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THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY<br />

OF THE<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR<br />

DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>)<br />

IAD R HISTORY AD H OC COM MITTEE<br />

DAN Y. BURRILL, NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY DENTAL SCHOOL<br />

H. S. M. CRABB, UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS DENTAL SCHOOL<br />

THOMAS J. HILL (EMERITUS), WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY<br />

SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY AND SCHOOL OF MEDICINE<br />

MAYNARD K. HINE, CHANCELLOR, INDIANA UNIVERSITY-PURDUE<br />

UNIVERSITY AT INDIANAPOLIS<br />

MASAO ONISI, TOKYO MEDICAL & DENTAL UNIVERSITY<br />

SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY<br />

FLOYD A. PEYTON, (FORMERLY) UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN<br />

SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY, (NOW) UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA<br />

COLLEGE OF DENTISTRY<br />

JEANNE C. SINKFORD, HOWARD UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF<br />

DENTISTRY<br />

REIDAR F. SOGNNAES, CENTER FOR THE HEALTH SCIENCES,<br />

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES<br />

FRANK J. ORLAND, ZOLLER DENTAL CLINIC, UNIVERSITY<br />

OF CHICAGO (CHAIRMAN OF HISTORY COMMITTEE)<br />

THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO<br />

PRINTING DEPARTMENT<br />

Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 74-75196<br />

© Copyright 1973 by the International Association<br />

for Dental Research; Chicago, Illinois<br />

Every freedom is granted to reproduce any part of this resource publication,<br />

as long as it is done in context and in good faith, citing the book's exact title as reference.<br />

Copy edited and printed by The University of Chicago Printing Department<br />

Printed in the United States of America


CHAPTER<br />

ONE<br />

TWO<br />

THREE<br />

FOUR<br />

TABLE OF CONTENTS<br />

PREFACE<br />

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS<br />

THE SCIENCES AND THE PUBLIC IN THE<br />

TWENTIETH CENTURY<br />

A. G. DEBUS<br />

ACHIEVEMENTS OF MEDICAL SCIENCE<br />

OVER THE PAST FIFTY YEARS<br />

F. STENN<br />

FROM ANTIQUITY THROUGH THE FIRST<br />

FIFTH OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY<br />

HAVE OBJECTIVES OF THE <strong>IADR</strong> BEEN<br />

ACHIEVED DURING ITS FIRST FIFTY<br />

YEARS?<br />

R. F. SOGNNAES<br />

PAGE<br />

FIVE MILESTONES AND LANDMARKS 38<br />

SIX PAGES OF PRESIDENTS 45<br />

SEVEN ADMINISTRATIVE ASPECTS OF <strong>IADR</strong> 80<br />

EIGHT THE ORGANIZATION OF <strong>IADR</strong> 85<br />

NINE HONORARY STATUS IN THE <strong>IADR</strong> 96<br />

TEN THE AWARDS 100<br />

ELEVEN MEETINGS AND MEMBERS 110<br />

TWELVE OTHER RESEARCH GATHERINGS 129<br />

THIRTEEN HISTORY OF THE DIVISIONS 134<br />

THE AUSTRALIA-NEW ZEALAND DIVISION 135<br />

B. R. D. GILLINGS<br />

THE BRITISH DIVISION<br />

136<br />

H. S. M. CRABB<br />

THE CONTINENTAL EUROPEAN DIVISION<br />

R. M. FRANK<br />

138<br />

140<br />

THE JAPANESE DIVISION<br />

M. ONISI<br />

THE NORTH AMERICAN DIVISION 142<br />

THE SCANDINAVIAN-NOF DIVISION<br />

M. R. SKOUGAARD<br />

THE SOUTH AFRICAN DIVISION<br />

M. SHEAR<br />

IV<br />

V<br />

1<br />

9<br />

15<br />

32<br />

142<br />

144<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY<br />

PAGE II


TABLE OF CONTENTS (CONT.)<br />

FOURTEEN HISTORY OF SECTIONS 148<br />

FIFTEEN HISTORY OF THE GROUPS 191<br />

SIXTEEN<br />

THE CRANIOFACIAL BIOLOGY GROUP<br />

S. PRUZANSKY<br />

THE DENTAL MATERIALS GROUP<br />

F. A. PEYTON<br />

THE PERIODONTAL RESEARCH GROUP<br />

H. A. ZANDER<br />

HISTORY OF THE JOURNAL OF DENTAL<br />

RESEARCH<br />

191<br />

199<br />

206<br />

210<br />

SEVENTEEN WHO IN <strong>IADR</strong> WAS WHO 221<br />

EIGHTEEN<br />

THE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY<br />

OBSERVANCE<br />

THE FUTURE OF RESEARCH IN THE HEALTH<br />

SCIENCES<br />

R. O. EGEBERG<br />

IN TRIBUTE TO THE MEMORY OF WILLIAM J.<br />

GIES: AN ASSESSMENT OF THE NEED FOR<br />

CHANGES IN DENTISTRY<br />

H. J. BARTELSTONE<br />

THE INTERFACING ROLE OF THE UNIVERSITY<br />

J. F. VOLKER<br />

POLITICS, PRIORITIES, AND PUBLIC HEALTH<br />

J. B. MACDONALD<br />

257<br />

263<br />

271<br />

277<br />

283<br />

CODA 294<br />

MONETARY CONTRIBUTORS 295<br />

INDEX 301<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY<br />

PAGE III


PREFACE<br />

It seems fitting at this time to retrace the steps in the road by which we came through the last halfcentury.<br />

Certainly the milestones and landmarks along the roadway have been emphasized; but imprints making<br />

a barely discernible impression have merely been cited. The road was befogged and rugged in part, since<br />

between the cobblestones some unrecorded facts and figures were unfortunately buried with certain deceased<br />

members who never gave much thought to posterity. Nevertheless, the author searched diligently for some fifty<br />

months to glean all significant information of the past fifty years, and then composed as comprehensively as<br />

feasible what is hoped to be a chronicled document of some merit and of value for at least the next fifty years.<br />

