University of Southern California School of Dentistry - El Molaro (Los Angeles, CA)
- Class of 1966
Page 1 of 290
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 290 of the 1966 volume:
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.ri ,. T) .l) THE SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA PRESENTS me r o 1 o g u e This is the pictorial record of the Class of 1966. To be sure, it contains some words. Words have a peculiar way of meaning different things to different people. The words we have placed here have been carefully put together . . , they will mean different things to each who read them, they will convey the message we have placed in them to many; to others they may mean nothing . . . but to those of us wh o have lived them, they will tell the whole story, and in future years will bring flooding back the memories of good times and bad. If this sounds nostalgic, it is intended that way — and will, in the years to come, mean nearly that. There is commentary in this book, there is wit, and there is humor . . . but most of all, there is memory. When we entered dental school, we were full of confidence, eager to learn, and anxious to become dentists of the finest caliber. Gradually, some of the shinyness eroded away, cynicism began to creep into our thoughts, and a little of the idealism was scraped away from the surface ... for the dentist ' s education is as tough as any, anywhere. But we, as so many others before us, have endured. We go now into the world of dentistry, full of confidence, eager to learn more, and anxious to maintain dentistry of high caliber. Digitized by tine Internet Arciiive in 2010 witii funding from DDO. Inc. Iittp: www.arcliive.org details 159wuda501 PuUcjiitimt HENRY MALAN TANNER, B.S,, D.D.S,, F.A.C, he ' i doinq hii damndeit .. .anqeli could do no more. . . . why did they cut the legs off? After school! A little air freshener ought to take care of things, Rex! I watched them tearing a building down, a gang of men in a busy town. With a heave and a Ho and a mighty yell, they swung the boom and the whole place fell. I asked the foreman, are these men skilled, these the ones you ' d hire, do you intend to build , , . , He smiled and said, Oh, no indeed, ' full-time labor ' is all we need. Cher Henry . . . a hobby Just watch, they may wreck in a day or two what it took the builders years to do. I asked this question as I observed that day, which of these roles am 1 to play? Am I a builder who works with care, measuring with a rule and a square. Or am I a ' wrecker ' who walks around ' wrecking ' things, getting mine — and sitting down? San Francisco World ' s Fair . . . age 16 (won the trip) The rear pump When times were tough for HMT Graduation, 1945, use AdiNUud uitiMt Dedication is a word of varied meanings. It means the effort and conviction of a man toward his environment ... it means holding your ground in times of adversity ... it means developing rapport with youp students such that you are able to effectively communicate ideas and techniques . . . it means being realistic about conditions, techniques, and procedures ... it means giving your students credit for having some degree of intelligence as professional students ... it means standing behind your staff on matters of departmental policy ... it means making you think rather than pumping you full of regurgitable answers ... it means concern for the technical abilities of future students. The Class of 1966, in appreciation for the man (and men like) Henry M. Tanner, dedicate El Molaro 1966 to him. Changes are taking place within our school of dentistry, and no one knows for sure where they may lead. The academic skills of the students are to be improved . . . but at what price? There are a few men left in this school who appreciate the value of repetition (which takes time), and this dedication extends, in part, to them for their equal concern. Dr. Tanner does not seek recognition — and perhaps would prefer not having it — but he, above all, deserves it. What is such a man? He is a man in a rubber suit being dragged to the bottom of a lagoon by a 70-pound red snapper ... he was fishing with his son Smitty near La Paz, Mexico. Tanner is a qualified Scuba diver, but.says when I ' m under the water, without mv glasses of course, everything appears smaller than it really is . . . and there was this small fish — so I speared it! I was promptly pulled 50 feet straight down. Smitty saw what i had done and swam into the murky cloud of mud, spearing the fish again. Together we managed to bring it to the surface and then into the boat. Hawaii, Acanuico, La Paz, Catalina, Corona and the local YMCA swimming pool have seen his twin-tanked countenance. Women play a big role in Henrv ' s life. We first found this out in the person of Jane Fowkes, who was introduced as the head of the Department of Fixed Prosthetics. His wife, Sarah, whom he claims to have been the shyest girl at East High in Salt Lake, and three daughters, Linda, Marie and Sarah Ellen. This man is also a leader in his church . . . having served as a youth leader, Counsilor, Bishop, and at present as High Priest. He takes water in varying forms . . . frozen on the ski slopes, fluid behind a fast ski boat on the Great Salt Lake, with tanks strapped on his back under the water . . . and, of course, on the rocks! Dr. Tanner graduated in 1945 from USC and received his Bachelor of Science degree in 1946. He conducts a part-time private practice in addition to being professor and head of the Department of Fixed Prosthodontics. He taught Operative Dentistry for ten years and served as an instructor at the Naval Dental School in Bethesda, Marvland. He also has been honored with membership in the American Academv of Gold Foil Operators, American Academy of Dental Practice Administration, American Academy of Crown and Bridge Prosthodontics, a Fellow of the American College of Dentists, and is a member of the American Academy of Restorative Dentistry. . - I Hi Ed baby . ' Errand boy a drink Cancel that surveyor order! Dean, 1950-1964 He gave us our start ... he threw the pitch which we hit . . . ' he permitted us to reach first base . . . then second . . , and head for third . . . then he turned us over to his successor for the drive around third and on toward home. He is Dean Emeritus Dr. Robert McNulty ... a guiding hand for many years, and now retired in Laguna . . . and enjoying life. Dean Ingle Things will change. Just wait until the new dean arrives. Comments heard frequently during the period of selection . . . and the coming of th new dean. Well, things certainly did change! Dean John 1. Ingle is the epitome of a hard-working dental school dean. He is a dynamic force in shaping the modern world of dentistry. His actions are swift and well calculated ... his decisions are final and sure. Our future reputation is in your hands, Dr. Ingle . . . tr eat us well. what do you mean the cadavers can ' t be in the Prosthetics lab? You say your daughter has diabetes and you have a burning mouth? Nope, you can ' t see this . . they ' re the plans for the WAF of the new building! You think they had WAF before — wait till you hear this! . . . THE GREATEST SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY IN THE WORLD BY 1970 I THIS HAS TO BE THE GREATEST PROJECTION FOR THE FUTURE ... what the hell, we can dream too! i hen the greatest dental school anywhere rises above its environs to shadow the world of health, and present its proud face to the world! Our dedication, however much we may have, and in what form, comes from the dedication of our faculty and staff in f S S •.  ?i«JjSK htUUUMHBBJillMUi muuuMBunhu miHiiiiii iiMfit mukuUiitkktkMKf ukui UHUBkktkkt ' kMuuumuUkUi huMkuukuuuuii kUtUtUUUMHMut iBBUUukkkkkkkHht mukmutiMMkn ukiituutkukm UuiUtiUkMMkmr IHIIIIIIlMffifH ' r feimiiiiikiiiinn MlllllllllllH llllllllllIIIH ■f!™ ! ! ■iiiififiiiii ' kuUhmumuiuuiuwIil miltlnnlnllllllhmlllht htuulhimuhuunllmh kumuiuiinmiinniljlll klHtuuuinimiiUilllllJjL inillllllhhmmuinnillir 11 Director of Clinics DR. FRANCIS CONLEY I ' m almost there! We might say the same things of Dr. Francis Conley as we have said in our dedication about another friend of the student. We can be assured that when things get rough, and the policies seem tough . . . modifications will be made by our director of clinics — do you get the point? Thank you, sir, for your genuine interest. IP OPERATWE H 1 III k . fl H 1 f ri 1 • m « A A m 1 i- - •Si. Dean of Admissions MRS. MARGARET COLMAN He ' s not busy — go right In! Throughout four years of dental school we may tend to forget what this man did for us ... he let us begin a journey through hell ! First, he tried to make reasonably sure that we really wanted to battle our way through what we didn ' t even know existed. He tried his best to warn us that the phrase the hardest part is getting in, wasn ' t exactly the truth. When he found he couldn ' t disuade us, we were sent that epinephrenic letter announcing to all who would see it that we had made it . . . we had been accepted to the epitome of dental schools. Government Can the will of the strong be bent enough to allow the weak to exist? This is the rhetorical question to be answered by every member of our student government. The hours spent and the job well done must be their only goal . . . for it is also their only reward. The conglomerate mass would have a difficult time indeed attaining their individual goals without the glue of its leadership. And, on the quality of that leadership hangs the degree of success of the SC graduate. Student leadership is a class for which there is no grade, but it is a learning process nevertheless. For with good leadership we learn that peers are our valued and trusted friends ... to be called upon when needed. But, no matter what kind of a job they do, we are the better for it. COUNCIL FOR 1965-66 JOE COODSELL, Student Body President VICKI STECMAN, Alpha Kappa Gamma Prexy MIKE SAMPSON, First Vice President CAROL BALL, Third Vice President RON THOMPSON, Senior Class Prexy RON MALOUF, Co-Editor, Explorer GARY WILLIAMS, Co-Editor, Explorer MIKE MILLER, Intorfraternity Council Prexy )IM CLARK, Alpha Tau Epsilon Prexy DR. ED BEVERIDGE, Advisor FRANK STONE, Second Vice President DAVE DICKERSON, Junior Class Prexy CINDY ROBBINS, Junior DH Prexy DICK REIMERS, Secretary-Treasurer ANN CREWS, Senior DH Prexy DELOS ADAMS, Freshman Prexy Not Pictured: Pete Weber, Senator; Duke Yamashita, Sophomore Prexy -lo NA)WA NABTI . . . shall 1 give CAROLE WILCOX Oh, thank you! JANICE ABDULIAN ... I should be him mv recipe for . . . on the DAU page, but they couldn ' t find room! )ANE FOVVKES . . . Now take this upstairs, get 15 signatures, 5 prescriptions, then wait one month! otdph THOSE WHO MAKE OUR LIVES MORE PLEASANT... or miserable in some instances PEGGY METZGER ... No, he ' s (lot here now — strange as it may seem! ALBERTA BARBER . . . Run, it ' s another flight of pigeons ELEANOR SWARTZ . . . Shhh! They ' re playing hang on sloopy! 14 JILL KATO . . . ■When I get my finger outa here, I ' ll be right with you LARRY POPPIATT . . . Another periphery gone with the pumice COTTIN BROWN ... A collar button? 15 THILM kl WLY ... I can just see the caption. . . Mrs. Ed |1M BAKER . . . You ought to see my garage PAT LYON ... The cotfee machine Is broken! LLAH rtARL, tAN . . . Smile, you ' re on candid camera. ELLEN BRAUN , . . That vvil be $17.27 over-due charge i in Hi NANCY MORGAN ... Do somethmg different, don ' t be nice! RAE NELSON ... Car 54 where are you ? MARY ANDERSON ROSA OCLASSEN Tropical beauties . . . CAROL CHAPMAN . . . Peek a boo DYCE RISDON ... I ' m shocked ne would come here dressed ke that! DON COSTON ... We can ' t afford it! JANLT BROWN . . . Yes, 1 have missed one job around here but I ' m learning to repair 17 mi m ScuKCt (wdlbJouqut 1962-1964 m ' i ai- Anatomy BRACHIAL PLEXUS . . . from the thorax to the digits via the pit! Let ' s turn m a false alarm and watch the fun WHAT IS ANATOMY? — looking at a dead body for the first time — not being able to eat lunch for a week — getting used to the smell of formaldehyde on yo while eating dinner — praying that you ' ll get Butterworth for the ora — tracing an efferent nerve impulse from the sella sphincter muscle of the navel and back via th left mandibular lateral incisor and explaining with referred pain — picking fascia — trying to find your dissection kit — coffee breaks on the terrace — trying to explain what happened to the aorta to — trying to get Dr. Cardey to touch the cadaver — trying to write thru the grease on your practicu — after two hour ' s work, finding out your cadavei — the lab open the night before the exam — Founder ' s Hall for the written . . . seated three — somebody must be cornering the market on p Night cap One of my kangaroo rats just died! v;fl sliK k Notice how I turn these pages , 21 S=::C THE MANY MOODS OF INKY DR. WILLIAM HARRISON you ' ve carved first central . . Did I e ei tell i)u how I got m name? nd today it ' s Til ' pie wax . . . ir should we . . jiaine what do x.u think? luthern Comfort, _-h ' 22 Xv We woke up one morning with a central incisor in one hand, and an Inky knife in the other. Looking down upon us was a little white-haired man pointing, with what we assumed was his index finger, at a pile of strange instruments on the table beside him. He was explaining the use of each as he packed them into a knapsack for the precarious journey ahead. There was the Boley gauge to plot our course, next our map for the trip ... the Linek tooth carving manual, the Hollenback carver to dig toe holds into the sides of the hills, a Bunsen burner to light the way in the dusky hours, the wax plane and wire screen to smooth the paths, and the rapidograph pen to keep our course straight and true . . . and most important our check cards upon which our daily progress would be recorded. The next day began our journey down Harrison ' s Wash into the canyons of the central groove delta, scaling the precipitous heights of the triangular ridges to the summit of the cusps where the view was magnificent ... on a clear day you could see the Cusp of Carabelli. We made camp for the night there. The last pink wax tent post was just about to be pounded to place when we were besieged bv a whoopine Indian shooting toothpicks from his bow strung with dental floss. From his belt hung a roll of toilet paper. He bombarded us with fiving theories of oral hygiene . . . dirty plates, and bleeding gums. We battled back with sleepy eves, and giggles. Finally, a cease fire was declared when our peace offering of Southern Comfort was accented, and the peace pipe smoked. At the campfire that night we were enthralled bv the ancient legend of how the great white warrior Inky got his name. He was the first person in the great new territory of Colorado to own a fountain pen . . . which leaked! The next day our journies were to be toward home, and our dreams were of packing up in the morning and heading out. On the trail that next dav we encountered a grizzled white-haired old trapper leading his beast of burden, loaded with supplies of tin foil, for the remote edentulous ridges. This kindly trapper gave us instructions on how to reach a small Chinese settlement where we could rest before continuing our journey. The settlement was indeed small ... it contained one distinguished Chinaman, sans que. He said he had retired many years ago (when a coup of northern chiefs overthrew the southern forces . . . who were wiped out except for a few braves ), and was just tending his garden here on the plateau until time to meet his ancestors. He showed us his soap carving . . . giant Hs and little tooth-shaped objects which he claimed to have carved in fifteen minutes. Finally rested, we proceeded on our journey home. As the sun slowly sank into the West we came to the end of our journey down paths never to be crossed again, for little did we know that our friendly guide would give up the struggle for men ' s minds and retire to his little shack in Beverly Hills. But, it was a good journey, and we survived As Chinese say . littou bit mowr Is a llttow better — Never did know nothing about histology . . . Mr. Brush Doctors Depcw and Kuplec -.—Dink and Fink — Don ' t sweat the small tf jH stuff fellows . . i DR. RALPH ALLM.AN Dental Materials Dental Materials Syllabus PLASTIC TOOTHBRUSH PREPARATION by G. V. Black ... RIP WHAT IS THE DEFINITION OF DENTAL MATERIALS? j Answer: , , , , . j .u • 1 Dental materials consists of all those operations upon the dental students and their adiacent structures, for the infliction of mental anguish and physical detenoation. To prevent improvement, discourage desire, and to completely demoralize said student. DISCUSS THE OUTLINE FORM OF THE CLASS RF-1 AMALGAM PREPARATION ON THE ORAL B 60, NYLON BRISTLE, ORAL PROPHYLAXIS INSTRUMENT Answer: , , , j 1. the occlusal must include all handle imperfections, fissured letter grooves, and ingrained manufacturing porosities 2. It must present an arc circumscribed a full 360 degrees from a central point, with a diameter of 5.0000 mm with an allowable tolerance of plus or minus 3 (three) microns (measurements to be checked on the hand-made, precision Hollenback light refraction gauge). DESCRIBE THE INTERNAL FORM OF A CLASS I RF AMALGAM PREPARATION ON THE HANDLE OF THE ORAL - 60, NYLON BRISTLE, ORAL PROPHYLAXIS INSTRUMENT Answer: 1. pulpal penetration to be 4.0000 mm with an allowable tolerance of plus or minus 3 microns (measurements to be taken on the Hollenback instrument described above) 2. must present a flat pulpal wall with continuous line angles in sound polymethyl methacrylate (plastic) 3. pulpal-internal-axial line angle to form an acute angle of exactly 87.5632896 degrees — plus or minus 3 x 10 to the minus seventh degrees DESCRIBE THE PLACEMENT OF THE SEVEN PREPARATIONS OF THE RF-1 AMALGAM FILLINGS OF THE ORAL B 60, NYLON BRISTLE, ORAL PROPHYLAXIS INSTRUMENT Answer: 1. the mesial outline form of the first preparation must be exactly 8.0000 mm plus or minus the usual 3 microns from the perpendicular line bisecting the handle flares of the brushal end 2. the centers of all preparations must be placed on a central line which bisects the central tuftal fissure at one end, and the exact center of the handular end at the other end 3. preparation must be spaced 9.3333 mm, plus or minus 3 microns apart, measured from central axis of one preparation to the central axis of the succeeding preparation NAME THE ARMAMENTARIUM, IN ORDER OF USE, FOR A CLASS RF-1 AMALGAM PREPARATION ON THE ORAL PROPHYLAXIS INSTRUMENT Answer: 1. number 557 Craftsman (Sears-Roebuck) upright three-horse power drill press with a 3 16 cold rolled steel drill a. used for occlusal otiine form and pulpal penetration ; b. used for convenience form 2. number 33-1 3 inverted cone diamond a. to flatten pulpal wall b. to establish pulpalward axial undercut 3. 9-13 .38 - 22-3 280-10 Allman weidlebinstrangle chisel a. used to accentuate continuous line angles in sound polymethyl methacrylate TELL HOW THE OUTLINE FORM OF THE CLASS RF-1 AMALGAM PREPARATION IN THE ORAL B 60 PROPHYLAXIS INSTRUMENT DIFFERS FROM THE OUTLINE FORM OF A CLASS I AMALGAM PREPARATION ON A SOUND TOOTH Answer: The Class I amalgam is placed in a sound tooth while the Class RF-1 is placed in the handle of an Oral B prophylaxis instrument in sound plastic WHAT IS THE RATIONALE FOR THIS EXPERIMENT? Answer: 1. in order that the dentist, in the event of need, be able to repair patients ' oral prophylaxis instruments 2. to better be able to serve the public need and maintain the proper public image of the dentist and his fees 3. It being an invaluable patient education instrument Orientation V ' 24 Dei l History. p. (Uvee. e Coffe S.«n ve oct % Biochemistry I Look It up! 0.. DR LUCIEN BAVETTA Almost everyone is failing biochemistry No, we ju t can ' t pass cviTvcinc ' There were things to be said in favor of biochemistry . . . the wit and humor of Dr. Lucien Bavetta (until he got sick) . . . the factual dryness of Dr. Dudley Thomas (until the exam). We were required to memorize little hexagon things in xarious shapes arid forms . . . lugubrious paths to this and that end product . . . cycles of some sort which had apparently nothing to do with the Hell ' s Angels, and regurgitate. We managed to learn about carbohydrates, fats, and proteins . . . we learned to clean glassware and store it! . . . we learned metabolisms, and storage ... we learned about vitamins, essential fatty acids, amino acids (essential and otherwise). Incidently, the formulas on this page are hormonal . . . we didn ' t learn about them! CVV: V Male and Female DR. DUDLEY THOMAS I iilsp tmker toys! They ' re kinda cute when you don ' t have to worry about them anymore! Lot ' s just pass half the class and put the rest on probation . . . this too! 25 I Histology DR. GOLDSTEIN . . . Am I ever going to get mv sweater? Please note Gee, isn ' t science wonderful? slide on ■c - .2 ' ' : ' ■y c - ■fjut) Jh DR, GOLDSTEIN Smooz Muzzle So what if I am wearing .a corsage Prosthetics j ' MURPHYisms go you ' re early, we haven ' t filled the swimming pool yet ' alright, you knuckleheads . . . not enuf to grease the wheels of the superchief about as thick as a yellow . . . just a smidgeon Floyd Murphy . . . always around when we needed him . . . the entrepreneur of Stubb ' s . . . helped everyone thru. Dr. Murphy, or Murph as everyone called him, was always willing to listen to a student ' s problems, eager and willing to help dissolve them . . . and more than a few times helped us out of deadline jams. We kidded him with Murphy Day . . . large, long ties, baggy pants, and shabby clothes; chuckled at his jokes; attended his lectures; but we never cursed him. There was always a time when palliation was in order and we discovered the medication of choice . . . Early Times! Fortunate for us, he waited until the end of our sophomore vear to retire ... he was there for checks at eieht in the morning, and thoufjh somewhat cvnical, he signed our cards . . . our thanks to Dr. Floyd Murphy! No! Bicuspids are in front of tine molars! How nuK sloiie one fraternity use 110 in the shade 27 is this any way to run a dentai sctiooi? % i f 3 It wiggles too much! How about a C Wake up, Norm Wake up, Fidele! Crown and Bridge DR. GUY HO Second bicuspid ... 1 think Clown and Blidge lectures started promptly at ten past the hour . . . silence prevailed until twenty past (the ten minutes being taken up by our art lessons for the day). Our past master of technique was also superb at moving the white stuff across the blackboard ... so as to give the visual image of living tooth structure. Punctuation of Dr. Guy Ho ' s remarks was accomplished as deft fingers propelled small white projectiles accurately in the direction of somnabulistic students. The projects were numerous and beneficial . . . the check cards had at least one Ho signature with ten Murph signatures . . . drawings on the reverse and wrinkled corners — the rules of the game! We learned the value of perspicasity and the slow down . . . along with the intricacies of the three-quarter and seven-eighths crowns. We are sure the students of the future will seriously miss the talents of the man known as the first real live Cod of S and T. Operative DR. HARRY QUINT OPERATIVE . . . this one word could strike terror into the heart of an SC dental student, and create a shivering mass of oozing jelly. Form the first lecture to the last lab the word was fear. The terms of the course were clearly defined . . . it ' s in the syllabus! The grading was clearly defined: easy for the first preparation, disasterous for the last. But one thing was ideal, the patients sat quietly, uncomplaining with never a disappointment, while we — the eager students — placed rubber dam, preparation, and restoration with impunity except for the watchful eves of the instructors. We Ducco ' ed our foils, thumbed our allovs, and drilled holes in our mirrors under the inspired tutelage of Drs. Quint, Buchannon, Bassett, Munsen. Stark, Leftwich, Shanlev, Lvnrh. Kimtz, Hodge, Desmoni. and Wallen. After siirvivin? we emerged little the worse for wear with an excellent practical knowlegde of operative dentistrv and a tribute tn the techniques of Dr. Harry Quint . . . and the operative department. Pathology JOHN Oral Pathology There are dental plumbers, dental jewelers, dental morticians . . . and there are stomatologists! With these simple, succinct statements we were introduced to Dr. Nathan Freudman, the psychologist of the periodontium. Here we became familiar with the exotic lesions of the oral cavity ... at least we classified them according to Dr. Rice, and destroyed them according to Dr. Freudman. Dr. Nettleman and Dr. Cantor taught us to scale extracted teeth and to recognize lines of retzius. We found out that the knife and fork does the masticating, mixing with saliva is done by the tongue, and you don ' t need the teeth at all . . . why save them? — they ' re of psychological importance only, my friend! Well, we had learned the normal tissue . . . then thev switched the slides on us and we learned what it really looked like! It was a classical class . . . dolor, rubor, tumor ... it was microprojection, being locked out, it was jiggle, jiggle evervtime a car, bus, or — heaven forbid — a train went bv the building ... it was consuming reams of paper during lectures, it was capillary distention, parenchymal degeneration, it was algormortis (set in 8-10 hours after exam), rigormortis (lack of oxygen during exam), and livormortis (rapid discoloration of the body upon hearing the grade). Differentiating hyaline degeneration, secondary amyloidosis, pyknosis, anorexia nervosa, cachexia, cloudy swelling ... all led to pressure atrophy (a form of brown atrophy or fatty metamorphosis). Semantically this was General Pathology! Roentgenology OUR FIRST EXPOSURE ... by a great guy, Dr. O ' Grady Bacteriology DR. MILO DON APPLEMAN Where do bacteria leave off and fungi begin? Can you really streak a plate evenly? Why in the devil do we have to figure out what this stupid unknown is when the lab tech is sure the culture was contaminated during inoculation. Sergi and Stan and that stupid Dr. Pepper sign . . . and incubators and gram stain, and methyl blue, and phenolphthalein, iodine, ethyl alcohol (hie) . . . cutting out early and missing the quiz; geting a copy of Appleman ' s lectures by buying his book; trying to follow Kurtz ' s fanciful trip thru immunity theory, and Kelly thru Cod knows what . . . these are the things Bacti is made of! Keep your bugs to yourself, John! sure to buy my book, and ou ' ll p, s this course! Aw come on fellas, you ' re kiddmg aren ' t you? Periodontics The lectures started off slow . . . we were told we could expect printed notes on these lectures later. We were about five weeks behind, which made for great fun on the first exam! Crading of exams left a little to be desired — we found out our midterm grades three days before the final! . My father ' s name was Caiant, therefore if follows that I should be Calanter • Dr. Benjamin, I don ' t know what calculus is, ! only went as far as trig! . The first patient was very traumatic — they actually bleed and move! . These students act like they are hoeing a victory garden! . No one knows what etiology is ... ! Ill print up these notes for you DR. BOB REEVES Feet up put em on the po po Pharmacology You don ' t appreciate mv lectures . . . ? Those of us who attended the lectures sat down, opened our books, pointed our finger, and followed word for word the material . . . until Orpheus took over (the god of sleep). Thru these dynamic lectures our eyes were opened to the far-reaching vistas of amazing scientific phenomena of ancient pharmacopia! We were awestruck by the PDR, USP, NF, ADR, and NNR. Then every Thursday afternoon we were amused and enlightened by our escapades thru practical pharmacology . . . and therapeutics of the mind. LSD was big . . . two teaspoons of nutmeg in coffee . . . and away we go. At the end of one hour of Dr. Brady ' s lectures the blackboard was covered with memorabilia . . . nobody took notes . . . and no final! It doesn ' t mailer i ju won ' t remember il anyway! Physiology Damn! It brushed my sleeve! Physiology — a lecture and a lab . . . really two separate entities! The lab with Zam (arm pits), frog ' s muscles, and cutting out early. The lecture with a brand new vocabulary and unending notes on the functions of the human body. Our arch enemy of the lab was the kymograph. We spent hours smoking drums, trying to get good recordings, and then shellacking before smearing. Invariably, something went wrong in this myriad of processes. Many times a sharp pointed instrument came in handy for writing on the drums. We saw muscles twitch until our sleep was disturbed with wierd tracings ... we saw minute wires . . . wrong connections, and pieces of old film in these dreams. We tested each other for blood pressure, pulse rate, inspiratory capacity, expiratory capacity, blood sugar, blood count, and just plain blood. We pithed frogs without end and ended with a frog jumping contest in back of S and T . . . well, it actually ended with the frogs in the alumni fountain in front of Doheny Library! Likeable fellow fl DITCH DAY C-sharp m - Awright , t oto ' , Watch your step, please! The Highway Patrol? Spring, 1964 PALM SPRINGS ... the end of a great tradition! re ' s the head? , ■■f • l - i CIKsiui 1964-1966 ! f ill ' Periodontics In this department came our first contact with a real live breathing patient . . with curette in hand and finger rests firm we spent eight weeks getting that first four quadrants as clean as a whistle . . . then we were introduced to surgery . . . across the hail it ' s enamel rods, but here in Perio it ' s tissue tags, eliminated with curette by process of the split bi-bevel flap. But, most of all, Perio was The Special. EDDIE LAST EDDIE HERRMANN LONNIE DENNlSON ' «S«j P ■5 -— ll E MINTZER LESLIE LEVINE ■- Anesthesia Dr. Leiand Reeve never began a lecture without an icebreaker ... a joke! An humorous incident experienced by the great Dr. Reeves, or a sarcastic remark about dental school and or dental students served as an introduction to each lecture. His pet peeves are lack of oxygen equipment around the clinic, lack of injection technique training, lack of students ' attention to his lectures . . . lack of lack. We were - thoroughly impressed by his information on , t! M Remember, he ' ll do it to you next! Before we go in, I want to tell you the preciseness of giving injections slowly, and the need for only small amounts (0.02 cc for the mandibular, 0.001 cc for the lingual, and 0.000001 cc for the long buccal) ... In spite of or thanks to Dr. Reeve ' s efforts we all seem to get adequate anesthesia on our patients ... or do we? Practice il anagement Shall we practice in the Army, Air Force, Public Health Service, in our own office, associate, pair up, or advertise . . . how many operatories, how many assistants, what fees to set, how to get the best deal on equipment, on insurance, and how to invest our money. These are the questions brought up in Practice Administration. Thank you. Dr. Finke, for all of them! Yes, Dr. Finke, there really is a Santa Claus! 