B A Y L O R D E N T A L
Tex a s A & M U n i v er s i t y Bay l o r C o l l e g e o f D en t i s t r y D a l l a s , Tex a s
An Alaskan Adventure
Caring for teeth in the tundra
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on the cover
Drs. Kim Self and Jonathan Oudin, pictured under the whale-bone arch in Barrow, Alaska, adapt to cold and isolation while bringing dental public health care to Alaska Natives 320 miles north of the Arctic Circle.
The Baylor Dental Journal is published by the Office of Advancement,Communications & Alumni Relations; Texas A&M University Baylor College of Dentistry; 3302 Gaston Avenue; Dallas, Texas 75246; 214.828.8214. This issue was printed April 2014. Production of the Baylor Dental Journal is supported by a grant to TAMBCD from the Baylor Oral Health Foundation. Financial support to defray printing and mailing expenses is provided by the Baylor College of Dentistry Alumni Association. TAMBCD serves people of all ages regardless of socioeconomic level, race, color, sex, religion, disability or national origin.
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3. Campus Connection
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Newsmakers
City of dreams
Dr. Claude Williams brought his family and his orthodontic skills to Dallas in 1970, enticed by the prospect of change within the environs of a post-integration South. His drive to foster inclusion still inspires possibilities.
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28. Giving
32. Impressions
Contributors LaDawn Brock, Deborah Clark, Lori Dees, Jenny Fuentes, Patti Haskins, Linda Piper, Brigitte Sims, Art Upton Photographers Leeanna Bartlett, Gabe Chmielewski, Steven Doll, Jenny Fuentes, Dr. Tom Johnson, Rick McDaniel, Dr. Jonathan Oudin, The Picture Junkies, Dr. Kim Self Executive Director, Advancement, Communications & Alumni Relations Susan Mitchell Jackson
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EDITORS NOTE For the sake of space and readability in this publication, Texas A&M University Baylor College of Dentistry will be referred to as Texas A&M Baylor College of Dentistry, A&M Baylor College of Dentistry or TAMBCD after page 3.
SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS The Baylor Dental Journal welcomes your feedback and suggestions. Send comments to ccox@bcd.tamhsc.edu, phone 214.828.8218, or mail to Carolyn Cox, Editor; Texas A&M University Baylor College of Dentistry; Office of Advancement, Communications & Alumni Relations; 3302 Gaston Ave.; Dallas, Texas 75246.
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Dr. Lawrence E. Wolinsky
lumni and friends, the warmth and enthusiasm of our dental school family continue to amaze me. I am grateful for all of the opportunities I have had to get to know so many of you here in Dallas and across the U.S. (If I havent been to your corner of the world yet, let the folks in the alumni office know, and well get out to see you soon!) State and national gatherings like the October 2013 American Dental Association Annual Session in New Orleans and the Southwest Dental Conference right here in Dallas in January lent the perfect opportunities to reconnect with one another and re-engage with the college. Even dozens of members of the Class of 1964 returned to campus. (By no means do you have to wait until your 50th anniversary to come back.)
electronically, and we want to make sure you are apprised of the latest and greatest from your alma mater. When you do get the chance to make it out to campus, take a look at a new addition to the first floor: our donor wall, which recognizes those generous individuals whose contributions help make the dental school what it is today. Initiatives such as the Seale Professorship, Cole Professorship and Rees Fellowship are just a few of the current fundraising campaigns that we invite you to support. I cannot believe I am halfway through my third year as dean of the greatest dental school in the country. I am honored and thrilled. The time has flown by, and the future promises to be bright and exciting. I am counting on you to be a part of it all, and I hope to see you soon!
Our next stop will be in San Antonio May 1-3 with a BCD Alumni Association booth on the Texas Dental Association Annual Session exhibit floor and the annual BCDAA reception and general membership meeting May 2 in the Grand Hyatt, a new location. But what about those times between visits, receptions and reunions? How do we as a dental school family and alumni base stay connected across the Lone Star State and beyond? Some of the greatest tools available to us lie with advances in technology and the Internet. August saw the launch of NewsStand, the dental schools revamped news website, which combines breaking college developments with digital versions of your favorite alumni features found in the Baylor Dental Journal, our biannual magazine. If you want to receive our weekly emails with links to online stories, simply go to newsstand.bcd. tamhsc.edu, look for the box that says Join our mailing list, enter your email address, and hit go. You can follow us on Facebook and Twitter, too! For alumni information and updates visit the alumni relations website bcd.tamhsc.edu/alumni. Or you can contact Deborah Clark, program coordinator, at deborah.clark@bcd.tamhsc.edu or 214.828.8471 to make sure we have your accurate contact information, especially your email address. The bulk of alumni happenings and invitations will come to you
Dr. Wolinsky joins Dr. Carmen Smith, Alumni Association president, in presenting the Betty J. Scott Scholarship to fourth-year dental student Lindsay Pigg during the January 2014 homecoming reception.
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C AM P US CON N ECTION
Tooth talk with a twist
CHILDREN WITH SPECIAL NEEDS may learn in manners different from their peers, but their oral health care essentials are the same as any youngsters. A Texas A&M University Baylor College of Dentistry instructional video featuring Restorative Sciences Assistant Professor Dr. Grace Snuggs teaches dental students how to relate to these exceptional patients in ways theyll best understand. Then the next time a dental visit rolls around, not only will the children have pearly white teeth to show off to the dentist, theyll feel excited not anxious about the appointment. Third-year dental students Sarah Severson, Stephanie Reeh and Niekia Franklin watched the video in mid-October before setting out for a Tooth Talk at the Rise School of Dallas, which provides early childhood education to students with Down syndrome and developmental disabilities. One childs face lit up when I revealed to her my smile under the blue dental mask, Severson says. The dental mask is something that makes many of the children anxious and fearful; I was delighted that I could reveal to her that under the scary mask was something she was familiar with and comforted by a big, warm smile! The video focuses on sensory stimulation as the primary tool to teach special needs children about their teeth and the dentist. Many of these children Dental student Stephanie Reeh with Rise School students have limited receptive and expressive language, and teaching them about the dentist through tactile, smell and other sensory means is not only fun but an excellent way to show these kids exactly who the dentist is, says Severson. Editors note: The Feb. 3 passing of Dr. Grace Snuggs deeply impacted the TAMBCD family. This video perpetuates her compassion for special needs youngsters.
Birth Defects Registry, about one out of every 570 children born in North Texas will have a cleft lip and/or palate. Using Texas Health Department statistics, Schneiderman estimated that in 2013 alone, at least 180 children with clefts in this region reached adulthood. These individuals may have a host of dental and medical needs as adults, says Libby, such as swallowing complications, speech therapy, psychosocial concerns and even learning disabilities. Realizing an adult cleft clinic at TAMBCD would require help from inside the school and out, drawing expertise from restorative sciences, oral and maxillofacial surgery and orthodontics residents and faculty, as well as plastic surgeons, speech therapists and social workers. Collaboration with neighboring hospitals and health education programs would also be an essential component. Grafts, dental bridges and lip and nose surgery revisions are just a few of the common treatments that would be provided. As residents we dont get exposed to this type of patient, says Libby. Establishing a center here would allow all of us to work together. Schneiderman admires the emphasis on interprofessional care by the Pediatric Plastic and Craniofacial Surgery Team at Childrens
Medical Center of Dallas, which periodically gathers a dozen patients and multiple specialists in one location on a single day. He envisions a similar model for adults on a smaller scale at TAMBCD. Dental school residents already treat approximately half of the cleft patients seen at Childrens. More than two dozen faculty members and administrators, as well as Dr. Alex Kane, head of the plastic and craniofacial surgery team at Childrens, have gotten behind the concept. At the outset, half-day clinic sessions could occur at TAMBCD twice a year, at which point follow-up appointments would be made. Just one crucial detail remains: funding. But in order to attract benefactors, concrete data is required. Libby distributed a survey in September to tens of thousands of potential respondents via Texas A&M University, the dental school and various social media platforms. The intent has been for anyone in this patient population to participate, offering crucial information about surgical treatment, continuing health care concerns as well as satisfaction with appearance. Data collected from the survey is being analyzed. The goal is to figure out the current medical and dental needs of adults with a history of cleft lip and palate, says Libby. Statistically it seems there should be a large population in our area, but we dont see them.
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On the road for schoolchildren
SEVERAL DALLAS-FORT WORTH AREA back-toschool fairs in August created a busy time for Texas A&M Baylor College of Dentistry volunteers. Thousands of economically disadvantaged schoolchildren beneted from the colleges efforts. Students and faculty provided free dental screenings, uoride varnishes and oral health education at events in Dallas, Fort Worth, Irving and Garland. Staff volunteers registered families at each of the events. The Dallas Mayors Back to School Fair at Fair Park was the largest venue, with more than 1,000 children served there by TAMBCD.
powerhouse molecule FAM20C has brought nearly $2 million in National Institutes of Health funding to Texas A&M Baylor College of Dentistry since a Department of Biomedical Sciences research teams findings were first published in PLOS Genetics as the May 2012 cover article. The attention is more than monetary: Dental and medical schools from the East Coast, West Coast even Canada clamored for a chance to collaborate. Harvard dental school, UC San Diego medical school, University of Pittsburgh, McGill University in Montreal and Howard Hughes Medical Institute in Chevy Chase, Md., all became partners. In fact, requests were so numerous that Dr. Chunlin Qin, associate professor in biomedical sciences and principal investigator, could not accept them all. TAMBCD just so happens to be the only institution in the world that possesses the unique gene knockout model in which the FAM20C gene has been selectively nullified. I didnt expect it was going to be that exciting, says Qin, whose research team includes Drs. Xiaofang Wang, Jerry Feng and Jay Groppe. In the past year, the research on this molecule has gotten very hot. At the moment its very attractive to many people, and this attraction is also good for the school. FAM20C is different from its two siblings in the protein family FAM20, because unlike FAM20A, which is essential to enamel formation, or FAM20B, which is necessary for cartilage development, FAM20C plays a critical role with all four types of Clockwise, from front: Drs.Jerry Feng, Xiaofang Wang, Jay Groppe mineralized tissues in and Chunlin Qin mammals: bone; enamel (outer
layer of tooth crown); dentin (bulky tissue shaping the contour of a tooth); and cementum (outer layer of tooth root). Knowing the proteins role is only half of the equation. Qins group discovered that the loss of FAM20C leads not only to bone and tooth defects but also a reduction of serum phosphorous levels. In a nutshell, FAM20C is critical for regulating the total body phosphate in addition to the formation and mineralization of bone and tooth, Qin says. It doesnt only affect the dental field; it has a very broad influence, he adds. This is a molecule present in many tissues. At this moment we believe it is most important for bone and teeth, while it is also likely to play important roles in the nerve, muscle, fat metabolism and immune systems. As a result, the college has attracted attention from experts in endocrinology, obesity and diabetes, and pharmacology. The researchers foresee intensive activity around FAM20C through the next decade. Dr. Paul Dechow, Regents Professor and chair of biomedical sciences, says the protein could represent a major advance in the understanding of mineralized tissue development. While we suspected its importance, the attention it has attracted from both within and outside the bone research community has been gratifying and attests to the high quality and hard work of our TAMBCD scientists, Dechow says.