A significant aspect of the <strong>IADR</strong> history, I believe, is that it developed and therefore was written in the context<br />

of the history of science in general and the history of medical science in particular, as the first few chapters<br />

demonstrate.<br />

This volume has in large measure been a truly international effort. The histories of the various Divisions,<br />

Sections, and Groups have been compiled by the officers of their respective components wherever they existed<br />

in the world. Moreover, a considerable amount of monetary support for the publication of this historic volume<br />

came from commercial firms based in and operating from many different countries (as well as from the William<br />

J. Gies Foundation for the Advancement of Dentistry and the <strong>IADR</strong> itself). Our Ad Hoc Committee on History<br />

is composed of members also from several different parts of the globe but who communicated well, so the<br />

Committee, and especially its chairman with his assistants, could make this published history dynamically<br />

expository, accurate, and objective.<br />

With this prefatory background, one can all the more emphatically state as foreground that it is only<br />

through an understanding of history that we can improve our evaluation of the present and attempt to guide the<br />

future with more enlightened and rational judgments.<br />

FRANK J. ORLAND<br />

<strong>Contents</strong> of this historical volume<br />

compiled, written in part & edited<br />

by Frank J. Orland<br />

President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 1971-72<br />

at the time most manuscripts went to press<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY<br />

PAGE IV


ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS<br />

If it should prove to have any historic value, this volume—it must be emphasized—has drawn its<br />

strength as well as its comprehensiveness from many knowledgeable persons. Besides the members of the<br />

Committee on <strong>IADR</strong> History, there were a considerable number of persons who deserve special commendation.<br />

Most helped in a variety of ways. Some supplied raw data—such as many of the Past-Presidents of <strong>IADR</strong>; Mary<br />

Gies Kellogg and Frances Krasnow (daughter and associate, respectively, of William Gies); George Heiges,<br />

historian in the Manheim-Lancaster area of Pennsylvania; as well as Otto Brandhorst, Secretary and Historian<br />

of the American College of Dentists.<br />

Since some of the records of the <strong>IADR</strong> were so meager, individual chapter manuscripts were sent to<br />

certain <strong>IADR</strong> members with long memories for verification and general concurrence. A partial list includes<br />

George C. Paffenbarger, President of the William J. Gies Foundation for the Advancement of Dentistry; Arthur<br />

R. Frechette, Secretary-Treasurer of the <strong>IADR</strong>; J. Roy Blayney, Past-Director and Professor Emeritus of the<br />

Zoller Clinic at the University of Chicago; and Gardner P. H. Foley, former Professor, University of Maryland,<br />

and a Founder of the American Academy of the History of Dentistry. Special thanks are also extended to the<br />

authors of the contributed chapters which provided a proper perspective for the <strong>IADR</strong> history, as well as to the<br />

authors who compiled the histories of Divisions, Sections, and Groups of <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

Acknowledgment is also made for the several contributed photographs, a few of which had appeared in<br />

the Journal, permission to reprint them having been obtained from two publishers—the University of Chicago<br />

Press and the American Dental Association.<br />

On the day-to-day action line at the University of Chicago, in commendably continual library<br />

researching, typing, and production, there have been Tesa Hyashi, Allie F. Woodbury, and Harriet L. Blakley;<br />

more currently, there have been Susan Stucklen, David P. James, Erwin Weirather, and Cynthia C. Susmilch.<br />

Finally, to the innumerable others who assisted—including the family of the primary author—go my humble<br />

but profound thanks.<br />

F. J. O.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY<br />

PAGE V


CHAPTER ONE: THE SCIENCES AND THE PUBLIC IN<br />

THE TWENTIETH CENTURY<br />

ALLEN G. DEBUS, PH.D.<br />

PROFESSOR OF THE HISTORY OF SCIENCE AND DIRECTOR OF THE MORRIS FISHBEIN CENTER FOR THE<br />

STUDY OF THE HISTORY OF SCIENCE AND MEDICINE, UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.<br />

All are aware that the twentieth century has been characterized by a previously unforeseen growth of the<br />

sciences; moreover, there has been, in effect, a new revolution in the attitude toward science. Yet, while this<br />

revolution has occurred within scientific laboratories throughout the world, it has also been a revolution that has<br />

touched the consciousness of the general public as well. If the former process has been a lengthy one, the latter<br />

has not. Indeed, it has only been within the last generation that the common man has really been aware that his<br />

was a "scientific" age. Prior to the Second World War, the schoolboy in the United States was exposed to little<br />

science. Mathematics, yes, and perhaps a little of the geological history of the earth, but for him "science" took<br />

on a meaning that had a special relation to the American dream. We were told of the telephone, the electric<br />

light, motion pictures, and the automobile. The "scientists" we knew were Luther Burbank, Alexander Graham<br />

Bell, and Thomas Alva Edison. This was an attitude reflected by the government, for, when the Post Office<br />

chose to issue a series of stamps honoring great American scientists in 1940, it did not turn to Josiah Willard<br />

Gibbs, Albert A. Michelson, or even Benjamin Franklin. Rather, the stamps portrayed John James Audubon,<br />

Crawford W. Long, Luther Burbank, Walter Reed, and Jane Addams. A second set, issued the same year,<br />

honored American inventors, singling out Eli Whitney, Samuel F. B. Morse, Cyrus H. McCormick, Elias Howe,<br />

and Alexander Graham Bell.<br />

THE APPLIED VERSUS THE PURE SCIENTIST<br />

In short, for the average American living before the Second World War, the "scientist" was an inventor,<br />

a physician, or a naturalist who made the world better for mankind while simultaneously assuring his own<br />

future. In contrast, the scientist who worked in a university research laboratory was little known or considered.<br />