25 class III foils, 15 class II foils, 10 class II alloys . . . gee thanks, Bill! VMi.iI the lirll ,ir(- you dumg witli lliat camera, Worrell? 39 THE ESSENCE OF Oral Diagnosis DR. SIMON GAMER ; DR. KENNETH O. TURNER, Chairman, Department of Oral Diagnosis It was a day like any other day in Turner ' s Garden, except you are there. You can run tip toe thru the tulips, or pick pansies, or take roentgenographs. The experience is good . . . you learn to take x-rays and make a diagnosis. In lecture . . . well, you may see some x-rays of normal roentgenographic features which might be mistaken for pathology, or see slides of various lesions collected by one Simon Gamer. One thing for sure ... the DHs were a welcome addition to this class! DR. O ' CRADY 40 gunner Ethics A complete course in professional ethics and sidelights on Zuckercandleism ... a view from the top of Dr. J. Wesley Robb DENTURE PROBLEM? • Difficult Cases Welcomed • Emergency Dental Repairs WH tf you wA r • Adult Dental Care Only PAYMENT PLAN AVAILABLE PENSIONERS, UNIONS INSURANCE CASES WELCOME 2). WurL 3. Wo.nS 474-5575 GR 4-5575 1710WESTWOOD BLVD., WEST LOS ANGELES Ground Floor Across From Food Gionf Market Orthodontics m r « No, they are chrysanthimums! Anyone having any thoughts about specializing in Orthodontics was quickly and thoroughly discouraged. Perhaps the specialty of horticulture would be better. We were treated to bilateral slides of Dr. Boone ' s wife, kids, swimming pool, office, assistants, house, garden, vacations ... in fact we know more about his private life than we know about orthodontics. Following the first midterm exam we were treated to a unique way of revealing grades . . . A+ ' s may leave the room, A s may leave, now the B ' s may exit, the C ' s next ... by this time those of us who were still sitting on the edge of our seats realized we were hurtin ' . . . well, he did allow us to take another test so we might regain our status in the group. The course was thoroughly organized and we did learn how to refer, not to mention the growth of the mandible and maxilla. Partial Prosthetics DR, ROBERT VIC Partial dentures turned out to be for us, just that . . . partial! Dr. Vig decided that at the end of our Junior j year he wanted to take a sabattical in Europe, and the ship he left us promptly sank! The Vig partial may be characterized by simplicity . . . cast clasps, the Vig stress breaker, and reasonable fees. His motto was fit the partial to the teeth, not the teeth to the partial. To those who made their requirements in the Junior year, congratulations! To those who . . . I T DR. FRANK LOTT Turn around Relmers and you ' d know what the doctor IS saying . . . ! Prosthetics Theda Bera, Rudolph Valentmo, Clara Bow . . . our weekly screen idols, as the mentor of lantern slides presented hours of the stars of yesteryear for the dentures of yesteryear! The kindly old Canadian informed us that we should stand up, keep the patient upright, not use a head rest, and to have all of our indelible pencils sharpened before each appointment. He taught us the value of posterior separation, cusp teeth, incisal guidance, compensating curves, and the ability to sleep with our eves wide open. He moved into Professor Emeritus status in our Senior year, and this Class of 1966 saw one more of the manv traditions cease to exist! 41 Operative That manikin was never like this ... it didn ' t fog the mirror . . . it didn ' t wiggle ... or put up a fuss at being three or four hours ... it didn ' t talk back. For, clinically, we had entered the impractical world of fantasy, fear and anxiety, lorded over by the Grey Fox, the world which puts finesse in the USC graduate. ISS i TGIF Hey diddle, diddle the cat and the fiddle ... cat is a good old dog . . . fiddle with the tap on the keg . . . because there cer- tainly aren ' t any fiddles in the bands we had (B.A. and RF ' ers) . . . four kegs of beer . . . hotdogs . . . popcorn by the sack-full . . . cokes, conversation ... all this helped us unwind at our Thank Goodness It ' s Friday get-togethers. We had a ball . . . ! 5! ' JUI. I ■ii f red went to get more . . . Freddie ' —{ A li.i; I .[, c)ur mind, ch Ul UidL THERESA ' S... food for the gourmet Can ' t kill that one . . . guess I ' ll have to stamp on it! Pedodontics We tried to get Benaderet to do this page but he couldn ' t stand still long enough to let us explain our needs ... so we ' re stuck with the usual screaming brats, dinky pedo exams (list nine indications and eleven contraindications, etc.), stainless steel crowns, practical Nishimine, and more than adequate x-rays! The magic number was 120 — and not one more! DR. ROBERT ANDREWS DR. GERALD KIRSHBAUM DR. )OHN GROPER DR. DICK HALLBERG Hi Bob! DR. PHILLIP SCHLECEL I bought seven of these . DR ED SAULKIN Was that the one who had dark curly hair and screamed? DR. LARRY REICHEL You want this, little girl? DR. MARTY ONO 21-22-23, F ' s We tried DR. NISHIMINE DR, MICHAEL SCOTT Tennis anyoin DR. RICHARD WATASE We tried . . . ! Thank you men . . . you are true Pedo! See? You have to use a bur! 47 Oral Surgery Oral Surgery is systolic and diastolic blood pressure, body temperature, pulse rate, complete medical history, allergies, contraindications, medications being taken {look them up in the PDR), cleaning instruments and aspirator bottles. Oh yes, occasionally we even get to take some teeth out! Don ' t knock it till you try it Commander — one part Schweppes, one part ethanol . . . Now, drop the cyanide capsule Isten for bubbles to know I was in a vessel? Jurisprudence In the case of Vernon S. Cray vs. Senior Class, USC School of Dentistry, 59 Cal. App 477, 210 P 975. The plaintiff charged the defendants with gross disinterest and excessive sleeping accompanied by unprofessional conduct in class attendance. The defendants based their defense on res ipsa loquitur. The ruling favored defendants, the plaintiff passing everyone in the course and giving them a discount on malpractice insurance. In the years to come we ' ll all appreciate the advice given on partnerships, associateships, and friendships (not to mention the lessons learned on early American history). And naturall the government set up this pohcy Nutrition DIET FOR A DENTAL STUDENT; Begin the day with a glass of orange juice and a multiple vitamin capsule prior to falling out of bed and crawling into your clothes. 6:45 a.m., one candy bar for quick energy; 7:05 a.m., one liter of oxygen for serious anoxia, along with a cup of machine c offee; 7:15 a.m., trip to Theresa ' s for French toast cooked Philippine style, with chili powder mixed in grease; 8:55 a.m., black coffee; 9:55 a.m., black coffee; 10:55 a.m., black coffee; 12:00 noon, settle down in chair in lounge . . . open brown bag, eat nutritious lunch of two pieces of rye krisp with poly unsaturated margarine, hard boiled egg with iodized salt, one large passion fruit, one-half cup of unsalted Yogurt. Later in the day you discover you have lost 35 mg of sodium chloride ion by taking an Operative Clinic . . . spend another few calories and some more salt in traveling to the 901 .. . intake, five salted beers! Return to clinic to clean up the mess eating one hot pepper on the way. After putting equipment in the locker, you head back to the 901 to get saturated because you have discovered your Iodine number is low. Forget about dinner, it ' s too late! DR. MARCEL NIMNI . . . Man of Distinction Public Heaitfi The problems of aging occur as we get older . . . The mean, the median and the mode have the same value as long as people are symmetrical . . . Didn ' t that just take the rag off the bush . . . Square the deviation and all the negative values become positive, and then we multiply the squared deviation times the number of children, then we add this column and divide by the number of children to get the average squared deviation, and then we take the square root of this number ... A headache is an ache in the head . . . There is a dearth . . . This was Public Health Dentistry — a course without a compass; one we ' re glad is behind us! 49 « AERODONTICS 4 IftoAe Wagniiieent Wen and ' Jkelz ICyingf Waekinei To get away from it all, these men take to the air . . . away from gingival margins, under-extended dentures, missed anesthetic blocks, and stacks of supplies . . . into the one place where they alone are master! 99 - ? 99q if ? -? : r 1 Uii T l I built this myself! n MM BAKER . i l_ ■) -■| _-v__ P pw Z .. ; Come fly with me . See those pits? Bov. I ' d like to fill ' em with foil! last minute checks! Moving in for the kill — photogMphu all See ya at the Boom Boom Room A barrel roll by (ujllctt ... a la ( cisslrr Fixed Prosthetics OR HENRY M. TANNER DR. GUY HO Don ' t you remember, I said to cancel that surveyor order ... DR. PAUL EHRLICH Goodbye Mr. Chips DR. TED LaFRANCHl Thmk that ' s funny . you ought to have seen the Juniors! DR. COLMAN Thought you belonged to Rene, McCook? I ' ve been practicrng my German accent, see just sittmg! DR. HAROLD EISSMAN DR. NATE GRINSPAN DR. HARRY KNOTT You can go to the bathroom now, Hall No! I didn ' t grade your P.P. lab test Worrell, you outdid yourself again! 54 DR. HAROLD EISSMAN DR. PAUL EHRLICH Veil, I ' m checking clinics today, und I ' m afraid some of the verk stinks! It has been a rough year for Fixed Prosthetics. They got jumped a couple of times, and lost their Chinese checker. The chair appointment book is out, and the analyst ' s couch is in. Here is where we relax and return to the idea that dentistry, after all, is fun. Here is also where definite rules are laid down. Rules which you are not toviolate . . . unless you really want to! The only department that goes into finals without a premeditated exam! When things get tight everywhere else and the pressure is on, we could always journey into the world of Fixed Presthetics, don our bare-skin hat, and use our own experience and judgment to produce dentistry of which to be proud. This is the seat of experimental restorative dentistry ... we try high speed here, we try rubber base here, but the one thing we do not try here is a double-bite impression (oh yes, we are sure to always place gingival bevels in excess of forty-five degrees and never to overwax gingival margins). Perhaps the best way to indicate the Fixed Prosthetic Department is in psychological terms . . . the reliever of Worry, Anxiety and Fear . . . the Freudman couch of dentistry. Gas who? DR. BOB DAVIES ... we hope he ' s recovered when this is in print DR. BILL BRADY DR. STAN SMITH DR. HAROLD FETTER Dr. Brady, are those white things the teeth? Dr. Smith, that ' s the tongue! That ' s ok. prep it. I!jbL 3 y I don ' t think you can do ihat without getting a cement margin . . . ! 55 Endodontics The day we came into the clinic as luniors Endo was a one-day-a-week clinical course with a requirement of four canals. Then, before we could get started, it had changed to seven and two days a week! At present they ' re holding at seven canals, but five days a week — some weeks! Things have changed! On completion of the new building in 1970 operative, fixed prosthetics, prosthetics, pedodontics and periodontics will all be practiced on Wednesdays only . . . the rest taken by endo . . . we can even envision (heaven forbid) having to fill a canal for the State Boards! 1965 four canals 1966 seven canals 1967 fourteen canals 1968 twenty-eight canai 1969 fifty-six canals 1970 fifty-seven canals 1971 fifty-eight canals prs Answers at the wrong ti Behavioral Sciences ' Gentlemen, you have a fixation on the second stage of psychological development. This was not the opening statement by Dr. Nathan Freudman, but to us it was an important one. Now we knew why we were destined to become dentists. And, we were fascinated over and over and over and over and over and over again by the psychosexoanalytical material presented . . . again. Lots of people k)i.k lliemselves their bathrooms and have fun My name is DOCTOR Worrell — you do have my table ready . . . ! Practice of Dentistry Let ' s give them their money ' s worth. Friday mornings should have a lecture. Thus the course, Practice of Dentistry, was born ... to fill a need. Another new on the dental curriculum, it rehashes some of the practictal phases of the business aspect of dental practice . . . and lots more: Dr. Edward Furstman obviously has been around and fills us in on some of the possible pitfalls of dentistry. DR. EDWARD FURSTMAN Conjoint Seminars It was three weeks before we had our first meeting and an inkling of what this newest of new courses was going to be. But the facts were clear . . . they wanted us out of the clinic that morning so the Freshmen could do Perio . . . another semester of Endo would be fool-hardy to print on the Senior schedule of classes so a more stimulating Conjoint Seminar might suffice (how to harass the seniors in the guise of educatiot The course may prove of value ... in some future phase of dentistry. Prosthetics DR BFRNIE LEVIN WHAT A CHANGE! At this point we ' re not sure whether we ' re totally confused or whether we ' ve actually learned something. We are sure it ' s the latter and only wish we had been exposed to Dr. Levin and staff sooner . . . the latest in techniques, in thoughts, in dental education. A man dedicated to the teaching of prosthetics, interested in the student enough to be sure that he is learning something . . . The introduction of world-famous lecturers. We are priviledged and somewhat envious of those underclassmen who will reap the richest harvest! DR. MAX SOSIN DR. IRV CULLETT JOHN MacDONALD okay, the Boom Boom R( at 8:30 . . . ! Partial Prostiietics REMOVABLE PARTIAL DENTURE DESIGN PROBLEM No. 69 Class of 1966 A female patient, age 12, presents with the following teeth missing: ... SEE OPPOSITE PACE FOR MORE DETAILS Connoisseur of fine foods! DR. AL COLMAN Tryin ' to do a thorough job Ya wanna know what you can do with this impression . . . ? DR. DRESEN DR. ALONZO McDonald DR. CHARLES NEDLEMAN DR. STAN GORDON OS. 1, 2, 3, 4, 35, 34, 33 were extracted when the father hit her at the age of two, and lack ■the dentist ' s ability to replace the missing tooth buds. Nos. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 32, 31, 30, 29, 28 ere extracted because of lack of proper contour in the gingival one-third — it was feared that lod impingement might occur, loosening these teeth and they would be lost eventually lyway. Nos. 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 and 17 were extracted yesterday because the buccal cusps f ail of them had fractured off in a freak accident involving punishment by the mother. OS. 27, 26, and 25 were extracted after a fixed partial bridge denture fell out during an all- rl slumber party at the girl next door ' s house, and couldn ' t be found again (it later turned 3 in the stomach of her neighbor ' s ' dog, after the dog had been cut up by the little kid own the block who thought the dog had rabies because his kid sister sprayed her daddy ' s laving lotion on its face). Nos. 24, 23, 22, 21, 20 and 19 were extracted because it was felt lat since all the rest of the teeth were gone these might as well come out too. here are several minor occlusal problems as she tries to make Nos. 18 and 36 meet, although o damage has occured. These two teeth have normal root contour for these type of teeth ' ith no pockets other than 12 mm on the distal of No. 18 and 14 mm on the mesial of No. 36. he interdental papilla of No. 27 — No. 27 is blunted and reddened. There is no loss of vertical imension. She has a relatively small maxilla and mandible with a rather large tongue. Several ears ago a very excellent farsighted surgeon did bilateral condylectomies leaving her jaw nkylosed — in an open position. SSIGNMENT: 1. List the steps and indicate the sequence of mouth preparation 2. Prepare a design of the prosthesis which you recommend 3. For full credit this design must be received at the 10:00 a.m. PDT, PD (r) class 10-20-65 4. Staple all sheets together in the upper left hand corner, 3 mm from the top and 2 mm from the side . . . remember, the middle page MUST be between the first and third WILLIAM DICKSON, D.D.S. The students of the future will miss this likeable young man. He is insulting in such a friendly way . . . you can ' t help but like him. He ' s always there — asking well, what-a-ya want? When you need a signature badly, he ' ll give it; when you need a little cheering up he ' ll give it . . . along with a friendly pat with his fist on your sho ulder. Dr. Dickson and his wife plan to retire in either Oregon or Washington — of all places! Oral Tumors dolor . . . tumor . . . rubor NOMORe! % f In the year of the BIG CHANCE Sharp and Fister became Simon and Schuster, and the Department of Oral Pathology took on the aire of dental respectability. This is one of those courses taken along with the Senior Dental Hygienists and consequently one of those where the dental students must study harder and learn more just to keep up with the average. Like many department heads, Dr. Abrams is very well versed in his subject . . unfortunately, we did not soak it in as well as he ' d expected. The path into this course has been studded with obstacles in the form of quizzes which were completely out of the question, and testies which were unbelievable! Principles of Medicine Now really . . . it ' s just a pump! 60 jl Belch twice and I - pass flatus once A nowadays and they diagnose heart disease! Hyperreactive . . . Dr. Kuzma. Hx: House physician at the Ambassador Heart Clinic, associate, diagnostician par excellance. Diagnosis: One of the best lecturers to which we have been exposed. Tx: Forget dentistry . . . become a Real Doctor Every week during his lectures we came down with a different disease, heart problem, lung infection kidney disease, liver dysfunction, endocrine imbalance . . . but we managed to learn more about bodily functions than in the previous years of biological studies. His lectures are of the non-sleep-producing type . . . fascinating, factual, and far-reaching! DAUP Dowp, as it is pronounced, is the Dental Assistants Utilization Program at JSC. For one glorious month each senior ;tudent is afforded the opportunity to jractice in his own cubicle with his ery own girl . . . position III . . . HAND . . a typical command heard every vorking day in Dowp . . . the fingers 5f one hand to the fingers of another and Jentistry is accomplished in a most jfficient manner . . . just like home. IILLLNA HUCIIES JANICE CAERBERT DELLA CLARK w Look at the bone in her handl 1 ifafli Hfl P ■4I 9 f ■' , H B. fii ' w ' B H 1 ' 4 B ' Hri laX BH 1 iP j X MAS f • S and T Christmas Play, 1963 • All-School Christmas Party, Ambassador, 1964 • Christmas Party, locker room-lounge, 1965 1 1 1 VVatch me suck thi f We In I I ] . shot, but lost It ' li.i! s on onr mind, S| fW ' orrell — you look like helT] in a Sania Claus suit! ri ' m bored, Bob . . . Bob!J •i r ' % Psi Omega bigwigs I What ' s this I hear about a new dean? . y f H r H 1 . ' Lets see . . . onc-eightk El Molaro presents Doctors of Dental Surgery 1966 Looking back at that first day when we assembled in the clinic building, lecture room C . . . we may recall Mel Schwarz, then student body president, telling us what a great future we had in store for us. We may remember the interfraternity council president recounting his glorious experiences as a member of a fraternity. If we don ' t remember these things, we will all recall Dr. Robert McNulty and his you are now on first base speech. He told us how we would soon head for second base with hard, diligent work, then on to third, and eventually home. We are home now and it feels good! That first year was hell! Due to good leadership and subsequent espirit de corps, our class prospered. Almost everyone from the dean on down reminded us that we were the best academically qualified group to enter any dental school throughout the United States . . . We went through the second year with even higher praise . . . they all said wait until this class hits the clinic! Our class — when it came time for examinations or when various projects were due — seemed as is it were comprised of eighty percent gunners! It was tough to keep in the running, but we did. The transition period had a definite affect on us . . . there were comments made about our poor attitude . . . most of us feel we made the transition well and as a result will be better dentists for our tolerance. Having passed through two to four years of pre-denta! studies, then these past four years of rigorous training . . . our goal has been reached. We passed the tests required for graduation (our last double clinic taken, our last partial completed, that final full denture inserted, our perio special completed, that PJC cemented, the last little tyke has gone screaming home to mommy, block assignments are complete) ... we are now ready to leave this place for our own private world of the office . . . and a new set of goals! 65 J GEORGE ARAKAKI, B.A., D.D.S. HONOLULU, HAWAII Pacific Union College PsI Omega Hmmmm — Should I . . .? George came to us by osmosis— thru a bed of glowing coals near Honolulu, Hawaii, via Pacific Union College, across the Pacific to beautiful Los Angeles and USC dental schoo!— and on his way he picked up a few pointers on how to prepare a luau. We have all had the opportunity to meet George, either in person or indirectly thru our stomachs, or both. He has played a key role in the food preparation for most all the major fraternal and student body functions we can recall ... the Zip Luaus, the Psi Omega Luaus, and the All-Dental School Beach Party. Not only has George satisfied our more carnal needs on several occasions, but also he has reduced many anxious moments before tests to mere routine by providing most of us with the most complete, accurate, and up-to-date set of test files any dental student will ever see. We can recall George finishing a Class V foil with a gold knife . . , that is to say, he pulled the foil out! We are sure George will continue to have an interesting and full life . . . how can you miss when everything you try ends in success? I wonder what that red spot is? So solly . . . no like whale meat! 66 This tastes like beer! Out of the night when the full moon is bright . . Zorro! For my next act I will assume a fetal position . THOMAS PETER BAGLIO, D.D.S. REDONDO BEACH, CALIFORNIA Loyola University of Los Angeles Psi Omega Tom Baglio is an all around student. In fact he got around during the sophomore year on crutches due to an injury suffered while skiing. His interests are broad . . . ranging from skiing, outdoor life, music, rock-out parties and women. To prove he is broad he can always be seen reading a book, smoking a pipe in the lounge ... he was once caught with a book upside down just before he was married, but that ' s not the point. Tom has attended Loyola University of Los Angeles prior to entering dental school. He was married in February to Nancy Clark. They plan to spend two years in the service before settling down. The most noteworthy thing about Tom as a dental student is that he makes bets on who will get better grades on exams . . . he has yet to get drunk! He has b een the Joe College amongst us. For four years he has provided us with a running account of the latest in men ' s apparel from Redondo Beach. 67 NORMAN R. BALL, D.D.S. CARBERVILLE, CALIFORNIA University of Redlands Delta Sigma Delta Please don ' t leak Norm came to USC from the University of Redlands. His interests are skiing, hunting, surfing, and fishing. As a member of Delta Sigma Delta, Norm can be seen participating in all activities, but remains a quiet participant. As a student, he is (was) a sleeper. One day in his favorite course, pharmacology, he and a few others were fast asleep. The instructor, who was lecturing on amphetamines, was astonished to see anyone sleeping, so promptly admonished all asleep to awake ... but Norm remained in a somnolent state. The instructor walked to the back of the lecture room where Norm slept and stood over his bod . . . on awaking Norm manifest a typical amphetamine reaction — peripheral vasodilation — he was not present for the three lectures following. He was born up north in Garberville, California and is married to a girl named Sandy . . . I just finished a double clinic ' Gosh, visibility is good this way! Oh, ya gotta be kidding me. JAMES BARTSCHERER, B.S., D.D.S. WHITTIER, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Delta Sigma Delta Jim came to dental school after a successful undergrad career as fraternity president of Phi Delta Theta, and excellent grades. Upon entering dental school he decided the best course of action was to find a good place to live and study hard, so he moved into a fine old house with some fellows, soon to be aptly tabbed by Jim ' s social group as two Nips and a nut. |im became a part of a quiet clique or social group which enabled his dental studies to come easily and never rocky. Jim ' s social life was purposely curtailed to this small group of friends, or study club, if you will, and occasionally watching the pumpers on TV . . . very seldom including girls in his activities. Then he met the girl next door — er — upstairs, and his life became rockv. It became so rocky that the wife of a member of the group once asked, Do thev like each other? But love takes this course, and it will be interesting to see who ' s fighting this battle with the girl upstairs next year! Good luck to |im who has been a great friend and will make a fine dentist ... in Viet Nam ' what the hell is it . . . two dots on the mesial for a second bi . . .? 69 JAMES ARTHUR BAYLYFF, A.A., D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA University of California at Los Angeles East Los Angeles College California State College at Los Angeles Los Angeles City College Alpha Omega Take it easy Steve, he ' s one of us! Jim is a product of Los Angeles. He has attetided East Los Angeles College, Los Angeles City College, the University of California at Los Angeles, and California State College at Los Angeles before he came to the University of Southern California (in Los Angeles). After graduation he plans to practice in Los Angeles. He met his wife Wanda while participating in his hobby — drag racing. She aroused Jim ' s interest when she beat his supercharged caddie in a Nash Metropolitan. Jim, too, is a sleeper . . . tests, no sweat; clinical requirements, no sweat — to talk to him you wonder what does cause him to sweat ... he is about the hang-loosest character you will ever meet — and yet, he performs well both clinically and didactically ... we don ' t know whether or not Jim is planning to go into the service — we only hope not . . .what we mean is, well, you know — like the hours are too much, man. Best of everything to you Jim ... we have enjoyed having you with us! I had too much hair to get Yul ' s part in Taurus Bulba Our Father which art . . . I hope when I open my eyes that this pattern is done so I can split out of this place! ' M How many roots do you have there, doctor . . .? Let ' s see . . . one-eighth of a millimeter from angle to angle GARY BECK, D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Los Angeles City College University of California at Los Angeles Brigham Young University A subtle protest to having his picture taken! Born in Los Angeles, he attended LACC and UCLA before going to BYU to complete his education. He returned to California and entered USC dental school. Gary has a wife, )udy, and a son, David . . . they root for him and bolster his ego. Gary is a good student and tries his best to follow instructions . . . however, when Dr. Bassett told him to reshape a polystone to make it more useful, he did not do i . . . Asked why, he answered: I ' d reshape my poly- stone if I knew what shape to reshape it to! Gary never lost a tooth at the S T due to overheating, although on more than one occasion he was heard to remark my prophy cup just vulcanized. After graduation he plans to associate, then enter private practice. 