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CAMPUS CONNECTION
Muzzins advice for students regarding special needs patients: Look beyond their special needs, and get to know these individuals. They are a warm and loving group. Also, dont look at it as a challenge; just treat them like anybody else, because thats who they are. Our goal of having the students be exposed to this population before they go out to private practice is that they will welcome them into their practice and be willing to treat them.
From left: Dr. Lawrence Wolinsky (TAMBCD), Dr. Brett Giroir (TAMHSC), Chancellor John Sharp (TAMUS), Sen. Royce West, Rep. Diane Patrick, Rep. Roberto Alonzo and Rep. Jim Pitts. Not pictured: Sen. John Carona, who accepted his award earlier in the day
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NE W S MA KER S
Giroir named to TAMHSC top post
DR. BRETT P. GIROIR was named executive vice president and CEO of Texas A&M Health Dr. Brett P. Giroir Science Center by The Texas A&M University System Board of Regents on Feb. 17. To learn more about this dynamic leader, visit www. tamhsc.edu/about/giroir.html.
Many of the patients Kang treats are dealing with the reality of radiation a treatment that, while often effective at combating cancer, is notorious for wreaking havoc on the environment in the mouth. He takes special steps to ensure that the patients reconstruction holds up to the radiation that may occur post-surgery. In the past, there was significant morbidity and decreased quality of life associated with oncologic resections resulting in loss of facial aesthetics, speech and ability to eat, sometimes leading to a hermetic lifestyle, Kang says. With the advancement of microvascular reconstructive surgery, we can now take composite free tissue skin, fascia, muscle, nerve, bone to reconstruct any maxillofacial defect regardless of size and return form and function to the patient. Free tissue transfer, or free flap, has become the gold standard in reconstruction of the difficult three-dimensional aspect of the oral cavity. For patient referrals, contact the Department of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery at 214-828-8403.
Her basic science research interests are in craniofacial growth THE PRESIDENT of the American Association of and development, Anatomists is A&M Baylor College of Dentistrys intramembranous bone growth and molecular own Dr. Lynne Opperman, professor and regulation of director of technology development, who Dr. Lynne Opperman craniofacial suture began her two-year term in April 2013. As AAAs elected head, she is emphasizing development and morphogenesis. Her cross-disciplinary collaboration and strategic translational research achievements include planning within the prestigious 125-year-old a distraction osteogenesis device protected by several patents. scientific organization.
NEWSMAKERS
Ive had all my care done here, she says. I wouldnt go anywhere else. Im very satised. I think the students are very good, and I knew I needed to keep coming back. For her birthday celebration at Mount Moriah Missionary Baptist Church in Dallas, church staff collected proclamations, including one from Dr. Lawrence Wolinsky, dental school dean. Among owery mentions of intriguing milestones and hearty congratulations, the proclamation noted that dental cleanings at the school cost 25 cents back when Gray was a teenager. Gray, who lives with her niece, is active in her church and the senior citizens group at Park South Family YMCA in South Dallas, where she attends potluck lunches, swims and Lizzie Mae Gray receives birthday congratulations from Dr. plays dominoes and bingo. Gray was honored during the dental schools centennial in 2005 and still receives routine care from students of TAMBCDs Caruth School of Dental Hygiene. She has also referred friends and family to become patients. Her tenacity in keeping her teeth clean is evidenced by exceptional oral health.
Bill Wathen and dental hygiene student Janette Garcia.
r. Ernestine Lacy, professor and executive director of student development and multicultural affairs, received ADEAs Gies Award for Outstanding Achievement for a Dental Educator, presented by the ADEAGies Foundation in recognition of vision, innovation and achievement in dental education. Lacy was honored at the American Dental Education Association annual meeting in March 2013. Dr. Lacys caring and compassionate personality has made her a natural fit for this role at our college, says Dr. Lawrence Wolinsky, TAMBCD dean. A consummate educator, she inspires excellence and serves as an exceptional role model. We are so proud to have her as part of our dental school family. Dr. Barbara Miller 83, 96 (MS), executive director of recruitment and
admissions, says, Dr. Lacy has facilitated diversity and inclusion at our dental school with grace and wisdom. Her work will continue to improve access to dental care for growing segments of our population that remain historically underserved by dentistry. Since Lacy 94, 96 (AEGD) began targeting diversity issues through the colleges outreach programs in 1996, the college has seen remarkable growth in diversity, with underrepresented minorities now comprising 39 percent of the student body.
Lacy develops and directs Bridge to Dentistry, the colleges pre-kindergarten through postdoctoral education pipeline program, which was boosted by a $3.4 million, five-year grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Center of Excellence program in 2012. Upon receiving the ADEA award, Lacy recognized fellow faculty and staff members. I accept this very special award with a great degree of humility, said Lacy. I accept it, though, not as a personal one, but as an award to a team of people at our college who make great things happen! That team includes Dr. Barbara Miller and the dedicated people with whom I work every day: the staff in the Office of Student Development and Multicultural Affairs. I also must recognize Dr. Claude Williams, who laid the foundation for diversity and multiculturalism at our college, and Dr. Jim Cole, our dean emeritus, who embraced it and ensured its continual funding.
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My vision is to have all the programs function as an interdisciplinary practice with a face-toface or digital interface for the optimization of patient care and learning, Nagy says. The treatment plan Dr. William Nagy becomes a joint plan rather than independent, and the residents learn about the other specialties. A past president of the American Academy of Fixed Prosthodontics and diplomate of the American Board of Prosthodontics, Nagy is in the eld of his dreams. I chose prosthodontics during my early U.S. Army dentistry years and have never looked back, he says.
r. Pilar Valderrama received her certificate in periodontics. Twice. It was a necessary step to continue in her career goal: teaching. Her determination to excel as an educator did not go unnoticed. After nine years as an assistant professor at the Pontificia Universidad Javierna School of Dentistry in Colombia the location where she earned her first periodontics certificate in 1993 opportunity beckoned. In 2003, Valderrama accepted an ITI Foundation research scholarship at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. The experience led her to pursue and complete a masters in clinical investigation at UTHSCSAs biomedical sciences program in 2006. She then didnt hesitate to pursue periodontics specialty education for a second time now that she had arrived in a different country.
After finishing her residency in San Antonio in 2010 and becoming a diplomate of the American Board of Periodontology in 2011, Valderrama was ready. She joined A&M Baylor College of Dentistrys periodontics faculty in August 2012 as a full-time assistant professor. Now, the American Academy of Periodontology Foundation has recognized her commitment to dental education with a $50,000 award presented in September in Philadelphia. Each year during the academys annual session, one or more members in their first three years of full-time teaching are awarded the AAP Teaching Fellowship. Its designed to support a young periodontists commitment to a career in education. For many academicians early in their careers, this means welcome relief from student loan debt. While Valderrama recognizes she has already devoted more than a decade to education, the fellowship marks the start of a bright academic career in the U.S. You have to follow your heart! says Valderrama. For the past 20 years I have dedicated my life to research and education. This fellowship award will be an additional incentive and support during my early stages in academics in the United States.
NEWSMAKERS
r. Lorenzo Prats and Cherri Kading have a few things in common. The 2013 Dental Teacher of the Year and Dental Hygiene Teacher of the Year, respectively, are relatively new to the college both began working at the dental school in 2010. And both faculty members followed an untraditional path to teaching that was at times daring and unpredictable. Its made them the educators they are today. For 25 years, Dr. Lorenzo Prats, now assistant professor in restorative sciences, practiced general dentistry in Isabela, Puerto Rico, but surgery on three of his vertebrae in 2004 resulted in a medical disability, forcing him to sell his practice. His thoughts immediately turned to teaching, but the only available dental teaching slots at his alma mater, the University of Puerto Rico, were pro bono. So instead, he took a job teaching dental assisting students at Ramirez College of Business and Technology, also in Puerto Rico. It was a dramatic transition. Just before the calendar flipped to 2005, Prats and his family packed their bags and headed more than 2,000 miles away to Dallas at the urging of a former teenage patient, now a DFW-area pastor. For five years, Prats worked as a medical-terms Spanish interpreter at Parkland Hospital, a dental lab liaison and briefly at the Kaplan College Dallas campus, where he taught dental assistants. He knew no one at A&M Baylor College of Dentistry, but he started networking with faculty members through the Hispanic Dental Association and eventually was offered a part-time position in the clinic. When Baylor told me, Were going to give you 10 to 20 percent, I saw heaven, Prats says.
Since joining the restorative sciences department in 2010, his time has increased each year. Now the assistant professor works full time at the college and has assumed the role of occlusion course director for the third-year dental class. Prats whose daughter Alexandra is a second-year dental student now has a smile for just about everyone he meets in the clinic, including his students, whom he views as future colleagues and sometimes as his own kids. Theyre all grown up, and some have sons and daughters and are married, but theyre just like my kids, says Prats. You feel when theyre sad, when theyre happy; when somethings going on with them you can tell. That affects the way they treat the patients. For Cherri Kading, assistant professor and dental hygiene clinic coordinator, the desire to
teach hit young. But coming from a family with no previous university graduates, she followed suit with other relatives and enrolled in a trade school for dental assisting. I loved working with patients, educating patients, Kading says. When a dental hygiene program opened up several years later, Kading who at that point was married with three kids in middle school enrolled and completed the coursework. Her mothers steady decline from dementia made her consider the importance of realizing her dream while she still had the chance. By the time she took her second child to visit colleges, she thought, I really want to be a teacher, but what can I do about it? Kading recalls. The turning point occurred during a college visit with their youngest child. I looked at my husband, and were standing among all these students, and I said, I am going back to school. It hit me that I could still do this. So Kading enrolled part time at the University of Wisconsin-Stout and earned her bachelors degree in adult education. By then, she had decided to teach in a higher education setting. But with graduation looming, she knew she would need a masters degree. I thought, I love dentistry, I want to be a teacher, why not put the two together? says Kading. That decision, coupled with some clever convincing that played on her husbands desire to live in a warm climate, led them to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and its masters in dental hygiene education. It all had to do with getting older, seeing my mom not be able to do what she wanted, and realizing that life isnt over at 40, says Kading. I got my masters degree and very first teaching job something I had wanted since 2 years old at 49.
of the radiology/imaging center, and Dechow is professor and chair of the Department of Biomedical Sciences. Drs. Benson and Dechow have provided extraordinary service to our college for nearly 30 years and are inarguably among the best in their respective fields, said Dr. Lawrence E. Wolinsky, dean, upon the announcement. Their achievements bring great honor to TAMBCD, Dr. Byron Pete Benson Dr. Paul C. Dechow dentistry and dental education.