This was the impractical and forgetful professor who puttered away at projects which were hardly likely to<br />

benefit him or anyone else. How much better it seemed to devote one's life to the emulation of Ford, Marconi,<br />

or De Forest. When we were told of the effects of the Industrial Revolution and other nineteenth-century<br />

developments on society, we heard of the hard-working practical men, the inventors, whose ideas seemed to<br />

have little connection with the universities. These "heroes" were men who had not gone to college. Rather, they<br />

had worked with their hands and had seen their ideas through to fruition even though they had suffered<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 1


hardships as they pursued their goal. This hostility to higher education was well expressed by the "Dutch"<br />

vaudeville headliners Joe Weber and Lew Fields in their sketch "Heinie at College" (1912):<br />

MEYER: When a rich man's son has got no sense then his father sends him to college and when he is stuffed<br />

full of useless inflammation then he is turned out into the cold world to look for work.<br />

MIKE:<br />

But a Colleger could easily get a job.<br />

MEYER: Of course, because while he was in college the other fellow who couldn't afford to buy his<br />

edimification has got a store by now and he must have somebody to ride his truck.<br />

For Meyer the only college courses worth recommending to his friend were in the field of literature, since they<br />

would lead to the highly profitable profession of "bookmaking."<br />

This anti-intellectual attitude changed for the great bulk of the public only during or after the Second<br />

World War. Until that time the effect of science and technology on our society—admittedly great—had,<br />

nevertheless, been a relatively slow process. It had not been difficult for a person to live with the changes he<br />

experienced during the course of his lifetime. The changes were far more rapid after 1939. Now the engineer<br />

was no longer praised alone. It was clearly recognized that he worked in concert with the theoretical scientist<br />

and that they were both needed to bring about a victory that would destroy the power of the Axis through a new<br />

Crusade for Freedom. This union of theory and practice clearly served to alleviate shortages on the home front<br />

as well as to prepare new methods of warfare. Above all, the public awoke to the importance of the scientist<br />

through the power of a new force unleashed by the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. Newspapers<br />

screamed in banner headlines, "Atomic Age Begins," while the Horatio Alger "inventor-scientist" hero of the<br />

past was relegated to our cultural mythology. And as the glow associated with the names of Edison, Burbank,<br />

and De Forest faded, the public turned to astronauts and pure scientists as new heroes. With a new and<br />

widespread knowledge of spectacular accomplishments, these men received respect and admiration undreamt of<br />

a decade earlier. This new popular recognition was reflected shortly thereafter in the fields of government and<br />

politics, where financial support for the sciences and engineering soon became a major part of the annual<br />

national budget.<br />

THE CHANGE IN ATTITUDE<br />

How did this change, this new sensitivity to science, occur? In an earlier period the scientists were no<br />

more successful than the public in forecasting the significance of their research or its impact on society. At the<br />

close of the eighteenth century Antoine Lavoisier was convinced that the revolution in chemistry which his<br />

work had initiated would surely result in the advance of that science to its greatest possible perfection within a<br />

period of a few decades. In the second half of the nineteenth century it was widely believed in the scientific<br />

community that the basic truths of physics had been determined and that in the future it would only be<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 2


necessary for physicists to further refine measurements. Perhaps no better example of this weakness may be<br />

offered than that of Alfred Russell Wallace, who, summarizing the scientific achievements of the nineteenth<br />

century in 1901, pointed to the rejection of the study of phrenology by the scientific community as one of the<br />

most unexplainable failures of an otherwise brilliant period. For Wallace at the opening of the twentieth century<br />

it seemed that phrenology had been one of the greatest scientific breakthroughs of the preceding seventy years.<br />

But if some scientists had developed a sense of complacency by the turn of the century, and if others were<br />

willing to judge the developments in fields other than their own with something less than the eyes of experts,<br />

the scientific world was in reality in the opening stages of what may now be called a second revolution in<br />

science. Surely many factors contributed to this development, but for the purpose of this short essay we may<br />

limit ourselves to only a few. Above all, looking back from the third quarter of the twentieth century, it is<br />

obvious that a number of spectacular discoveries sparked by scientific genius contributed to a rapid series of<br />

advancements. Classical concepts in the physical sciences were overturned in the closing decade of the old<br />

century and the opening decades of the new one. In their place new concepts, hypotheses, and theories were<br />

postulated at a pace that bewildered the scientist then, no less than it does the historian today who attempts to<br />

reconstruct that era. And yet perhaps no less important for an understanding of twentieth-century science than<br />

these internal developments within the sciences were the parallel origins of a new union of science, industry,<br />

and government in the late nineteenth century—a union that was essentially nonexistent in earlier periods. Here<br />

the result was to create a demand for scientists that the universities with new teaching methods quickly filled.<br />

And, as newly research-oriented industries began to affect the economic well-being of nations, scientific<br />

research inevitably became a matter of concern to politicians and their governments.<br />

It would be impossible to list adequately the major scientific developments of the past eighty years. At<br />

best one can point to a few of the more significant areas of change. Nowhere had change been less expected<br />

than in physics. Here the spectacular discovery of X-rays by Roentgen in 1895 quickly impressed itself on the<br />

scientific world as well as the public. While music-hall comedians pointed to the girls in the chorus and sang<br />

songs such as "X-Rays Will Give It Away" (ca. 1899), scientists were engaged in work which led in turn from<br />

radioactivity to a whole set of new elements and then on to the problems of nuclear physics. In the course of a<br />

few decades this discovery resulted in a knowledge of how atoms are arranged in solids. And, if we may trace<br />

these developments through to the solid-state physics of the present, we may point to a second contemporary<br />

major development in the physical sciences in the early part of the new century. At that time a new synthesis of<br />

the relative character of motion and of the relationship between mechanics and optics led to both the special and<br />

the general theories of relativity. With the latter, a far more satisfactory explanation of cosmological phenomena<br />

has been made possible. In chemistry, as the fields of biochemistry and physical chemistry developed, a heavy<br />

emphasis has been placed on structural problems. The search for answers to biological questions through the<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 3


use of chemical methods was not a new one, but surely a new key was found in the investigation of enzymes in<br />

the final years of the old century. Eduard Büchner's discovery that the juice obtained from triturated yeast cells<br />