71 ARNOLD BECKER, D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA University of California at Los Angeles University of California at Berkeley Alpha Omega The only senior who finished his Class II foil clinics with the help of Benaderet! Arnie never gave up trying. The Dental Assisting Program was a boom to him . . . Virginia, his assistant, kept him on his toes and on his back! Arnie is well-versed in the literature and the arts. His choice of words and articulate of speech reveals a student educated in the finer things of life. Caught into the spirit of discussion, Arnie can and will give you a debate, argument, or what-have-you, like you ' ve never had before! Generally mild-mannered, Arnie has no definite plans for the future ... except to continue enjoying life. After all, we are brothers! ... I know throwing it on the floor won ' t fix it (I ' ve already tried that) Please look the other way when you say Stainless Steel! y We couldn ' t resist printing this one, Ted! THEODORE BENADERET, D.D.S. LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA Long Beach City College California State at Long Beach Wonder when they ' re going ' i start putting chloroform n the issue? % m I know it was you . . . even though both hands are on the table! if I can just get this miniature time bomb planted in his tooth before the THRUSH agent sees me . . . Theodore was born in Long Beach, raised in Long Beach, attended Long Beach City College and California State College at Long Beach . . . prior to attending USC. He has commuted to school every day from Long Beach for four years. When he graduates, Ted plans to practice in Long Beach — then retire in Long Beach. This guy is anything but a hang loose or casual fellow. LHis high-strung nature makes Ted an unrelenting perfectionist. He is noted for his lack of hair. He came to us with very little and showed us the reason why. Whenever something was difficult or annoying to him, he pulls out his non-existent hair! Seriously, he is an excellent dentist. He was recognized for his diligence and good dental work by being provided a private work area and little to no-check privileges . . . seven months before graduation (under the program for excellence in dentistry). 73 It ' s three o ' clock in the morning STUART BERNTHOL, D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Santa Monica City College University of California at Los Angeles Alpha Omega Stu was born here and will practice here in Los Angeles. We will never forget him and his wonderful inventions and his knack for organization ... his constant-heat-spatula was a good invention — until he reached for it and burned his pinkies. Oh, yes, remember the lamp hung off the fluorescent light giving enuf light to illuminate his entire working area . . . worked great until the heat from the bunsen burner caused the bulb to explode. Oa another occasion he decided to cover the desk with his lab coat to give an esthetic, pleasing appearance — forgeting to turn off that damn burner! Then he came to the clinic and really got organized. Writing himself notes, rehearsing his plan of attack in the early hours ... we were told that he rehearsed his assistants when in oral surgary on just how he wanted them to aspirate to red stuff— all this at 7:30 a.m. We ' re ribbing him a little and are well aware that he is taking dentistry seriously and is sincere about his education . . . and as a result will be a credit to the profession — if he will only leave the inventing to Rube, the inventor. If you say anything about my sissy T-shirt, I ' ll hit you again! Oh well, I can always play pmg pong! X See Donna, the buccal cusp is gone. You shouldn ' t start an ideal prep that way. m DONNA BIGHEART, D.D.S. PAVVHUSKA, OKLAHOMA Los Angeles City College University of California at Berkeley Upsilon Alpha If I polish this cup, I bet my pencil sales will double! How come his notebook ' s so thin and he gets better grades than me? Donna came to dental school thinking it would be easv She soon found out that dental school is different from undergrad school. During a freshman set-up test Donna ' s hair caught on fire. During an operative lab she overextended a preparation when her hair got in the engine belt (it ' s pretty hard to keep your eyes on a margin with your head moving along with the belt of a handpiece). Aside from these setbacks, Donna has been one of the boys. She has played an important role in our class in keeping the instructors clean, although her ears have been red on numerous occasions! Donna served as secretary-treasurer for our class during the sophomore year. She is a member of Upsilon Alpha, a sorority for female dentists. Best wishes to you. Donna, in your future! 75 We put our heads together and we have as much hair as this kid! O. BRENT BLACK, B.A., D.D.S. MURRAY, UTAH Brigham Young University University of Utah O. Brent Black (well, it ' s better than Boren Orent Black) was born in the bustling metropolis of Murray, Utah. He attended BYU for one year, then spent the next three years seriously preparing for dental school at the University of Utah by majoring in French. After receiving his B.A. and acceptance to dental school (there was a mission to France and Belgium for his church somewhere in here) he came to USC and really saw sin in action. Brent always attempted to make dental school easier for all of us . . . such as his suggestion for developing crown and bridge cement which wouldn ' t show a cement margin! Although Brent ' s hair is thinning, he doesn ' t mind . . . so who wants fat hair? ' He has maintained his home town quaintness by being an active member of his church. He conducts himself with a high degree of professionalism and is well-liked by his fellows. Oh yes, he is a talented artist! Would you like to hear more about the Mormon Church ' Brent baby . . . that ' s the wrong hole! 76 How should I angle my cone . . ,? I, Woody Allen, will now shoot that tube of toothpaste off your head! STEWART M. BRADFORD, D.D.S. CLENDALE, CALIFORNIA University of Nevada Southern Brigham Young University Los Cerritos College Los Angeles City College Fullerton College Stewart has two hometowns — Las Vegas, Nevada, and Clendale, California. Hearing of the diversity of courses and the variety of training methods, Stewart prepared for his dental career by attending the Universitly of Nevada Southern, Brigham Young University, Cerritos College, Los Angeles City College and Fullerton Junior College. He is a very diligent student, and is famous for the prodigious distance he commutes daily. Somehow, he maitages to drive from Orange County and hold down three jobs, too. He is the steward of the lab . . . the nighttime Mac. He has, in his capacity, aided many students during the short time he had charge of the facility. Stewart became famous for his six o ' clock snacks in the lab ... a feast for any gourmet! Brad plans to settle in private practice in Orange County. Good luck, Brad . . . it ' s been great to have you around! N I think I can! 77 Oh yeah? I challenge you to ping pong right now! L. NELSON BUTLER, D.D.S. CLENDALE, ARIZONA University of Arizona Delta Sigma Delta Another fugitive from the Arizona cow country, Nelson brought his vices with him from the Russian settlement of Clendaie, Arizona. Known to some as Nick Kanovalov, Nelson gained fame from his curvaceous female patients, speedy clinic work, and the knack of being in the right place at the right time. Early in his dental career his dexterity was demonstrated in his smooth opening of a local restaurant. Being a busy person, he frequently has to eat and run. Always game for bridge or an afternoon on the links, Nelson learned to budget his time so well that he always has the night before to complete any unfinished work. He will move himself and his lovely wife, Judy, back to the lettuce fields of Glendale and put his many dental skills to work. He plans to specialize in gold foil reconstruction. Yes, I know that ' s how you would do it, Stu! I ' m hip, dad! 78 - I m too tired lo see my patient . - - PHILLIP DALE CHRISTENSON, D.D.S. SHERMAN OAKS, CALIFORNIA University of California at Los Angeles Xi Psi Phi . . . let ' s see: it ' s thumb on the ramus, finger on the cheek 5r jl Hold still . . . ,. J the needle broke off r . Dale came to dental school as one of the youngest members of our class. With him, he brought the ability to sleep most of the time, including most of the evenings after school. It has been amazing to many of his friends how he was able to succeed in school while spending so much zzz time. Anyway, his ability to cram so much in just before an exam has paid off. Actually, his great attribute has been his ability not to let dental school interfere with his way of life. He has a very substantial beetle collection and is interested in little beasties in general. That digital skill of his really comes into play when he has something interesting to do such as stuff a squirrel or another little animal he has happened to acquire. In conjunction with his desire to collect the little beasties is his continual interest and desire to travel. He finds it great living to drive to the mountains or the desert and camp outside while going on the prowl for his little creatures. Dale ' s middle name should have been Red and his nickname should be Blatty. The former is for his fervent affinity for this color and the latter for his unique ability to describe almost anything not to his liking as blatty. When he graduates he will go into the Navy for two years at which time he will buy a brand new Porsche 911. 911. I ' m sure we don ' t hve to tell you what color it ' s going to be! 79 $ Me and Daphne 1 JAMES R. CLARK, B.S., D.D.S. REDLANDS, CALIFORNIA University of Redlands Delta Sigtna Delta Alpha Tau Epsilon With thoughts always pressitig toward graduate Orthodontics |im Clark has found time for many, many sidelights in his four years at dental school. Adventurer- photographer supreme, he has undertaken many iourne ' S into the great out-of-doors. While in school, he found time to be our top scholastic student in the freshman year, which earned him a place in Alpha Tau Epsilon (dental honor fraternity). Since then he has become president of that organization. Lank, as he is known by his friends, is the most eligible bachelor in the Class of 1966. He seems destined to remain such while using the four-month technique of courtship. Long-known for his color blindness, |im holds the record for running the most red lights. This malady is responsible for the rumor that he founded the Beveridge color combo mode of dress. Looking forward to someday living in or around Boulder, Colorado, Jim is bound to become one of the finest all-around men to be graduated from USC. Muscles and eggs ' P Oh, oh, my mouth mirror ' s anesthetized! 80 Jockey shorts too tight . . . wheez! FLOYD CLAUS, A.A., B.A., D.D.S. SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA University of California at Los Angeles Santa Ana lunior College Psi Omega No, I ' m not another Tanner! Walking around the Ventura oil fields must have put rocks in Floyd ' s head because he decided, six years after graduation from UCLA as a geologist, with a stable income, a family and a nice home, to return to school and embark on a new career. As all members in our class with a scarcity of hair, Floyd does beautiful work. He takes copious amounts of notes in lectures, is friendly and helpful, is one of the few to attend all lectures . . . and, as a result, maintains a very high grade point average! After graduation he plans to practice in Tustin . . . staying as far away from the Santa Ana Freeway as possible (four years of commuting daily from Orange County has done this to him . . . not to mention a few more hairs) ! Floyd and his wife, Sue, have three lovely daughters . . . Karia, Kelly, and )ayma. Best of everything to you, Floyd ... it has been our pleasure! . . . no, Benaderet ' s the thin one! 81 CURTIS W. CROSS, D.D.S. BAKERSFIELD, CALIFORNIA Bakersfield College Santa Monica City College Delta Sigma Delta Alpha Tau Epsilon Without a doubt, certain of our classmates have given our dental school days fleeting moments of spice and hilarity that are undisputably good for morale. Curt Cross has been one of the best, and we can all thank him for moments like the morning, one February, as the group gathered for the beginning of a periodontal seminar. Curt, with a serious and quizzical look on his face (same look he used on Colman), asked Dr. Galanter, well, are we going to treat this like a periodontist would or as a dentist would? Dr. Galanter ' s answer was smothered by the commotion of Curt ' s classmates writhing with laughter on the floor. Like all of us, he encountered a few obstacles in his four-year hurdle race to doctordom. Like the time he had to be hospitalized for eye-strain; etiology — way too much studying! The ENT man told him to ease off on the bookwork and Curt ' s been mowing Dr. John Soule ' s lawn ever since! In all seriousness, however. Curt must be commended for the sacrifice he gave as a student council member and general organizer. He resides in Whittier with Chris, his wife, who is attending Whittier College. He plans to associate in that area until she completes her work. Ooh, what a pretty toofie . . . Boy. 82 The only way to take a double clinic! WILLARD CLYDE CROSS, B.S., D.D.S. SAN FERNANDO, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Psi Omega MMMMMM I er see I have to wear it ihis high — lis my Dad ' s! Clyde might aptly be termed the slowly-energetic member of our class. The first two years he seemed to be around and then again, not to be around. He was there but he wasn ' t. We do remember him doing an amazing amount of work during the sophomore year. He made a profound impression on Dr. Ho by preparing nineteen typodont PJC preparations on ivorine teeth ... a profound dent into his pocketbook at the same time . . . and a profound impression on his classmates who needed to do the same and found he had bought the bookstore out! Those who sat next to Clyde during lectures were quick to notice his predisposition toward eating. He eats constantly . . . those quick energy foods you ' see advertised in the leading magazines. Our senior year found Clyde in the medical center part of the time . . . five weeks out of action. He bounced back got married, and was hitting the ball the last time we saw him ... or did we? He plans to practice in San Diego (or Australia). He is considering graduate work in Endodontics. 83 A drop a day keeps the patient away . . WARREN J. DEAN, B.A., D.D.S. SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA San Diego State College Alpha Omega The Bassett devotee, Warren has an irresistable fascination for Kerr ' s blue, and dead wax, and unclickable margins, which has led him to many more inlays than required of dental students. Throughout tiie four years in dental schoool, he has worked very carefully and meticulously. During his second year, he excelled in operative dentistry as well as the other technical disciplines in dentistry. At the beginning of the third year, Warren got married to Marilyn and thus ended his many weekend trips to San Diego. Warren has spent much of his free time dabbling in tropical fish, and doing the lab work he so dearly loves. He plans to live and work in San Diego . . . the so-called Zion of the West! Be patient Dallas — I ' ll autograph your models as soon as I ' m finished here ' See ... I told you that margin was open! 84 do it over- ' IR ' M Id love to! FIDELE DE LA TORRE, A.A., D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Los Angeles City College Psi Omega Hi honey! Fidele was reprimanded often during the Oral Stage . . . he was in seventh heaven when he entered the Anal Sta ge . . . and has a fixation at that level. Fidele ' s most difficult time in school was when the Cuban uprising occurred . . . and, oh yes, when finals came around. He is always seen during breaks and lunch hours with a cup of Java in hand. He holds the distinction of having a ping-pong ball landing in his cup five times, staining his shirt only once! . . . Wienke ' s shirt was hit the other four times. After graduation he plans to enter the Air Force or get married . . . whichever will get him away from Jerry! Don ' l ask me, Al — perio IS my field . . .1 85 Press the button when the engine turns ROGER DENNIS, D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Bngham Young University El Camino College Psi Omega What Roger did prior to the advent of the ping pong table we are not sure, but we are sure that it saved his life . . . if not to say his wife! He plays the game with such force and vengeance that there cannot possibly be any Worry, Anxiety or Fear remaining. When his slams are on, he in unbeatable. When they are off, the table gets the beating. Dentistry to Roger is as serious a game as ping pong! He plays it with vengeance, accomplishing myriads of work in a short time. Bridge and golf are his other tension relievers, or in the case of golf, creator. He excels at both activities. Even with all this extracurricular activity, he still finds time to frequent the 901, where he joins in playful and frivolous conversation about our four-year enforced environment and its captors. The ADA Convention in Las Vegas produced a few walletal scars and very little sleep for him. Dentistry is a career we know Roger will enjoy . . . and it will benefit from his many talents. I ran this special pipe from the 901, see and . . . 86 I ' m a boy You can ' t fool us Mormons . . Brent — will you knock off the whistlmg? RICHARD R. DESPAIN, D.D.S. GRANITE, UTAH University of Utah Utah State University Alpha Tau Epsilon Dick began his dental school career as a typical hard-working sea gull. He did well both didactically and technically. He performed especially well when it came to the many projects requiring skilled hands. Always on time, never late, always there, he could be counted upon when a helping hand was needed. When that bridge prep was due, he had it done. If everyone checked someone elses matrix band, he made his own . . . when Richard reached the clinic, his skill expanded by leaps and bounds. He even had time for an occasional game of ping pong — at which, incidently, he excells. Dick never believed in the admonition, be anonymous! He has made his presence felt throughout the past four years. He listened avidly as the gang recounted their thrilling excursions to the Boom Boom Room. Taking all of it in over a period of several months, he decided he just had to see this phenomenon for himself, and was finally persuaded to make the trip. The Room lived up to all of his expectations . . . and his trips became more frequent! He plans to return to Salt Lake City where we are sure he will establish a successful practice . . . but there may be that yearning for another trip to Gardena! 87 I like kids. . . huh, huh! A WILLIAM EDELL, D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA San Diego State Universitv of California at Los Angeles K Bill Edell belongs to a small elite group categorized as super seniors. He is also known to a few by the name of Frank Cifford {a faomus football hero), although in no way does he image one! He has developed an allergy to eight o ' clock classes and only the threat of a quiz will stir him from the rack. His hobbies include fishing, golf, and girls. When he is fishing, you would swear he was under the influence of Dilantin, but the fish apparently have a distorted view and bite anvwav His frustrations are eliminated on the golf course, and we have actually seen the rare reverse curve of a Class II preparation transferred to a putter following one of his famous shots. The people of Nogales, Mexico refer to him as the midnight singer ... he was obsenv ed singing Cuadalahara at the top of his lungs in the rain with six inches of mud over his shoes one night! Open wide, you you can come In? You say! i - I wish I were at a rock-out party. GEORGE EKINS, D.D.S. WHITTIER, CALIFORNIA University of Utah Psi Omega Psychological active hyperemia describes Harry ' s reaction to being volunteered by his classmates to operate the projector for lecturers. George Ekins may not be the , , vouneest member of our class but it is reported that he . . . you put your left arm out, ' and you swmg it all around frequently gains admission into movies for one-half price! He is a cheerful, easy-going guy who has turned out to be one of the top men in his class. This ambitious student doesn ' t knov where he wants to practice but it ' s a cinch he won ' t be drafted ... he only has to tell them he is still in high school! Wherever Handsome Harry ' goes he is destined to succeed ... if people just don ' t ask him to project for them! This is called hooking the lube up 89 ANGELO ELARDO, A.A., D.D.S. ST. PETERSBERC, FLORIDA Pasadena City College Scratch ear and cut prep at same time . . . Pretty good, huh Angelo came to dental school after nine relaxing years in the Air Force as a jet pilot. During this time he was given the nickname Hook, for some unknown reason, and the name caught on quickly in school. Angelo quickly became one of the most popular members of our class . . . being known for his congeniality and love for all members and groups of members of our widely diversified class. Becoming a great golfer is one of the manv benefits he has derived from school. Reluctant to miss the manv stimulating lectures, he still had time to develop his game. During one of these excursions Angelo nearly had his career(s) ended when the Nip caught him in the ear with a 1 wood! The Nip quickly apologized, then added, would you like to press the bet? Angelo has also made many friends among the instructors in school. Such men as Dr. Irv Gullett in Prosthodontics, Dr. |im Pianfetti in Endo, Dr. Harr ' Knott in Fixed Prosthetics, Dr. Mike Scott in Pedodontics, and Dr. Dave Dunn in Operative . . . ! Nice going, Hook. Must be the environment and excitement that ' s raised vour B.P. 260 180 J 90 . . . Like, I ' m not on the same wave length as these cats! You hold the bottle cap like this, and . . . . . . let ' s see, I ' ll take three steps then let the ball go! yeslthinktheresenuf extensionontheborder JOHN ESSER, D.D.S. TUSTIN, CALIFORNIA Fullerton College Delta Sigma Delta A streak of peroxide blonde hair, blue tennies, and white levis running from S and T or the Delt house to the library. What was it? Only Esser in our freshman year. Long John brought us surf talk and the new dances (the Bird, the Scratch, the Dog, etc.) Who but John with suds in one hand and a book in the other would practice surfing on the Delt coffee table? We lived through the phases of Esser — Jean, Margie, Kathy, Sharon, Betty, Jerrie, Mary, Julie, Barbara, Pat, Sandra . . . Esser, being from Orange County, fits well into the conservative pattern of dress, drink, and action. Every TGIF or party was a new educational experience for us in etiquette. The move to buxomy neighbors taught John the techniques of housekeeping, interpersonal and family relations, and so-o-o-o-o much more! After worrying a little through the freshman year, John began to relax and be hyper only eighteen hours a day. The clinic years treated John well. He has always been one of our high-point men. After four years of dental school John is no longer an innocent, skinny kid of nineteen, but rather a fifty-pound heavier dentist, still crawling under fences and over fields to go to the Ascot drags or figure eights. Who but Esser could fall asleep one night and wake up with a beaut ' of a shiner and a broken ankle and nose? 91 I think I ' ll throw Lip if he sticks his fingi-; down his throat again ' DENNIS FILLMORE, D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA University of California at Berkeley University of Southern California Delta Sigma Delta Dennis started right out in dental school without making any claim to fame ... he soon proved himself by his deeds! He performed well didactically from the minute he entered the hallowed halls of the S and T building through the clinic years. He did have one or two bouts with the National Boards, but came through in his usual way. Everybody likes Dennis and he makes a good impression on people who meet him for the first time. Two people come to mind immediately. One is a denture patient who liked Dennis so much he came back for a year or so. The other was a patient (female, which doesn ' t affect the tale much) who thought Dr. Fillmore should drop by her house and keep her bridge clean . . . THAT ' S RAPPORT! Dennis plans to enter the Army and, sight unseen, is so well-liked they want him around for an extra year — in the internship program. Good luck, Dennis . . . we ' ve enjoyed your company. Like this Terry — 1, 2, 3,4, 5 Welcome back — I ' m so happy to see you . . . You ' re right, doctor . but I was thinking — A. L. FRANCE, A.A., D.D.S. TORRANCE, CALIFORNIA El Camino Junior College Psi Omega - now, watch him bite his tongue! No one can say that Al doesn ' t work hard. He has worked diligently throughout our four years of internship, but that ' s where the push ends. It may be said that Al is a really nice guy. Not swayed by the many whims of modern society. Dentistry seems to be one of those things which Al Enjoys thoroughly. His gripes are fewer, his thoughts happier than most of the rest of us. He spends a little time at the ping pong table, a little time at the 901 Club — but his greatest pleasure comes from the time he spends on the golf course. Along about five p.m. he is anxious to get home to his wife and kids . . . Janet is reputed to be a good cook. Our senior year found him spending four glorious days in Vegas ... he broke even at the gambling tables (due to the generosity of the downtown merchants ' association). Theresa will miss his sign painting, and so will we . . . but dentistry will be the benefactor. you might as well leave your coat on . . only two more hours! 93 The only lion tamer that uses a box rather than a whip! LARRY E. FUKUMOTO, B.A., D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNLA University of California at Los Angeles PsI Omega Larry Fukumoto, the master of subtle sarcasm, spent most of his time in dental school working with rabbits! We hope you have no adverse consequences after you get married, Larry! Constantly presenting an unabashed facade in all of his dilemmas, hence maintaining face in all adversity! Larry ' s extra-curricular activities have included building a life-long friendship with Dick Reimers, being a friendly television and stereo repair man for many, and giving haircuts to many dissatisfied customers . . . Larry, the quality may have been hurtin ' but the price was right! He plans to continue his education after graduation in the field of biophysics (very impressive, Larry) . . . and many of us will undoubtedly benefit from his scholarly endeavors. I knew you Karate experts were fast, but really . . . Why don ' t my foils stay In? 94 I believe in ; finger rests . What ' s the lecture on next week in Behavioral Science? Otto Ceissler and Fukumoto . losers of the year 1945! OTTO WALTER CEISSLER III, D.D.S. CLENDALE, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Clendale College Bud is from Clendale! ... He likes Clendale! ... He has lived there for several years, receiving his undergraduate training at Clendale College and USC. He plans to practice dentistry in Clendale ... He is so Clendale that if there were no Clendale, there would be no Bud! During our freshman year, he learned he had pegged laterals. He also learned he had diastemas. In the sophomore year he was mortified to find out he had missed questions on pegged laterals and diastemas . . . he forgot to bring a mirror. Toot (Otto — spelled backwards and inside out) is noted for his ability to educate his patients in Perio. Bud carefully explained to a patient all the factors involved about periodontal disease. After getting a check from an instructor the patient said, That Dr. Perio is a nice person, isn ' t he? After six or seven years of education we are tempted to ask the question, Is Bud-weiser? Well, at any rate, we can say he is Busched! 95 But Dr. Ho, I ' m , tennis player — not a diver ' f- -c JOHN CHARLES GODDARD, D.D.S. HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA University of California at Los Angeles Psi Omega V If I yank sharply and you pull her ears . . , John spent his first two years in the school of dentistry embalming cadavers during the day and embalming himself at night! Long John, showing true coordination, dropped a Hollenbeck and it stuck in his foot — when he reached for it he stuck the other end into his thumb! He recently app eared in a movie which played the better theatres (Vista, Paris, Monica) in which he could have been billed as )ohn Goddard, appearing in Selected Shorts. His wardrobe was briefer than his short appearance in the film! In addition to his theatrical tendencies he likes to play tennis, crew, and the guitar. After his stint in the Air Force John plans to practice in Los Angeles. 9mA 1 • ! 