Word: dentalized
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...newest Animal Farm is in the Dental School and was built in the fall of 1950. It boasts six animal rooms and five accessory rooms for experimentation and breeding...
...chlorophyll toothpastes? A small pharmaceutical outfit named Rystan Co., Inc. of Mt. Vernon, N.Y. thinks that it has. Eleven years ago Rystan, which is owned by ex-Adman O'Neill Ryan Jr. and two associates, paid more than $200,000 for a patent on all medical and dental compositions of water-soluble chlorophyll derivatives. Last month a federal court in Dallas upheld Rystan's patent and awarded the company $6,727 in damages against
Other gifts for immediate use announced yesterday were: American Cancer Society, to support research in medicine and dental medicine and the program of "research in action," $40,185.82; Associates of the Harvard Business School, $50,000; George F. Baker Trust, for Business School Scholarships, $50,000; Carnegie Corporation of New York, for research in social relations, $30,000; Commonwealth Fund, for research in medicine and public health, $33,313.56; Grant Foundation, Inc., for business research $25,000; Harvard Business School Fund, $21,953.77; W.K. Kellogg Foundation, for cooperative program in educational administration, $24,000; Rockefeller Foundation for research in chemistry...
...article Bronner mentioned that in small quantities fluoride is a deadly poison with no known antidote. When interviewed, Dr. James H. Shaw, Assistant Professor of Dental Medicine at the Harvard Dental School, replied that this statement was true, but in order to be dangerous the quantity would have to be 200 to 300 times that proposed by the city of Cambridge...
Seattle's Christian Scientists were joined by the Washington State Council Against Fluoridation and a group called the National Nutrition League, Inc. Arrayed against them were the District Dental Society, the trustees of the King County Medical Society and a formidable list of other organizations. Opponents of the plan argued that fluorides are dangerous poisons, and that even in smaller doses they cause unpleasantly mottled teeth. They conjured up the specter of Nazi science; human experimentation, they said, had been outlawed at Nürnberg. Furthermore, they asked, what could fluorides do to car batteries and radiators...