could ferment sugar opened an entirely new field of scientific investigation. The subsequent development of<br />

biochemistry has been dependent on the combination of genetical, physical, and chemical methods, and these,<br />

in turn, have led to the field of molecular biology. The search for the source controlling the enzymes was to be<br />

found in the genes, and by 1951 the research of Watson and Crick had resulted in the definition of DNA, the<br />

substance which was seen to provide a molecular mechanism for the duplication of genetic material at each cell<br />

division cycle.<br />

If one were limited to a choice of one other field of pure science currently in a state of flux, he might<br />

well choose geophysics. Here interest in the age of the earth has continued undiminished since the speculations<br />

of Lord Kelvin a century ago, and much of the research relating to extraterrestrial samples has been centered on<br />

this problem. At the same time there has been a closely associated search for additional information relating to<br />

the earth's interior, and most recently a revived interest in the study of surface phenomena. Within the past ten<br />

years the investigation of the drift of continental land masses has been established in a way not previously<br />

possible.<br />

Even the listing of this limited number of scientific developments indicates the fundamental nature of<br />

the changes that have occurred in the sciences in the twentieth century. These developments were in turn to<br />

result in the elucidation of totally new techniques and new methods of instrumentation. No less important is the<br />

fact that scientists began to view their disciplines in an entirely new fashion. Traditional fields which had<br />

previously been taught in a compartmentalized fashion were now found to be closely interconnected, and new<br />

interdisciplinary sciences quickly became among the most cultivated areas of research.<br />

SCIENCE APPRECIATION BY THE STATE<br />

To be sure, the development of the sciences since the turn of the century may be explained in terms of<br />

internal factors. Nevertheless, without some understanding of changes that have occurred in the funding of<br />

research and in scientific organization, the history of recent science is difficult to understand. Surely the<br />

realization of the potential of scientific advance for national welfare is nothing new. In the seventeenth century,<br />

Francis Bacon stressed this point in England, while Johann Joachim Becher and Johann Rudolf Glauber did the<br />

same in Central Europe. And so convinced of this was the French minister Colbert that he saw to it that the<br />

members of the newly founded French Academy of Sciences (1663) were paid salaries by the State. Thus a true<br />

professionalization of the scientist began to evolve.<br />

While the nonacademic "inventor" remained a person of public esteem in the mid-nineteenth century—<br />

and beyond—the "scientific amateur" was rapidly being relegated to the past. If there are a number of factors of<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 4


importance connected with this development, few are more significant than the new relationship that developed<br />

at that time between industry and the academic world. In this area the most significant changes occurred first in<br />

Germany. Justus Liebig introduced the modern chemical laboratory in his courses at Giessen and this<br />

development corresponded closely with the new needs of industry. The search for cheap acids, alkalies,<br />

bleaching chemicals, fertilizers, and especially explosives, in quantity brought about a new need for wellqualified<br />

chemists in the second quarter of the century. The new laboratories—first at Giessen and then<br />

elsewhere—were able to supply this need.<br />

The potential of the German system was clearly made evident in the second half of the century when the<br />

study of synthetic dyes became a major field of new research. Although this field was opened in England<br />

through the research of William Henry Perkins (1856), it was only a matter of decades before German scientists<br />

and German industry became preeminent. By 1875 German industrialists and politicians were well aware of the<br />

importance of this industry for the economic welfare of the State. This foresighted attitude was to give the<br />

German Empire a superiority in the sciences as a whole, at least until the period of the First World War.<br />

Emphasis was placed on pure research, and laboratories were closely in touch with academic consultants who<br />

were willing to look beyond the immediate interests of an industry and seek out the broader uses of new<br />

discoveries.<br />

Among the benefits that the State reaped were those connected with warfare. Because of the flourishing<br />

dye industry, the Germans found themselves the world leaders in the research on coal-tar derivatives. The result<br />

was to be the development of a number of new explosives, as well as the investigation of the effects of a group<br />

of new and deadly gases. Similarly, the need for raw materials no longer available during the war spurred<br />

German industry in the search for new processes and synthetic substances. It is little wonder that German<br />

industrialists fostered scientific research in their own laboratories as well as in the universities. They helped to<br />

organize associations of academic and industrial research scientists in the fields of chemistry and physics—<br />

organizations that proved to be so useful that they continued into the postwar years. Recent historical research<br />

has shown that these German academic-industrial associations originated the present system of grant support of<br />

science projects.<br />

The union of industry and science had clearly contributed to the need for a larger number of bettertrained<br />

scientists. And, as the number of scientists increased, the highly individualistic nature of scientific<br />

research changed gradually to the concept of "scientific teams" more common today. The increased number of<br />

scientists also contributed to the ever more intricate organization and specialization of the various fields. The<br />

nineteenth century saw the founding of many new societies that were to limit their activities to a single field, in<br />

sharp contrast to the omnibus national societies that had been founded in the seventeenth and the eighteenth<br />

centuries. These societies, in turn, fostered new journals to record the recent work in their own fields. As Price<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 5


has shown, the hundred journals existing in 1800 had grown to a thousand by midcentury, and these had<br />

increased to nearly ten thousand fifty years later. The introduction of abstracting journals for the greatly<br />

increased literature was an inevitable result. Their growth has also followed an exponential curve, and, with the<br />

volume of scientific literature now doubling on the average every decade, an entirely new field related to the<br />

retrieval of science information has developed.<br />

THE CHANGED PUBLIC ATTITUDE<br />

In the past fifty years there has been a vast change in the public attitude toward science and scientists. If<br />

in 1920 we turned with pride to the inventor rather than to the scientist, today we would emphasize the<br />

achievements of the latter first. Our grammar-school students are now exposed to laboratory experiments from<br />

their earliest training, and they are more likely to hear the names Galileo, Newton, and Einstein rather than<br />

those of Edison and Burbank. This change is a marked one and relatively recent, but was especially accentuated<br />

by the contributions of the scientists to the winning of the Second World War, as well as by the more recent<br />

exploits of man in space. Science and scientific technology have both become topics that often receive frontpage<br />

news coverage.<br />

Yet, if the atom bomb, the sputnik, and the landing of man on the moon may be referred to as the most<br />

dramatic events that led to a new awareness of science in our society, nevertheless the roots of this change<br />

extend back much further than fifty years. Derek Price has established the fact that the sciences have grown at<br />

an exponential rate since the first issue of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London<br />