100 mg demerol, 150 mg nembutol, 200 mg noctec . . . it doesn ' t bother me at all . . . zzzzzzzzzz I ' ve got a feeling somebody ' s watching me Ladies — I ' d like to show you this new product to clean trays STEPHEN GOLDBERG, D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA University of California at Los Angeles Alpha Omega Alpha Tau Epsilon Steve is debating between Beverly Hills, Century City and Tibet as a place to practice — whenever he decides to go, it is sure that he hopes never to have to place a rubber dam over a bridge again. While doing his first Class V foil, he sewed the dam to the patient ' s cheek . . . 8V2 hours later he removed it along with half the patient ' s buccal mucosa. He told her that this was necessary to hold the dam in place, and when she came in to have the foil re-done, he had to re-sew the dam to the granulation tissue so as not to disclose his error! If Steve can remember his clever pneumonics (and the meaning behind them), he will have the most vast collection of didactic material ever amassed! This uncanny ability has enabled Steverino to excell in his four years of test-taking ... if asked the answer to a certain ciuestion, you might have heard him reply: Oh, that was 3A-FLAP-CERR! ■My finger ' s caught in the clamp. 97 JOSEPH GOODSELL, A.A., D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Los Angeles City College Alpha Tau Epsilon JfS - _ . Let ' s see ... if I stal- these in your eais I won ' t have to use llic indelible pencil Joe Coodsell . . . who ' s he? We got to know him in our senior year when he decided to challenge the Worrell dynasty and run for the student body presidency — he won, and things have changed at the School of Dentistry . . . for us, the seniors, and all other classes, loe still works at the same frantic pace established years ago in his youth ! Joe is organized ... so much so that he received credit for his diligent efforts in the form of the Best Overall Award for didactic and clinical dentistry in our junior year. Probably one of the most likable, genuine personalities of our class. Those who have known Joe for several years are well aware that his success is nothing new . . . he ' s been doing it all along. He was in the middle of things in high school as all-city catcher for the baseball team and all-league center for the football team. We could list several accomplishments and innovations made during his tenure of office, but we won ' t. Suffice it to say he has brought an element of professionalism to our student government . . . something he has imaged through every facet of his life. We are proud to call you a colleague, Joe. Hurry up — I can ' t breathe ' ft. '  «iW . Now what ' s wrong? to the Dean ' s office again! f 98 Go fur your gun Ah, come off it will ya- say It and let me go! Harry . . . have you been writing notes to Beveridge again . . . ? CHARLES GRABOWSKY, D.D.S. SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA San Diego State College Psi Omega Out of the rolling hills of God ' s Country and the Tijuana River Bed came this itinerant Polish metalsmith to USC. After completely rebuilding, from the ground up, a Model A Ford, and with a complete course in high school metal shop under his belt. Chuck uttered the cry heard long and far . . . I got it in the hands, man ... at least in the thumbs. Prowess in the field of technical endeavor was soon squashed when he displayed his lab gown evidencing twenty-six dwt of partial gold which had managed to go through the ring and damn near through him! Hobbies and interests are quite varied with this man — ranging from skin diving and hunting to other forms of masculine endeavor in the feminine arts. The major interest, of course, at least up to the senior summer was frequent, varied, and multi-nepharious trips to San Diego to see, as one would expect, a girl. It seems this was out shortly after Rose had the altar and preacher waiting for him on one trip and Chuck beat a hasty retreat to the calm serenity of dental school with papa following — armed to the teeth, intent on using a big stick policy! Upon graduation and an uneventful tour with the USAF we will find this hard and silent worker making friends and money in north San Diego county. 99 G. JOHN GRIM, JR., D.D.S. SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA San Diego State College Psi Omega John was very productive in dental school! He was able to start a family in his freshman year, and then add to it in his junior year. John was always active in Psi Omega and held several positions. He also refined and expanded his vocabulary for the many frustrating situations which arise in dental school (his son has also increased his vocabulary). John has developed his physique by the addition of twenty pounds of adipose tissue to his midabdominal area! He became known for his display of sportsmanship and emotions at the football games . . . no one ever had to guess where he was sitting. We all were envious of John ' s ability to breeze through the histology course in our freshman year . . . most of us were really sweating it out! When he quits working on cadavers for Dr. Gregg and starts working on live people, he will make a fine dentist in God ' s country, San Diego. I missed that question too! I always clean my nails before I work . . what ' s it to you ' $5 to win on Lazy Louie in the fifth 100 what nervous tic . . .? Beat It Tom . I can handle this kid! THOMAS E. GROVE, D.D.S. SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA San Diego State College Psi Omega Brother Tom has been an outstanding student from his freshman to his senior year. Way back four years ago, he was the only student who never touched the bod in anatomy lab! Of course, he had to poke at it occasionally to see what was marked on it for the quizzes and practicals. Our first two and one-half years found Tom in San Diego on weekends! As a result, he gained weight, married a charming girl, and not too long after that, became a daddy — for the first time! In the S and T building he was one of our finest (especially in sophomore operative)! Proof for our statement is contained in a photograph of the perfect retentive features for a Class V foil! Clinically, they seem to stay in . . . crown and bridge cement does the trick every time! Tom also has retentive fingers at exam time! Those RF fingers produced many a wincing, agonizing pain to a fellow student or those weird seismographic reading on the notes of those who sat next to him — you figure it out! ... and when I ' m through . I toss It in that T bag over there. 101 DAVID GUILLIAUM, D.D.S. TEMPLE CITY, CALIFORNIA Pasadena City College University of Southern California Xi PsI Phi Get the wrench, I dropped my onlay! ' Be as inconspicuous as possible when you go through dental school. This the oft-quoted advice given to pre-dental students. And Dave has manager to do just that in the last four years! In fact, so inconspicuous is he that many of his classmates don ' t even know who he is. Dave ' s hobbies include photography and playing the guitar. He is very quiet and can be poker-faced, which came in quite handy after an operative clinic. He has a patient who always very carefully, prior to any procedures, places his contact lenses in a dixie cup. One day, after a gigantic Class V foil was placed, the patient filled the dixie cup and gulped the water and the lens down . . . Dave managed to keep a poker face so that the patient didn ' t know he swallowed his lens . . . uniti he walked into the exit door. Well, if we wait one day . . . Why does it have to happen to me? 102 Let ' s see, I still owe you 325 beers! RICHARD L. HALL, D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Delta Sigma Delia ■rnc Ya wanna see what I got from Rene today . . vou push a button and it turns into a bar! I jus! tried to thumb a ride home, see and then the black and white car stops . In the cool, cool, cool of the evenin ' tell ' em I ' ll be there yeah, I ' ll play poker tonight. Yeah, I ' ll go to a stag, when and where? At one party we can recall he . . . oh well, that ' s a long story (something about picking up a ride from a friendly man in blue). Dick has been one of the class brains even since we first started. He has had excellent grades throughout dental school . . . and, he has shown the way to many of his classmates! He studies hard, works hard, and plays hard. His friendly easy- going manner has ingratiated him to all who know him.. Whatever he does . . . whether dentistry, ping pong, or card playing, he does well. With dentistry he performs well and fast, with ping pong he defeats a majority of his opponents ... and at bridge he outfoxes his partners every time. Our first two years he set out to prove that dental school is a breeze. If there ever was a combination of hang loose and work hard, Dick is it! Monday evenings were always set aside as Delt nights ... he is one of the few active Delts (along with his wife). The image of dentistry will be enhanced with Dick Hall joining its rank and file. 103 No, you can ' t have a date with my sister ROBERT E. HAMMOND, D.D.S. CULVER CITY, CALIFORNIA University of California at Los Angeles Psi Omega Our boy Bobby is not the kind to relax and let life pass him by. He is always on hand with his 180, 160 blood pressure to participate in the action. You see, he is a favorite in Oral Surgery! When we first took blood pressures on each other, he was found to have a reading of 180 120, which got him excited ... so he had another taken (it turned out to be 210 160), and then he was realily excited . . . next time, 270 200! Dr. Ronnau decided that was enough reading . . . coronary arteries taken into account and all. Action, to Bob, may come in the form of dentistry or sports. The sports in his life include surfing, swimming and volley ball. The dentistry in his life includes patients, lab work and clinics. He is not one to let social life pass him by either. He dates sufficiently and dances well (mostly at the Beaver Inn). Following graduation, he will be looking for an associateship. Word has it he is quite choosey and wants to work for a blue-eyed blonde in Beverly Hills. You ' re right, George Don ' t you sing to your patients too? 104 Diz I evuh tell ya bout cla time I had this . . . Must be talking about Arizona . . . they ' re the onlv ones awake MATT O. HANHILA, JR., B.S., D.D.S. PHOENIX, ARIZONA Universitv of Arizona Delta Sigma Delta ' Matt came to USC fresh from arid Arizona with a wrestling championship and a student body vice-presidency under his belt. Perhaps this is why when asked a question, he merely grunts. His pre-clinical years were a rapid blur of studies and Delt functions! He was one of the few to experience no difficulty in technique courses. When he came to the clinic, Matt almost completed all of his requirements on one patient. He did a foil on a clinic ... an ditched it! Rene re-did that one and Matt placed an MOD onlay on it ... it blew up! He opened the tooth for Endo, only to have problems with the filing (sometimes you can get a good seal with a file . . . !) This guy is fantastic! . . . there was a time when Matt was knee-deep in Endo! Whenever we wanted to find our boy Hanhila, we only needed to the waiting room ... he was there observing homo sapiens! A man of prompt decisions. Matt has decided to join the Army ... or enter private practice ... or apply to Ortho school! uhh-l had about sisteen fights, but I ' z smart, I quit when I did ofore it ' s too late 105 GEORGE M. HANSEN, D.D.S. SALT LAkt CITY, UTAH University of Utah San Fernando Valley Stale ColleRp Los Angeles City College Los Angeles Valley College Brothers, our scripture lesson for today is taken from . . . Ever since he can remember, George has been going to some form of college or university to get that elusive degree. From the University of Utah, to San Fernando Valley State, to Los Angeles City and Valley colleges . . . he has hungered for education and is obtaining his first degree! George has worked hard in dental school! He has tried all the latest techniques — and then some. He spends most of his after hours in the school lab. Those of us that have worked with him are aware of the tremendous drive that he has . . . coming in daily from Chatsworth! The responsibilities he takes on are always done superiorly, and in the shortest time possible. He is mild-mannered, easy going, nice fellow . . . until he comes across something that bugs him — -then the streaks of blue! Perhaps when he settles in that small conservative town set in a beautiful green valley which he often dreams about, his temper will mellow . . . till he gets his first tax bill! An old Navy man with a cunning business mind, George will do well for Theresa, his wife, and their three children (did you know that he is a grandfather?) . . . and the profession. It ' s been our pleasure, George. But really, this is the vva I hold my foil condenser too! Clean-up (6:30 p.m. daily from June, 1964 till June, 1966) 106 and III squirt our e e . fingers got cemented ? the crown ft -- a t ' one GARY H. HESS, A.B., D.D.S. TRONA CALIFORNIA Occidental College Psi Omeea Can, arrived at L ' SC with a bright, shinv face, a mind eager to learn, thirt ' white shirts, thirty sets of under sear, and one ver ' large laundrv bag. These last items were provided by Gars ' s mother so he would have to return home to Trona (where ' s Trona?) only once a month for washing and ironing. Besides Gary ' s parents and his sister, Trona has quite a large population of desert lizards. Trona also boasts a ver ' peculiar odor ... as discovered bv a group of Gary ' s fraternit ' brothers one memorable weekend. He lived at the Psi Omega house during his time in school. Most of the time was spent sleeping, however he was nonetheless elected house manager during the junior year . . . the house has yet to recover! Gar devoted considerable time to some memorable frolics on the Tri-Delt lawn in bottomless splendor. He studied diligently, but found time to visit San Francisco on many occasions! . . . During such excursions, his thrombus bothers him terribly. This limits his performance with the girls, so he says! Actually, his romancing has never come up to his friends ' expectations! After graduation Gars will fade back into the desert . . . best of everything, Gary! 107 You don ' t tell I got my diploma early, Jan, and I won ' t tell him you smoke! DAVID HILL, D.D.S. TORRANCE, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Delta Sigma Delta Dave has distinguished himself in dental school in more ways than one. He is one of the better operators, one of the best golfers, and potentially the first to enter the movies from the class of 1966, for as Mr. Miller, he may sojurn to Africa, in the role of great white hunter! He may be ready for the role, if he ever gets his anterior ceramco ' s. Dave is the only one in the class to wear temporaries for a year and one-half! Dave ' s many friends include Dr. Cullett . . . they ' re both golfers! In the senior year Dave moved in with his bohemian roommate in a small castle near campus, and the ants promptly moved in too. Only one serious problem worries Dave . . . that is, he has to pay two dollars for a haircut . . . but then if his hair outlasts his ' 51 Olds it ' ll be worth it. Graduation will see Dave associating while setting up his very own practice. Whata ya want? You got to be - Doctor Don Izumila, a patient Doctor Don Izumita, a patient DONALD H. IZUMITA, D.D.S. SAN GABRIEL, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Delta Sigma Delta Don Hep Nip Izumita has to be the easiest guy who has gone through dental school. Anyone in need of cash merely had to engage him in a bridge or poker game. Between his inability to make a good bet, and his knack for doing or saying the wrong thing at the wrong time on the clinic floor, Don was constantly in a state of depression. It was suggested that he take up gardening, but he doesn ' t know a weed from a lawn sprinkler! When asked if suicide might be the answer, he replied, I ' ve thought about it, but I ' d probably screw it up too and be in deep pain for weeks! Don ' s plans after graduation consist of worrying about what he failed on the State Board, followed by two months of disbelieving that he is really out of school! Don ' s dental school highlights include receiving a B in Endo and then flagging the course twice, successively! He claims his recall gradually diminished after Dr. Murphy complimented him on being the only student in twenty years to get 100% on a prosthetics test! No one who has known Don will ever forget his amazing career at use . . . Good luck, Nip. Doctor Don Izumila, a patient 109 ROBERT J. HUBBERT, D.D.S. CLENDALE, CALIFORNIA Clendale Cil ' Collegp Psi Omega Alpha Tau Epsilon Bob is probably one of the most personable members of our class. He is impatient, and has an almost insatiable desire to succeed in whatever he undertakes. Dental school held great future promise for him and he for it. Bob has been a key figure in correcting some of the correctible idiosyncrasies of dental school. He started the monthly publication The Explorer, in 1964. Using this as a sounding board for expression, he wound up with another job (the publication of the Student Directory) . . . you may remember the poor quality ana even poorer delivery date of the previous directories (it is now enjoyable reading, useful, and delivered to us tor use on time). He is responsible for the quality of layout, the typesetting, a good portion of the photography, and much of the content of this book. He has involved himself in politics, too . . . working untiringly for the election of candidates of his choice — they won! He made every effort to get the most out of his dental education, and was given the opportunity to audit post-graduate courses by being elected to the Honors Program in December of his senior year ... he also was awarded membership in the dental school honor fraternity Alpha Tau Epsilon. Being five or six years older than many of us (he doesn ' t look it) probably gives some basis for his impatience to start practicing dentistry in Tustin, California, becoming active in his church and community affairs, going water skiing at every opportunity, and, oh yes . . . he and his lovely wife, Sharon, plan to have a bunch of kids and live in a house on a hill. How many times do I have to tell you, Russ, NO silk on the over wax! I don ' t give a damn if he doesn ' t like it . . pour it up — I know Its correct ' South of the border 110 But It ' s so big Harvey- won ' t It hurt . . .? y t This isn ' t your case?- oh, well . . . Get outta here with that camera you dirty old man! HARVEY HOLSTE, D.D.S. ONAMIA, MINNESOTA Santa Monica City College El Camino College Los Angeles City College Psi Omega What ' s Pyorrrhea? That ' s just one of the statements ol ' Harv is likely to be heard making in the midst of lectures, for he likes to speak his mind freely (when within the group). But, when it comes to soft-soaping an instructor on the floor, there is no greater master than he! His technical ability is without peer in our class. And, his idea file is full to the brimming . . . always coming up with a brilliant idea at just the right time. The right time is when soineone is asking to borrow something he doesn ' t want to lend . . . his fanciful devices for refusing are something to behold. Studying hard, warking hard technically, and producing excellent results in the grade department, are also Holste specialties. In the first two years Harv developed an ideal relationship with his next bench neighbor to the left ... a model for the rest of the class to follow. Harv is an active member of the Psi Omega clan. Private practice is his goal, and leisure time his chief concern . . . luck to ya ol ' Harv. Ill What ' s all this flash . . . er . . . excess? WILLIAM CLARENCE JAQUES, D.D.S. LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA Long Beach City College Psi Omega Bill likes to talk ... to anyone — and when not doing this over a cup of coffee or something stronger at the 901, he can be seen doing the most beautiful dentistry you ' ll ever see. His uncompromising personal demands (placed by himself) for quality have made him the best operator in the school. Here is a guy with no problems for the future and almost none for the present . . . being on a first-name basis with the three R ' s — Rex, Rene, and Russ . . . et al. Bill will spend some time in Beverly Hills in an association before going into private practice. In addition to being good with his hands Bill is a real personable fellow and well liked. He is married, has a little girl, and resides in Long Beach. I ' m arrested in what stage ' Gee — it certainly is thrilling to do somethmg besides operative! 112 V f-r. Never have used this thing . . . what ' s it for? EDWARD JOHNSON, D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA University of California at Los Angeles Los Angeles City College University of Southern California Psi Omega I wonder if there ' s time to run home for my milk money? :: Ed started dental school with ideas of building a political nnachine . . . these changed (or were changed), and he retired (or was retired) from this way of life! Ed enjoys the nicer things of life and with the help of his mother, has had an easy time of it thus far . . . When he met Dr. Bassett (who could care less about Ed ' s careful upbringing), he was forced to conform to the pooch ' s way of doing things . . . you know Ed — he resisted! Ed and the hound see eye-to-eye . . . i.e. the good doctor says I don ' t see the margins. Ed ' s reply, I see the margins! . . . touche! Ed was active in a group before entering dental school (playing and guitar and singing) ... he still spends his moments of relaxation playing his instrument and humming a popular tune . . . which, according to Dr. Freudman, is quite allright (lots of people do)! Aren ' t I handsome? 113 I hate dental school ' RONALD KAIDEN, D.D.S. QUEENS, NEW YORK University of California at Los Angeles University of Arizona Alpha Omega Alpha Tau Epsilon Ronny what me worry Kaiden is known as the antioote to Miltown. He spends his days claiming he never studies and his nights burning the midnite oil in the library or at home. He was the first person to stay up all night studying for a Public Health quiz! Kaiden is very easy to locate In the clinic . . . simply form a line of over two people and he ' ll automatically step in front of the first person. The only way we can recognize him is by the back of his neck. Racer is his nickname . . . which he claims comes from the fact that he races his red corvette from stopsigns, stoplights, etc. (actually, it ' s short for Racemic Epinephrine). Looking back at the first two years . . . at S and T he was frequently known to have uttered to Tom Keating, that ' s really too bad Tom, mine really turned out good! And, good is how his technique has turned out . . . he got the technique award for our junior year. Between golf, tennis, jewelry making, model airplane building, and the Army, Ron will practice fine dentistry. Do you know who you are talking to like that, Clara? . . . why I — oh well, you wouldn ' t understand . . . neither did anyonegelse! You ' re right, it is in the book! 114 I ' m going to finish this clinic — even if It takes till 6:00 p.m. Look Bob, he ' s taking our picture! THOMAS JOHN KEATING, D.D.S. SAN MARINO, CALIFORNIA University of California at Los Angeles Delta Sigma Delta Rubber dam? Wliat rubber dam? Good old Tom Turkey Keating . . . the mati who learned to coordinate his shakes, or at least that is what they say. It is the general consensus of opinion that Tom owns or possesses both Lau ' s and Kittell ' s freshman and sophomore issues! We think he stashed all of their equipment in the trunk of his big blue Buick battle wagon, and then sold the blue load to get out of jail for shooting pregnant ducks! If anyone would like to learn what the word panic means, just ask Keating about the time both he and his date had at the Ellendale Pit . . . Tom, we must admit, has studied furiously and has become a fine dentist . . . the San Marino whiz kid is bound to be a credit to our profession — he is a straight shooter! liilifs: ' Now, it ' ll only take 15 minutes . . . GAYLE KIEFER, D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Rowdy Yates, as he is affecti onately referred to, comes to Dental school endowed with mammoth talents . . . He is a serious archer, and prefers hunting with bow and arrow to almost any other sport. However, other sports do intrigue him — hunting, fishing, the opposite sex. He was National lunior Archery champion in 1956. Another favorite pastime of this energetic dental student is listening in on conversations at the 901, and then joining in at appropriate moments. And, he has been known to have spent many hours studying the earthly habits of the cockabury bird in its natural habitat! In his senior year Gayle made a valiant attempt to cement relations south of the border with a trip to Nogales, and has become quite well known around the canal section. Gayle plans to set himself up in private practice and a chair all to myself. It ' s time to go to lecture V , Wfiat the hell, I haven ' t been to one yet this year — what ' s one more? But Jim — what would Linda say if we . . . ... I wonder what she would do if she found out? JAMES S. KITTELL, D.D.S. LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY University of Louisville University of Southern California Delta Sigma Delta )ames undersold Mint Juleps at Churchill Downs during the Kentucky Derby until one of his customers tripped over an empty can of methanol! Stuffed into the same, he was sent to the worst place imaginable . . . USC dental! He soon discovered that walking to the vibrator was a wasted trip . . . neighbor Keating ' s head was soon dripping with stone! Lau (other neighbor) had to put up with the once-an-hour flaming gliders which Jim found fantasy in making. Never a dull moment Kittell often let go with a rebel yelp heard throughout the environs. When Jim wasn ' t sneaking up the fire escape to the old Alpha Chi Omega House, he was rupturing kegs at TGIFs or elsewhere. He likes bourbon, chasing frogs out of the Renault pond, and becomes deathly sick at the sight of ging blood. Jimmy spent his last two years at USC courtin ' one Linda Brown ... he married her for many reasons (one was that he tired of sleeping in closets . . . )! Kittell wants to keep his wife in Orange County ($$$), and is making every effort to stay away from the military. . she won ' t find out If I am careful! Remember, one tooth at a time . . . FREDERICK T. LAU, D.D.S. PHOENIX, ARIZONA University of Arizona Delta Sigma Delia Fred the Arizona Turkey Lau made a hit right off in dental school . . . receiving all A ' s from Inky (we fee! this success had something to do with the Deit Grip ). There were moments of anguish for Fred though . . . during a freshman set-up test the odor of burning flesh pierced our nostrils. We looked around and saw this guy drop his red hot silver dollar — he still has Baltimore branded on his finger tips, or should we say talon tips. We always enjoyed watching Fred go into one of his tantrums during the last one-half hour of a lab test. Somehow, we never saw Fred during bird hunting season though . . . when the guns were again silent, and the smoke cleared away, we could only hear his familiar stork, smock, smack cry! Fred the flamingo hopes to practice in Phoenix and left the questions unanswered about his children and or plans for marriage. There ' s your chance, Fred! What the hell was it they said about finger rests? 118 My Cod, only three months left! ALLAN LILES, D.D.S. YOKOSAKA, JAPAN University of California at Los Angeles How ' s this for an Eidson stare . . .? - Boy, I do beautiful work! To a fate worse than death was Alan Liles, Naval hero, delivered. Damned to be a land lubber forever, the old swabbie settled down to work in the S and T building among the likes of an Arizona cactus and a Kentucky hillbilly! It took approximately two weeks for Al to police the decks and to stow his gear. Meanwhile, Keating and Lau were helping him stow it — in their lockers! Al then began the long ordeal of maintaining order among the young troopers around him. He told Kittell the evils of tobacco and he was saved. He helped Lau to endure the last fifteen minutes of a set up test and he was tranquilized. He steadied Keating during the Inky carving test . . . but, alas, Keating still shook. Then one day Al met one of his own. There on the poop deck of the S and T stood Rear Armiral Turner tUSN retired) . . . directing a salvage mission below. Instantly, Al and the Admiral were friends for life after all they were both RN (regular Navy). Happily married, Al and his first mate, Necia, live by themselves on a light cruiser anchored in Santa Monica Bay. Once in a while, Al lets his first mate go along on liberty with him (TGIFs), and when this happens the shore patrol really has a big night on their hands. When the boatswain finally pops Al ashore this June, he will enter private practice and we will truly miss one of the greatest guys we have known. 