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onths of constant darkness. Months of continuous light. High temperatures that dont even reach freezing eight months of the year. Low temperatures 50 degrees below zero. Snow from October through June. Some would call this environment forbidding. Dr. Kim Self 09 and her These Texas A&M University Baylor College of Dentistry alumni are in their husband, Dr. Jonathan Oudin 11, call this desolate spot home.
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third year as public health dentists with the Indian Health Service in Barrow, Alaska, the northernmost city in the United States. This outpost on the frozen tundra clings to the edge of the Arctic Ocean. I had always been interested in working in a more rural setting, and everywhere theres an Indian Health Service clinic, its rural, says Self. Here in Alaska its off the grid.
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are no roads leading into the towns in Alaska; you get there by plane or thought it sounded like an experience and adventure.
DR. KIM SELF
A Sp ark elf traveled to Barrow for a two-week externship before her final year of dental school to get a hands-on feel for life and employment there. Whereas most avoid winter in northern Alaska, Self elected to return in December that same year. When Oudin was a predental student at Texas A&M University, he came home one weekend and told his parents about a public health dentistry presentation he had heard. It involved working in Alaska. He was intrigued. By the time he and Self were both dental students, the idea had evolved into a reality.
She waited until we were married and I graduated, and then we moved up here. She had to convince me, but it didnt take too much, Oudin explains. Self is not the least surprised the two are now living their dream together. I believe God has things work for a reason, she says. The roots of Selfs sense of adventure stretch back to a sleepy hometown: Malta, Texas, population 297 at the time she entered elementary school. In this tiny northeast Texas community, public school goes through sixth grade, and chicken farmers spend weekdays hard at work and Sunday mornings at church. Selfs father worked for the government in a position that required travel around the country. When school wasnt in session, the rest of the Self family went with him. My first road trip was at 7 months old. My mom was a teacher so she had the summers off, explains Self. Wed just pack up and go see everything along the way. Ive been to almost all of the 50 states; most before I graduated high school. Adventure has always been in my blood.
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La n d o f E x tre m e s eaching the top of the world is an experience that requires willpower and resources. Case in point: the journey from Dallas to Barrow. This trek requires 28 hours round-trip and a cool $1,300. Driving is not an option because there are no roads in and out of Barrow. Travelers must arrive by plane, enduring at least three airport layovers. And every prepared sojourner packs ample cold-weather gear. I love the winter; its my favorite time, Self says. The snow covers all the dirt so it looks a lot prettier. Here the climate is so different. Having to do all the varied things to get ready to go outside is an adventure. For reference, this adventure of dressing for subzero temperatures is a story of layers. Starting with the legs, the prepared Alaskan pulls on long underwear and then covers it with jeans and snow pants. For the feet, expedition-weight wool socks get topped with Muck arctic sport boots rated to -40 degrees Fahrenheit. Moving to the upper torso, the outfitting begins with long underwear, then a flannel shirt, topped with a fleece jacket and ultimately a down parka. Layers continue with gloves for the hands, a scarf around the neck, and a balaclava, or face mask, if needed. Oudin is as pragmatic about the cold as his wife. The cold is a gradual shift from the summer so it doesnt require that much adjustment, he says. You buy the right gear for the weather. Our signing bonuses were spent on clothes. Home for Self and Oudin is a three-bedroom house with one bath provided as part of their employment agreement. Aside from adjusting to extensive travel and a changing schedule, Oudin mentions a unique challenge of winter in the far north. Our pipes freeze so we have to be flexible about where we live. If no one flushes our toilets every day the house freezes up. Then you need the company with heat pumps to thaw everything out. Heat pumps have a wait list of two to three weeks. Sometimes theyll put us up in a hotel, or they might give us a five-gallon honey bucket with a toilet seat on it. Lodging in the outlying villages takes the shape of a twobedroom apartment attached to each villages health clinic. This is convenient when available, but demand sometimes exceeds supply. If all the rooms are filled, we stay in clinic offices, school classrooms or fire department bunk houses, Oudin says. Returning to Texas for a visit requires adapting to the flip side of extreme climate and lifestyle differences, specifically heat and bustling humanity. After living with polar bears, face masks, sea ice and unpaved streets that turn to mud during snowmelt, Getting back to a city is stressful, Oudin says. Im not used to traffic anymore.
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he remoteness of northern Alaska is precisely the reason that Oudins and Selfs work is so needed. North Slope Borough is a vast, sparsely populated region larger than the state of Utah consisting of Barrow and seven far-flung villages, five of which receive visits from Oudin, Self and the deputy dental director at Samuel Simmonds Memorial Hospital in Barrow. Our villages have a population between 250 and 500 people, Oudin explains. I go to Atqasuk and Nuiqsut, and Kim Goes to Kaktovik and Point Lay. We each spend seven weeks in the villages a year; three times to one village and four times to the other. Era Alaska airplanes, featured on the Discovery Channels show Flying Wild Alaska, provide the dentists air transportation, either via single-engine propeller planes that seat six passengers or dual-engine planes that seat 19. Takeoffs and landings occur not on concrete but on gravel or ice runways. Traveling to the farthest village, Kaktovik, takes three flights and three hours to go 310 miles.
scheduled trip is at the mercy of the Alaskan weather, so travel is unpredictable. Icing conditions on aircraft are common; its the storms that bring wind, low cloud ceilings and near-zero visibility that make flying hazardous. Its not unusual for sixday trips to a village to extend to 10 days. Ive had a few interesting experiences on the small planes, Self says. The altimeter went out on one recently. That made for an interesting landing. The pilot was hanging his head out the window to see the runway. Most of the time its standard stuff. Her exposure to Alaskan travel adventures began the moment she landed in the state in August 2008. After being told she wouldnt be going to a village during her externship, Self was sent by herself for a village health fair in Kaktovik on her first official day. Travel to a village requires taking a week of food. They told me, You need to grab food and pack that. I dont know where youll sleep, but heres a sleeping bag, Self explains. A sleeve of Ritz crackers and a jar of peanut butter was all I had with me, and I figured Id just make it work. I was really blessed because right when I got there I met the fire station chief. To this day hes my best friend in this village. He took me to his house and fed me. His sister lived with him at the time, and she would cook. It was nice to be a part of something.
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The flag on this umiaq (whaling boat) signals a successful hunt.
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he remote location and an extraordinarily high level of soda consumption impact the severity of dental problems. Severe toothaches are common, says Oudin, due to a combination of sugary diet, poor oral hygiene and no fluoridated water. In the Alaska Native population the decay rate is through the roof, says Dr. Kimlea Medlin, dental director at the Indian Health Service clinic and a Barrow dentist since 2006. The national decay rate is 25 to 30 percent. Among Alaska Natives and the American Indian population, the decay rate is above 75 percent. In North Slope local numbers, the decay rate in children in some villages is 100 percent, which means every child has active cavities or treated decay. Soda consumption numbers point to a source of the problem. According to the manager of Barrows largest local grocery store, AC, soda sales average 5,000 cans per resident annually, despite the fact that a 12-pack costs $13. Its not uncommon for a person to drink one or two 12-packs per day, says Oudin. Ninety percent of kids go to Anchorage to get full-mouth rehabilitation. Self adds, I dont feel its due to a lack of education; its a cultural norm: Its OK not to have teeth; Mom doesnt have them, Grandma doesnt, brother doesnt; I dont need them. Its better than it used to be but still has a long way to go. Large families consisting of children that are not all from the same parents and the offspring of teen pregnancy add a layer of difficulty in providing dental care to the native Inupiat population. It is common for other family members such as aunts, uncles or grandparents to adopt children who exceed what a family can adequately support.
HE INDIAN HEALTH SERVICE dental externship in Barrow, Alaska, is an indispensable tool for exposing potential public health dentists to the North Slope. Between 10 and 14 students spend two weeks in the Barrow area, usually including a remote village trip, in the summer before their fourth year of dental school. Externs are accepted through a competitive application process and receive travel, housing and food for the duration. Dr. Kim Self completed the externship in 2008. Some family and friends who heard details about her Alaska experience asked, Are you sure you really want to do this? She was undeterred. During my externship I learned that you have to be extremely flexible and willing to roll with whatever obstacle is put in front of you, says Self. I had to learn how to adapt to Alaska culture; it was not what I was expecting. Self and her husband, Dr. Jonathan Oudin, are in their third year as public health dentists at Samuel Simmonds Memorial Hospital, site of Barrows community dental clinic. The hospital cut the ribbon on a new facility in fall 2013 that includes a dental clinic with 10 chairs instead of six, all-new equipment and more elbow room. Two additional dentists the director and the deputy director and a dental hygienist, who is the first at the clinic since 2006, complete the dental staff.
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HE TRANSPLANTED TEXANS impress their colleagues and patients. Kim and Jonathan have been a huge blessing to the clinic and a lot of fun to work with, says Dr. Kimlea Medlin, dental director. They are kind, professional, polite, incredibly conscientious with patients and staff and very much liked and appreciated by the communities they serve. The externship is incredibly important for recruiting across the board for Indian Health Service dental clinics. Weve offered contracts to only two dentists out of 10 over the past seven years who didnt come through the externship program. One of those was Dr. Oudin, who happens to be married to Dr. Self. Information about the IHS externship is available at www.ihs.gov. Email Oudin or Self with questions at jonathanoudin@gmail.com.
EYE MASK for better sleep when the sun never sets between May 10 and Aug. 2 ALARM CLOCK for awakening when the sun never rises between Nov. 18 and Jan. 23 BOOKS AND GAMES for entertainment due to limited Internet access and spotty cell phone coverage NONPERISHABLE GROCERIES for remote village travel CAMERA for polar bears ambling on the sea ice, the snowy owl that visits or the miles of magentaspiked fireweed dotting the summer landscape along the scenic Alaska Railroad FACE MASK because 50 below is not kind to your nose or ears or anything exposed. MUCK BOOTS for the messy, muddy spring snowmelt
ts a very different culture here, Self says. Its difficult to figure out whom to get consent from for a 3-year-old who needs care because Mom may not be the mom whos the legal guardian. Its a challenge. Sometimes in the Alaskan tundra, Self and Oudin are asked to step outside their dental sphere and render medical aid for lacerations to hands, limbs or faces. When were out in the villages we are the highest level providers, so they often call on us to do sutures and so forth, Oudin says. We see a lot of injuries, including broken jaws from aggressive snow machine and four-wheeler use. Self points to the child who improves his oral health habits as a sign the dentists Alaska work has impact. That makes you feel like youve made a difference, she says. This experience has shown me no matter how much you are able to adapt, you are still going to have challenges to work through without quitting or giving up. One reason community members are leery of outsiders is because they think they are there for a fleeting moment and gone. Our staying around a third year will help show people there are professionals who want to serve their native Alaskan community.