(1665). Still, in the seventeenth century scientific publications seldom proved of interest to the average man,<br />

and they rarely affected the society of the period. Even the developments associated with the eighteenth century<br />

Industrial Revolution may be ascribed largely to inventors who, for the most part, had little association with the<br />

members of the scientific academies of Europe. In the nineteenth century, with the notable exception of the<br />

problems posed by Darwin, the sciences seemed to become increasingly remote to the average man. For a good<br />

number of scientists this was a period that witnessed increasing specialization in fields that had already been<br />

established. Many felt that the basic truths had already been discovered and that new breakthroughs were<br />

unlikely. It was only in the final decade of the century that the landscape of a new science began to unfold.<br />

Then, rather than continuing the trend toward further compartmentalization, there was a move toward the<br />

establishment of connections between previously separated fields. Indeed, a hallmark of the past fifty years has<br />

been the growth of interdisciplinary areas of science.<br />

Many historians have studied the growth of the sciences from the journals and the publications of the<br />

scientists alone; that is, they have interpreted the subject strictly from an internalist point of view. Nevertheless,<br />

there can be little doubt that developments in the sciences are affected by external factors. During the past<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 6


century all governments have become aware of the practical significance of scientific advance. Perhaps seen<br />

first in Germany in the late nineteenth century, the economic and social implications of scientific predominance<br />

were soon acknowledged throughout the world. The results of the German superiority in scientific training<br />

clearly became apparent during the First World War, and German scientists continued to press their cause in the<br />

postwar era. The unified efforts of scientists, industrialists, and government leaders did much to establish a<br />

system of research funding during the period of the Weimar Republic that has been widely copied since that<br />

time.<br />

CONCLUSION<br />

There is little doubt that the role of science has been widely expanded in our society in the past five<br />

decades. Much of this expansion in scope may be ascribed to scientific genius, but it would be unfair to suggest<br />

that industrial, economic, and social factors have not played a part in creating an atmosphere favorable to the<br />

furtherance of both pure and applied research. In any case, the continued historical investigation of the science<br />

of the past century and its relationship to society will surely establish more firmly the deep roots of the<br />

widespread interest in the sciences which exists on all levels of society today.<br />

BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES<br />

There are no thoroughly satisfactory accounts of nineteenth- and twentieth-century science. It is<br />

interesting to note the views of nineteenth-century scientists published at the end of the century. There are a<br />

number of such evaluations; the one referred to in the present paper is that by Alfred Russell Wallace, The<br />

Wonderful Century: Its Successes and Its Failures (New York: Dodd Mead & Co., 1899). A Century of Science,<br />

1851-1951, edited by Herbert Dingle (London and New York: Hutchinson's Scientific and Technical<br />

Publications, 1951), offers an old but useful set of papers on a crucial century, and among recent internalist<br />

interpretations of twentieth-century developments may be included Scientific Thought, 1900-1960: A Selected<br />

Survey, edited by R. Harré (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1969), and Science in the Twentieth Century, edited by<br />

René Taton, translated by A. J. Pomerans (London: Thames & Hudson, 1966).<br />

Recent research in this field may best be followed through the annual volumes (since 1969) of the<br />

journal Historical Studies in the Physical Sciences, edited by Russell K. McCormmach (Philadelphia:<br />

University of Pennsylvania Press). Some of the most provocative research in this journal will be found in the<br />

papers of Paul Forman and the editor, Russell K. McCormmach, such as studies on the relationship of science to<br />

broader socio-economic problems. Another early investigation is that of John D. Bernal, Science and Industry in<br />

the Nineteenth Century (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1953).<br />

The special significance of the chemical industry in nineteenth-century Germany has been discussed by<br />

Aaron J. Ihde in The Development of Modern Chemistry (New York, Evanston, and London, 1964) and by J. J.<br />

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Beer in The Emergence of the German Dye Industry (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1959). Derek J. de<br />

Solla Price's studies will be found most conveniently stated in his Little Science, Big Science (New York:<br />

Columbia University Press, 1963) and in the chapters on "Mutations of Science" and "Diseases of Science" in<br />

his Science since Babylon (New York and London: Yale University Press, 1962).<br />

The dialogue between Joe Weber and Lew Fields was transcribed from Columbia record A-1168,<br />

"Heinie at College," recorded on 22 March 1912; the author is indebted to Mr. John Wholahan for locating<br />

Albert A. Michelson's reference to the common belief that the future of the physical sciences was to be found in<br />

ever more accurate measurements, in the Quarterly Calendar (University of Chicago) 3: 2-15, August 1894.<br />

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CHAPTER TWO: ACHIEVEMENTS OF MEDICAL SCIENCE<br />

OVER THE PAST FIFTY YEARS<br />

FREDERICK STENN, M.D., M.S.<br />

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF MEDICINE AND CHAIRMAN OF THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE COMMITTEE,<br />

NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY MEDICAL SCHOOL, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.<br />

The dynamic growth of medical science over the past half century has greatly exceeded the<br />

achievements of any other fifty-year period in the history of medicine. This accomplishment is the product of<br />

many centuries devoted to the learning of scientific principles as taught by Newton and Francis Bacon, Vesalius<br />

and Harvey, and by the application of the precise methods of Pasteur and Lister, Johannes Müller and Virchow.<br />

This period promoted high standards in medical education through the efforts of Abraham Flexner, the<br />

American Medical Association, the American College of Surgeons, the Association of American Medical<br />