119 I get less sleep than Worrell — have to make every minute count! VERNON LOCKHART, A.A., D.D.S. PROVO, UTAH Brigham Young University Long Beach City College Vern ' s only real problem in dental school was that he had chronic insomnia. He could never seem to sleep more than three hours a night! In a final desperate move to keep the population explosion down, Vern went to work as a fireman and subsequently as engineer on a Southern Pacific switch engine. Dr. Roy Robinson once told Vern that he did not believe that anyone could work forty-plus hours a week and go to dental school at the same time. Moral: even the best of us are sometimes wrong! For never being caught sleeping in lecture (with his eyes closed) Vern has been nominated to the very top of a list of one to receive the dental school ' s highest award, an 18-carat gold Thompson carver with the initials R.B. overwaxed from angle to angle. To Mrs. Vern Lockhart and the five little Lockharts, for your patience and helpful perseverance, we release to you full title to someone who unquestionably is to become one of the finest and most able dentists in Southern California. . . . works all night on R.R. — sleeps until time for lecture Like this Mike . . . clean living helps though! vonder where Coddard is? BERT LOCKWOOD, D.D.S. lOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Llniversity of Southern California Psi Omega Beaver everywhere . . . doesn ' t faze me at all! 1 What was that? I heard a crash! Oh. it ' s just Bertly testing the downstairs safety glass with his forearm, or maybe he fell out of the barrel. Oh. well — to say the very least, he is an amazing character. Not only is he an excellent student didactically, but his clinical work leaves little to be desired. A connoiseur of everything good, he enjoys coffee, cigarettes, liquor, and dancing girls. He also surfs, hunts, plays chess and loses miserably at ping pong! Jasper lllis presently contemplating the prospect of private practice around the Los Angeles area (or even Alaska) and is considering the advantages of returning to school to specialize in oral surgery . . . Bertly figures the service is no sweat because he plans to go to Israel for a while so Pook can fulfill his military obligation). Suffice it to say that the blond bomber is our choice to succeed, regardless of the initial path he pursues. f .. ■' Did you see that one? 121 I feel so helple when you stand over nn like this Dallas . . DALLAS C. LONG III, D.D.S. PHOENIX, ARIZONA University of Southern California Do you really go to school with Dallas Long, and can you get me his autograph? After four years no one knows why our patients ask, but some say it has to do with a sixteen pound lead ball . . . Olympics, world records, gold medals, and numerous interviews never stopped the Big D. Besides being student and athlete, Dallas has time for his family, adding three daughters to the roll while in dental school. He bought a house and found he could not prune roses as well as teeth. It has been rumored that Dallas helped Dr. Gregg prepare exams for anatomy as he always stold the show and had answers for everyone at his table. At five o ' clock on any day, Dallas could be seen pondering over acrylic, wax and compound — just doesn ' t seem there ' s room in one mouth for his fingers and these dental aids. The future is bright for Dallas and now the lust of medical school is calling as the Giant of ' 66 never seems to run out of energy — or jokes — or wind. Open your mouth or I ' ll belt you again ' 122 . . hello Tokyo — come in Tokyo! Now, do I get the ice cream cone . . . I clapped my hands THOMAS MacKINNON, B.S., D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA University ot California at Los Angeles Delta Sigma Delta Look at the size of that crash helmet say aah Tom, commonly known as TAM, is taken from the large scab box he hauled around . . . one which almost everyone has tripped over at one time or another It hardly seems possible that Tom and the box can both fit into the small red bug, usually parked in front of a driveway, battered from luxation of parking places (a new surgical technique he described to Dr. Ronnau), and lately sporting a new engine cover because of some midnight remodeling. Actually, Tom, the six-foot runner-up in the ' 60s, has been known for his endless like of stories that could possibly range from guerrilla warfare on the Burma Road, to the latest hottest rumor off the clinic floor. Active in sports, Tom has letters in coffee drinking at Teresa ' s, supporting the wall in the lab, and filling hydrocolloid trays for five patients in separate chairs at 5:15! During four years Tom and wife Jeanine found time to produce Jamie, now a bouncing two-year-old. Instead of frequent trips hunting, Tom now chases rabbits in the Baldwin Hills. During summer vacation Tom and family found time for a pleasant trip to Hawaii . . . ! He plans to spend two years with the Navy gaining the experience needed to compete in the world of private practice, most likely in the West Los Angeles area. 123 PHILLIP ZANGLEIN MAHAN, A.B., D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Occidental College Delta Sigma Delta Alpha Tau Epsilon Phil Mahan should have taken a lesson from the Dutch fellow who stuck his finger in a leaky dike and saved his homeland from flood. As sure as 1 can ' t read his handwriting, I know that Phil should have shoved something in that Baldwin Hills dam and prevented he and his wife, Bonnie, a lot of trouble. In a serious vein, none of us envy the task Phil had of cleaning up his Village Green villa. He ' s a top-notch student, however, and could easily make up the time lost from school. Phil was initiated into Alpha Tau Epsilon Dental Honorary Society in our freshman year for his outstanding technic grades. This year he has very ably taken over the presidency of Delta Sigma Delta dental fraternity, indicating his ability in extracurricular as wel as academic pursuits. Phil and Bonnie named their first child Leptolophus hollandicus which is short for an Australian parrott. Bonnie swears that the pet is real bitchin, whereas her husband is the bird of the family. I thing she is being facetious. Phil ' s interests include raising tropical fish, gardening, vacationing at the Salton Sea and at his folk ' s cabin at )une Lake. Phil and Bonnie tried the sport of burglar-catching one night while a prowler stole some jewelry from under their noses in their bedroom. They decided they sleep too soundly to be good at that game. After a two-year Navy stint Phil and his wife plan to build their nest in Northern California or Oregon. My card Madam . You can ' t listen — you ' re not in my club ' Now I lay me . He swallowed the casting . . . GARY MALOTT, D.D.S. VAN NUYS, CALIFORNIA Sacramento State College University of California at Los Angeles This guy won ' t sit still- jab him in the lip again, honey! If one were to walk into the student lounge this year and hear a fwapp as a ping pong ball was being slammed down Megerdichian ' s throat, most likely Gary would be found on the giving end of the delivery. A fine ping pong player, and champ of this popular noontime sport, Gary demonstrates that he has some fine hands going for him also — most of the time, that is! His freshman year found him getting a little fancy with his slam hands and he polished a hole in his three-unit bridge! No one knows why Gary goes into tachycardia three weeks before anything is due . . . because he always comes out in great shape, maintaining a 3.0 g.p.a. When his Class V foil fell out at the S and T he had good reason to regress to a previous learned state . . . Duco came to the rescue, and he got it checked off. Gary and Andrea have been married since they were eighteen. Scrimping to get through school, they finally cancelled their loan in Gary ' s senior year and fell in with the Mustang set. Gary ' s interests center around water sports and camping. Last summer he and Bo Martin had their wives pack their gear into the Trinity Alps for a marvellous week ' s wilderness trip. After serving in the Army Gary plans to build a practice somewhere in Southern California. Swaanee, how I love ya LAWRENCE RILEY MARTIN, D.D.S. TEHACHAPI, CALIFORNIA University of California at Santa Barbara Delta Sigma Delta I heard the call They say that only jack rabbits grow in Tehachape, but we al know that ' s the home of Little Stevie Wonder. Steve doesn ' t ask many questions and never lets the patient talk, but silently works away to conquer mountains that sometimes seem unattainable. During dental school Larry has been known as the bubbly little fellow that is game for anything. Besides being active in sports and learning how to get rained upon while camping in two short weeks, he has always found time to bomb any test the professors could think up. While attaining the didactic award in his junior year, Larry still has time for a quick game of pong or to sit on the steps of the Founder ' s Hall and eat lunch. After a hitch in the Army Larry plans for a general practice and will always be a credit to USC. Keep your hancK over his eyes while I get the syringe out . . . i Vjr i Where did I get this one? 126 Now that ' s what I call a real beaver shot! Ah, come on Bob — take my picture when I am m operative . . . McCook — look back here . . . don ' t be a ham! JAMES McCOOK, D.D.S. RIALTO, CALIFORNIA San Bernardino Valley College Coming to dental school fresh from the corrupting influence of San Bernardino, where he specialized in rain running, Jim made a big hit at USC! He immediately developed an intense love for prosthetics and Murph was his best Dental God. Time passed and Cookie began saving lives and healing the sick for real at the clinic. Here they characteristic McCloud three-ring circus started. First, he fell in love with Clara . . . then, while other students were on the L.S.D. jag, )im became a premedication and second division block specialist. By the way, he ' ll extract a tooth with an elevator if it kills him! Actually, he is one of the finest operators in our class. His dentistry is consistently good ... at least the Silver Fox and Rene the Ripper think enough of it to give him lab jobs! But, dentophobia has taken its toll . . . James is ( ompletely incapable of doing a Class III foil without patting his head six times or twirling his colic on the crown of his head with his fingers ... he must derive some tremendous sensual pleasure from this (Nate Freudman, the B.S. man, is so enthralled bv this manifestation, that he wants Jim to associate with him). We are sure Jimmy will accept if Nate can fix it so Jim can take his flossie blanket and flatus tube into the Navy for two years! We have no doubts about Jim ' s future in dentistry . . . success will follow him as in the past (as long as he drives the freeways when his eyes are open! 127 EEEEEK . . . kill It, kill It! JERALD MARK MEDWAY, D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Los Angeles City College Santa Monica City College University of Southern California Alpha Omega Happy Hanukkah to you, too ' ' I wonder what I will do with the next three months? Jerry finished his clinic requirements early, and promptly decided rather than wear himself out he would spend some time with his favorite pasttimes . . . swimming, the banjo, and scouting (what would Freudman say about that?). For the past four years Jerry has worked hard and has completed things early, leaving him time for experimental work such as his new denture impression technique. The technique was discarded when the patient went into syncope and was taken to the hospital. He was rarely seen around the technique building unless working on a project. FHe is very rarely seen at the clinic, except for an occasional patient. Most of the rest of the time is spent somewhere else. Jerry hasn ' t as yet made any definite plans for the future, but whatever he does he is bound to be a rapid success. ... I see — you say ■' like spokes of a wheel . . . 128 Ya, I ' m saluting- what ' s It to ya? JACK MEGERDICHIAN, A.A., D.D.S. KESSAB, SYRIA Los Angeles City College Into the calm and serenity of those first days in the S and T stumbled our little old Syrian fisherman friend, With a puff of smoke and a hardy I doon knoow, he whirred into action with elbows, arms, and flashy footwork. So enthusiastic is the old ' 69er that he has been seen beginning at the wrong end of those long, long check lines. A note of tragedy has touched our hero, however, as it must touch all those who traverse this four-year tragi-comedy. The downfall came in the middle of the first act as the Megers was carving one of those fine wax teeth only to have it stolen as he was nearing completion by the flighty villain of our talc. Oh foul deed! The villain was a blue jay. Undaunted, lack made a direct assult upon the clinic ... at least he established a firm beachhead on the ping pong table. It has been rumored that the class has lost a total of 100 pounds trying to beat the flashy master. Jack seemed to have more English on the ball than he did in his vocabulary. Fine man and hardy soul . . . peace! . . a camel with license numtjer HOH 69 is blocking the loading dock! MICHAEL MILLER, D.D.S. COLTON, CALIFORNIA San Bernardino Valley College PsI Omega Alpha Tau Epsilon there ' s nothing in it for me! aL? Mike, the Colton kid, is the most innocent looking member of our class — one can hardly believe his literary prowess . . . writing for an Old Testament analogue (a local publication — now defunct. His individualistic spirit was exemplified when he refused to take an operative midterm on the day of President Kennedy ' s assassination. He slammed his paper on the front desk and stomped out. Incidently, he never took a makeup and received an A from Dr. Quint. After his election as Psi Omega prexy there were rumors that his sweet voice and lamb-like mannerisms were dispelled with two beers . . . the mountain Bear Hunt seemed to prove this! As a hunter, he is the only one to receive the honor of shooting a deer and a pheasant in the same year (luck) — especially when seven others were shooting at the same bird. Mike ' s interests lead him to San Bernardino County where he intends to practice. It has been mentioned that Baker is in S. B. County. Here he may be able to use his talents to write addendums for his favorite literary works . . . such as Operative Atlas II. His individualism gives us great comfort in that there are some left! whew — why not try Mennen speed stick? nm a piece of what? 130 nunca deja de asar el pasta dental Crest! ROBERT MONTGOMERY, B.S., D.D.S. LONC BEACH, CALIFORNIA Long Beach State College You ' re hurting, lady! No, I never rang the bell at Notre Dame! Bob comes to us from Lorig Beach State College and the Parke-Davis Company. He obtained his B.S. at Long Beach State, and if you ask George M. he ' ll tell you it was a true B.S. It seems that one of Bob ' s favorite pastimes is pestering Morris to desperation! Other of Bob ' s infamous activities include missionary expeditions to Mexico . . . with cotton rolls and a flashlight in hand he becomes the tireless terminator of tooth torture, or as the natives call him, the Gringo Tooth Fairy. At school our religious friend spends five nights a week trying to find someone to buy him nectar at the 901. In the S and T it seemed as though Dr. Harper was a bit unreasonable concerning Bob. it so happened that he wouldn ' t check an aluminum guard for Bob ... Dr. Ho had just finished making it on a demonstration. When he graduates we can expect to find him tucked away in some plush Long Beach office dreaming of those carefree Mexican vacations and waiting for that hot line in the corner of his operatory to ring. 131 O.K., you ' re tough! GEORGE MORRIS, D.D.S. COALINCA, CA LIFORNIA Coalinga Junior College San Francisco State College Xi Psi Phi From Coalinga, California, via Coalinga College and San Francisco State College came one of USC ' s most explosive dental students. The rare talents of this gentleman had Dr. Shanley running for the door during the quiet of a sophomore operative lecture. We wouldn ' t accuse George of trying to hide from anyone, but toward the end of the first semester of our senior year we overheard Dr. Ingraham asking, Are you Morris? I ' ve seen everyone on the floor except Morris, and I ' ve never seen you, so you must be Morris, George turned redder than if Dr. Freudman had caught him covering his snout in B.S. Unaffected by trauma (to others), the loudest we ever heard George laugh was when Bob M. caught a drop of flaming greenstick on his finger in the S and T. We have seen our short friend mighty unhappy at times also. His feathers have been ruffled more than once by the old 69 ' er eagerly tripping behind George ' s desk and trying to dislocate elbows during critical moments. Say George — what ' s this about you and your wife having something in common vith Hubbert and his wife . . .? quick — act like a patient . . . here comes my wife! We have an agreement Mike; the Delts and Zips cooperate! You say that again and I ' ll cry . . . GERALD NAFTALIN, D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA University ot Southern California Alpha Omega Alpha Tau Epsilon lerry could always be ftuincl in the rlinic at 6 ?0 p.m. . . . waiting lor his ride home with Goldberg ' |erry is a product of Los Angeles and came to USC from the local campus. His endeavors are aimed at helping others either in their dental needs or loaning ol ec|uipment. He was second only to Steve for borrowing, i le v ' as a great leader in the Christian Medical Society ' s crtisade to Monterey, Mexico, where he was an expcMienced exodontisi ' On his return from down south he assumed (he leadership of his frat(Mnily and the ASTIP program! Jerry ' s supreme moment was when he set his lower cuspids and posteriors mesial to his opposing ujipers ... no problem with getting the lower anteriors in! Dr. Murphy didn ' t agree that was the way to make spai e. lerry will go into the Army after his marriage in )une . . . yeah — I am a litjoral democrat, so whal 133 M. DALE NELSON, B.S., D.D.S. OCDEN, UTAH Brigham Young Universrty I put my plunger in his tube and presto — I ' ve got all the hydrocolloid I need! Dale the Mechanic Nelson. Being a teacher of mechanics before dental school has not changed Dale ' s outlook at all. He has found that one of the big differences between auto mechanics and dentistry is that the rubber dam will adapt more quickly to a patient ' s teeth than to an auto engine. Dale never found a neurotic car that couldn ' t adjust to wearing new dentures! You would think his being an ex-teacher would help him to understand the problems of lecturing to a class, but the only problem Dale seems to understand is that of the students staying awake during lecture, it has been rumored that Dale was heard muttering to himself after waking up from an O.D. lecture . . . could I have been that bad when I was teaching? He plans to enter private practice after graduation in the San Dimas area ... or possibly in Utah! Dale and his wife, Barbara, have two sons. Dale, Jr., and Don. my hand, Brother Joe, my hand! 134 Dale Nelson . . to where? i You let me In there silly guys. MICHAEL MYRON OLSON, D.D.S. FORT DODGE, IOWA University of Southern California Xi Psi Phi Alpha Tau Epsilon On your mark, get set . . . Look . . . he ' s swelling like a puffy toad! Michael Big Swede Olson ' s idol is said to be Ingmar lohannson. This is probably why Mike ' s soft-handed injection technique has fondlv been referred to by his patient ' s as the thunder bolt! Mike paints in the same class as Dr. Russell Bassett . . . probably accounts for the fact that he believes Mike should come back to the clinic to check wax patterns for gingival excess from angle to angle! Mike plans to enter private practice upon graduation and set up in Diamond Bar, California . . . legal entaglements permitting! He is married and plans to avoid the draft by buying a house on a hill and having a home full of kids! 135 Let ' s see — behind and to the left I GEORGE A. PAPAZIAN, B.M., D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Los Angeles City College Los Angeles State College University of Southern California Xi Psi Phi George Papazian, a local refuge from the Armenian colony, came to us from the ranks of school teachers. A gifted violinist in his own right, he has appeared with the Pasadena Symphony Orchestra, the Doctor ' s Symphony Orchestra, and a special duet with Dr. Galanter! He has distinguished himself in the Trojan marching band as a mainstay in the tuba section. He started out as a mild-mannered freshman dental student, but has since decided that that was for the birds. So he proceded to develop an Eidson stare that would shake Rene himself. He has also developed a policy of putting instructors back in their places when they get too big for their stripes! The 1960 green monster has been pretty elusive during the years in dental school for George had his car stolen at least twice in that time. He hopes to trade the mint green thing for a Corvette, provided the car is still around at the time. Wedding bells will ring for George following graduation. He will join with a fine young thing from Palos Verdes who has a hint of a southern accent. Then he plans to spend two years in the Air Force before settling down to private practice. What the hell are you doing with my handpiece? Where ' s the dressing room? 136 The hands Slop chewy DAVID W. PARK, B.S., D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Los Angeles City College University of Southern California Xi Psi Phi Alpha Tau Epsilon Dave Goldtinger Park, two years older than Buddha, is our own Korean heritage. Meticulous, inscrutable, master of the Oriental arts of beer drinking and crown and bridge, Dave managed to get top grades in his own technique work, while doing enough of everybody else ' s to insure them of a passing grade. Scorning the juvenile pursuits of ping pong and bridge, Dave preferred the more mature leisure-time activity of wandering around the clinic enjoying the views with Dr. Dickson. Most frequently at night, or on some weekend day you ' re most apt to find him at a sporting event of some kind . . . football, basketball, baseball, waterpolo, etc. He knows the names of the players in these various sports, along with all of tluMr vital statistics and idiosyncrasies. He ' ll tell you when they are going to pass, and when a run will be tried, who ' ll make the next basket, or when the coach will take them out. An outstanding dentist at this point in his career, Dave is destined to be one of the finest practitioners in our profession. whew — garlic on this one, loo! 137 JACK PATTIRSON, A.A., D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Santa Monica City College XI Psi Phi Sure I ' m happy smoking — you ' d be too if you bought these little brown cigarettes! Breathes there never a man who to everyone hath not said why the hell are we doing this? Attitude Jack: I ' ll get it done . . . I ' ll do it tomorrow . . . and he does! Jack, rather than conning, gets conned constantly. He was conned into carving teeth for other students, conned into setting up teeth, conned into showing everyone around him how to do it (lack was a jab technician prior to dental school. He was conned into becoming a working member of the cast of the Christmas Play in our sophomore year, and doing a copper matrix which was checked by all 100 class members. He was conned into becoming class secretary-treasurer during our junior and senior years . . . and an editor of the El Molaro. jack is what you might call a tight-hang-loose. Through all this service to one and all he has managed to get his own work done with superb proficiency. Most of the first two years of dental school Jack spent at Stuby ' s, on the roque court, or mowing the spacious lawns of the apartments he owns (the mortgage on). And, his main hobby is sleeping. His last two years of dental school have been spent at the 901, working on the El Molaro. There aren ' t many things Jack won ' t do for you . . . it ' s a wonder that he has been able to carry his load with such ease and yet accomplish so much in the field of human relations . . . he ' ll make a great dentist! Two pickled fish 138 Notice the hoop, its shadow, the ball, the mallet, my legs, arms, nose, pompador and bald spot are all aligned before I strike . . . No lady, I ' m not clawing on your face. Well, its better than a safe deposit box at First National . . . REX PETERS, D.D.S, SAN BERNARDINO, CALIFORNIA Pomona College Delta Sigma Delta Alpha Tau Epsilon It has been said that Rex Peters, for years, has polished his head with Wesson oil! So that is what makes you sparkle so much, Rex! We just got word that the freshmen want you to come grind in their typodonts for them. They may not feel so bad if you tell them you used three sets of teeth as a freshman. Or, maybe you can ' t help the sophs mount their teeth for the manikin — yours were so beautiful . . . unforgetable! Rex has the singly unique distinction of being engaged to a goose girl. His golden goose girl is named Donna, and admittedly, she is very pretty and rightly deserves the role of owning the golden goose egg (Walter). Rex, the mighty kid from the hot plains of San Bernardino, via Pomona College, probably remembers how he and the Rabbit sneaked into the freshman lab to view their models ... or the wild San Clemente beach party that took Rex over a week to regain his equilibrium. We hope. Rex, that you don ' t get too mad at the swabbies in the Navy. Well, ole ' buddy is going down the aisle of destiny this June with his goose girl, and we cannot think of a better thing that could happen to such a great friend! 139 if ya ain ' t gonna buy, .«■« don ' t handle llv j merchandise! DONALD PHILLIPS, D.D.S. BEVERLY HILIS, CALIEORNIA University of Colorado University of California at Berkeley University of California at Los Angeles Alpha Omega Don Epidemic Phillips as he is affectionately referred to, has spent more time at the USC Medical Clinic than the use Dental Clinic. The walking agar plate ' s greatest achievement came in his junior year when he got a big B in practice administration without ever attending a lecture. Mr. Host Organism spends most of his time making the winter ski circuits where he claims he got a little A —without ever attending a lecture! Sports do play a big part in Don ' s life— snow skiing, of course, water skiing on the Colorado, and ping pong in the lounge. Until the bug got him late in the junior year his fine technique enabled him to keep up with the class even though working at half speed . . . with his many extra- curricular activities taking up the rest of his time. Don will make a welcome addition to the dental profession upon graduation ... for he is one of the really nice guys of our class. A little higher, Ronnie! Skiing, cards, liquor, women . . . 140 Class I— no; Class II— er; Class 111 — aw, just hand it here! LEONARD PRESTON, D.D.S. SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA San Diego State College Pasadena College I ' ll buy you a pipe, Lenney — then the tobacco won ' t burn your hand . . . Ready . Rumor has it that Lennie is actually a young buck of some twenty-five years . . . don ' t believe it! This guy is one step away from qualifying for social security! Lennie still sports a beautiful scar on his thumb which he received during his sophomore year in S and T, when he learned that the joe dandy is as effective with flesh as wtih gold! Although no transfusons were required, his hair turned three shades grayer from the shock. Dr. Bassett of wear said that the gash should have no affect on his ability to pack a Class V foil (but arterial blood has a mysterious non-cohesive quality about it). There is no truth to the rumor that Lennie met his beautiful wife, Dinda, in a topless bar in San Francisco and wooed her with exciting stories of his World War II heriocs against the famous German flying ace, the Red Baron. Besides, Lennie doesn ' t drink! The couple have one child who was born bald ... but now has a beautiful head of gray hair! 141 now he I think (he kid ' s trying to tell you something — going to write a note. MICHAEL RABBITT, D.D.S. BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Delta Sigma Delta Mike is looking forward to a two-year Naval hitch. He has hopes of beitig assigtied as commanding officer of a sixty-foot yacht running dental supplies up the treacherous rivers of Viet Nam to the beleaguered frontier dental clinics staffed by Dean Ingle ' s trained killers from the Class of ' 66! After spending two years in Stubby ' s training on the electric bowling game, Mike turned his attention to a homecoming princess named Patti and married her. Dental school has been a snap for Mike. He ripped through his freshman midterms and pulled top grades with almost no study at all. As a sophomore he revolutionized the precision partial design by preparing the attachments in the gold after casting! Class V foil requirements took only nine days and one patient who must have enjoyed Freudian fantasy with the electromallet. Mike has been big in Endo in this our senior year. He knows how to treat his patients and is well-liked by them . . . and his classmates. Good luck, friend. VVhat-a-ya mean I look like Steve Allen? . getting some before hours! 