XPLORING ALASKAS SCENERY and culture is a perk of Oudins and Selfs location. Time off is spent in big city Anchorage, population 291,000, and in Fairbanks, the states second-largest city. Long summer days away from Barrow are spent whale watching, fishing for Pacific Halibut along the Kenai Peninsula in Seward and Homer or hiking and kayaking down glacier-fed rivers. The Alaska Railroad has taken the dentists gliding past magnificent snowcapped peaks, nesting eagles, brown bear and moose. Traveling around Alaska has been fun, Oudin says. We really love Seward, concurs Self. Its a small fishing village where the mountains come straight up out of the water just like a postcard. We dont live in postcard Alaska. We just live in flat tundra. In early August, the two ventured 414 miles north from Fairbanks along the largely primitive James Dalton Highway the only Arctic-access highway past oil pipeline outposts like Coldfoot and Deadhorse to Prudhoe Bay. Their mission was both scenic and practical: retrieving a Jeep they purchased in Fairbanks. After reaching Prudhoe Bay, the couple put their new vehicle on a barge to Barrow for $4,000. It reached them the next week. We had bought a vehicle from the dentist we replaced up here, but unfortunately it caught fire and burned down last March, Oudin says. Since then we had been borrowing a vehicle when needed.
The Dalton Highway opened for public use about 20 years ago and beckons summer travelers with incomparable mountain, valley and wildlife vistas. Dubbed the haul road because trucks use it to supply the oil fields in the north, large portions remain gravel when they are not covered in ice during the winter. This is when the road becomes the focus of the Ice Road Truckers show on the History Channel. Close to home, the two fish for salmon, anchoring a net 100 feet offshore each August in the Beaufort Sea, located just 3 miles north of Barrow. The net stays in place for a month and a half and is simply hauled in from the shore. I caught all Alaskan salmon species in my net last summer except for Coho, including Pink, Chum, Sockeye and King, Oudin says. This summer my net was less successful. We think the salmon ran early before the ice left and before we got our net out. The couples next big adventure? Baby Elijah, due in April.
y CIt dreams
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The prospect of change lured Dr. Claude Williams to Dallas. After 44 years, his quest to foster inclusion still spurs opportunity.
A&M University Baylor College of Dentistry. Williams answers as many students as he can, but time during the campus visit is limited. Later in July, we meet several times for his retirement profile story. Williams reclines in his office chair as he talks, but when he leans forward, furrows his brow and widens his eyes, I know to listen closely. His words bring his struggles and aspirations to life.
E C R O W D I N T O T H E E L E VAT O R , and the questions start. Dr. Claude Williams knows this process well. Were giving a campus tour to dental assisting students from Kaplan College. One young man recognizes Williams, asks him about his service in the Navy. There are more questions from others who want to know about this pioneer: the first African-American orthodontist in the Southwest and the first African-American faculty member at Texas
B y Jennif er E . Fuen t es
AS WILLIAMS WAS preparing to finish his orthodontic residency at Howard University in Washington D.C., he got a call from two good friends: Dallas physicians Drs. Emmett Conrad and Robert Prince. In those fragile years in Dallas following the Civil Rights movement, the city along the Trinity was on the verge of integration and growing like crazy. And even though the Kennedy assassination was almost a decade in Dallas past, the city desperately needed to recreate its identity and shake its smeared reputation as a city of hate. The African-American community was trying to build a middle class of blacks in Dallas, Conrad and Prince told Williams. And they had an important question for him. Would he come back to be a part of it? Dallas wasnt on Williams short list. The very reason the former Marshall, Texas, dentist closed his practice, abandoned his home and left for D.C. to pursue an orthodontic education was because, two years earlier, every orthodontist he consulted in the state of Texas refused to provide care for one of his 11-year-old twin daughters because of the color of her skin. Could you imagine having a daughter who needed orthodontic care and no one would treat her? says Williams. I had to re-evaluate a lot of things in my life. How do you respond to the rejection? But Williams couldnt deny the opportunity to be a part of lasting change. So he went right into the thick of things. The decision to accept Conrad and Princes invitation was a good call. By 1973, business at Williams South Dallas orthodontic practice was bursting at the seams. Naturally I had a built-in population group because
In 1970,
white orthodontists wouldnt treat black people, Williams recalls. He took his first patient before even moving back to Dallas. Conrads daughter, Cecilia Conrad now vice president of the MacArthur Fellows Program based in Chicago was in junior high at the time. I was the first kid in my school and the first kid I encountered in South Dallas who had braces, she says. I was a walking community educator and advertisement. Williams spare hours were spent volunteering at the Childrens Medical Center of Dallas dental clinic. It wasnt long before word spread. Two enterprising faculty members Drs. Robert Gaylord and Tom Matthews had created A&M Baylor College of Dentistrys graduate orthodontic program a decade before. It was growing, and Gaylord and Matthews knew just whom they wanted to add to their team.Williams said yes to his professional suitors and began teaching orthodontics a half day each week. He would go on to stay at the dental school for four decades.
ROWING UP IN MARSHALL , home for Williams was a four-bedroom house surrounded by peach and pecan trees. There was a swing on the L-shaped front porch where he liked to sit. Just two blocks away was Wiley College, a historically black school, still segregated at the time. Hed zip over on his bike after school because it was the only place in town with paved roads in the black community. Dr. Kelso Morris, the chemistry professor, was his idol. I admired him, number one, because of his academics, but also because he was recognized as a community leader, says Williams. You would hear people talk about how they admired him. Thats what I wanted to be. In the background that was just my goal in life.
Williams couldnt deny the opportunity to be a part of lasting change. So he went right into the thick of things.
Drs. Chi T. Le (left) and Joanna Saenz, then fourth-year dental students, join Dr. Claude Williams at the 1999 National Association of Medical Minority Educators annual conference in Dallas, which Williams chaired.
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Williams used his local, state and national connections to forge long-lasting partnerships for the college.
OLE MODELS were never far away in Marshall. Williams saw Morris, along with his own schoolteachers, everywhere around town at Moons Grocery Store, during movie nights at the college and at Sunday service at Ebenezer United Methodist Church, where they would sit on neighboring pews. Expectations were high. We always got used books from white high schools, but we had outstanding teachers in the basic philosophy of education, says Williams. They instilled in us commitment to learning and living. So they had constant influence at school and in the community. Then there was the fraternity. Members of Alpha Phi Alpha, a traditionally AfricanAmerican organization, were known for their scholastic achievements. Williams liked that. Hed see them often, whether he was on campus riding after school or helping direct traffic for football games with fellow Boy Scouts. They were just part of the fabric. They would wear different attire every day of rush, he recalls. The last day of the initiation process they wore white suits. Their lives seemed to be in order. Grade school led to high school, and with graduation, opportunity. Williams attended Wiley College on a $50 scholarship. He arrived early and picked a spot in the front row the first day of class. Getting around campus was tough, since hed undergone an appendectomy just two weeks before an operation for which his parents had saved for an entire year just to be able to pay. During that time, in the old days, youd take a month off after surgery, says Williams. I didnt want to wait a month; I wanted to go to college. He learned chemistry from his idol and donned the crisp white suit of his Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity brothers, even became the chapter president. By 1948, after two good years
Fort Worth Star-Telegram executive Bob Ray Sanders (left) pictured with Dr. Claude Williams and Dr. James S. Cole, dean, in 2003 is one of many notable AfricanAmericans Williams invited to speak at TAMBCD.
at Wiley, student unrest had Williams looking east to Howard University. By 1954, he had earned his bachelors and dental degrees at that institution, and 16 years later, its where he earned his certificate in orthodontics. Williams mother, like his aunts, was a teacher. His father built railroads during the Great Depression. But that work was not to last. When his dad took a job for $2.50 a day as a janitor at Southern Methodist University, Williams an only child split summer vacations between long days on his grandmothers farm in Jefferson, Texas, and visits to his dads garage apartment on Stratford Avenue in Highland Park. As early as age 5, Williams would walk to campus with his dad. He soon found himself under the watchful eye of a female faculty member from the chemistry department. While his dad mopped and cleaned, Williams learned. The kind woman never missed an opportunity to teach. She kept a lot of chemicals on the desk, says Williams. I would ask her, How would you know what things to mix first? She said, There is an order in science that you need to have and an order in your life that you need to have. She said, Youre black, so youre going to need to be twice as good.
The farm
IN JEFFERSON offered learning experiences, too. It was there Williams grandmother taught him to draw water from the well. There was no plumbing at that old farmhouse, so he would pour his bath water into a metal tin tub early in the morning, warming it in the Texas sun until nightfall. The time in between was spent working the fields and learning how to catch and harness the mule, Tib. Once the day grew too hot, hed escape to the lake to fish. If Williams wasnt with his grandmother, chances were he was alone, since none of his cousins opted to go to the farm.
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Nights were spent reading the Bible by the fireplace. His grandmother loved to sing hymns, and sometimes Williams would join in. He sings in the church choir to this day. N THE EARLY 70 s the Tweed method, a process for diagnosing and treating malocclusion, was king. There was just one problem: The total concept of the Tweed treatment was not flexible for people of other races, Williams says. His education at Howard included a diverse group of patients, which allowed him to learn several treatment modalities. Two of them the twin wire mechanism and several edgewise treatment techniques allowed the basic concepts of the Tweed method to be expanded. Williams implemented these at TAMBCD, and the timing was good, as the colleges patient pool was steadily diversifying. Soon enough, the same was true for dental students. TAMBCD integrated in 1974. In 1978 his son, Claude Jr., enrolled. It was a source of immense pride and strain for Williams. Even though segregation was a thing of the past, the mindset behind it was at times very much alive. Watching his son struggle was hard. But Williams remained loyal to the college. They brought black dental students in, but they had not prepared the faculty, staff or students, says Williams. They would bring them in with no support there. They had a very difficult time. It didnt take long before minority students started showing up at the clinic and even Williams practice. Im having problems; can you help me? they would ask. So Williams invited students his son among them to his practice so they could observe his style of practice management and, under the careful supervision of AfricanAmerican lab technicians, learn to carve wax patterns. I was determined then that I would work within the system of the school so that no other child would have to go through what my child went through, Williams says. It was not the first time Williams had to step back to re-evaluate his place in life. He found it natural to apply that same lens to the dental school environment.