Colleges, and the American Hospital Association; through the establishment of specialty boards; and through<br />

the appearance of the full-time faculty in the medical schools. These five decades were decades of research<br />

vigorously pursued by the Rockefeller Institute in New York, by the Medical Research Council of Great Britain,<br />

by the U.S. Federal Government, and by medical schools, foundations, and the pharmaceutical industry, with<br />

emphasis upon basic science. Perhaps the greatest stimulus of all lay in World War I, which uncovered glaring<br />

deficiencies in medical science, such as the poor control of wound infections, lethargic encephalitis, meningitis,<br />

and war psychosis. The quarter-million deaths that followed in the wake of the influenza epidemic of 1919<br />

demanded a serious reappraisal of medicine.<br />

England, Scotland, France, Germany, Russia, Japan, and the United States continued in their course of<br />

increasing excellence in service, education, and research. The World Health Organization helped to quell the<br />

great destroyers of mankind—malaria, yellow fever, malnutrition, tuberculosis, and schistosomiasis—and raised<br />

health standards in the most backward countries.<br />

The movement toward national health care by which all received free or nearly free medical care from<br />

birth to grave was adopted by the Scandinavian countries, England, Russia, South Africa, New Zealand, and<br />

parts of Canada, Medicare and Medicaid being practiced in the United States. Third-party carriers like Blue<br />

Cross and Blue Shield arose in the United States, along with health centers and group practice units like the<br />

Mayo Clinic and the Permanente Group in California. Life expectancy in the United States improved from 53.6<br />

years for men and 54.6 years for women in 1920 to 67.3 years for men and 73.7 years for women in 1956. The<br />

death rate per 1000 population in the United States was 14.2 in 1920 and 9.0 in 1967. The national health<br />

expenditure in 1950 was $12,867,000, and in 1968 it was $53,122,000. The monies spent for research and<br />

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fever. 1 Pathology contributed the Pap test, in which smears taken from the cervix, lungs, mammae, and stomach<br />

development totaled $1.6 billion in 1968 in the United States; in 1903 the Public Health Service expended a<br />

total of $300 for a research grant in Chicago.<br />

THE LABORATORY IN GROWTH OF MEDICAL SCIENCE<br />

The recent growth of medical science emerged from the increasing interest in chemistry, physics,<br />

microbiology, and pharmacology, as well as in the physiology of health and disease in animals and man. The<br />

problems of the bedside were taken to the laboratory and the discoveries of the laboratory brought to the<br />

bedside. Precision necessary for the new knowledge came through the invention of specific tools and technics:<br />

electrocardiography, electromyography, and angiography; radio scanning for studies of the brain, lung, heart<br />

chambers, liver, pancreas, and spleen; the evaluation of electrolytes in the body fluids and of phosphorus,<br />

calcium, uric acid, creatinine, bicarbonate, and glucose; the determination of blood gases; pulmonary function<br />

tests; improved visualization of the retina by photography; esophagoscopy, gastroscopy, peritoneoscopy,<br />

proctoscopy, thoracoscopy, mediastinoscopy, bronchoscopy, and cystoscopy; the use of isotopes of iron,<br />

sodium, iodine, and phosphorus for both treatment and diagnosis; and the employment of sophisticated<br />

laboratory technics such as column chromatography, absorption spectroscopy, ultracentrifugation, electron<br />

microscopy, X-ray diffraction, electrophoresis on gel media, and immunochemical assays.<br />

Wilhelm Roentgen's wildest dreams could never have imagined the broad range of developments that<br />

flowed from his discovery of a simple X-ray light beam at his laboratory in Würzburg in 1895. Diagnostic<br />

radiology came to include cholecystography, intravenous pyelography, myelography, and angiography and<br />

brought out details such as those seen through tomography, air contrast, and cinematography; it helped to track<br />

down deformities, infection, ulcers, and tumors wherever they occurred. Thanks to the discovery of artificial<br />

radiotherapy by the Joliots in 1934, therapeutic radiology with its gamma rays and its cobalt 60 has been useful<br />

in the treatment of tumors and leukemia. Robert Koch would be surprised at the rise of a new field in<br />

microbiology, the viruses—such as the adenovirus, the virus of Eaton agent pneumonia, and the virus of<br />

hepatitis.<br />

Stupendous developments were a diagnostic skin test of trichinosis; successful vaccination against<br />

tuberculosis, measles, German measles, cholera, and poliomyelitis; and the Dick test for susceptibility to scarlet<br />

are studied for early diagnosis of cancer. 2 Percutaneous biopsy of liver and lungs became commonplace.<br />

SUCCESSES IN SURGERY<br />

Surgery entered the vascular system and altered our previously hopeless outlook in that area. In 1945<br />

Alfred Blalock and Helen B. Taussig 3 at the Johns Hopkins Hospital operated on three children with cyanosis<br />

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due to pulmonary stenosis and by pulmonary atresia by connecting a systemic artery to the pulmonary artery.<br />

With the invention of the heart-lung bypass machine, heart surgery became commonplace, as did perforations of<br />

the myocardium, valvular commissurotomy, plastic repair of diseased valves, replacement of old valves by<br />

synthetic valves, correction of false communications in the heart, plastic repair of diseased coronary arteries,<br />

excision of stenosed arteries and aneurysms and replacement with synthetic vessels. Heart replacement, first<br />

successfully performed on Blaiberg, a dentist, in 1968, suffered a setback due to the misunderstood mechanisms<br />

of tissue rejection. Renal transplants achieved after the use of immunosuppressive drugs fared better—some<br />

