Word: dentalized
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...American Dental Association was scheduled to meet in Oakland. Calif, last month. For their convention that association of proud professional men decided that they needed no less than 3.000 hotel rooms. 50.000 sq. ft. of space for clinics and exhibits, an assembly hall to hold at least 1,000 persons at a time. Oakland had the space, but not the sleeping quarters. Hence Oakland hotelkeepers and merchants lost the business which 8,000 dentists created when they met across the bay in San Francisco last week...
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences: Claude C. Albritton, of Dallas, Texas, (Ph.D. Marshal); Henry G. H. Halvorson, of Huntington Park, California, (A. M. Marshal), Law School: Abraham R. Ginsburgh, of Wikes Barre, Pennsylvania. Divinity School: Arthur P. Colbourne, of Secretary, Maryland. Dental School: Charles M. Underwood, of New York City. Medical School: Daniel B. Dorman '32, of Beirut Syria. School of Public Health: Charles G. Hutter of Washington. Graduate School of Design: (including degrees in Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and City Planning) Eustis Dearbon '32, of Sandwich, Graduate School of Business Administration: William S. Allen, of Winchester, Graduate School...
Waiting in Philadelphia last week for famed Bronchoscopist Chevalier Jackson to haul a hooked dental bridge out of his gullet was a Detroit medical student. En route from Australia last week was a child from whose lung Dr. Jackson is expected to remove a foreign body. Shipped home fortnight ago from Philadelphia's Temple University Hospital, where Dr. Jackson operates, was the body of a Knoxville, Tenn. girl who had inhaled the brass cap of a lipstick. Knoxville bronchoscopists had failed to remove the obstruction from her left lung. A fatal abscess had developed before Dr. Jackson...
...Jackson advises people with removable dental bridges or sets of false teeth to take them out of their mouths before going to sleep. "Some people are extremely sensitive about this," he once told a group of Philadelphia dentists, "and it is amazing the number of people who are annoyed when I suggest that they remove their dentures before retiring. . . . The chances of suffocation are not great. Occasionally a man has been asphyxiated by a denture or a tooth. But not nearly so often as by an oyster." The obstruction which Dr. Jackson has found most often in the gullet...
Other Harvard dental men participating in the meetings are Dr. Maurice E. Peters; Dr. M. S. Strcok, instructor in oral surgery at the School; and Dr. Norman W. Swett, instructor in prosthetic dentistry...