142 I wonder if I can afford ($) to do tfiese as castings? ROBERT REDMON, A.A., D.D.S. CENTERVILLE, SOUTH DAKOTA Los Angeles City College Don ' t bother him needs the sleep! he Stop me if I talk too much! Unlike those breakfast cereals that make a lot of noise, Bob has spent most of his time not bothering anybody. He has outstanding ability clinically ... he seems to really shine in prosthetic work! Bob says he was sidetracked from his original ambition in life — that of a household collection engineer. Bob ' s hobbies include music (violin and high fidelity recordings) and gardening. During our senior year, he was awarded the Ebell Scholastic Scholarship. His quietness has caused many of us to be suspicious . . . is there a smoldering fire hidden deep within him? He has already spent three years in the Navy, so he plans to enter private practice when he graduates. You will certainly have no problems building a practice with your ability, Bob. 143 RICHARD DARR REIMERS, D.D.S. JACKSON, WYOMING Pasadena City College Santa Monica City College Brigham Young University Alpha Tau Epsilon Dick came to dental school from Wyoming . . . Marlboro country. His continued interest in a complete and broad education has taken him to such diversified areas as BYU and Pasadena City College. The greatest asset that Dick claims is his friendly, easy going manner, that rare quality of being liked from the first contact with him. His infamous notoriety is not due to his loquaciousness, as some claim, but rather to his innate ability at discussions, his friendly love for competition, but especially for his witty, to-the-point and most-pertinent remarks about the discussion not at hand. Dick has been the most competent technician in the class, from passing along dentures in class without dropping them, to giving complexion treament to Dr. Gregg in anatomy lab. With such an outstanding record in dental school, Dick will go far in his plans to practice in Northern California . . . where he can wear Pendleton shirts, red jackets, and a long moustache, relatively free from social restriction. Darn ... I can ' t remember what the doctor said . . . minus 20 or . . .? . and 1 study four hours every night You push the middle valve down, the air goes round and round . . . TERRY C. ROBINSON, B.A., D.D.S. ARCADIA, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Delta Sigma Delta 10 dwt short? How long? Faith Rube started with a barig in dental school . . . Cathy Bleabaum! This didn ' t daunt our hero though, and he was promptly back at Santa Anita, his childhood home, with Radkovich and an XKE. Anatomy and histology interrupted his social life somewhat, but a helpful Dick Reimers managed to get him through these barriers with a minimuni of effort. The clinic was a d ifferent story. Different because the Arcadia flash had given up women (at least those who attended USC), and settled down to hard, serious work in a new atmosphere. After dropping his operative box down the stairs, separating his shoulder, and geting sick in Mexico, it seemed nothing would stop him. Unfortunately, California had imports from Norway and Germany this year and TCR was diverted again! Luckily, about this time, Rabbitt convinced him thai taking the Endo midterm was pure folly and a nite at the 901 Club would be much better for his health. The next day in the Dean ' s office, no one seemed to believe that his car had broken down. By his senior year Rube had all the secrets of a good practice down pat: make an appointment at 9:00 o ' clock and show up at 9:45; make the patient think you ' re highly in demand; have the hare tell your patient you ' re sick, and then go to the track; or, the best solution of all, go to Mammoth for two weeks and don ' t tell anybody! Seriously, TCR has close to a 3.0 and has the technique and personality to be a great.dentist. Have fun in Europa, Rube. IP RICHARD RUHE, D.D.S. CHESTERTON, INDIANA Valparaiso University Long Beach City College Psi Omega Some of us are dental students; some of us are democrats; some of us are died in the wool Republicans . . . namely, Richard Ruhe. After Nixon ' s losses poor Rich was non-coherent for ten weeks. Since he couldn ' t talk during these periods, Rich decided to undergo orthodontic treatment to correct his dysfunction, Be ' ides politics, Rich had time to father four children. His wife, Lee, finally gave in and p resented him with a babv boy, Ronnie, last year. His other children, all girls, are Debbie, Tammie, and Jackie. Rich has many varied interests . . . 6% at California Bank, 5% at Coast Federal, 10% from a neighbor, and 3.5% from a liberal neighbor. Rich is planning to practice in conservative Orange County. Let ' s hope ail his patients are Republicans. He does have one request ... an honorable discharge from LJSC. Look — 24-hour protection! Oh well, it doesn ' t matter! 146 Yes, I got all A ' s on my exams again Now while that ' s setting I ' ll go over to the graduation exercises . . . don ' t go ' way . . . Mother, I ' ve got ya right where I want ya! VICTOR S. SCHWARTZ, B.S., D.D.S. WEST LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Ljniversity of Southern California Alpha Omega Alpha Tau Epsilon Voracious Victor has not stopped going since that first day at the S and T. He was always the first to complete any project and the first to re-do it! One point in his favor, however, is that by doing everything twice, he had gained twice the experience! When Vic does things, they ' re done all the way. He decided to have his teeth straightened in our sophomore year ... he has gone all the way to graduation, and they ' re still on! He wore his external head gear twenty-four hours a day, shortening the time of treatment by one-half! He is now one of the few members of our class to have perfect occlusion. Vic was awarded membership in ATE our junior year for his excellent scholastic ability. Since that first day in the clinic when the rest of us were listening to orientation speeches, he was on the clinic floor scaling a patient ' s teeth in preparation for his first operative clinic . . . few have approached his point total. Victor always helped those that sat around him . . . first there was Lyn Schiveley, then Tom Sawyer, and finally, Danny Warner. Yes, Victor deeply moves those around him! He will always be remembered for having turned in his crown and bridge typodont first, finishing his requirements first, and never borrowing from his neighbor! After graduation he will spend two years with the United States Public Health Department, then practice in West Los Angeles. 147 Clean body, clean mind, clean DAVID SKERSICK, B.A., D.D.S. VAN NUYS, CALIFORNIA Pepperdme Collpgo Delta Sigma Delta That first year of dental school might have been hell for Dave, had it not been for the little boost he got from his neighbors in prosthetics, dental anatomy, and so forth , . . that second year might have been hell except for Suzie . the same for the third! You see, he met this DH in his sophomore year. She was short, cute and popular . . . everyone wanted a date with her (even some instructors) . . but Dave won out and her name is now Skersick! Dave is not one to let extracurricular activities interfere with dentistry ... he is always the first to ask an instructor for constructive criticism, and he takes it to heart! He does Dr. Fred Harper ' s lab work ... so he must be good! Excellent technique and superior didactic grades have put him near the top of our class. He never seems to have much time to spend w ith the rest of the pang, but what time he does spend makes up for the difference! He, his wife and the Thompson ' s often go to the 301 Club in Orange County ... for that good Mexican food they enjoy so much! Dave plans to join the Air Force after graduation . . . then private practice. Do I polish before or after casting it? Oh, Dave- you shouldn ' t have . . 148 Ookay, whooo put the alum in the fountain? . . what is it- V foil? M ROBERT F. SMITH, D.D.S. LA CANADA, CALIFORNIA University of California at Los Angeles Los Angeles City College Clendale City College Xi Psi Phi From a hot ' 57 Chevy to a crippled Alpha Romeo (because he ' s always got it apart) via his parents T-Bird, then his wife ' s T-Bird, Bob managed to motor to use to learn dentistry. When not piddling around with cars, looking at cars, selling cars, or buying cars, he likes to spend three-day weekends in Mammoth skiing, or afternoons at Brookside on the tennis courts. Prior to his entrance into the whimsical world of dental school, he spent several years being inculcated in the superior-attributes and traditions of the UCLA engineering program, where he distinguished himself in the pure basic research of the tvpical Uclan style. Bob puttered around with high-speed handpieces in the Human Factors Research laboratory for the Silver Fox, Dr. Rex Ingraham. Together they delved into the ethereal world of speed and pressure . . . Robert, a sea gull (but not a heart), married an all-time wife with a southern accent. Another of those less seen seniors who are quite unnoticed ... he has lived a no-sweat existence while with us. He hopes to dodge the draft and enter private practice. There was a margin here someplace . . . 149 DAVID C. SPRINGER, B.A., D.D.S. CHARLES CITY, IOWA State University of Iowa Xi Psi Phi Alpha Tau Epsilon David Charles Springer arrived in California fresh from the family farm in Charles City, Iowa. And, he frequently returns to that environment via a place in Long Beach called Jo Josts. He feels right at home with the atmosphere created by the people, bar tenders, and pool tables at Jo ' s. Believe it or not, he has a B.S. in psychology, he won the sophomore technique award, and won a scholarship his junior year. The first two years at USC for Dave were spent in the S and T building at the corner of Hoover and Exposition to the tune of rumbling trains and fog horn bellow of Murph, whom he dearly loved. The last two years he spent at the clinic located at the corner of Hoover and 34th Street, where he has shown remarkable technical skill . . . and good didactic grades. After hearing one lecture by Marsh Robinson he ran out and performed a vertical osteotomy on his wife, Dorothy. Most of Dave ' s weighty problems have been solved, while one hasn ' t! He will enter private practice in Los Alamitos in a beautiful, brand new building. w A wave of my hand and , To the rear march! The masked grandma strikes again! 150 . . . gee, 1 don ' t know Carol — you know how close my wife keeps tabs on me . . . The only inconspicuous way to suck my thumb! the mad itch! RONALD THOMPSON, A.B., D.D.S. FULLERTON, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Delta Sigma Delta Alpha Tau Epsilon The Navy seems almost to be a prerequisite at SC. For Ron spent twelve years as an officer in the United States Navy prior to gaining admission to dental school. He was fortunate to be stationed in Europe as a high level courier, and managed to spend many hours in all the exotic capitols of the Old World. He and Nancy, his wife, picked up most of the furniture for their luxurious hill-top house while in Europe and had it shipped back by Uncle Sam. The sophomore year we remember Ron as quietly sitting at his desk and producing some of the best technique work ever seen at old S and T. During this period in Ron ' s life, he worked as an assistant to an oral surgeon in Fullerton . . .an extra advantage in his block assignments in oral surgery. Ron was elected senior class president, and spent his extra time during the senior year doing lab work for last year ' s senior class president, Ray Werts. There is little doubt that Ron ' s sincere, warm manner will aid him in building a fine practice in Orange County. 151 KENNETH TURNEY, D.D.S. WATERBURY, CONNECTICUT University of Colorado Unive ' -sity of Southern California Delta Sigma Delta Oh, there it is! X! KOT, the phantom, has a predilection for girls that are physically well-endowed. Perhaps to keep from over- gluttoning on the subject, Ken eats copious amounts of protein. He even does mor e lab work than most seniors . . . but none is his own! This may account for his liking to sleep through all lectures. Ken is noted for his promptness and his long hours in Oral Diagnosis and Oral Surgery. He is the only dependable one during those block assignments. Only because the coffee machine stocks hot chocolate is Ken able to subsist from day to day. His immediate dream is to get a super-nasty 427 Cobra, but Uncle Sam may put a dent in those plans. Stop Ken . . . that tickle Last night? 152 VVlitil new U ' ihni(|UO? In four more hours il ' ll be an A. JAMES D. VANDER HEIDE, B.S., D.D.S. BtLLFLOWTR, CALIFORNIA Long Beach Slate College Xi Psi Phi The blond Dutchman Irom Belltlower, with the Lord ' s goof for occlusion, is Jim VanderHeide. Ho is mild-mannered, except on those rare occasions when his temper boils! A product of Phase Two, Jim is a conscientious dinker, meticulous in all phases of dentistry. He even keeps his locker sterile! It was in his sophomore year that he took unto himself a wife (a school teacher named Judy) . . . but this does not deter him from looking at every DH that walks by his operatory. Bouncy in spirit, pleasant to be around, Jim is a likable guy who offers help to all. As a member of Xi Psi Phi, ho is active especially around luau time in the Spring. He is one of the few remaining actives in that fraternity from the senior class. Jim plans to enter private practice ... his patriotic visions of joining the Air Force having been shattered. You like the way this view box lights up my face? LARRY WEBBER, A.A., B.A., D.D.S. LA CRESCENTA, CALIFORNIA Glendale College Lo5 Angeles State College Delta Sigma Delta Web may be found almost any time of day standing in front of his locker staring into its empty confines. He seems to be always looking for something that is never there. In the morning he may say hello or he may not. When not, its because he is preoccupied, not because he doesn ' t see you. At other times of the day you will find him on the clinic floor hard at work which he does with meticulous care, if not speed. Hard work comes naturally to Larry ... he helped his mother raise his sister and brother after his father died and he now has a little boy and girl of his own to care for. Larry and his wife, LaRue, manage to attend most of the social functions throughout the year and he is an active member of the Delts. His night time hours over the past four years have been spent with wax, flame and spatula. His weekends, when not the same, may be spent at the beach or skiing. A TGIF never passes without Larry ' s attendance. Larry is well-liked by the memebrs of his class and we all wish him well in the years to come. II must have gone ovei there after it hooked the wheel . . . . . . yeah, right . through the apex and out the mandible! , but the zipper won ' t go any higher! 154 Now that we ' ve both explained it, is It clear? KENNETH R. WEITZMAN, D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Santa Monica City College University of California at Los Angeles University of Southern California Alpha Omega You could tell me what you didn ' t like Denney without bringing out your entire list of insults . . . Is it 11 or 13 mm from the tragus (or anti-tragus) , . . maybe my patient knows; I ' ll ask him! Ken, also known vicariously as the flying madman . . . dental school ' s answer to the Hell ' s Angels — the brilliant, eloquent defender of the dental student ' s rights. Ken manages to coufDie uncontrollable exuberance, gross rationalizations, and blind tenacity to come up with a kind of unshakable force. His most brilliant hour on the stage was when he went to Dr. Ho, fire in eye, boley gauge in one hand, PJC prep in the other — demanding to have his check card signed . . . adamantly displaying irrefutable mathematical proof thctt he did not overcut his prep! To wit Dr. Ho replied: Well, you can ' t argue with perfection . . . Our clinic day would not have been complete without hearing Ken tell some ten-year-old patient to interdigitate in centric occlusion then protrude into quartering as you disarticulate your condyles from the most retruded position in your glenoid fossae . . . He shows up at the clinic in the morning replete with motorcycle, helmet, gogles and scab box, steps into his locker, closes the door and utters a few magic words, and emerges spotlessly attired for his first clinic patient. Good luck. Ken. 155 Yes, it ' s a cloth towel ... so what? RONALD WHEATLEY, D.D.S. ARCADIA, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Delta Sigma Delta Ron is not what you woijld call an obstreperous person, nor is he pertinacious or loquacious . . . we have been aware of his presence primarily due to his recalcitrant nature when face to face with authority. There was the time he flipped his Class V foil out at the S T building; he put it back in, burnished the margins and asked Dr. Stark to help him with it . . . well, after it was lost due to an extra graceful trajectory there were ample aoologies to soothe his hyperemic eyes and pulsating cardiac organ. Ignominiously, he repeated a course in endodontics because he could not resist the urge to go to the dental convention in San Francisco during midterm examinations. He talked the dean out of all but endo . . . but this was not without its rewards; it allowed him to get in well with Dud and the boys. Ron certainly cannot be called a pusilaninious person — he has his wings and spends many hours flying over beautiful Southern California. He plans a stint in the USAF then travel before deciding where to practice . . . wherever you go, Ron, we know you will do it in a voluptious manner! 1, 2, 3, wide awake feeling good . ' ' ' I VY ge.od.e-sy (Gr. geodaisia) f Hey guys — my guppies died! JERALD WIENKE, D.D.S. KINGMAN, ARIZONA University of Arizona PsI Omega . . . thanks for the lecture, John, on how I should be doing this. Our answer to Gentleman ' s Quarterly . . . It has often been said that never has one person done so much with so few clothes (we thought we ' d inject a little class in here, )erry). His basic interests in dental school lie in the field of prosthodontics — and in a particular individual, one Svengali who affectionately refers to him as the little fellow. Wienke has always been plagued with a great deal of good luck, which has appartently not rubbed off on those who sat next to him during the inital years in our beloved USC! Wienke, during his senior year, was Psi Omega house manager (you ran a loose house, friend). He plans to practice out of the states in some place called Kingman, Arizona ... if not in Viet Nam! Do you have any guppies? JOHN KING WONG, D.D.S. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Xi Psi Phi Ah sol John comes from a family of dentists — his older brother is an orthodontist, and Andrew graduated last year. He is norotious for his incessant study habits. He will start studying for first semester finals all thru Christmas vacation! He has his notes organized and memoriezd before others have even considered studying for exams. John used to live at Avalon and Manchester . . . until the Watts riots. Then under cover of non-chalance, he and the family moved closer to town. It was quite an experience moving all that furniture and those boxes . . . while the police were on the lookout for looters. John ' s discovery of North Beach in San Francisco has him on the verge of running up there for a weekend whenever he can find someone to go with him. Orthodontics has a special calling for him since he is familiar with the work involved, having done tracings and other lab work for his brother. He looks forward to a few years in the Navy or Air Force. Then he will settle down, after ortho school, in private practice . . . probably sharing an office with his brother. ; ' s I hate working on orientals •Ji I t .-J[ . That ' s why the light doesn ' t work 158 Gee, Dr. Gullet— I really appreciate your making all these dentures for me . . .! Bubble, bubble, boil and bubble! Mind your own business . we ' re doing a feature for Ladies ' Home Journal! SUZANNE LYNN WOODCOCK, D.D.S. WESTMINSTER, CALIFORNIA California State College at San Fernando Upsilon Alpha Alpha Tau Epsilon What good is a FEMALE dentist; or what good is a female dental student? Susan came to our beloved dental school as a sweet, lovely, naive girl . . . however, she is leaving us as a sweet, lovely, non-naive girl! It all started back in our first year, namely anatomy lab. Susan refused to have the cadaver (male) uncovered, until Dr. Gregg indicated that her group was three weeks behind in dissection. Poor Susan . . . she was shocked! It might have been too much for her emotional stability, but Dr. Freudman came to her rescue and explained the necessities that every girl should know. After this little episode she became one of the guys. She actually became useful (most girls are so helpless). One of her great contributions was teaching the male dental students the latest dances. She did a great job as freshman secretary and senator. Susan has some very special hobbies and interests. She likes tennis, the organ, and a special dental student (male) turned dentist one year before us. After graduation Susan would like to practice in some foreign country really, anywhere out of the states where two dentists are needed in the same place! The draft poses no problem as she was classified 4-F due to sex. It certainly has been our pleasure Sue . . . you added an extra spark to our class with your personality, femininity, and leadership (proving that there is a place for females in dental school). such a well-liked guy. 159 BLAINE PATTEN WORRELL, A.A., D.D.S. PASADENA, CALIFORNIA Pasadena City College Stanford University San Diego City College San Diego State College Delta Sigma Delta Alpha Tau Epsilon Our first encounter with Blaine came when he calmly (and accurately) informed us that he was the best qualified for class president and with apologies to the other candidate would be the better man for the job . . . well, we will never know how the other candidate would have served, but Blaine Worrell was so well received that he served three consecutive terms: freshman, sophomore, and junior years. He can come through at the last minute on anything ... he can talk himself and others into or out of most anything— he was able to divert Dr. Gregg from the pterygoid canal to rock polishing during oral quizzes ... he knows all the administrators and faculty members as well as most students — and yet, even his closest friends oft times wonder whether they really know him. He has a mysterious aire about him that defies definition! Space doesn ' t allow listing all that he has done for our class and the school . . . suffice it to say that he has had his hand in almost everything on campus ... and off campus too at Stubby ' s and the 901 Club. He was elected membership into the dental school honor fraternity in his freshman year . . . Alpha Tau Epsilon. When asked what his hobbies and interests are, he replied simply and succinctly . . . you guessed it! He plans to enter the branch of the service that was cut off . . . he is destined to be a leader in dental circles with his natural ability to there simply is not enough space to continue as we could well do. Just one more thing: we don ' t think we will ever forget the shocked look on his face when asked (in all seriousness) by a DH at a TGIF who had just sold him a raffle ticket . . . what ' s your name? 1 like corn almost as well as . . . If I concentrate I know that I can do it! We thought we would throw this one in . . . a rare scene, indeed . . . ! 160 Iwb CLASS OF 1967 Class Officers . . . DAVE DICKERSON, President MIKE TYLER, Vice President GIL SNOW, Secretary-Treasurer lUNIOR . . . that one word is enough to make one feel good. Good at having to wait in the cold morning air for one-half hour only to have to run full tilt down two flights of stairs, grab a large wooden suitcase and your own stool, then race back up those same two flights of stairs, down the hall, around the corner, and grab the first chair you come to, just ahead of (sometimes behind) your classmate. But here, for the first time, you begin to learn real dentistry on real people . . . and you finally begin to look forward, somewhat, to your Senior year and then to graduation. Being a Junior is like being a freshman all over again, except for the fact that you are expected to know a little something. There ' s only how many chairs left? So that ' s how Bradford ' s always first in line! Cot to get my hose out! Look at that shine! Without Karen ' s help I ' ll never get set up . . If this doesn ' t work, I ' ll have to use aqua regia! You ' re supposed to use Vel Mix for your dies . . Back to the bench ° ever heard of BoldT I already have two chairs Co easy on the mix, Dave Meet you at the 901 The perfect end to a hard day ' 162 F L J ' ' •- Yes, Doctor, but that tooth was here yesterday! It ' s all in the hands That s a senior chair, fella Watch the eye this time, fella! jp, that s my they ' re admiring! Looks like another large turnout Dr. Turner is Iftluring Can you hold that quiz another five minutes? Real interesting! That was rather good, wasn ' t it? 8:55 a.m. — you sa tlnic 1A4 an operative chair open? We can copy the DH notes But I ' m not ready yet We didn ' t have any change! Ml Science and technique Is the retention good enough? We ' re holding back . . . look for more in El Molaro 1967 , So(ikdiium . 167 CLASS OF 1968 Well, here we are . . . Sophomores in the world of the freshman. Just wait until the Sophomore year we said, and now that it ' s here, we seem to be there. Ho to Harper. But thru all of this comes the future . . . and we ' ve had the hang-loosest year we ' ll ever have in dental school. Sorry fellas, can ' t go to play . . . wife says I have to study! Retention form Convenience form I ' ve plenty of time to go- to the game . , . I have alt my work done 168 omore Rube Goldberg device 169 -— M| : ••til ; { ■■Pit check sf r f :a Five minutes of silence 170 Duke do you think that wi affect the war in Viet Nam? What do you mean what would my wife say . . . that IS my wife! That ' s not the solution, Deon Never trust your patient! ones I All-Dental School Assembly WE GATHER TOGETHER ... for the first time in the history of the dental school . . . where traditionally we ' re split into two factions . . . everyone got together for some entertainment and a couple of short speeches . . . and we found that there really are four hundred eighty plus of us ... ! Fie limni the dean d dO ' CaCCed NEW BREED This is the proof of the pudding class. They are firsts at SC. They have been taking x-rays making diagnoses, and doing prophy ' s ... no other freshman class before them has done this! Working hard is the standard criterion for all dental students. Working even harder is their criterion. Either they ' ll make the best damn dentists ever assembled in this school, or the . . . Let ' s see — the hip bone ' s connected to the open your mouth! Ika fiS ivv K. Come now — let me give you a nice big kiss! Allnght Dr. O ' Crady — your money or your virility! Lookout! — Soule ' s coming with twelve demo slides Unlorlunatcly ... a rare scene lor the new breed Mama nature never That ' s right — the angle of the beam perpendicular to your Now hear this ... the PORT side — aah— 5-4-3-2-1— blastoff! ,, ,.|i Dm- -Alv-n I VN.. ' , •.,t-, ,ili:.- tlici i tiu!iln 1 li ' t nie hdM ' a Lbi( ( iv 111 ' I- all Ihc other kids and ALLRIGHT! ... if 1 give you your checks, will you go away and leave Dr. Campbell and me alone? Dental Anatomy Theory Perio Theory V Operative Theor Perio Technique Endo Technique Graduates of the future? . . . we hope not! . . . the so-called new breed to be molded in the greatest dental school in the world by 1970 176 CMitttMfiU Cueck I sACT PSI o A w etter to be a ull than a turkey SE AG U LLS S ATE Alpha Tau Epsilon gains membership from those students honored for academic excellence, technical ability, and leadership ability. TE sets its standards high to set the pace for excellence in dentistry. During the year members attend dinners with guest lecturers and occassional picnics. In years to come this organization will grow in its ideals and standards, and remam an inspiration to both Its members and the faculty. ZIPS Let me show you how the Eskimos do it in their igloos . . . How will you present your first denture case ' Your patient La likely to be apprehensive. Chances are, vou may be a little nervoug yourself. 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CERAMICS • CROWN AND BRIDGE • DE HINGE STRESS RELIEVER • FLUID BALANCE • LUXENE PRECISION AND DOWEL ATTACHMENTS • SWISSDENTURES • UNIBASE • VITALLIUM AND GOLD CASTINGS 202 CUSHMAN clentJLLrato. 3612 WEST PICO BOULEVARD • LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 90019 • 731-3161 7( e appzeclate out uAe o( ouz aCCo and mezcuz capAuCe tkzou kout AckooClng. . . we tzuAt tkU wiCC continue (oz man eazA in ouz pzactice ARGENTUM ALLOYS for highly satisfactory long-lasting silver amalgam restorations . . . used by the most critical in your profession who demand the best! Complement your skill with Hammond ' s Argentum Alloy It mixes readily, is clean working, has the proper consistency for good packing, carves easily and smoothly to precision contouring, and takes and retains a high silver luster. Used in dental schools for over thirty years Guaranteed to meet U. S. Government and A.D.A. specifications HAMMOND DENTAL MANUFACTURING COMPANY Our Thirty-Eighth Year of Dental Alloy Service 1358 MICHIGAN AVENUE, P. O. BOX 793, SANTA MONICA, CALIF. 