University of Southern California School of Dentistry - El Molaro (Los Angeles, CA)

 - Class of 1966

Page 40 of 290

 

University of Southern California School of Dentistry - El Molaro (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 40 of 290
Page 40 of 290



University of Southern California School of Dentistry - El Molaro (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 39
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University of Southern California School of Dentistry - El Molaro (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 41
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Page 40 text:

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.

Page 39 text:

% i f 3 It wiggles too much! How about a C Wake up, Norm Wake up, Fidele!



Page 41 text:

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

Suggestions in the University of Southern California School of Dentistry - El Molaro (Los Angeles, CA) collection:

University of Southern California School of Dentistry - El Molaro (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

1955

University of Southern California School of Dentistry - El Molaro (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

University of Southern California School of Dentistry - El Molaro (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

1963

University of Southern California School of Dentistry - El Molaro (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

University of Southern California School of Dentistry - El Molaro (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 1

1978

University of Southern California School of Dentistry - El Molaro (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 189

1966, pg 189


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