 197 WE CARE TO SATISFY CUSTOMERS Dear Ike, It's over!!! Happy Graduation. Happy Future. Love and Kisses, Michelle Dear Miss, How about that? Thanks. All my love, Ike Marty, You finally made it? Now where? You better be nice or I'll keep you here forever! Love you, Nancy Dear Mike, May God grant you the wisdom to use your specialty to help all mankind and give you the understanding with which to do so. We pray that your future will be one of great fulfillment and success, and may you have many bright tomorrows. Love, Mom, Dad, Joan, Jack Jeffrey and Beth To My Michael, I thought this would be the perfect opportunity to tell you how proud I am of what you have accomplished. It has been four rough years for you, but I hope I have made them a little easier for you. That was my main goal. Remember I'm understanding. I am really looking forward to our next thousand years together. I love you so very much, and I always will. With All My Love, Your Kitten 198 INDEX TO GRADUATES Albertine, Joseph A. 20 Allan, Jeffrey B. 63 Appel, Steven A. 65 Au, Raymond 60 Barbieri, Ernest G. 41 Barry, John M. 57 Bauer, E. Gregory 76 Benjamin, Andrew M. 78 Biffen, Donald R. 79 Black, Steven B. 47 Blitzer, Robert M. 38 Bodenschatz, William A. 64 Breit, Mark W. 49 Brightbill, Robert E. 51 Brookreson, Joe W. 74 Bryan, Peter L. 80 Candio, Stephen J. 81 Capista, Joseph J. 85 Churgai, Francis J. 65 Cipriani, Pier J. 86 Civillico, Nicholas J. 67 Conway, Timothy W. 19 Dickert, James E. 77 DiLorenzo, Vincent P. 38 DiNoia, Frank A. 49 Director, Robert C. 50 Doughty, Dennis D. 55 Eisenbrock, Michael 21 Eshbaugh, Harry L. 61 Fisher, Larry S. 48 Fisher, Marc R. 59 Fishman, Kenneth Y. 70 Fishman, Steven 83 Fontana, John B. 26 Foore, John P. 28 Frattali, George E. 31 Frederick, Donald A. 37 Gamba, Thomas W. 79 Getty, Paul F. 67 Glassman, Frederic I. 36 Gloria, Joseph A. 34 Goff, George V. 48 Good, Thomas N. 27 Gorman, Martin N. 29 Granados, John A. 26 Gregory, Richard J. 66 Grigger, John P. 25 Haggerty, Stephen F. 20 Hall, Robert D. 70 Hamilton, David M. 25 Hellerstein, Harvey E. 73 Henschel, Douglas J. 43 Hershman, Dwight L. 23 Hill, James J. 72 Hollingshead, William P. 86 Kaminski, Walter J. 78 Kane, Michael W. 84 Kantor, Barry R. 82 Kaye, Gary 6. 69 Kazmierczak, Stephen T. 51 Keenan, Richard R. 30 Kelisek, Robert F. 53 Koryat, Stanley J. 52 Kossa, Anthony P. 56 Kring, William T. 82 LaKind, Leslie E. 24 Lascher, Michael F. 57 Lawrence, John S. 56 LeBlanc, Dennis E. 22 Lewan, Matthew J. 54 Ligh, Randy Q. 40 Litman, Larry K. 50 Lorch, Lance 21 McCarel, Dan C. 71 McDowell, Gary W. 29 McGuire, Eugene J. 28 McManus, Thomas M. 33 Mansueto, Michael A. 62 Mariani, Eugene J. 32 Marinchak, Michael R. 75 Mastrini, Louis J. 30 Mathieu, Gregory P. 63 Maurer, Christopher D. 31 Maybruch, Walter I. 74 Meltz, Steven M. 22 Meng, Thomas R. 54 Miller, Steven I. 23 Mucklow, William B. 45 Mullen, Michael J. 42 Myers, Michael H. 60 Naganuma, Greg K. 69 Nastasia, Thomas V. 73 Neidhardt, Alexander M. 41 Nicklas, William G. 76 O'Leary, Michael D. 83 Ollock, Stephen B. 81 Pacenta, Anthony J. 18 Parker, Ira R. 64 Pellegrino, Robert M. 47 Perretta, Michael 39 Peters, Gary G. 32 Peterson, Roger M. 77 Petrosky, Ronald P. 39 Pfund, t. Gregg 68 Pitt, Charles A 53 Price, Andrew S. 85 Prousi, Andrew S. 44 Rinehimer, James A. 84 Rising, David J. 66 Roberts, William D. 52 Robinson, Nathaniel 18 Roper, Alfred K. 27 Rosenbaum, Jack 43 Rosenthal, Allen 36 Rubin, Gene I. 34 Sandilos, Charles G. 33 Santucci, Steven J. 44 Schmidt, JoAnne Sidoti 35 Schwartz, Norman B. 37 Schwartz, Paul D. 35 Smith, Ronald A. 40 Snively, John 55 Snyder, Larry H. 68 Sobel, Stephen 80 Sorin, Mark S. 72 Speicher. Kirk A. 59 Stevens, James L. 75 Takach, John J. 58 Teen, William K. 45 Trovato, Frederick 62 Uram, Stephen J. 42 Webb, James P. 71 Weber, Andrew H. 46 White, Charles D. 58 Whitham, H. Christopher 19 Wiesner, Jeffrey J. 46 Williams, Joe 24 Woolery, Robert 61 199 . Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Senior Section Editor Theme Section Editor Dental Hygiene Editor Faculty Section Editor Activities Section Editor Theme Section Contributors Candid Photography Cover Design Printer John P. Grigger David M. Hamilton Steven M. Meltz Robert C. Director Cynthia Black Steven I. Miller Stephen T. Kazmierczak Joe Williams Leslie E. Lakind Vincent P. DiLorenzo Stephen J. Candio Roslyn Schloss David M. Hamilton Steven M. Meltz Steven I. Miller Robert C. Director AFM Design Studios Hunter Publishing Company Odontolog 1976 has been published in an edition of 235 copies by Temple University School of Dentistry and School of Dental Hygiene Classes of 1976. The editor would like to express sincere thanks to Mr. Steven Merin for his invaluable assistance and support in the preparation of this book. TEMPLE UNIVERSITY DENTAL • ALLIED HEALTH -PHARMACY LIBRARY 3304 N. BROAD STREET PHILA.. PA. 19140
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