All of Williams efforts zeroed in on one goal: increasing access to care for those in underserved areas.
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Dallas population had grown to more than 900,000. Opportunity was ripe to develop what remained of the citys open spaces, and business boomed. What was curious wasnt so much about what had happened as opposed to what hadnt. At the time nearly one-third of Dallas population was African-American, yet the city had been largely untainted by urban riots, deep ghettos and high unemployment. Like many cities in the South, Dallas was known for its prejudices. But the sentiment among the citys growing middle class of African-Americans was that it wasnt enough to deter them from a rewarding career, according to an article in the January 1983 Ebony magazine. It was in these environs that Williams laid the foundation for the colleges outreach and pipeline programs. In the early 1990s, with support from the administration and then-dean Dr. Dominick DePaola, Williams formed the Office of Minority Affairs. The role took Williams out of the orthodontic department but allowed him to shape the early direction of what is now known as the Summer Predental Enrichment Program. In the years since, the program has evolved under the careful guidance of the Office of Student Development and Multicultural Affairs, helping to make the dental school one of the most diverse in the country. All of Williams efforts zeroed in on one goal: increasing access to care for those in underserved areas. Everything I have done since the beginning has been toward that cause, Williams says. Williams used his local, state and national connections to forge long-lasting partnerships for the college. Such has been the case with the schools longtime role in the Emmett J. Conrad Leadership Program. Summer educational outreach involved the help of Dr. Tom Diekwisch, former assistant professor in biomedical sciences and creator of the Habitat for Science program, which provided hands-on lab activities and discussions for high school seniors from inner-city neighborhoods. I think Claude is quite different from many people today, says Diekwisch. You could see how hard he had to work for what he had accomplished and how he had to fight, and how he made a difference in where he was. For years during Black History Month, Williams saw to it that students, faculty and staff had the opportunity to hear notable African-American speakers. He also brought TAMBCD into the community.
By early 1983,
R. JAMES COLE, dean emeritus, went with Williams on several visits to Dallas movers and shakers, including elected officials local offices. If there was something that we needed to resolve at the state level, Claude could really help in that way, says Cole. Whether they were state representatives or senators, it was obvious he had known those individuals and their staffs for years. The car rides provided ample time for Williams to share his stories from decades past. Hed tell Cole about what it was like trying to get into Dallas country clubs or the trials of shopping for a car. Before then Im just not sure that I appreciated the depth of segregation and what it was like for Claude and others, says Cole. It was an education for me, because of his experiences. Along the way, Williams mentored and counseled minority students as they navigated the mires of dental school. I dont think I would have made it through dental school without him, says Dr. Angela Jones 01, who maintains a private dental practice in Dallas Oak Cliff, not too far from where Williams ran his practice until retiring in 2000. He was the most helpful person at Baylor for me, she says. He always listened; the door was always open. Whatever I needed he was there. Dr. Williams went to bat for us. His influence went beyond the college to the farthest reaches of the globe even like in 1995, when Williams traveled to the Third African-African-American Summit in Dakar, Senegal, located on Africas western tip. He was one of just six U.S. dentists invited.
More recently, in a conference room at the American Dental Association headquarters in Chicago, Williams recounted his professional journey to more than 75 dental association presidents, past presidents and student leaders from across the country. By the time he was done, the audience had dissolved into tears. There wasnt a dry eye in the house, to convey the kind of story that he did, says Dr. Nathan Fletcher, a National Dental Association past president, who asked Williams to speak at the ADA-sponsored 2010 diversity summit. Some found it incredulous. Some probably were in disbelief, says Fletcher. But when you have a man standing at the podium telling his life story you really cant deny the fact and verification of it. That story is kind of the epitome of who he is. He saw the bigger picture and generated legacies for other people, primarily African-American, to get into the profession and be successful. Thats not a story that a lot of people know. To contribute to the Claude R.Williams Sr., D.D.S., Scholarship Fund, benefiting dental students from underserved communities, gifts may be made payable to A&M Baylor College of Dentistry and sent to the Office of Advancement, Communications & Alumni Relations at 3302 Gaston Avenue, Dallas,TX 75246. Please contact the advancement office at 214.828.8214 with questions or to contribute via credit card.
Op T game
of his
interviews for this article, a theme came to light: Every single person mentioned Dr. Claude Williams love of golf a sport he picked up as a young Naval officer in Maryland. Dr. Tim Meyers of Atlanta graduated from Howards orthodontic program in 1970, and they, along with two other classmates, get together several times a year to play, flying in to golfing destinations from their respective homes in Dallas, Atlanta, Virginia and North Carolina; although youre just as likely to see Williams teeing off close to home at Cedar Crest or Stevens Park in Dallas. Its hard to say who is the better player, says Meyers. The old man holds his own most of the time from what I hear. Ive lost money from betting against him several times.
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WI T H A LU M NI
A student-created video complete with vintage-clothed actors depicting TAMBCDs dental hygiene program through the years was a crowd favorite. As part of the celebration, alumni contributed $1,100 to benet student scholarships. Special guests included Patricia Wessendorff Londeree Caruths rst program director and Dr. Sylvia Swords Gleaton 79, daughter of the late Dr. Ruth Swords a former program director from 1962 to 1982. Slated to become an annual event, the next Caruth alumni luncheon is scheduled for Aug. 8, 2014. Go to tambcd.edu/alumni for information.
Clockwise, from above: Caruth School of Dental Hygiene current students; Dental Hygiene Class of 1968 at the luncheon; members of the Dental Hygiene Class of 1957 with the first program director, Patricia Wessendorff Londeree
hen Dr. Gayle Glenn completed the graduate orthodontic program at A&M Baylor College of Dentistry in 1984, she was the fourth female resident in the programs 20-year history and one of just 36 female American Association of Orthodontists members to graduate that year. During the 1980s there was a significant increase nationwide in the number of women attending dental school, says Glenn, but the same was not true with graduate orthodontic programs. I was unaware that at the time I graduated from dental school, the number of practicing orthodontists who were female was less than 3 percent, says Glenn. Three decades later, Glenn is now the first female president of the AAO, and the number of female members to graduate from orthodontic programs each year has jumped to 145. Women also make up approximately 22 percent of practicing orthodontists. Glenn, who treats patients at Kogut, Villaseor and Glenn Dentistry a Dallas practice she shares with two fellow alums who are pediatric dentists was voted presidentelect in 2012, but it wasnt her first taste of leadership within the specialty organization. Being the first female elected to the AAO board of trustees in 2004 was a huge honor and a milestone for women in the profession, says Glenn. I may be the first female to hold the position of AAO president in the 113year history of the organization, but I will not be the last! A female in AAO office is a reflection of the changing demographics of the associations membership, Glenn adds. We are seeing more women becoming involved in leadership all the time. I do not see holding the office of president as much of a gender issue as I do a significant commitment to the time and effort it takes to be a leader in the organizations which represent dentistry and its specialties.
Dr. Shane Whisenant (center) with Drs. Larry Wolinsky and Amerian Sones
Drs. Russell and Carly Cunningham, Dr. Craig Knell and Dr. Michael and Kandice Ding
Currently, ONeill-Smith is a clinical education manager for Hu-Friedy, where she oversees direct sales at dental and dental hygiene schools in a three-state region, providing invaluable curriculum tips and building lasting relationships in the process. Caruth taught us critical thinking skills, instilled confidence and prepared us to meet the challenges of a constantly changing profession, says ONeill-Smith of her alma mater.
Sipping the first coffee of the morning to a Caribbean sky graced with a double rainbow: Its an island ting.
The two wound their way from Corpus Christi, up to the Chesapeake, back down to Florida and then island-hopped through the Bahamas and eastern Caribbean to Venezuela. They stopped for weeks on end at hot spots like St. Martin, Antigua and seemingly everywhere in between, striking up friendships and mischief wherever they went. Toward the end of the journey, while sailing back up the island chain and nally mooring in Christiansted Harbor in St. Croix, the couple decided to make the island their home, living 15 years aboard the Serena. But during those years on the high seas, dentistry still had its place in Toms life. I had a DentalEZ compact dental equipment box designed for the Vietnam War that had highspeed, low-speed, air-driven drills and a multiplex syringe that could be hooked up to a small compressor or scuba tank, says Tom, who also outtted a Pelican dive case with a complete set of dental equipment. I gave out a lot of free exams and advice, but never did I have a need to open any of those cases, he adds. That didnt keep him from gain-
ing the title of dentist among island publications such as Caribbean Boating, which chronicled the unlikely cruising duo. There was only one time when Tom considered returning to dentistry. As he describes in his 2011 memoir, Sailing the Dream, Hurricane Hugo had come howling into St. Croix, leaving the tropical paradise a swampy mess with a decimated economy. Hurricane Hugo was such a complete, chaotic disaster with little hope for a speedy recovery that it took a night out at Buck Island a week later under the stars listening to Jimmy Buffetts song Island for me to come to my senses, he reminisces. Its not that Tom doesnt love his former profession he just loves island life more. These days, this Ernest Hemingway double (and 2011 look-alike contest participant) spends much time cutting unruly island foliage, cleaning the pool and chasing iguanas from their house, which they bought in 1997. Millie nurtures Serenas Showroom, selling clothing lines to island retailers. Weve had 40 years together. Who knows what hes going to get me into next? Millie laughs.