90406 204 TAB. The delicious, sugar-free, low-calorie soft drink from The Coca-Cola Company. TAB is brimming with full-bodied flavor. But has only one calorie in every six ounces. One calorie, and no sugar. How can one calorie taste so good ? GO Troy GO ( onaraiulauons LuraujI . . manh uou wr uour patmnaat We specialize in uniforms for: • DENTISTS • PHYSICIANS • NURSES • PHARMACISTS •TECHNICIANS •STUDENT NURSES • BEAUTICIANS • BARBERS • DOMESTICS •WAITRESSES •VOLUNTEER GROUPS PROFESSIONAL UNIFORMS c v —y r 523 NORTH CENTRAL AVENUE • GLENDALE, CALIFORNIA 91203 • 242-3404 205 uour ruture In aS6ets 16 aained and retained no faster tnan the auaiitu of uour accountlna sudtem V TrJ jj A- ' accounting systenns, office business procedures af d programming especially designed for dentists rely on quality . . . you benefit in quantity when you ' re lax, you pay in tax A W BUSINESS CONSULTANTS MONTEREY PARK, CALIFORNIA • 288-2099 206 ,- Warren Claybaugh We have enjoyed our relationship with you and USC as much as we hope you have enjoyed our Neopar and other products. We look to the future with confidence and good feelings. rv a. ▼ Miner Dental Products, Inc. 5770 Shellmound Street, Emeryville, California 94608 • Phone 654-6404 . . . Area Code 415 A few of our products: NEOPAR COLD CURE ACRYLICS • NEOPAR HEAT CURE ACRYLICS • GYPSUM PRODUCTS (Hydroc) • IMPRESSION MATERIALS (Dyna-Cream) LABORATORY PUMICE • PROPHY PASTE • WAXES • LUBRICANTS • CLEAN-CAST INLAY INVESTMENTS .an Itemized price list of all items is available on request BEST WISHES FOR CONTINUED SUCCESS DENTAL CERAMICS 740 East Colorado Boulevard • Pasadena 1, California SYcamore 3-0903 209 NOW .... Wilkinson introduces The Hand Caster KIT The Wilkinson Caduceus Tie Tack shown here, an example of air pressure casting, was presented by The Wilkinson Company to graduates of USC Dental School, classes of ' 65 and ' 66. A portable kit designed to aid student or graduate dentist in developing his casting skills at nominal cost. The new Wilkinson air pressure Hand Caster Kit for crowns and inlays weighs about 7 lbs., can be used in a space of less than 1 sq. ft., and costs approximately one hundred dollars . Thoroughly tested by The Wilkinson Company, fabricators of alloys for dentistry since 1919, the Kit consists of: 1. THE HAND CASTER . Completely self-contained, it requires no hoses or connections. Metal is heated in crucible of ring (photo right), then forced down into mold by air pressure. Rugged, trouble free. Weighs less than 16 ozs., casts any castable metal. 2. THE HAND CASTER OVEN. Housed in anodized aluminum and mounted on heat-resistant base with ring platform and controls. Can be used with ordinary household current. 3. RONSON VARAFLAME BUTANE TORCH. Burns for hours with Ronson Multi-fill cylinder. Easy to handle. Adjusts to reducing flame capable of melting most dental golds. {Note: Any of the components of the Hand Caster Kit may be bought individually. Prices on request.) Order from your dealer, or for further information call or write: WTHE WILKINSON COMPANY, precious metals for dentistry since 1919 Dept.SCY, P.O.Box 303, Santa Monica, California 90406 Phone : (213) 451-1466 Patent Pending  s ipsa lOQuitur .. 1 t ii ' i ' r X ' :j l BI 130 East Victoria Street SANTA BARBARA 963-3404 216 East Highland Avenue SAN BERNARDINO 882-1263 4537 Van Nuys Boulevard SHERMAN OAKS 788-7700 81 North Mentor Avenue PASADENA S.S.WHITE COMPANY 1138 Wilshire Boulevard LOS ANGELES 482-0470 927 North Euclid Avenue ANAHEIM 774-8677 1057 Pine Avenue LONG BEACH 437-6468 ;760 Fifth Avenue SAN DIEGO 239-1133 211 when it comes to loans... here ' s just what the doctor ordered! „f thp California medical More than 4,000 members ottne . r.d denta. fratern.V ;eW - „. as ' ' ' ' ' nTta ' re ief anS insurance guidance. r:: :;:°;Se, persona. se..ce. pnoneDUnKTK 7-8361. or drop. n at... W GRISWOLD ASSOCIATES ?400 WEST SIXTH STREET over forty years of faithful service to the profession. . . IN FIXED PROSTHETICS: • Microbond • Ceramco • Porcelain Jackets and Inlays • Gold Bridges and Inlays • Luxene Crown and Bridge Material IN REMOVABLE PROSTHETICS: • Cast Vitallium Partials • Cast Gold Partials • Precision Dowel Attachment Partials • A Complete Full and Partial Denture Service • Luxene Denture Material • Swissedentures SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO THE UNUSUAL OR DIFFICULT CASE Cxxriel c SirxiiDSon Dental Laboratory 916 North Western Avenue, Los Angeles, California 90029 Telephone 462-6342 Accredited by the Sonthem California State Dental Association 213 . )pondor6 CRESCENT DENTAL MANUFACTURING COMPANY A. L. ENGELHARDT COMPANY GLOBE DENTAL LABORATORY (Harold Globe, C.D.T., Dale Alkov, C.D.T.) HARVEY DENTAL SPECIALTY COMPANY RETAIL MERCHANTS ' CREDIT ASSOCIATION (Medical-Dental Division) 0. SUTER DENTAL MANFACTURING COMPANY ROBERT C. McSHIRLEY COMPANY SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA STATE DENTAL LABORATORY SOCIETY WILDENT CORPORATION DENTAL PRODUCTS CRESCENT TOWEL AND LINEN SUPPLY COMPANY HAMMOND DENTAL MANUFACTURING COMPANY GUGGENHEIM BROTHERS DENTAL SUPPLY ANAHEIM DENTAL LABORATORY JOHNSON-OGLESBY MANUFACTURING COMPANY JOHN 0. BUTLER COMPANY PARKELL PRODUCTS INCORPORATED GARFIELD STUDIO CongfzatuCatlon CCadd o 7966i PnMHjquHt ■% $ 9 1 1 , JI B 3:, i 1 1 Uj pW JB| 3[ 1 Hpoing the Monkr ' ' J ' ' niiiriilkiiXi Sf ' is r lA 1 1 L % 1 ■: MM 1 N« kUM i I L 1 I -JH H 1 ■1 H Hk m B ' J HHI H 1 1 I ■- ' ISto i Fill FLookatthose, will yajj 1 B 1 ilr J hB hi I ■B, K You ight, Santa ' 1 fpon ' t you v sh .v..,vl kkK used Cros ■t H V l B 1. , .-jm 1 BppiHVHI I Hj 1 • ■k l fi H JBHJMH ' .., V H WPB 1 1 pr l I Mk ' B VP ' tI I 1 M ■I E ' ■P LomII { t Bi ■i B r H i P j p w  ■' ■■■■„J E-. a l ' v T ■KiKHBj ' i 1 ■If Aa ShHH r who L Ise was thert ' ft ft Al H HI H N It ' ll stay . . . sides, who cares if it doosn ' tJI B V mH ■j V ' MARY ASMUS NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California The silent supersaleswoman of our class suddenly swept down upon us with her special ski-type sweaters during our senior semesters. Many of us were the beneficiaries of her sales ability. Mary has been active in Delta Delta Delta and is reported to play the guitar excellently. She had the unique idea to advertise in the paper for a summer job as a dental assistant and received a most favorable response and, of course, a job. Mary says she ' s really from Downey but her loyalty is imbedded in Newport. In keeping with the atmosphere of the beach she is noted for owning several outstanding bikinis. Hey! Batman is on tonight! Say ... he doesn ' t look bad for a freshman! CAROL BALL HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Orient the new dental students (and DHs), that was Carol ' s job as third vice president . . . Have a perfect attendance record at ALL the TGlFs, that was Carol ' s duty . . . Spend Thursday evenings at the 901 (that was a way of life for Carol) . . . Serve as chaplain for Alpha Delta Pi . . . know every guy in dental school . . . Have the wildest hairdo . . . Never study too much . . . Plan to live in Manhattan Beach, have fun and see the world . . . that ' s Carol! 218 SUSAN BALLARD PASADENA, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Having decided that the best way to tour the Trigeminal Nerve was armed with a gun and camera, Susie set out to do just that. It was a hectic journey, but in the end all came out well. It must have been the strain of the trip that made it so easy for Susie to take naps in class every time the lights went out, and at times when the lights were on! She has been an active participant both in and out of DH. She has served as president of Delta Delta Delta and Spurs, and has been our class recorder and AKG reporter. We will never forget the outstanding job done by Susie in organizing our now infamous donut sales. For the future Susie has ideas of taking fine arts classes at night school and perhaps studying medical illustration. Also, she has thoughts of practicing in Europe. Oh, I ' m so glad to be back in the clinic today! Please don ' t take my Sego! JOY BEBBLING TORRANCE, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California If I had it to do over again, I ' d lose twenty pounds and be a cocktail waitress in Vegas! . . . so spoke Joy during our junior year. Though we all laughed, we believed her! After all, Joy proved herself right at home in Vegas during the ADA Convention ... to the tune of winning $135 at craps . . . Joy was a real natural, and a natural she is when it comes to water skiing or swimming, and not to forget handwrestling. For Joy dental school has been traumatic . . . still, whatever the situation or restrictions, Joy has managed to maintain her individuality . . . long hair and uniquely designed uniforms — mmmm — She will be an outstanding hygienist in spite of her struggles with conformity. She has a rare sparkle, a bubbling ever-present and ever-heard laugh and most of all, she cares. 219 JOAN BILKISS LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California ' I want to form a committee . . . and, we ' ll all get better grades. This is Joanie. But there is more to our gal: prime authority on Peyton Place . . . hyperfilled ball of fire . . . word for word notes . . . gunner . . . with good aim? star of the S and T Christmas Show as Sara Bellum. Hustler Joanie likes the out-of-doors and numbers swimming, riding, sewing and knitting among her hobbies. To these, talking on the telephone might be added! Okay kid . . . one false move and you ' ve had it. Let ' s go poison pigeons in the park . . . KATHY BROCKETT SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California One of the three muskateers . . . Tri-Delts, that is. Kathy takes all of our kidding with her cute turned-up smile and peddles away on her bicycle to her homing place, the Tri-Delt house. Whoever thought of Kathy as quiet during the first week should have waited until the second week when her clever wit started to flood the Histo lab. Kathy achieved a reputation for hard work . . . intermittantly. She plans to return to La Mesa, her home, to await the state board results. Maybe she will spend part of that time water skiing as she often does during vacations. Chances are Kathy might remain in the San Diego area to work. 220 LINDA CHOQUETTE LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California We know Linda as quietly determined but with a sparkling wit to match any occasion. We know Linda likes to be neatly dressed and especially favors her blue and maroon outfit, and a variety of hair bows. We know Linda tends to panic at the thought of an exam but always seems to pull through. We know Linda as somewhat conservative and somewhat reserved, but is that the real Linda? Her talents in presenting A Visit with Susie and Dr. T were all appreciated by our class, but the kindergarten reaction was something else! In her other life Linda is a member of Delta Gamma and had the good fortune to spend one summer studying at Upsala, Sweden, and traveling through Europe. Cosh, oh golly, I mean jeepers. •ie« Fooled her that time. JAN CHRISTENSEN CULVER CITY, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Who is the girl cheering so loudly football season . . . basketball season . . . baseball season? The real USC rooter is our gal, Jan. Thanks to her quick wit, compounded with an easy sense of humor, we managed to keep Liz in Path lab during the junior year. Her ability to actually understand Chemistry amazed many of us and helped us to pass the course. Jan knows the TV schedule backwards and has read a variety of everything. Her secret desire is to graduate as a DH and then continue her education in psychology or anthropology. She plans on leaving Culver City to practice in Santa Barbara, San Bernardino, or the big town of Los Angeles . . . ? 221 LIZ COOKE LA CANADA, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Our most traumatic moments have often been eased with Liz ' s unique sense of humor, and an okay, you kuys! . . . We will remember her transformation into a native Tahitian dancer at last year ' s AKG luau. Also, we are most grateful to Liz for the many raffle prizes she acquired for the cause. During the past year, Elizabeth has been treasurer for her sorority. Gamma Phi Beta. Unkonwn to many of us for quite a while, Liz and Larry were engaged at Christmas time. When we did find out we enjoyed celebrating with not one, but two boxes of candy. In the near future a wedding is planned by Elizabeth and Laurence. Well girls, Betty Barf is one of the p atients this afternoon . . . If I think hard enuf I ' ll remember her name, I ' m sure . . . ANN CREWS PLAYA DEL REY, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Fearless leader . . . her ability to be well organized has contributed greatly to the success of our class projects of the past two years. Ann always manages to get everything done and everything includes participating in Shell and Oar, Amazons and Chimes. She enjoys sewing and is always on the lookout for ideas she can use on her next creation. Saturday mornings Ann can often be found in Griffith Park. Ann and Dick have plans for a June wedding and will live in Virginia for the next two years. 222 ROSE ANN DEEB BURBANK, CALIFORNIA University of California at Los Angeles Where do we go . . . what do we do . . . Ask Rosie! Rosie Miss Colorful DH. It was her big push that got us to Las Vegas via the traumas of raffles, toothbrush sales and, of course, donut sales. During football season, we frequently heard Rosie support her favorite team — U.C.L.A. During senior year she joined the group of knitters and gave skiing a try. Never to be forgotten by our class are the two AKG parties held at Rosie ' s brother ' s home. Who had the most fun, the Deeb family or the DHs, will never be known. Where she ' ll go . . . what she ' ll do . . . ask Rosie! Wow! No second patient . . . it ' s time to rock out! How ' bout that ... I snicked off an Interdental papilla! RUTH DeYOUNG CARDENA, CALIFORNIA Harbor College Why work as a D.A. on Saturdays? ... ask Ruth! She would probably tell you how it has proved quite interesting for her ... no, not the work ... it is the place where she met her engineer fiance. She usually has a mischievous smile on her face, yet, she never seems to do anything mischievous. A diligent student, Ruth usually studies in the library with )udy in the evenings. Outside of school she leads a busy life, and is especially active in her church group. She enjoys tennis, knitting, sewing and cooking, and plans on being married in September. 223 MAREEN EVERTSEN PHOENIX, ARIZONA Phoenix Junior College Brigham Young University Where there is a piano . . . there is Mareen! The Mandarin Chinese Restaurant has a piano . . . She literally has it in the hands for music and for calculus. When not organizing her day, she may be found at the piano in her apartment. Scaling (teeth and piano) is not the least of her talents . . . sewing, designing, moonlighting, are high on her list of endeavors . . .a hustler, Mareen always has one waiting! She, we are sure, will be one of the most successful gals in our class. She plans on returning to her home in Phoenix, where she ' ll practice. Mareen also plans to further her education in public school work. Thev don ' t have any Winnie the Pooh books! Notice how the little finger never touches the patient ... or leaves the hand! SUSIE FREER TORRANCE, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California in the middle of finals each January we celebrated Susie ' s birthday. Dr. Jakway delighted Susie with a card and her anatomy final as a junior. As a senior, life was a bit more jazzy and we all migrated to the 901 to celebrate her twenty-first! As secretary-treasurer of the junior class Susie never turned a deaf ear to the whining, crying and suffering of all giving her their life savings for dues. Susie did a great job planning the AKG luau . . . this was probably one reason why we voted her AKG vice president. Susie plans to spend the next three years working for her PHT (putting hubby through). Susie will marry jerry this summer and move to San Francisco where he will finish dental school at Cal . . . of all places! 224 REBECCA FUSZARD DIAMOND BAR, CALIFORNIA Santa Monjca City College When Rebecca came back in September of our senior year, she was Becky. Her new contact lenses, hairdo and ail her changes added up to an outgoing girl we saw having tun at the AKG parties. Living at the Holiday House also had a great effect on Becky. Her calm, peaceful nature is rarely changed by any crisis that shatters most of us to bits. In keeping with her quiet image she has quiet, restful interests. She enjoys sewing, crocheting and painting. Her plans after graduation include practicing somewhere in California. Being a DH is such an easy life liat pre-med great stuff! fl Hf KAREN GOSTANIAN FRESNO, CALIFORNIA Fresno State College Help! Help me if you can! This commonly heard phrase rings in Karen ' s ears frequently. She is often helping a DH behind in her work . . . helping many brides make the big step . . . helping her dental student roommate! She ' s a great cook. However, she has been a constant companion to Dr. Mayo, eggs and grapefruit all year in a successful attempt to continue wearing her Diors to class. She manages to exercise physically as well as mentally by running back and forth to the library with textbooks. Karen plans on returning to Fresno to work as a DH. There is also a plan of seeing Mexico right after graduation. 225 MICHELE HALL LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA Long Beach City College ' If only I had started to study earlier. This was an oft-heard cry from Michele. But that ' s what comes when one is an advocate of the rock out life as is Michele. During exam time, many of us have had the privilege of answering a paniced Micheie ' s many questions. Distinction has come to this girl in many ways. She has been able to achieve the reddest eyes during finals; she maintains the sharpest instruments of anyone; she has a swinging gait . . . which, no one can challenge — she has turned many a head her way. As we all know, Michele is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. The big question is, will she or won ' t she . . . go to Europe this summer? . . . don ' t you? Why I thought all girls did! The detergent apple is good for cleaning the anterior teeth and keeping food from the . . . etc . . . etc . . . ETSUKO HAMASAKI LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California I ' m jazzed about ceramics! This is a staternent that exemplifies Etsie ' s whole outlook! Whatever the project or assignment, she will be found supporting it with her great enthusiasm. She usually tops the class academically, yet finds time to be one of the star performers in our dramatic endeavors. Etsie is seldom seen without a list of questions that teachers must answer even the minute before an exam is handed out. She has informed many a lecturer that material on his exam was not covered in his lecture, for this we are grateful. Next year (besides working) Etsie plans to go full speed into classes in interior decorating, tailoring, and, of course, ceramics. 226 MARIE HAMMOND CULVER CITY, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Please pay your AKC dues! spoke treasurer Marie, softly. Pay your AKC dues! spoke Marie. Pay your AKC dues or else . . . We paid. Dental student brother, Bob, set Marie straight early about the ins and outs of dental school and how to play it cool. This accounted for her remaining so cool during our panics, crises, and so forth, of the past two years. Marie is also known for her ability to switch from a DH during the day into a DA during the evenings. She calls Culver City home and plans to stay in that vicinity after joining the crowd for a summer sojourn in Europe. This guy is cule . . . maybe III rub noses with him! How could I cut my hair when Its so long and beautiful? ROBIN ANN HARKEY CLAREMONT, CALIFORNIA Chaffey College Realizmg that hallway is a very long distance to walk, we often find Robin pausing for a short rest |ust about midway at the coffee machine. Also realizing that in a mixed class, the DHs sit in front, where do we find Robin? . . . usually several rows behind our segregated section . . . having a ball ! How do we know the way Robin feels on any certain day? ... by the way she wears her hair, of course! What will Robin write for the next Explorer? . . . we ' re never fiuite sure . . . what does Robin plan for the future . . . she has visions of work, of travel, and of staying in Los Angeles. 227 KAY HENRY CLENDALE, CALIFORNIA Clendale College As we know an Excuse me doctor, but I have a question . . . ' from Kay can cause the most organized, and dedicated lecturer to get his schedule completely off balance. For kay almost everything is a crisis . . . sort of. She is usually exuberant with an idea whether it pertains to studies or to parties or to pictures for AKG parties or pictures for State Boards. Kay was truly dedicated to her cause just before Christmas ... a red and yellow sweater that just had to be finished. Europe is calling this summer. After that she plans on working in the Los Angeles area. . . . you say you know the answer I always slide down bannisters! LESLIE HOWRY CULVER CITY, CALIFORNIA University of California at Los Angeles Knit two . . . purl two . . . the mandibular foramen is located . . . knit two . . . and so goes the senior year for Leslie. Little did we know that she would set a record for the most sweaters knitted during senior year. As much as she likes to knit this year, she enjoyed playing games with Histo and Path slides last year. Notable were the plate of spaghetti and Christmas ball. Leslie has never panicked, in fact, she has always had her work done early and has managed to get to bed early (as early as 8:30!). She has been corresponding secretary for AKG and enjoys playing bridge, tennis and reading. Leslie and Doug plan a trip to Hawaii to celebrate graduation and then it ' s back to work for her in Culver City. 228 JUDY JACKSON LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA Long Beach Cily College Freeway flyer . . , commuting early-bird ludy was always there to turn the lights on in S and T. We find that Judy has the sharpest pencils and the most sparkling diamond in our class. Quiet, reserved, hardworking Judy has a personality flip when found outside of school. At the 901 she surprised many with her clever jokes and laughter. At Long Beach City College she was active in student government as well as president of her sorority. Outdoors Judy likes to ride horses, play tennis, and travel. But indoors Judy likes to read, play chess and cook. Who do you think turns out the lights in the library Tuesday and Thursday evenings . . . That ' s right . . . Judy! I get this sick feeling every time I see blood . . . What do you think they ' ll say in El Centro? RUTH MACKEY EL CENTRO, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California The El Centro flash can often be seen zooming around campus in her red Mustang in fast pursuit of her many activities. Be if clinic or class, Ruth usually manages to arrive in just the nick of time. The ability to produce the most magnificent Moniliasis cultures in bacti is another specialty of Ruth. In her spare time she is Panhellenic President, a member of Mortarboard, Amazons and Gamma Phi Beta. An exam to Ruth invariably means there are twenty-four hours in a day and she wastes very few of them! 229 KIT NEACY PALOS VERDES ESTATES, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California University of Vienna Only one . . . the only one who would wear bright green and bright purple together! The only one who would love skiing so much as to get a third-degree snowburn. The only one whose horse would get an impaction! She ' s the only one who would cook a pork chop for a hour . . .that ' s Kit. An ardent student commuter as a junior, she quickly adjusted to apartment living during the senior year. She ' s always ready for a good time ... be it at a TCIF, an art exhibit, or a new reading kick. Always ready to broaden her interests, culturally, academically, or fun-ly. She has been vice president of the senior class and of Chimes and a member of Spurs and Amazons. She worked diligently on the El Molaro . . . and conned her roommate, Joy, into a bit of work, too) Prior to entering USC, Kit studied and traveled in Europe and after graduation, will go who knows where . . . Bovs, we ' re in room 210, iust up the back slaii Upstairs, downstairs, I all around the house. ADRIENNE PADRICK SAN GABRIEL, CALIFORNIA Pasadena City College When Adrienne asks a question we realize that she expects a definite and direct answer immediately. Have you ever tried to not answer her immediately? During the junior year she found time to be a member of Chimes and driving the Pasadena Freeway. And during the senior year she has time for Dennis! The Padricks are busy building a ski boat and fun times should follow for them as they enjoy swimming and water skiing. Adrienne ' s plans after graduation include time for work and for leisure. 230 KATHY PURKISS TULARE, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California Enjoy TGIFs . . . Enjoy skiing . . , Enjoy life . . . This is the way Kathy feels about everything. Her quiet ways . . . Her ability to be one of the first out of a lecture (there must be some attraction out in the hall) . . . Her affiliation with Alpha Delta Pi and her office as social chairman all typify Kathy ' s outlook. Of course her plans include having fun and seeing the world. It seems like I ' m always ronmg my shoes . . . isn ' t there a better way to clean them? The bedroom scene IS most descriptive . KAREN QUANDT BREA, CALIFORNIA Fullerton junior College Homemaker and housemother are two roles that keep Mrs. Karen Quandt quite busy. Her interests in sewing and cooking are most useful in her new status as a wife. As managers of the three apartments near the clinic, Karen and Jack have quite a job looking after almost half of the senior class. Karen is the girl who is assigned all the ' bigwigs who come into the clinic and always does an outstanding job. Kitty joined the Quandt family early in the fall and appears to have full control of the household (she ' s a cat). A European jaunt is planned in the near future for this hard-working couple. SHIRLEY REDDIN GARDEN GROVE, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California If there is a job to be done well Shirley can do it. She sews well, she does well in her studies and she plays bridge better than anyone in the class. She is a stickler for detail. If there happens to be a seat empty next to Shirley it is certain to be saved for Etsie. If one or the other fails to appear (a rare occurance except at 8 a.m. on Tuesday mornings, during second semester of senior year) carbon paper is whipped out and an extra set of notes made. Between junior and senior years Shirley took a try at streaked hair and even let it grow longer until she began to worry if it was touching her collar. Shirley ' s many interests and activities include the presidency of Alpha Gamma Delta and membership in Spurs. Sailing and suntanning hold her interest out of doors. In June Mike and Shirley plan a wedding and will call Orange County home. If you only knew what goes on in here . Disgusting, the dirt, grime, filth, that will accumulate . . . CAROL RICHARDS SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA Brigham Young University Carol was our senior AKG pledge and a most ideal one at that. She exemplifies all that was required of a good AKG member and more. Carol ' s self-cut, not set hair was the envy of many. Last summer, Carol and Terry surprised almost everyone by suddenly getting married. Before coming to SC Carol was active in Brigham Young University. She now teaches a class for her church every week. After graduation the Richards plan to move to Provo, Utah, where Terry will finish school. 232 CAROL ROBINSON TORRANCE, CALIFORNIA University of Southern California If asked what she learned at the ADA Convention, Carol might reply with important facts such as DHs are really female periodontists, and Movies with lots of colored balloons motivate interest in the DH profession. But, if asked the most outstanding experience of the trip she just might remember her winning streak at Black Jack (coming home with an additional $95.00) . . . when she isn ' t hustling, Carol gets good grades without ever struggling . . . maybe it helped to fill in the teacher ' s name as Dr. Kutie Kirschbaum on the Pedo final. Our AKG secretary is an outdoor girl. Tennis and swimming are her main interests. After a four- month trip to Europe she plans on returning to the South Bay area to work as a DH. Working at The Broadway was never so much fun! For my first act -n ' 1 DARLENE ROBINSON VAN NUYS, CALIFORNIA Brigham Young University Darlene ' s change of name the summer before she entered dental school really confused the records department! She belongs to the stalwart group of fender benders who risk all on the Los Angeles freeways everyday. During this year, she has managed the class accounts with great ease. It must be her home training. Noteworthy is Darlene ' s basic philosophy for bulletin boards which stresses balance as opposed to accuracy. Her interests include a little bit of knitting — in fact a little bit of everything! After graduation Darlene and Cayle plan a trip to Hawaii to celebrate, and then work is in order. BARBARA SETH CLENDALE, CALIFORNIA Glendale College ' Help a ' needy DH to Las Vegas was Barbara ' s motto for many months. She toiled many hours tor the cause. No matter what the project or occasion, Barbara has always been there ready to work. During our junior year, Barbara and Karen established and maintained the record for being the first to exit from Histo and Path lab as everyone sat there amazed! In all of her college studies she has had an excellent record . . . but Saturday mornings invariably find her out riding. Included in her future plans are owning a horse and teaching as well as practicing in Eagle Rock and possibly commuting from Inglewood. It looks like ... It could be no, not another — I ' m not really up to it today! Who, me panic? . . . never! KAREN SNYDER PASADENA, CALIFORNIA Pasadena City College Karen has distinguished herself for laughability. She not only has a unique laugh but she can, and does, use it frequently. She never appears to take herself too seriously. In her senior year Karen joined the general exodus to the apartments on 34th Street, where she put fears into the hearts and lives of her neighbors by keeping two pet iguanas (Ugh) ! Last summer, she lived and worked in Laguna where she acquired a tremendous tan that made us all jealous. 