1000 such patients survived for a considerable period of time.<br />

Surgery also resorted to tracheotomy as an emergency measure; resection of the lung for tuberculosis,<br />

bronchiectasis, or tumor; pacemakers for heart block inserted into the chest; colectomy for ulcerative colitis;<br />

and portocaval shunt for cirrhosis of the liver. Vagotomy as recommended by Dragstedt 4 in 1943 became the<br />

accepted treatment, with pyloroplasty, for duodenal ulcer. Corneal transplants achieved measurable success, as<br />

did prostheses for hip fracture.<br />

MEDICAL TREATMENT<br />

The field of hematology was advanced by the discovery of the anticoagulants coumerin and heparin for<br />

the prevention of thrombosis in coronary disease, cerebral insufficiency, and atrial fibrillation, as well as by the<br />

important contribution of the Nobel Prize winners Murphy and Minot, 5 who demonstrated that liver extract<br />

contains vitamin B-12, which is specific for pernicious anemia. In addition, the Rh blood factor was isolated in<br />

the antiserum prepared by the injection of the blood of Rhesus monkeys into rabbits. Rh-negative mothers<br />

immunized to Rh substance from an Rh-positive fetus led to the disease erythroblastosis fetalis. Replacement<br />

transfusion was provided in therapy and RHO-GAM for prevention. Finally, Factors V-XII were unraveled in<br />

the explanation of the clotting reaction. Factor VIII, the antihemophilic factor, present in blood plasma, was<br />

found specific for hemophilia.<br />

Psychiatry explained abnormal behavior more in relation to infantile and early childhood emotional<br />

trauma than on the basis of the repressed sexual experience doctrine of Freud. Although the pathophysiology of<br />

psychiatric disease has not been established, drug therapy has been effective in leading to discharge of large<br />

numbers of patients confined to mental hospitals. Some of these drugs were the phenothiazine derivatives, such<br />

as chlorpromazine, meprobamate, and chlordiazepoxide for anxiety; monamine oxidase inhibitors like<br />

ipromasid and imipramine were for depression. The discovery of mescaline and lysergic acid diethylamide<br />

(LSD) led to the field of experimental psychosis; their inappropriate use has been of social concern.<br />

Diphenylhydantoin took its place as a dependent anticonvulsant drug, along with primidone, phenacemide, and<br />

trimethadione. The new narcotic analgesic agents also found approval: meperidine, methadone, and<br />

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propoxyphene.<br />

A historic event occurred 2 December 1921, when Banting, Best, et al. 6 treated Leonard Thompson,<br />

aged 14, ill with juvenile diabetes at the Toronto General Hospital. The blood sugar of the child was 500 mg<br />

percent. The doctors injected insulin which they had isolated from pancreas and achieved control of the<br />

diabetes. Shortly afterward, crystalline insulin was prepared, to be followed by protamine zinc insulin, globulin<br />

insulin, isophane insulin, and lente insulin, all given parenterally. By a serendipitous route the sulfonyl ureas<br />

were ushered into the world, then the biguanids, as phenformin, thus making available the long-sought-for oral<br />

therapy in diabetes. Surveys disclosed a 1 percent incidence of diabetes in the entire United States population.<br />

Equally notable was the use of cortisone and its derivatives obtained from the cortex of the adrenal gland, along<br />

with the adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) of the pituitary gland. In 1949 Hench and his associates 7<br />

observed a salutary effect of these substances on rheumatoid arthritis. In succeeding years these hormones were<br />

useful in acute and chronic adrenal insufficiency, osteoarthritis, bursitis, nephrotic syndrome, systemic lupus<br />

erythematosus, bronchial asthma, chronic ulcerative colitis, cerebral edema, acute leukemia, and shock; in organ<br />

transplantation; and in the fields of ophthalmology and dermatology.<br />

CHEMOTHERAPY<br />

Modern chemotherapy grew out of the textile-dyeing industry when prontosil, an azo dye containing<br />

sulfanilamide, was discovered. In 1935 Domagk 8 of the I.G. Farbenindustrie proved the specificity of this<br />

chemical for streptococcal infections, winning the Nobel Prize as a result. With prontosil Foerster saved the life<br />

of a ten-month-old child dying of staphylococcus septicemia. The active ingredient turned out to be<br />

sulfanilamide. Substitution made in the amido group led to the development of potent antibacterial substances:<br />

sulfapyridine, sulfathiazole, sulfadiazine, sulfamerazine, sulfaguanidine, succinyl-sulfathiazole, and others.<br />

These drugs proved effective against staphylococcus, streptococcus, pneumococcus, proteus, and gonococcus.<br />

In 1928, while engaged in the study of staphylococcus variants at St. Mary's Hospital, London,<br />

Alexander Fleming et al. 9 noticed lysis of staphylococcus colonies in an agar plate that had been accidentally<br />

contaminated from the air by the penicillium mold. His studies disclosed strong inhibitory properties by the<br />

broth cultures of the mold against growth of the common disease-producing bacteria. This was another example<br />

of serendipity so common in the drug therapy of the period. The substance took the name penicillin. Twelve<br />

years later, on 25 May 1940, H. W. Florey, Ernest Chain, and Norman G. Heatley of the Sir William Dunn<br />

School of Pathology at Oxford injected the Fleming mold, Penicillium notatum, into two groups of mice with<br />

hemolytic streptococci. The first group, protected with penicillin, survived; the second group, unprotected, died.<br />

The first patient treated at Oxford was a policeman, ill of staphylococcus and streptococcus sepsis, who<br />

received penicillin for five days. However, because sufficient amounts of penicillin were not available, he died.<br />

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Penicillin, by the demands of World War II, was manufactured in quantity at the Department of Agriculture in<br />

Peoria, Illinois, through the deep-tank fermentation method and through the addition to the culture medium of<br />

corn steep liquor. In 1942 there was hardly enough penicillin to treat one hundred patients, but by the end of the<br />

year there was a sufficient quantity for all the Armed Forces and their allies. The first civilian patient treated in<br />

the United States was a thirty-three-year-old housewife who in 1944 became ill with sepsis due to b-hemolytic<br />

streptococcus from inevitable abortion. She recovered under penicillin therapy. By 1958 some 375 tons of<br />

penicillin were put to use. The semisynthetic penicillins, congeners of penicillin, were conceived because of the<br />

inactivation of penicillin by penicillinase-producing microbes. Methicillin, oxacillin, cloxacillin, nafcillin, and<br />

ampicillin all have a broader spectrum of antibacterial activity than penicillin.<br />