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GIVING
Binnies legacy continues
DR. WILLIAM H. BILL BINNIE retired to his native Scotland in 2006, but his Dr. Bill Binnie presence was never far from A&M Baylor College of Dentistry. His 27 years at the dental school and health science center made a lasting impact, and his wisdom, dry wit and endearing Scottish accent all led to a favored spot in the college community. Following Binnies passing on Aug. 17 in Scotland, a memorial service in Dallas on Oct. 9 drew a packed house of family, students, faculty, staff, alumni, friends and colleagues. This Regents Professor emeritus, member of the colleges Hall of Fame and health science center administrator served as professor and chair of oral pathology upon arriving at the dental school in 1979. Binnie later oversaw the creation of the Department of Diagnostic Sciences, merging pathology, oral and maxillofacial radiology, and the Oral Diagnosis Clinic. Also at TAMBCD, Binnie spearheaded the development of the nationally acclaimed Stomatology Center and the Oral and Maxillofacial Imaging Center. His inuence in oral pathology spanned multiple continents; he served as president of the International Association of Oral Pathologists and mentored numerous colleagues, students and future leaders. Most recently, Binnie spent his time in retirement running a bed-and-breakfast in St. Andrews, Scotland, with his wife, Cheryl, and teaching part time at the Edinburgh Postgraduate Dental Institute and at his alma mater, University of Glasgow Dental School. Memorial gifts may be directed to the William H. Binnie Oral Pathology Fund. Gifts should be made payable to Baylor Oral Health Foundation-Binnie Fund and sent to: BOHF; 3600 Gaston Ave., Ste. 1151; Dallas, TX 75246.
he miles stretching between Dr. Don Les Houston practice and A&M Baylor College of Dentistry have prevented him from volunteering in the colleges clinics. So the 1998 TAMBCD graduate and his wife, Cindy, decided on another way to imprint lasting change in the lives of students: They pledged $50,000 toward the creation of a scholarship. Once it is fully funded later this year, the Drs.Cindy and Don Le Endowed Scholarship Fund is designed to annually award one student with a scholarship up to $2,500. Selection is based on GPA, community service and financial need. My life could be 180 degrees different if I never received that acceptance letter, says Le. We love the school, love the profession, and we wanted to give something in return. One day a week, Le leaves his private practice a small shop with three chairs, his staff and one part-time associate and instructs dental students in the urgent care
clinic at the University of Texas Health Science Center School of Dentistry at Houston as a volunteer faculty member. Its a far cry from his life just a little more than three decades ago. In 1985, Le and his family made a harrowing escape from Vietnam, living at a refugee camp in Indonesia before receiving permanent asylum in the U.S. and making their home in Houston. Le didnt speak any English at first, but math and science were a natural fit for him. High school led to physics and math courses at the University of Texas at Austin, and by 1994, acceptance to TAMBCD. There have been a lot of good things in my life, Le says. All of this happened because Im a dentist. Read more about Les remarkable story and lifes work in the Fall 2014 Baylor
Dental Journal.
Dr. Don Le (second from left) with some of his students at the Houston dental school
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he American Dental Partners Foundation/Carus Dental Scholarship was established in 2007 with both alumni giving and students in mind. Six years later, the endowment funds purpose is gaining momentum with new gifts from A&M Baylor College of Dentistry alums who are partners of the group practice. One even recently hand-delivered a $4,100 contribution to the colleges advancement, communications and alumni relations office. Were trying to create a culture of giving and giving back, says Dr. Ray Scott, president of Carus Dental, a group practice with locations throughout Austin, Houston and Central Texas. Its easy to not look at how we got to be where we are today. We oftentimes forget it came from our dental education, whatever institution we graduated from. We felt like it would be great if locally we could create scholarships where we could encourage our employees and doctors to give back. Several Carus dentists and staff members jumped at the opportunity to give to their
alma maters, including Dr. Paul Bates 88, who has been a full partner of Carus Dental for 23 years. Honestly I didnt know what I had when I got out of dental school, says Bates. It very much prepared me for private practice. So I was very, very happy to support the scholarship. Bates never did receive a scholarship when he was a student at the dental school, but he recognizes the impact even a small amount of assistance can make. It would have allowed me to make better decisions when I first started practicing, he says. I hope it helps these students move forward into successful careers. Giving at Carus is simple. Dentists and other employees may opt for payroll deduction and can choose for money to be given as a general gift to the school, or the funds may be directed to the Carus Scholarship, which annually benefits a thirdyear dental student. TAMBCD isnt the only beneficiary. Carus also gives to the UT Health Science Center at San Antonio Dental School and the UT School of Dentistry at Houston that way all dentists and staff with dental or dental hygiene school ties in Texas feel motivated to give. Scott says he hopes the mentality spreads
to future professionals, as scholarship recipients pay it forward after graduation. We thought it could create a mindset in that student so that when they graduate, they say, Someone helped me. What can I do to give back? says Scott.
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GIVING
Gift Report
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY BAYLOR COLLEGE OF DENTISTRY is grateful for the nancial support it receives from loyal and diverse constituencies. These gifts represent the tangible and lasting means of assuring that the colleges quest for excellence continues. This gift report includes donations to Texas A&M Baylor College of Dentistry, Baylor Oral Health Foundation and Baylor College of Dentistry Alumni Association in calendar year 2012. Not included in these listings are competitively awarded grants and contracts managed through the Texas A&M Research Foundation. Every effort has been made to make each list complete and accurate, but inevitably some errors or omissions may have occurred. We would appreciate receiving corrections, comments or questions. Please direct any concerns to the colleges Ofce of Advancement, Communications & Alumni Relations at 214.828.8214. You also may contact this ofce for information on ways to continue your support of the college and its mission. We heartily thank our alumni, faculty, staff, students, friends and members of the corporate and foundation communities for their generosity and commitment to the college. TEXAS A&M BAYLOR COLLEGE OF DENTISTRY CONTRIBUTORS $1,000,000 or more Baylor Oral Health Foundation $100,000 or more Nobel Biocare USA Inc. $50,000 or more Biomet 3i Drs. Cindy and Don N. Le 98 $10,000$49,999 American Dental Education Association Richard E. and Doris Bradley Estate Fund DENTSPLY Tulsa Dental Healthy Smiles, Healthy Children Dr. Phuong Nguyen 01 U.T.D. Pre-Dental Association Estate of Jessamine G. Younger Estate of Dr. Cledith M. Zimmerman 58 $5,000$9,999 BioAlliance Pharma North Texas Endodontic Associates Oral Health America $1,000$4,999 American Association of Endodontists Foundation Baylor College of Dentistry Womens Club Dr. Robert E. Lamberth 63 The P&G Company Mrs. Elaine A. Wagner $500$999 Dr. Charles H. Creed 54 Dallas Rotary Club Foundation $250$499 Alliance of the Dallas County Dental Society
Dr. John S. Findley 70 Mr. Vernon Horsley Dr. Steven P. Kirsch 87 Dr. Kent B. Macaulay 74 Mr. Sam Oladipo Dr. Sterling R. Schow $100$249 Dr. Todd Baumann 02 Dr. Jacob Geller 56 Dr. Sylvia Swords Gleaton 79 Mr. Christopher M. Huckabee Mr. and Mrs. Tommie J. Huckabee Mr. Harry M. Jannette Dr. Frank H. Moore, Jr. 69 Dr. Terry J. Scott Dr. N. Sue Seale 70 Up to $99 Dr. John T. Baker 67 Mrs. Leeanna Bartlett Dr. Michael C. Bell 78 Ms. Phyllis Huckabee Mr. and Mrs. Richard K. Myers Mr. Dan Shadle In-Kind Contributions 3M Unitek American Orthodontics Anatomage, Inc. Dr. William L. Cook III 84 DENTSPLY GAC International DENTSPLY Tulsa Dental Johnson & Johnson Ortho Organizers Inc. Ms. Gail Parrigin-Clark Southern Implants Straumann, USA Gifts In Honor Of: Dr. Gerald Glickman Dr. Timothy Huckabee 87 Dr. Charles Hutto 80 Ms. Mamie B. Jannette Dr. Daniel L. Jones 89 Dr. Kathleen Rankin 77 Dr. James Shadle 72 Gifts In Memory Of: Dr. Edward R. Genecov 56 Ms. Norma Grant Mrs. Jessamine Younger BAYLOR ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION CONTRIBUTORS THE MISSION OF THE BAYLOR ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION is to provide A&M Baylor College of Dentistry with funds and support to sustain its institutional pre-eminence through excellence in students, faculty, research and outreach. BOHF does this by managing and raising private dollars for world-class faculty, leading-edge research, academic programs and scholarships. Private support helps the college go beyond the limits of state and federal funding to provide innovative and high quality programs for thousands of students and patients touched by TAMBCD. The scal-year 2012-2013 foundation directors were: Mr. Stan E. Allred, Mr. Mike Baggett (vice chairman), Dr. Patricia Blanton, Mr. George Bramblett, Jr., Mr. Bill Carter (chairman), Dr. James Cole, Dr. Frank Eggleston, Mr. Gary Elliston, Dr. Kathy Hamilton (secretary), Mr. Larry J. Haynes, Mr. Terry Kelley, Mr. John McWhorter, Mr. Carl Schieffer, Mr. John Solana, Dr. Keith Thornton and Dr. Terry Watson.