234 VICKI STEGMAN LANCASTER, CALIFORNIA Fresno State College Vicki was the most non-gunner gunner of the junior year. Her unpanicked attitude during a year of panic belied the fact that she attained almost a 4.0. After all who could challenge her attendance record at the TGIFs? Never one to plan too far in advance (except for her trip to Europe this summer) Vicki is capable of doing a lot in a small amount of time whether it be planning an AKG function or the inevitable amount of studying that must be done. Knitting, a rather atypical pursuit for Vicki, has kept her quite busy this year as has disposing of the left-over food from the AKG Christmas party. Wherever Vicki goes we know that funtimes will follow. Let ' s put some life into the Ctiristmas punch . . . Unless he ' s thirtv-plus and darling, I won ' t go out. W KATHY WIEGAND WEST LOS ANCjELES, CALIFORNIA Santa Monica City College Really responsible Dental Hygienists are born, not made. They come to USC ready to be molded into a more polished form, but the basis is already there. And, if one were to pick the ideal, the perfect form ready for the molding, it would be Kathy Wiegand, or someone very much like her. She took the first year of her internship here as a challenge to be met . . . and she met the challenge. The second year has been the practical one . . . learning the techniques which will lead her to superior heights. Depreciation is a common fault of the peopled world of dental hygiene and its environs ... a fault not found in Kathy. We look to her for spontaneity and for maturity. It comes as no surprise to those of us in her class that Kathy is able to maintain scholastic ability and to raise two delightful daughters superiorly at the same time. Dental Hygiene is gaining an excellent practitioner; leanne and Janet have already discovered an excellent mother. SHERRY WILSON LA CANADA, CALIFORNIA Clendale College Ask Sherry what is foremost in her mind and she will probably mention her June wedding and planned honeymoon m Acapulco. In keeping with the skiing trend during the senior year she gave it a try and came home with a sprained ankle. As AKG pledge mother for the unsuspecting juniors, she kept them on their toes with her iron-handed discipline! For her favorite hobby she lists water skiing and thus joins the aquanauts of the class. Open wide! ft Open wide ' 4- Junior DHs See, here we are. See, we are the Junior Dental Hygiene class. See the teeth in the mirror. See the fulcrum. See the point stay stationary as our fingers move. See our fingers move. See us carve a tooth. See us clean each others teeth. See us in the clinic each Thursday. See us work on the little kids. See us help our fellow students. See us get good grades. See us learn good hygiene. See us in the clinic full-time next year. See us come up with a better section and more original poses for El Molaro 1967! Hey, big boy! Let ' s see — plug into wall, insert In mouth . . . You didn ' t know it without reading that sign, did you? Dental Health Trailer This went off so well that Sexy Rex extended it for a week ... we volunteered our services, but somehow never got those Class II and ill foils . . . ? Your teeth are ok, but the gums have to go! you 11 drop hy ' 947 we ' ll get this unstuck Quit sulking Larry, you ' ll get a chance to look for Ills! Just one at a tinif, pk mdnuik tuuhi - , n K r 1R. HARRY DOUCHFR Department Chaiiiiuin •As. MRS. AILEEN PFTERS .. ' Il( |),irlnvnl ' -•r ' t ORTHODONTICS CL66 of 1966 r .1 1 b_ . _ t -A Back Row: Drs. Keith Tanaka, Chuck Mindlin, Ard Heffernan, Bruce Carler, Jari n, Harry Dougherty Front Row: Dri. Ralph Allman, Larry Hughes, Ron Zamarin, )ohn Rosoti, )im Loo5 i 1)R, C. ARDEN HEff ER.NAN College of Physicuns and Surgeons h Intenfls to practice in Manhattan Beach, t aiii CLs6ofl967 Farsakian, and Cantor. Front Row: Drs. Baker, Griffiths, Sinclair, Kleffer, and Abbey. DR. A. LAURENCE ABBEY University of Southern California DR. HERMAN M. ALLENBACH University of Southern California DR. GUY T. BAKER College of Physicians and Surgeons DR. MARVIN R. CANTER University of Southern California DR. JOHN FARSAKIAN University of Southern California DR. DONALD L. GRIFFITHS College of Physicians and Surgeons DR. JOHN C. HOLMAN Northwestern University DR. RAY L. KIEFFER University of Southern California DR. RICHARD B. MEEK Northwestern University DR. WILLIAM C. SINCLAIR, JR. University of Oregon Followifig in the footsteps of the preceding magnificent ten is another group of stalwart scholars . . . the junior orthodontic class, in years to come this group may come to be known as the unbelievable ones. The following prodigies make up their membership: Laurence Virile Abbey Herman Gland Allenbach, Guy Kindly Baker, Marvin Baby Canter, John Grape luice Farsakian, Don Gibbon Griffiths, John Brainy ' Holinan, Ray Nares Kieffer, Richard Deacon Meek, and William Calmly Sinclair. No further words are needed for these men at this time . . . their acts will eventually write their history in the books! 246 ORAL SURGERY DR M !:m! The program accepts three dentists each year. These men spend three years under the tutelage of Dr. Marsh Robinson . . . one year at our school of dentistry and two years at the Los Angeles County General Hospital. At the hospital they work on a rotational basis ... six months in general anesthesia for general surgery, and the other time treating fractures, removing cysts, surgical correction of micrognathic and prognathic jaw relationships, and bone grafts. CL66ofl966 DR. LAWRENCE RICHAK[)S() and after Paris I ' m going lo St.irlr CLsso(l967 DR ROBERT HUNTINGTON LalL ' ly, I ' ve been feeling grea CLl55o[i968 who haven ' t I invited to the dub? Plavbovs lictt |-rii[ 30W DR. PEDRO E. PARDO, C.ir.K ,,■. Wn nr — staff.. . L, MOLARO 1966 what you have leafed through is El Molaro 1966 . . . and it has been our pleasure to give you an opportunity to turn its pages. But we hope you will do more than just that ... we hope you will go over it again and again, . . . and as your emotional thoughts change over the years, be able to see more of it in the light in which it was so thoughtfully prepared for you. Putting a book of this caliber together is no easy task ... we have spent enough man hours to have built a battleship, and enough sweat and swearing to fill an olympic-sized swimming pool. But this is not what makes this the best El Molaro ever produced . . . what makes it this way is the complete cooperation of a few of your classmates who have put all they have into bringing you as complete a record of your thoughts and emotions over the past four years as it is humanly possible to do . . . you can see them here — at work and at play; for play makes the work a little bit more enjoyable Blaine Worrell, Editor BLAINE WORRELL Editor BOB HUBBERT L,i ' oul, PhotoKraphv, T pesetling, Editing lACK PATTERSON Editor, Senior Sections GEORGE HANSEN Business Manager ALAN LILES Editor, Photographs DOUG VVATKINS Cartoons for El Molaro 1966 ROGER TUBBESING Editor, Junior Section LARRY FUKUMOTO Cop ' Writing CHET KAUFMAN Editor, Sophomore Section TAK YAMAMOTO Editor, Freshman Section KIT NEACY Editor, Senior Hygienists GEORGE ARAKAKI Indexing, Typing ' - r t i .••s ' . . . in addition we are grateful to the following for making ElMolaro1966 the publication that it is: Delos Adams Matt Hanhila Tom Bagllo Kay Henry Gary Beck Sharon Hubbert Steve Bein Fred !.au Ted Benaderet Tom MacKinnon Brent Black Phil Mahan Harry Blatnick Gary Malott Joy Bebbling |im McCook Stewart Bradford jerry Medway |im Clark lerry Naftalin Ann Crews Dave Park Curt Cross Mike Rabbitt Steven D ' Arc Vic Schwartz Dick Despain Dr. Henry Tanner Dave Dickerson Ron Thompson George Ekins Roger Tubbesing Jane Fowkes |im VanderHeide |oe Goodsell Ken VVeitzman Steve Goldberg Kathy Wiegand Otto Ceissler Sue Woodcock Sheryl Ceissler Duke Yamashita .♦ , ' I5 7 Project: w Headsouth MW An opportunity to practice dentistry as well as sharing with those less fortunate ... in little villapes in Mexico where no dentistas or medicos are found. Our treatment consisted primarily of extractions ... the long-range objective is to do more in the preventive and restorative area. Ideally, the treatment is given v. ' ith no strings attached to those who are unable to receive needed help due to inability to go to the large cities where it is provided by the government, invaluable experience was gained by those who took advantage of the opportunity . . . applying their clinical knowledge gained at USC under Dr. |ohn Ronnau. El professor Santa Claus! I l «ir - Typical day in the 1 1 Exiractions are easier with pre-medicatlon I can ti( k youJ il u e We are ready for the future . . . whatever it may bring. We have learned that we have only begun to learn . , . that every day will bring more, and that experience will lessen the gap left between dental school and the practice of dentistry. We have experienced four years, we have soaked in four years, we have felt four years, we have had the damndest experience anyone could ever have! For some it has been but a day ' s wild experience, a phase of life to be lived and then forgotten; to others it has been a nightmare finally lived through; for a few it has been fun . . . hell, fire and damnation must be mild bv comparison. But, it is done, and only the good memories will linger for long. The Worry, Anxiety and Fear we experienced will soon fade into a past which will remain suppressed and long forgotten. It was not our purpose here to predict nor predispose the future for any of us, but to chronical the past. The prospects for the future are bright, not for what we have endured, but for what this experience has taught us. It has taught us that enduring, of and for itself, will produce results ... we can now pick our own goals . . . and results. 257 INDEX Major Sections in Book: DEDICATION pp. 5-7 ADMINISTRATION pp. 917 SCIENCE TECHNiaUE pp. 19-36 CLINICAL DENTISTRY pp. 37-64 GRADUATING SENIORS pp. 65-160 JUNIORS pp. 161-156 SOPHOMORES pp. 167-172 FRESHMEN pp. 173-176 CONTRIBUTORS pp. 177-214 DENTAL HYGIENISTS pp. 215-242 GRADUATE STUDY pp. 243-251 ABDULIAN, Janice 14, 142 ABBEY, A. Laurence 246, 247 ABE, Joseph 170 ABRAMS, Albert 60 ABTS, Thomas 44, 45, 169, 170 ADAMS, Delos 13, 175 ADDLESON. Lawrence 173 ADMINISTRATION pp. 9-17 ADUDDELL, Arlos 40, 138 ALEXANDER, Larry 175, 258 ALLEN, Mark 161, 248, 249 ALLENBACH. Herman M. 245, 247 ALLMAN. Ralph 24, 244, 245 ALVEAR, Celia 15 AN FR ; ' N, Ja k H. 244, 245 ANDERSON, Keith 84, 171 ANDERSON, Lila Rae 241 ANDERSON, Mary Amelia 17, 133 ANDREWS, Robert G. 47, 76 APPLEMAN, Milo D. 32, 187 ARAKAKI, George 23, 31, 34, 43, 53, 56, 65, 104, 113, 165, 178, 1P5. 192, 203. 254 ARMER, Lee 175 ARONIS, Constantine 99 ASMUS, Mary 216, 218 BAGLIO, Thomas 29, 43, 57, 67, 141, 199 BAHAM, Thelma 16 BAILEY, Julie 238, 241 BAKER, George 59 BAKER, Greg 106 BAKER. Guy T. 246, 247 BAKER, James 15, 52, 184, 252 BAKER, Richard 44, 57, 162, 164, 165, 202 BALL, Carol 13, 45, 64, 77, 151, 172, 184, 194, 205, 209, 216, 217, 218, 237, 238, 239, 242 BALL, Norman 28, 29, 34, 35. 57. 63, 68, 118, 131, 172, 193. 197. 205 BALLARD, Susan 216, 218, 219 BARBER, Elberta 14, 236 BARD, Robert 165 BARTON, Craig 170 BARTSCHERER, James 28, 29, 30, 35, 50, 69, 203 BASSEn, Russell 28, 29, 112, 167, 182, 196, 197 BAVETTA, Lucien 25 BAYLYFF, James 29, 42, 63, 70, 192, 208 BEBBLING, Joy 133. 184, 217, 219, 236, 237, 238, 239, 242 BECK, Gary 31, 52, 71, 95, 185 BECKER. Arnold 39, 63, 72 BEIN, Steven 164, 165 BELLIN, Robert 61, 63, 162, 164. 165 BENAOERET, Theodore 42, 52, 53, 73, 76. 185, 188, 208 BENJAMIN, Sheldon 38, 208 BERARDO. John 43, 44, 135, 161, 155, 217 BERG, John 170, 171 BERGER. Joseph 42, 89, 127 BERNTHOL, Stuart 29, 31, 34, 41, 58, 74, 78. 191. 204 BEVERIDGE. Edward 9, 42, 56 71, 252 BIOHFART, Donna 75, 159. 202, 258 BILKISS, Joan 77, 89, 220, 221, 238, 258 BINDER, Herbert 174 BLACK. Brent 28, 29, 76, 87, 96, 202. 255 BLAKELY, Kandice 240, 241 BLANKFORT, John 171 BLATNICK. Harry 161, 163, 201, 202 BLENDE, David 175 BOLANO, Isobel 9 BOONE, George 41 BRADFORD, Philip 161. 162. 201 BRADFORD. Stewart 22, 30, 31, 56, 77, 179, 196, 201, 202 BRADY, Edward 33 BRADY. William 55. 194, 205 BRANDON, Dale 162 BRAUN, Ellen 17 BREITBARTH, Larry 171 BROCKETT, Katherine 50, 77, 216, 220 BROLLINI, Van 163 BROOKS, Donald 176 BROWN, Janet 17 BROWN, Jett 159 BROWN. Zeohrene Cottin 15 BUCKTON, John 45, 63, 161 BUTLER, Nelson 34, 35, 50, 78, 105, 202, 208, 253 CAERBERT, Janice 51 CAMPBELL, Barbara 17 CAMPBELL, Michael 44. 176 CANTER. Marvin 246. 247 CARDENAS. Delores 47, 61, 107, 198 CARDEY, Norman 21 CARPENTER, Melvin 27 CARTER Bruce 244, 245 CASAGRANDE, Eugene 170, 203, 217 CATON, Harold 43 CHALEKSON, Ernest 175 CHAD, John 127 CHAPMAN. Carol 17, 181 CHASE, Wilson 59 CHILDERS, John 165 CHOQUETTE, Linda 50, 50. 94, 194, 203, 208, 215, 221, 237, 238 CHRISTENSEN, Janice 50. 185, 194, 195, 203, 208, 221, 239 CHRISTFNSON Dale 22, 57, 79, 96 CHUKA, Ronald 42, 135 CH RCH««nN Leonard 248, 249 CLAPP, Florence 14 CLARK, Delia 61, 198 CLARK, James 13, 34, 35, 80, 166, 172, 187, 204 CLARK, Vichy 23 CUUS, Floyd 26, 56, 81, 191, 198 CLAYPOOLE, Langdon 43 CLINICAL DENTISTRY pp. 37-64 COCHRAN, Elaine 241 CnHFN Edouard 250, 251 COHEN, Laurence 174 COLEMAN, Helen 236 COLMAN, Albert 58, 182, 195, 252 COLMAN. Harvey Lee 54 CniM«N Mnparet 12, 54 COLLONS, Mark 169 CONLEY, Francis 12 CONSTABLE, Helen 61 CONTRIBUTORS pp. 177-214 COOKE, Elizabeth 184, 185, 216, 222, 229, 237, 239 CORNWELL. Robert 62. 165, 188 COSION, Donald 17, 181 COVERT, Jeanne 7, 15 CRAPO, Jacquelyn 240 CRAWFORD, William 29 CREWS, Ann 13. 75, 222, 236, 237, 238, 239 CROSS, Cylde 46, 54, 83, 87, 187 CROSS, Curt 26, 28, 29. 34. 35, 44, 56, 53, 64, 82, 83, 105, 126, 190, 19 4, 197. 202, 204, 205 CURREN, John 176 CURRY, Frank 62, 165 O ' ARC. Stephen 175 DAVIES, T. Ray 42 DaVIRRO, Kerry 44, 176 DAVIS, Carol 241 DEAN, Warren 55, 53, 84, 172 DEDICATION pp. 5-7 DEEB, Rose Ann 45, 185, 216, 223 • ' 37, 738. 251 de la TORRE, Fidele 28, 29. 30. 44, 52, 57, 85, 131, 182, 185, 202 DFNISON. Lon 38 DENNIS, Roger 22, 28. 30, 31. 56, 76, 86, 96, 185. 196, 201, 205 DENTAL HYGIENISTS pp. 209-236 DERM ' iDY Lawrence 201. 208. 74S, 249 DESPAIN. Richard 22, 28. 29, 30, 63, 87, 96, 185, 196, 208 DEWEY, Mark 169 DeYOUNG, Ruth 184, 223, 242 DICKERSON, David 13, 63, 64, 161, 152, 164, 155, 194 DICKSON, William 59, 91, 96, 108, 116, 197 DIFFLEY, James W. 57, 182 DINESFELO, Lanny 155, 201 D ' MURA, Bob 45 DOSSEN, Joe 166 DOUGHERTY, Harry 243, 244, 246 DUNN, David 42, 51, 59 DURKIN, Patricia 241 DWYER, Thomas A. 42 DYER, Connie 14 EDELL, William 57, 88 EDWARDS, Thomas 172, 176 EGGLESTON, Theodore 165 EHRLICH, Paul 54, 55, 249, 250, 251 EICHORST, Ida 15 EIDSON, Rene 42, 258 EISSMAN, Harold 54, 55, 83 EKINS, George 28, 34, 89, 99, 131, 182, 206, 258 ELARDO, Angelo 24, 28, 29, 90, 108, 186, 188, 202, 204 ELLIOTT, Glen 28, 164, 202 ELLIS. Gary 172, 176 EL MOLARO STAFF pp, 239-242 ERIKSMOEN, Jack 45, 161, 163, 190 ESSER, John 24, 26, 28, 34, 63, 91, 139 EVERTSEN, Mareen 224 FAIA, Ronald 124, 162 FARKAS, Daniel 168, 172 FARKAS, David 158, 172 FARSAKIAN, John 246, 247 FETTER, Harold 55 FILLMORE, Dennis 24, 31, 55, 63, 92, 105, 124, 209, 256 FINKE, William 39, 187, 252 FIRETAG, Zelda 15, 181 FISCHER, Norman 248, 249 FLEMING, Steven 165 FORD, Virg inia 61, 110 FORT, Edward 43, 175 FOSTER, Robert 165, 172, 173, 174 FOWKES, Jane 14, 54 FRADJER, Henry 251 FRANCE, A. L. 31, 46, 56, 63, 93, 122, 202, 204 FRANK, Alfred 57 FREEDMAN, Lorry 59, 63, 124, 203, 205 FREER, Susie 77, 218, 224, 237, 239 FRESHMEN pp. 173176 FREYMILLER, Lawrence 174 FRIEDEN, Richard 173, 174, 175, 175 FRIEDER, Dennis 169 FRIEDMAN ( Freudman ), Nathan 29, 55 FRITH, William 173, 174 FUKUMOTO, Larry 22, 30, 46, 94, 95, 103, 156, 185, 194, 201, 202, 204, 242, 253, 254 FURSTMAN, Edward 57, 179 FUSZARD, Rebecca 201, 215, 217, 223, 225, 238 GAUNTER, Dennis 38, 130, 155 GAMER, Simon 40, 185 GARDNER, Jerry 63, 163 GARRETT, Edward 176 GEISSLER, Otto Walter III 22,30,31, 34, 48, 52, 53, 95, 132, 178, 185, 186, 188, 196, 197, 201, 208, 255 GIBSON. Michael 248, 249 GEORGE, John 170 GIFFORD, Jeannie 238, 240 GIVENS, Donald 174 GLASGOW, Gary 175 CLICK, Dudley 57, 252 GLOBE, Peter 170 GODDARD, John 22, 28, 30, 31, 96, 151, 185, 186, 196, 204 GOLDBERG, Steve 30, 31, 70, 97, 149, 172, 192 , 255 GOLDSTEIN, Earl 169 GOLPHENEE, Jerry 62, 165 GOODREAU, Larry 174 GOODSELL, Joseph 13, 14, 22, 30, 41, 43, 50, 57, 64, 65, 95, 98, 134, 151 16fi 172, 185, 194, 196, 255 GORDON, Stanley 143 GORRIS, Richard 168 GOSTANIAN, Karen 44, 50, 188, 194, 203, 208, 216, 217, 225, 236 GOUVION, Wayne 161, 152 GRADE, William 168, 170 GRABOWSKY, Charles 28, 30, 41, 57, 99, 202, 206 GRAHAM, Linda 238, 241 GRAY, Vernon 49, 190 GREGG, Robert 20, 21, 63, 173 GRIFFITHS, Donald L. 246. 247 GRIM, John 57, 63, 100, 202, 206 GRINSPAN, Nathan 54, 55 GROPER, John 47 GROVE, Tom 57, 101, 202 GRUDIN, Leo 56, 154, 252 GUILLIAUM, David 28, 29, 34, 57, 102 GULLEn, Irwin 51, 53, 58, 159 HALE, Arthur 43, 54, 170 HAUUN, James 176 HALL, Michele 60, 184, 201, 216, 226, 237. 238, 244 HALL, Richard 28, 30, 34, 35, 51, 103, 155, 208 HALL, Robert 154, 165 HALLBERG, Richard 47 HAMASAKE, Etsuko 73, 172, 184, 216, 217, 225, 238, 239 HAMMOND, Mane 50, 194, 203, 204, 208, 227, 236, 237, 238, 239 HAMMOND, Robert 31, 34, 35, 43, 44, 78, 104, 193, 202 HANEL, Robert 170 HANES, Stanley 44 HANHILA, Matt 28, 29, 30, 34, 35, 105. 136, 188, 204, 238, 253 HANSEN, George 30, 75, 81, 106, 181, 202, 252, 253, 254, 255 HARKEY, Robin 45, 60, 73, 184, 185, 198, 205, 227, 242 HEFFFRNAN C. Arden 244. 245 HERMETZ, Gary 174 HARPER, Frederick 29 HARRISON, Raunscival 169, 170 HARRISON, William P. 22, 23, 202, 204 HARTBRODT, Fred 175 HASEGAWA, Norito 63, 163, 155 HEDMAN, Edwin 170 HEID, Judy 240, 241 HELLERUD, David 53, 164, 201 HENRY, Kay 50, 77, 196, 208, 216, 228. 235, 238, 249 HENSON, Irene 16, 28, 29. 171, 181, 187 HERRICK, Doyle 170 HERRMAN, Edward 38 HESS, Gary 42, 57, 61, 107, 198, 202 HILL, David 31, 35, 50, 63, 108, 202 HIROSHIGE, Kenichi 175 HO, Guy C. 22, 29, 30, 50, 54, 87, 96, 185, 201 HODGE, James 63, 162 HOFFMAN, Betty 236 HOLMAN John C, 245 247 HOLST, Gary 28, 34, 35, 103, 202 HOLSTE, Harvey 29, 41, 61, 62, 93, 111, 141, 202, 238 HOLT, Ralph 171 HONIG, Melinda 238, 241 HORN, Dennis 203, 217 HORVATH, Michael 170 HOWRY, Leslie 216, 228, 237, 239 HOYT, Richard 170 HUBBERT, Robert 37, 43, 52, 53, 62, 63, 77. 110, 149, 192, 197, 253, 254 255, 256 HUGHES, Helena 61, 141 HUGHES, Lawrence 244. 245 HUNTINGTON Robert 201. 248 HUTCHISON, Bernice 50 IGASAKI, Howard 158 INGLE, John I. 9, 172, 201, 206, 252 INGRAHAM, Rex 42, 192, 195, 252 ISDN, Myron 43 IZUMITA, Donald 64, 109, 203 JACKSON, Judy 194, 217, 229, 238 JAKWAY, Jacqueline 21, 173, 216 JAQUES, William 62, 90. 112 JENSEN, Glenn 174 JENSEN, Jan 216, 222, 238, 241 JOHNSON, Bonnie 241 JOHNSON, Clara 250 JOHNSON, Edward 55, 57. 100, 109 113, 149, 172 JOHNSON, James 43, 45 JOHNSON T. Cuyler 244 245 JONES, Gilbert 175 JONES, Howard 164 JONES, Leon 174 JONES, E. Thomas 27 JUNIORS pp. 161-165 KAHN, Richard 42, 72, 75, 112 KAIDEN, Ronny 29, 31. 56, 72, 114 140, 172. 191. 197 KAINO. Alfred 155 KAISER, Arthur 174 KAllMAM Steven 63, 161. 188. 249 KAMAYATSU, Erika 216, 222 KARATZAS, Tula 61, 190 KATO, Bill 15 KATZ, Abram C. 15 259 KATZ, Leiand 165 KAUFMAN, Chester 170, 203, 254 KAUFMAN, Nathan 175 KAUTZ, Bruce 38 KAZANJIAN, Janet 168, 159 KEATING, Thomas 29, 34, 52, 53, 56, 114, 115, 204 KELLY, Beatrice 32 KENNEY, Thelma 16, 181 KELSEY, Patricli 161, 202 KEROPIAN, Bryan 203 KIEFER, Gayle 116, 202 KIEFFFR. Ray L. 246, 247 KIRSHBAUM, Gerald 47. 72, 192, 195, 209 KIHELL, James 29, 30, 34, 35, 52, 53, 56, 81, 100, 117, 193, 196, 201, 206 KLEIN, John 43 KNOTT, Harry 54 KOBATA, Dennis 172 KOONTZ, Walter 28, 29 KUMAMOTO, Takashi 250 KURTZ, Harrison M. 32 KUZMA, Oliver 60 LaFRANCHI, Theodore 28, 54, 55, 63 LANOF Robert 243 LANDES, Arlene 44, 216 LANNERS, Jayne 44, 170, 217 LANZ, William 55, 164, 165, 194 USAS, Al 21, 174 LAST, Edward 38 LAU, Fred 28, 34, 35, 43, 44, 45, 56, 63, 118, 151, 191, 197, 205, 208 LAWLER, William 40 LEE, Barry 174 LEE, Terry 175 LEFTWICH, Yale V. 168 LENSCH, Bruce 0. 28, 29 LESLIE, Robert 171 LEVIN. Bernard 58, 181, 252, 258 LEVINE, Leslie 38 LEW, Edward 54 LILES, Allan 28, 44. 56. 63, 85, 95, 118, 119, 138, 197, 201, 205, 253. 254. 255 LOCKHART, Vernon 41, 120, 130, 182. 204. 258 LOCKWOOD, Bert 44, 57, 121, 133, 190 LOFTIN, Frances 14 LONG, Dallas 20, 84, 101, 122, 182, 198 LOOS. James F. 244. 245 LOn. FRANK M. 41 LOW, Dennis 175 LUND, Thomas 174, 175 LYON, Patricia 17. 42, 181, 193, 194 MacDONALD, John 58, 172, 181, 205 MACK, John 172, 175 MACKEY, Ruth 198, 229, 236, 237, 238 MacKINNON. Thomas 20. 44, 105 123 151. 201. 253. 256 MAEDA. Ronald 85, 161 MAHAN, Phillip 42, 44, 64, 124, 192, 201, 242 MALOTT, Gary 27, 125, 139, 141. 191, 197, 208 MALOUF. Ronald 63. 162, 164 MANHEIM, Alan 170 MARKLE, David 175 MARTIN, Lawrence 28, 63. 126, 197 MASSEY, Gerald 42, 50, 51, 52, 182, MATSUl ' SHI, Anna 238, 240 MATTHES, Edwin 165 McCANTS, Frances 15 McCAUGHNEHEY, Clara 16 McCLAIRE. Bruce 174, 175 McCLANAHAN, Brian 173 McCONNELL, Melville 173 McCOOK, James 20, 22, 23, 43, 45 54, 56, 62, 87, 124, 127, 139. 185. 196. 197. 258 McDonald, Aionzo 59 McLACHLAN, Robert 64, 163 194 McNAMARA. Robert 173 McNULTY, Robert 9 MEDLEY, Dee 164 MEDWAY, Jerald 27, 56, 128, 179 191 MEEK, Richard B. 246, 247 MEGDAL. Phillip 27. 31. 44 204 MEGERDICHIAN. Jack 23, 29 56 129, ?58 MELENDEZ. Rodrigo 168. 170 MENDELSOHN. Martin 38 METZGER, Peggy 14 MICHELS, Alan 38 MIHALKA, Dennis 173 174 MILLER, Bruce 173 MILLER, Elaine 238, 240, 241 MILLER, Gary 42 MILLER, Michael 13, 23, 34, 35, 48, 52, 53, 57, 62, 63, 64, 87. 90, 96, 109, 120, 123, 130, 133, 185, 193, 196, 201, 203 .. . whew! MINDLIN. Charles 244. 245 MINER, Margaret 14 MINTZER. Herman 38. 155, 258 MITCHELL. Gerald 248 MOLLE. Paula 240. 241 MONTGOMERY. Robert 20. 29, 48. 115, 131, 182. 204, 242 MOORE, Richard 163 MORGAN, Nancy 17 MORRIS, George 20, 28, 39. 48, 50, 132, 182, 197, 204, 205, 208 MOTOYOSHI, Paul 173, 174, 176 MUFF, Jim 164 MULLEN, Joe 43, 162, 165, 172, 190 MULLIGAN, Gerald 45, 63, 162, 165, 172, 190 MURPHY, Floyd M, 22, 27 NABTI. Najwa 14, 246, 247 NAFTALIN. Gerald 20. 27, 28. 39, 48, 56, 121, 133 NEACY, Kit 44, 45. 50, 194. 196, 198. 203. 204. 208, 216, 217, 228. 230. 237. 238. 239. 254 NEAL. Kenneth 48 NEDELMAN, Charles 59 NEDLEMAN, George 31. 38 NELSON, Dale 134, 253 NELSON, Gary 165, 201 NELSON, Rae 17 NEWCOMER, Richard 44, 170 NIMNI, Marcel 49, 197, 206 NISHIMINE, Kenro 47 OCLASSEN, Rosa 17 O ' GRADY, Charles 28. 29, 31, 40, 174 OLSON, Michael 135 ONO, Martin 47 ORGAN, Stanley 21 OSAKI. James 161. 165 OTA, Craig 171 PACKARD, Kim 238, 240. 241 PADRICK, Adrienne 50, 184, 194, 204, 208, 215. 218. 223. 230. 236 PALMERLEE. Daniel 171 PAMPALONE, Barbara 164, 205 PAPAZIAN. George 20. 57. 62. 112. 136. 139, 151, 201, 204, 208 PARDO, Pedro E. 250. 251 PARK, David 20, 30. 32. 34. 35, 50, 62 64 137. 185. 196. 201, 204. 208 PARK. Edwin 56, 63. 165 PARKINS. Arthur 44, 172 PARKINS, Barry 43, 44 PARLE, Roy 63, 106, 162, 164, 165 PARROTT, Harry 21, 172 PASHLEY, Michael 162. 164, 165 PATTERSON. Jack 20. 23. 32. 35. 44, 63. 64. 100. 118. 125. 132, 138, 139, 150. 166, 182, 184, 185, 190, 191. 192, 194, 195. 196. 197, 202, 203 205, 253. 254. 255 .. . whew ' PEARLMAN, Leah 17, 205 PELOCHINO, John 170 PEMBERTON, Dorothy 16. 181, 182 PENDERS. Thomas 58, 79. 161 PERSONS. John 169 PERUMEAN. James 163 PEirRS, Aileen 243. 244. 246. 247 PETERS, Rex 20, 27, 31. 35. 56, 78, 104. 121, 123. 133, 139, 201, 204, 206 PETERSON, Alan 43, 165 PHILLIPS. Donald 20. 40. 140. 204 752 PIANFETTI, James V. 57 PINHn Rubens 250 POPPIATT, Larry 15 PORTER, Minnie 17 PORTNOY. Elaine 185. 238. 240. 241 POWELL. David 170 POWERS. James 44. 45 PRESTON. Leonard 20, 23, 56, 141, 192. 204 PREWEH. William 58. 63, 162 PR1IIT Ross 248. 249 PURKISS, Kathy 44. 73. 77. 216 231. 237. 238, 242 QUANDT, Karen 50, 194, 203, 204, 9nn 917 231 J1R. 239, 240 QUINT. Hari7 29, 30, 192 RABBin, Michael 20. 27 32 84 139. 142. 145. 203 RAGUND. Ruth 236 REDOIN. ShirlPv 50 58, 194, 195, 204 217, 232, 236. 237. 238 REDMON. Robert 28, 56. 121, 143 REEL. Roger 16, 187 REEVE. Leiand 39. 51, 52, 193, 197, 205 REEVES, Robert 9, 29, 38. 172, 182, 190 REICHEL, Laurence 47. 258 REIMERS, Richard 13, 29, 41, 42, 43, 56, 63, 64, 98, 144, 172, 178, 194, 202 REINER. Roger 250 RICHARDS, Carol 50, 196, 232, 242 RICHARDSOR, Lawrence 248, 249 RING, Ellis 59, 252 RISDON, Joyce 17 RIZZO, James 43 ROBBINS. Cynthia 240, 241 ROBINSON. Carol 196. 233, 237, 238. 239 ROBINSON. Darlene 219, 233, 237, 239 ROBINSON. James 165, 203 ROBINSON, Marsh 248, 249 ROBINSON, Roy 25, 33 ROBINSON, Terry 27, 44, 92, 145, 193. 203. 255 RONNAU. John 48. 238. 256. 258 ROREM, Joshua 169, 170 ROSOFF. John E. 244. 245 RUBEN. Phihp H. 250. 251 RUHE, Richard 35. 86. 123, 146 RUTHERFORD. Robert 12. 258 SAHARA, Ronald 63, 161, 162, 165 SAITO, Edward 42 SAMPSON, Michael 13, 28, 64, 136, 164, 165, 166, 194, 201 SANDER. Allan L. 57. 190 SAULKIN, Edward 47 SCHIPKE. Dennis 176 SCHIRFSON, Svlvan 38 SCHLEGEL, Philip 47 SCHOLL, Almah 16. 163. 187 SCHWARTZ. Victor 20. 41. 147 190 SCHWARZ. Melvin 38 SCIENCE AND TECHNIQUE pp. 19-36 SCOn, Michael 47 SENIORS pp. 65-160 SETH. Barbara 75. 209. 217. 234, 237, 239 SETZER. Carolyn 216, 238, 240 SEVERY, Steve 45, 162 SEYMOUR. Jack 42 SHANLEY. John M. 28 SHAW. Richard 170. 171 SHEETS. Cherilyn 168 SHIBATA Sumio 165 SHINMOTO. Thomas 39, 162, 165 SHUKFN Rohprt A. U8. 186. 248. 249 SIEBENBRUNER, Hazel 16 SINCLAIR. William G.. Jr. 246 247 SINGER. Julian 47 SIRY, Richard 44, 170. 172 SKERSICK, David 34, 35, 62, 63 64 148, 203, 205 SLUSSER, Beverly 241 SMITH. Robert 29, 30. 32. 46 87 100. 149. 185. 198, 208 SMITH. Stanley 55 SNOW. Gilbert 62. 161. 164. 165 SNYDER, Karen 75, 188, 194, 195 204, 208, 217, 234. 236, 239 SOLNIT, Albert 42 SOPHOMORES pp. 167-171 SOULE. John 26. 29. 203 SPRINGER, David 19, 23 27 28 29 30, 32, 39, 62, 63, 64, 87, 96 ' ' ,.„«i°2- ' 32. 150. 190. 202. 253 SPROLES, Ronald 164 SRIRO, Michael 175, 176 STARK, William D, 28 STAIITS, Braden 42, 258 STEELE, James 162 STEGMAN, Victoria 44, 185. 235 238. 249 STELLMAN, Ronald 162 STEPHENS. Roy 173, 175 STEWART, Bill 175 STICE, Eric 45, 162, 164. 165 STONE, Frank 13. 194 STONE. Janet 241 STONE. Marilyn 241 STOOKESBERRY, Lucille 16 STROSCHEIN. Guilbert 59 206 SIIFT ;iir,i), Tsuneo 250. 251 SURABIAN. Stanley 175 SWARTZ, Eleanor 14 SWEDBURG. Sharon 61. 251 TANAKA. Keith 243. 244. 246 247 TANNER. Henry 5. 6, 7. 54. 63 87. 190. 252 TEMPLETON. McCormick 175 THOMAS, Dudley 25 THOMAS, Jean 14 THOMAS, Vincent 63, 166, 181 THOMPSON, Ronald 31, 43, 45, 64, 136 151. 201. 255 TOCHIOKA. Mickey 164, 165 TODD. Aaron 15. 38. 202, 247 TOGUCHI, Richard 162 TOKUYAMA, Yoshiki 161, 162, 165, 190 TOMER, Judy 240 TRUE, Steve 174, 175 TUBBESING, Roger 53, 165, 166, 172. 254 TURNER, Kenneth 0. 28, 29, 40, fi4. 174, 252 TURNEY, Kenneth 20, 22, 30. 34, 35, 43, 56, 62, 63. 87. 152. 156, 178, 185, 196. 201. 206 TURPITT, Lorrie 240 TUTUNJIAN, Rosemarie 12. 42. 43 TYLER. Michael 63, 161, 164, 166, 172, 238 UHERBACH, Harry 175 VALOIS, Pamela 241 VALVERDE Marc 250. 251 VanderHEIDE, James 56, 121, 153, 202 Vxn GEMERT. Richard 166 VAUGHN, James 165, 176 VETTlFR, Jaques 250. 251 VICKERS. Cynthia 240. 241 VIG. Robert G. 29. 41. 205, 206 VOGEL, Robert 63, 165 Von HERZEN. Bruce 166, 170 VOSS, Ronald 42, 128 WALCOTT, Robert 173 WALTERS, Jack 166, 238 WARNER, James 164. 238 WASLEY, Genevieve 15 WASSENMILLER, John 170, 171, 203 WATANABE, Jane 37, 61 WATASE, Richard 47, 192 WATERS, Mary 15, 100 WATKINS, Douglas 35, 63, 163, 184. 196. 254. 255 WATSON, Pat 14, 61 WEBB, Cecil 163, 164, 165 WEBBER, Larry 44. 154, 188 WEBER. John 13, 63. 64, 162, 164, 194 WECKWERTH. Walter 170, 171 WEICHMAN, Jack A. 57 WEISS. Arthur 173 WEITZMAN, Ken 109, 155, 188, 242 WELDON, Robert W. 27 WESTLUND, Janice 15, 181, 188 WHEATLEY. Ron 46. 71. 103. 156, 188, 205. 206. 256 WIEGAND. Kathryn 50, 194, 203, 204, 205, 208, 215, 216, 235, 236, 237, 238, 242 WIENKE, Gerald 20, 23, 29, 34, 35, 58, 62, 114, 157, 205 WILCOX. Carole 14 WILKENING. Janice 240 WILLEY. Robert E. 41 WILLIAMS, Dillard 176 WILLIAMS. Gary 13, 29, 64, 161, 165, 166, 194, 201, 204 WILLIS, John 172 WILSON, Sheryll 185, 236, 238 239 WOLK, Roger 23, 76, 165. 206 WONG. John 20. 22. 30. 32. 56. 143, 157, 158, 185, 196, 201, 204, 206, 208 WOODCOCK. Suzanne 20, 28. 42. 45. 62. 64, 159, 194, 203, 204, 206, 239 WOOLERY, Robert 173. 176 WORRELL, Blaine 20. 28, 34, 35, 36, 62, 64, 143, 160, 185, 186, 188, 195. 198. 206. 208. 237, 253, 254, 255 .. . whew! YAGURA. Karen 241 YAMAGUCHI, Florence 61, 128, 130, 149 YAMOMQTO. Takeo 217, 254 YAMAMOTO, Teruo 170 YAMASHITA, Dennis Duke 13 64 If R. 170. 172, 258 YANASE, Roy 172, 173, 176 YAUCH, Karl 56, 128, 162, 164 YOSHIMURA, Iwao 165 ZAMFRIN. Ronald 244, 245 ZATKIN, Allen 163, 164 ZETTEL, David 168 ZURBRIGGEN, Timothy 258 • jT - .1. y] IS Pa. ■% ■j ' i ' 1 Vi jr -;-y;f ■■' v ;; ' ' , 7 ■' ' - ' _ - ' .Z V - ' Z i.- - A
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