The following gifts reect giving to the foundation in calendar year 2012. They were donated to benet one of these funds held at BOHF: Unrestricted Fund Betty J. Scott Scholarship Jesse T. Bullard Lectureship The Peter H. Buschang Endowed Professorship for Orthodontic Research Kimberly Campbell Research Fund The Richard F. Ceen Endowment for Educational Enrichment The James S. Cole Endowed Professorship in Dentistry Robert E. Gaylord Endowed Chair Gaylord Endowed Chair Support Fund Tom Matthews Endowed Lectureship Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery Orthodontics Support Fund Orts Endowed Scholarship Pediatric Dentistry Support Fund Perio Alumni Support Fund Periodontics Resident Endowment Fund The N. Sue Seale Endowed Professorship in Pediatric Dentistry Robert S. Staffanou Memorial Scholarship Fund Straumann Fund Patricia Clendenin Wessendorff Caruth School Fund Whiteaker-Hurt Endowed Chair in Periodontics $10,000 or more Baylor Orthodontic Alumni Association Dr. Jim Burk Dr. Barrie Choate Dr. Charles L. Hutto Dr. and Mrs. Mark Morrow $5,000$9,999 Brassler USA Dental, LLC Dr. Ralph A. Brock Dr. and Mrs. James S. Cole Dr. Tammy Gough Dr. Kimberly Gronberg Dr. Myron Guymon Dr. Jeffrey Johnson & Family (Amy, Maddie, Dylan) Dr. Stephen A. Kellam Dr. Mark Kogut KLS Martin, LP Dr. Siegfried Naumann Nobel Biocare Dr. Samuel G. Papandreas Dr. Dan C. Peavy Dr. Christopher A. Rawle Dr. Bruce K. Reeder Dr. Payam Sanjideh Dr. John Sherrard Dr. Harold V. Simpson Texas Association of Orthodontists Dr. John R. Valant Dr. Wayne Woods $1,000$4,999 Astra Tech Dr. Jessie Banks Dr. Charles Berry Biomet 3i Dr. J. C. Boley Dr. and Mrs. Ronald A. Bryant Dr. Phillip M. Campbell Dr. Claudio H. Caycedo Mrs. Cindy Ceen Dr. John N. Conniff
Dr. Neil Dean Dentsply International Dr. Gayle Glenn Dr. Hilton N. Goldreich G. Hartzell & Son Dr. Brigitte Hermann Dr. Ashley Hoban Dr. Paul A. Kennedy Dr. Don N. Le Dr. Timothy Lee Dr. Koyu Wu Lin Dr. Adam Martin Dr. Maryam Mojdehi-Barnes Dr. Robert E. Morgan The Murrell Foundation Osteogenics The P&G Company Piezosurgery Inc. Dr. Judith A. Ragsdale Dr. John Roberts Dr. Melissa Rozus Dr. Stephanie S. Smith Dr. Adam C. Spencer Mrs. Ruth E. Staffanou Dr. R. Gil Triplett Dr. Alejandra Villaseor Whip-Mix Corporation Dr. and Mrs. Larry W. White Dr. Lawrence Wolinsky Dr. John F. Zummo $500$999 BCD Pediatric Dentistry Class of 2012 Dr. Larry Bellinger Dr. Kenneth M. Hamlett Dr. Dean Hudson Dr. Hedeki Ikeda Dr. James Dean Jensen Dr. Mark LaHaye Dr. F. T. McDonald Ms. Juanna Moore and Mr. Ricardo Vasquez Patterson Dental Company Dr. Thomas B. Randers, Jr. Dr. Sherri J. Reuland Dr. Lee M. Romine Dr. Wayne Sankey Ms. Lanelle Watkins Dr. Elaine Whitney Ms. Melissa Wise, RDH The Dr. Don Woodworth Family $250$499 Anonymous Dr. Terry B. Adams Dr. Moody Alexander Dr. Mark D. Allen Dr. Mike D. Allen Dr. Kurt M. Anderson Dr. Raymond Barbre Dr. Adam Benham Dr. Dan Blue Dr. Ralph A. Brock Dr. Troy Christensen Dr. Monte Collins Dr. Linda Crawford Dr. Carly Cunningham Dallas County Dental Society Dr. Douglas Depew Dr. Bryan Elvebak Dr. Aaron Engels Dr. David M. Ferguson Dr. Mai Ferrara Dr. Mark S. Geller Dr. John A. Gerling Dr. Hilton N. Goldreich Dr. Kimberly Gronberg Dr. James E. Hatcher Dr. Andrew C. Hodges
Dr. Arthur V. Khurshudian Dr. Harold J. Koppel Dr. Casey R. Lepley Dr. Jeremy R. Lustig Dr. Danette McNew Dr. Bart Miller Dr. W. Jim Moore, Jr. Dr. Jacqueline R. Moroco Dr. Karen Neat Dr. Christopher T. Nevant Dr. Alan Paradis Dr. Michael Pickard Dr. Michael Plunk Dr. Alan V. Reed Dr. Raenie Roberts Dr. Richard D. Roblee Dr. Lee M. Romine Dr. Kirk D. Satrom Dr. Jesse N. Schroeder Dr. Stephen P. Shepard Dr. Douglas A. Singleton Dr. Stephanie S. Smith Dr. Steven W. Smith Dr. C. E. Spencer Dr. Thomas M. Starck Tiedke Marketing Group Dr. Kimberly Travers Dr. Lauren Van Bebber Dr. Franklin M. Wheelock Dr. Evan G. Wilson Dr. Ronald R. Yen Dr. Andrew Young $100$249 Dr. Douglas M. Anderson Mr. Robert J. Bigham, Jr. Dr. J. C. Boley Dr. George E. Cantu Dr. Richard Ceen Dr. Lisa Cheng Mr. John Clark Dr. Jonathan Clemetson Dr. James Cole Ms. Regina Courtney Dr. Lauren E. Davis Dr. Janice DeWald Dr. Jessica Downs Dr. Yiyu Fang Dr. Jerry Feng Dr. Michael Fesler Dr. Scott D. Hamilton Dr. Robert Hinton Dr. Maria Howell Ms. Susan Mitchell Jackson Dr. Barry James Dr. Jeff James Dr. Stephen A. Kellam Dr. David J. Lasho Dr. Adam F. Lukens Dr. James F. Lunardon Dr. Stanley Marder Dr. Barbara Miller Dr. Frank R. Miller Dr. Loulou Moore Dr. and Mrs. Philip R. Morrow Dr. Preeti Naik North Texas Periodontics & Implantology Dr. Lynne A. Opperman Dr. Michael A. Peck Dr. M. Julia Prewitt Public Health Sciences, Baylor College of Dentistry Dr. Christopher A. Rawle Ms. Debbie Ruff Dr. Emet Schneiderman Dr. Kevin Seidler Dr. Reena Kuba Shiralkar Dr. George Soh Ms. Jo Spears
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Dr. Clark Spencer Dr. Cory Stephens Dr. Marvin Stephens Dr. Kathy Svoboda Mr. Ricardo Vasquez Mr. Eddie Victorino Dr. John Wright Up to $99 Anonymous (2) Ms. Darlene Amos Ms. Nancy Anthony Dr. A. U. Guys Dr. James B. Barnes Ms. Leeanna Bartlett BCD Alumni Association Dr. Patricia Blanton Dr. Ali Bolouri Ms. LaDawn Brock Dr. Burt Bryan Mr. Jeffrey Burton Central Texas Orthodontic Specialists Mr. Ray Covington Ms. Carolyn Cox Dr. Justin A. Dacy Dr. Mark Dake Ms. Karen Delaney Ms. Kay Egbert Dr. Michael Ellis Dr. Paul Ezzo Ms. Linda Gothard Mrs. Betty Hagins Ms. Wilhelmina Hobbs Dr. Harvey Kessler Mr. Dale Lewis Dr. Jack Long Ms. Vickie Nigh Mr. Leon Oltrogge Dr. Charles F. Orth Ms. Marge Palma Dr. David Philofsky Ms. Linda Piper Ms. Kelli Posey Dr. W. M. Price Dr. Ronaldo Ramirez-Ramos Ms. Sharada Ramsubramanian Dr. Jeffrey Rossmann Dr. Sang Shin Ms. Brigitte Wallaert Sims Dr. Gary B. Solomon Ms. Myra Spurgin Dr. Monica Tanur Ms. Victoria Thompson Dr. Pilar Valderrama Ms. Eleanor Weigand BAYLOR ALUMNI ASSOCIATION CONTRIBUTORS EACH ALUMNUS OF THE COLLEGE is encouraged to contribute to the BCD Alumni Association Fund, which is managed by the Baylor Oral Health Foundation. BCDAA donations fund scholarships, programs, networking/ career opportunities and awards to benet current and future alumni. The following gifts were gratefully received by the BCD Alumni Association in 2012. Ambassadors Club - $10,000 or more Heartland Dental Care Inc. Deans Club - $1,000$4,999 Dr. Colin S. Bell 79 Dr. Michael C. Bell 78 Dr. Franklin R. Boyles 72 Dr. Neil A. Bryson 75 Dr. Barrie B. Choate 84
Ms. Pamela K. Cobb 81 Dr. Stacy V. Cole 77 Dr. Mark A. Craig 90 Dr. Tommy Harrison 79 Dr. Greg LoPour 95 Dr. Andy Mack 85 Dr. Byron M. McKnight 81 Dr. Phuong Nguyen 01 Dr. Calvin Vo 03 Scholars Club - $500$999 Dr. Robert A. Bettis, Jr. 64 Dr. Jonathan Clemetson 02 Dr. Demetra C. Dorsey 98 Dr. John S. Findley 70 Dr. Diane J. Flint 86 Dr. Kenneth M. Hamlett, Jr. 74 Dr. James R. Kersten 69 Dr. Chris L. Kirby 89 Dr. Robert W. Kleypas 02 Dr. Eugene M. Kouri 61 Dr. Arthur H. Kuhlman 71 Dr. Ernestine S. Lacy 94 Dr. Thad Langford 74 Dr. Thanh-Truc Ngoc Le 09 Dr. William T. Lee, Jr. 67 Dr. Paul E. Menton 66 Dr. Jack O. Mills 61 Dr. Michael W. Moftt 72 Dr. LaVan R. Parker III 94 Patterson Dental Inc. Dr. Daniel C. Peavy, Jr. 62 Dr. Robert L. Reames, Jr. 69 Dr. Donald H. Roberts, Jr. 74 Dr. N. Sue Seale 70 Dr. Kevin L. Seidler 78 Dr. Mark A. Smith 94 Dr. Scott M. Staffel 95 Dr. Julie A. Stelly 87 Dr. Marvin G. Stephens, Jr. 71 Dr. Christopher L. Tye 88 Dr. Fred J. Voorhees 77 Dr. Ronald H. Watkins 68 Dr. Scott Waugh 74 Ms. Patricia Whalley 66 Dr. Karen E. Williamson 90 McCarthys Club - $250$499 Dr. George Acquaye 96 Dr. Zoel G. Allen II 95 Dr. Justin E. Aurbach 69 Dr. Robert A. Baker 75 Dr. Jeffrey W. Ball 80 Dr. Charles W. Bartholomew 89 Dr. Karla H. Bishop 94 Dr. James L. Bolton 65 Dr. Rex E. Brewster 60 Dr. George I. Bridges 68 Dr. Burt C. Bryan 79 Dr. Robert J. Christian 69 Dr. James S. Cole 75 Dr. Leon A. Conkling 72 Dr. Joe T. Crawford, Jr. 76 Dr. Herbert F. Cross, Jr. 75 Dr. Russell Cunningham 02 Dr. Terry A. Darden 63 Dr. Paul G. Davis, Jr. 83 Dr. Stephen E. Davis 73 Dr. David M. Dick 78 Dr. O.E. Dickinson 54 Dr. Thomas A. Ding 99 Dr. Mark A. Dougherty 87 Dr. Elbert A. Franklin 79 Dr. James B. Goates 76 Dr. Marshal D. Goldberg 80 Dr. David B. Gregory 75 Dr. James T. Grogan, Jr. 65 Dr. Kenneth M. Hamlett, Jr. 74 Dr. Richard Haught 67 Dr. Brent Hawkins 04
Dr. Larry D. Herwig 84 Dr. Nathan E. Hodges 00 Dr. Quyen Tu Huynh 09 Dr. John E. Kidwell 55 Dr. Michael A. Klepacki 84 Dr. Karen A. Knight 88 Dr. Kirk E. Kooker 86 Dr. Seth Ramsey Koschak 79 Dr. Lester H. Kuperman 70 Dr. Robert E. Lee III 69 Dr. Eduardo R. Lorenzana 96 Dr. Joy K. Lunan 80 Dr. Brock Lynn 80 Dr. Kent B. MaCaulay 74 Dr. David H. McCarley 81 Dr. Thomas M. McDougal 64 Dr. Amp W. Miller III 73 Dr. Frank H. Moore, Jr. 69 Dr. James S. Moore 69 Dr. Davis W. Morgan 89 Dr. Scott Anthony Myser 08 Dr. Rita F. Ne 96 Dr. Gary W. Penn 78 Dr. Todd Phelan 04 Dr. David W. Price 81 Dr. Hedley Rakusin 73 Dr. Everett Renger, Jr. 70 Dr. Dale C. Rogers 87 Dr. Francisco J. Romero 74 Dr. Roger B. Salome 69 Dr. Charles E. Sauer, Jr. 87 Dr. Jill Sentlingar 04 Dr. Carmen P. Smith 96 Ms. Janice L. Snyder 75 Dr. Audrey Lynn Stansbury 09 Dr. Charles D. Stetler 89 TDA Financial Services Insurance Program Dr. William K. Thornton 69 Dr. Ronald C. Trowbridge 73 Dr. David H. Utzinger 63 Ms. Elizabeth D. Voorhees 80 Dr. Mark N. Waters 81 Dr. James M. Watson 84 Dr. Terry D. Watson 67 Dr. Thomas M. Weil 65 Dr. Robert Wells 77 Dr. Patrick B. Wilcox 83 Dr. James E. Williams 83 Dr. Andy Wilson 95 Dr. Ronald L. Winder 73 Dr. Jeffrey S. Woodson 67 Dr. Debrah J. Worsham 85 Century Club - $150$249 Dr. George Q. Adams 75 Dr. Terry B. Adams 78 Dr. Kipton Ford Anderson 07 Dr. Charles J. Arcoria 80 Dr. Deanna E. Aronoff 91 Dr. Ray A. Ashcraft 63 Dr. Cary B. Askins 72 Dr. Pamela J. Asseff 93 Dr. Jeffrey P. Atkinson 94 Dr. Steven J. Austin 85 Dr. John D. Barrett 77 Mrs. Judith A. Blackwell 66 Dr. Culberson R. Boren 81 Dr. Billy G. Brown 64 Dr. David N. Brown 76 Dr. W.L. Bullis 67 Dr. Arthur T. Burciaga 87 Dr. James V. Burnett 48 Dr. Michael B. Butcher 80 Dr. Thomas D. Calabria 84 Dr. Ellysse Yvette Canales 10 Dr. James R. Carrell, Jr. 02 Dr. James R. Carroll, Jr. 74 Dr. Neill P. Clayton 66 Dr. Gregory T. Cohlmia 74
Dr. Ramiz Cohlmia 59 Dr. Gerald D. Cox 78 Dr. Stephen L. Crane 73 Dr. Carly Cunningham 04 Dr. Odilon P. Delcambre 47 Dr. Kurt E. Delius 91 Dr. Thomas H. Dembinski II 74 Dr. Paul S. Denson 07 Dr. Jarred K. Donald 00 Dr. Valerie A. Drake-Ernst 99 Dr. Terrence L. Duncan 64 Dr. Philipp M. Dunn 87 Dr. Arlet R. Dunsworth 69 Ms. Janell Dunsworth 71 Dr. Donald R. Eckersley 83 Dr. Kristi Elia 00 Dr. Dale L. Farmer 83 Ms. Betty N. Ferraro 68 Dr. Sean E. Fitzgerald 09 Dr. Bill K. Forbus 58 Dr. Karen Foster 02 Dr. Howard Frysh 90 Dr. William J. Garard, Jr. 77 Dr. Alma L. Garza 91 Dr. Clayton A. Gautreaux 79 Dr. Mark S. Geller 73 Dr. William H. Gerlach 87 Dr. John J. Graves 74 Dr. Dale W. Greer 77 Dr. Gary A. Greer 80 Mrs. Rosalie A. Grifn 67 Dr. Randall L. Grifth 77 Dr. Stephanie L. Grogan-Payne 96 Dr. Kim Gronberg 02 Dr. Mina Haghiri 98 Dr. Clayton M. Hamilton 86 Dr. Dana K. Harmon 73 Dr. Paul M. Harrington 69 Dr. Charles R. Henry, Jr. 72 Dr. Carol Herrington 88 Dr. Marvin M. Hewlett, Jr. 73 Dr. Dudley M. Hodgkins 76 Dr. Sunhee C. Hong 92 Dr. Joseph E. Irving 81 Dr. Thomas S. Jeter 71 Dr. Richard L. Johnson 68 Dr. Steve Karbowski Dr. David P. Kretzschmar 74 Dr. Dale A. Kunkel 84 Dr. Thomas B. Larkin 63 Dr. Wesley A. Lasater 70 Dr. Celeste E. Latham 97 Dr. Paul N. Latta 91 Dr. Peter V. Lecca 90 Dr. Stanley D. Lowrance 81 Dr. John P. McCasland 57 Dr. Adela McLaughlin 96 Dr. Michael R. McWatters 73 Dr. David Mikulencak 02 Dr. Evan N. Miller 91 Dr. Loren M. Miller 84 Dr. Maryam Mojdehi-Barnes 97 Dr. Pamela A. Moore 96 Dr. Michelle Morgan 93 Dr. Partha Mukherji 01 Dr. Joe Mike Murphy 77 Dr. James S. Nicholson, Jr. 74 Dr. Pamela A. Nicoara 03 Dr. Jimmy W. Novak 75 Dr. Charles Nunnally 01 Dr. Anne M. Orr 93 Mrs. Julia H. Ousley 65 Dr. Carol E. Owens 71 Dr. Shannon Owens 02 Dr. Sherwood B. Owens, Jr. 61 Dr. Robert F. Parker, Jr. 65 Dr. Michael A. Peck 83 Dr. Chris Perkins 90 Dr. Sandra Petrocchi 12 Dr. Richard E. Phelan 78
Dr. William R. Phillips III 97 Ms. Frieda A. Pickett 66 Dr. Jacqueline M. Plemons 86 Dr. Thomas J. Powers VI 83 Dr. Martha E. Proctor 86 Dr. Harlan L. Raley 51 Dr. Kirstin Ramsay 03 Dr. Terry D. Rees 68 Dr. James H. Reisman 76 Dr. Jessica Rohlffs 02 Dr. Steven Z. Richardson 93 Mrs. Kay F. Rickets 58 Dr. Karen A. Roberts 93 Dr. Matthew B. Roberts 07 Dr. J. Dean Robertson 41 Dr. Dena G. Robinson 99 Dr. Thomas Ray Rogers 79 Mrs. Jeanne Rumley 62 Dr. John L. Rumley 65 Dr. Brian Salome 03 Dr. Samuel H. Sanders 75 Dr. Edward H. Sauer 77 Dr. John W. Scott 51 Dr. Kirk E. Scott 96 Dr. Andrea M. Scoville 83 Dr. Stephen P. Shepard Dr. Cindy Sheppard 83 Dr. Ernest E. Sheppard 83 Dr. Ronald T. Sherwood 79 Dr. Daniel W. Shipman 67 Dr. Walton V. Shofner 52 Dr. Joe J. Simmons III 98 Dr. Charles T. Simms, Jr. 74 Dr. Grace E. Smart 86 Dr. Joseph K. Smith 64 Dr. Diana B. Watson Smith 78 Dr. Marlene L. Spady 88 Dr. Claude R. Stephens, Jr. 81 Dr. Larry R. Stewart 79 Dr. Casey Stroud 01 Dr. Michael L. Stuart 86 Dr. Paul E. Stubbs 70 Dr. Albert M. Tate Jr. 67 Dr. Jack L. Taylor 58 Dr. Elizabeth Tomlin 10 Dr. Ramona M. Torgerson 84 Dr. Marisol Vargas 09 Dr. William C. Vargo 85 Dr. Carlos Vela, Jr. 74 Dr. Robert G. Vittetoe 73 Ms. Pamela Wade 68 Dr. Paul D. Wallace 83 Dr. Jerald W. Walton 81 Dr. John M. Weaver 83 Dr. Marea White 89 Dr. Bettye Whiteaker-Hurt 68 Dr. Steven Widner 86 Dr. Jon W. Williamson 88 Dr. Graham Wilson 66 Dr. Joe H. Yarbro 77 Supporters - Up to $149 Dr. John T. Baker 67 Ms. Martha W. Berry 72 Dr. Laura L. Carter 06 Mrs. Cathy Clemmons 81 Dr. Kristi L. Davis 96 Dr. Travis Lane Epperson 08 Dr. Robert S. Hamilton 78 Dr. Gelynn L. Majure 91 Dr. Kirstin K. OLeary 11 Dr. Arthur C. Reed, Jr. 54 Dr. Jerry V. Roach 71 Dr. J. Roark 43 Dr. Stephen Sperry 11 Dr. John R. Swanson II 51 Mrs. Mary A. Wallis 62 Dr. Dennis E. Weibel 73 Dr. David S. Wilbanks 73
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II M MP PR RE E SS SS II O ON N SS
This Impressions page captures a moment in time in the rich history of our Dallas dental school. The people of Texas A&M University Baylor College of Dentistry have called the school by various names: State Dental College from 1905 to 1918, Baylor University College of Dentistry from 1918 to 1971 and Baylor College of Dentistry from 1971 to 1996, when the name became longer to reect the afliation with the Texas A&M University System and, later, its health science center. In 2013, a new name reected an alliance with Texas A&M University. Through the ebb and ow of history, the dental school has been nurtured by people who reaped its benets and perpetuated its legacy. Enjoy this glimpse into the mirror of time.
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i Community care
Editors Note: A&M Baylor College of Dentistry alumni, faculty, students and staff work to improve public health, whether its more than 4,000 miles and several time zones away in northern Alaska or just a few strides down the hall in one of the schools own clinics. This news story from 46 years ago shows the colleges longstanding commitment to Dallas-area residents.
aylor University College of Dentistry is under contract to examine and provide necessary dental work for 900 children, aged 4 through 6 years, for the Head Start Program in Dallas.
The children, from school districts in West and South Dallas, are brought to the
College of Dentistry by nurses employed by the program. Six recently-licensed graduates of the college are performing the dental services: Dr. R. Kelly Roberts, Dr. Barry Brooks, Dr. Robert Rickey, Dr. Walter S. Reeves, Dr. Gary D. Johnson and Dr. Barry G. Acker. The Head Start Program is sponsored by the Dallas County Community Action Committee and the Dallas Day Nursery Association, a United Fund affiliate. The dental program at the College is under the supervision of Dr. Walter C. Stout, professor and chairman of the Department of Dentistry for Children. A preliminary survey of dental problems showed that there are an average of four or more decayed, missing, or filled teeth per child. Routine dental service includes an examination, cleaning of the teeth, a topical fluoride application, and full-mouth X-ray. Necessary dental work is done as the children are brought back to the College Clinic. An accurate statistical survey will be compiled after the program has been completed. Although approximately 99 percent of the children have never seen a dentist, almost all of them are very cooperative patients and readily accept dental care. The teachers and nurses of the Head Start Program have been extremely helpful in preparing the young patients for their initial visit to the dental clinic. Many of the children have shown pride in exhibiting their freshly-polished teeth after their first appointment with the dentist.
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An agent of change ... par for the course. See page 18.