Contemporary with this brilliant work was the equally important uncovering of streptomycin. Between<br />

1939 and 1943, Selman Waksman, a soil microbiologist from Rutgers University, disclosed antibiotics in the<br />

soil actinomyces. By 1944 he and his associates 10 had isolated streptomycin and found it effective against<br />

brucellosis, Listeria infections, and Shigella and Escherichia coli infections. So effective was it against the<br />

tubercle bacillus that the morbidity and mortality of the dreaded tuberculosis fell appreciably, tuberculosis<br />

sanitariums were less needed, and tuberculosis was treated in the clinic and the office. An array of potent drugs<br />

flowed from laboratories studying soil bacteria: bacitracin, chloramphenicol, polymyxin, chlortetracycline,<br />

cephalosporin, neomycin, oxytetracycline, nystatin, erythromycin, tetracycline, novobiocin, cycloserine,<br />

vancomycin, ristocetin, kanamycin, griseofulvin, and lincocin. Ehrlich's magic bullets had indeed been brought<br />

forth. The death rate from infection and parasites in England and Wales was reduced from 1600 per million<br />

living to 180 per million living in 1957. The years 1920 to 1970 were, indeed, years of the conquest of bacterial<br />

disease.<br />

ORAL CONTRACEPTION<br />

Two active substances in the ovary were defined in the 1920s: the one, estrogen, varying in amounts<br />

during menstruation and pregnancy, and the other, progesterone, present in the corpus luteum. The folliclestimulating<br />

hormone and the lutein hormone were traced to the pituitary. Diethylstilbestrol was one of the<br />

several estrogens used for menopause, dysmenorrhea, ovarian dysgenesis, osteoporosis, and cancer of the<br />

prostate. Recognition of the use of progestin for the inhibition of ovulation led to the discovery of an effective<br />

oral contraceptive agent. In 1955 Rock, Pincus, and Garcia 11 gave the combination of norethylnodrel with<br />

mestranol to large numbers of women in San Juan and Humacao, Puerto Rico, and in Port-au-Prince, Haiti,<br />

giving the drug from the fifth to the twenty-fifth day of the menstrual cycle. The rate of pregnancy was<br />

appreciably reduced. What a boon to womanhood!<br />

Primary hypertension affected 5 percent of the population. Although its pathogenesis has not been well<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 13


understood, it has responded appreciably to the benzothiadiazines, hydralazine, methyl dopa, guanethidine, and<br />

ganglionic blocking agents. One of the most effective agents was rauwolfia, a herb used in ancient India for<br />

anxiety. It was rediscovered in India in 1931 and put to clinical use in 1955.<br />

HOSPITAL AND COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTERS<br />

The emphasis of medical science has been largely centered in the hospital and the improvement of its<br />

facilities and professional care; the recent decade has directed attention to the community through health<br />

centers, visiting nurses, social service, and rehabilitation services in the home. Social problems such as<br />

psychiatric crimes, drug abuse and addiction, alcoholism, delinquency, absenteeism, sexual deviation, and<br />

smoking have increasingly burdened the physician. The medical profession has directed attention steadily in the<br />

direction of prevention through periodic checkups, immunizations, psychological testing, and the<br />

encouragement of a positive, wholesome life through recreation and physical exercise. In view of the present<br />

expanding population of 3.6 billion people, medical science in the next fifty years must profit by the past fifty<br />

years, and seek to curtail reproduction, and contribute to a higher quality of life.<br />

[Editor's note.—For additional informative background, see The Growth of Medicine, compiled and<br />

edited by Frederick Stenn (Springfield, Ill.: Charles C. Thomas, 1967).]<br />

REFERENCES<br />

1. Dick, G., and Dick, Gladys H.: Scarlet Fever Toxin in Preventive Immunization, JAMA 82: 544, 1924.<br />

2. Papanicolaou, G. N.: The Sexual Cycle in the Human Female as Revealed by Vaginal Smears, Amer J<br />

Anat (Suppl.) 52: 519, 1933.<br />

3. Blalock, A., and Taussig, H. B.: Surgical Treatment of Malformations of the Heart in Which There Is<br />

Pulmonary Stenosis or Pulmonary Atresia, JAMA 128: 189, 1945.<br />

4. Dragstedt, L. R., and Owens, Jr., F. W.: Supradiaphragmatic Sections of the Vagus Nerves in Treatment<br />

of Duodenal Ulcer, Proc Soc Exp Biol & Med 53: 152, 1943.<br />

5. Murphy, W. P., and Minot, G. R.: A Special Diet for Patients with Pernicious Anemia, Boston Med &<br />

Surg J 195: 410, 1926.<br />

6. Banting, F. G.; Best, C. H.; and MacLeod, J. J. R.: Internal Secretions of the Pancreas, Amer J Physiol<br />

59: 479, 1922.<br />

7. Hench, P. S.; Kendall, E. C.; Slocum, C. H.; and Polley, H. F.: The Effect of the Hormones of the<br />

Adrenal Cortex and of the Pituitary Cortico-Tropic Hormone on Rheumatoid Arthritis, Proc Staff<br />

Mtg Mayo Clinic 24: 181, 1949.<br />

8. Domagk, G.: Ein Beitrag zur Chemotherapie der Bakteriellen Infectionen, Deutsch Med Wschr 61: 250,<br />

1935.<br />

9. Fleming, A.; Florey, H. W.; and Chain, E. B.: On Antibacterial Action of Cultures of a Penicillium, Brit<br />

J Exp Path 10: 226, 1929.<br />

10. Waksman, S.; Bugie, E.; and Schatz, A.: Isolation of Antibiotic Substances from Soil Microorganisms<br />

with Special Reference to Streptothrix and Streptomycin, Proc Staff Mtg Mayo Clinic 19: 537,<br />

1944.<br />

11. Rock, J.; Pincus, G.; and Garcia, C. M.: Synthetic Progestins in the Normal Human Menstrual Cycle,<br />

Recent Progress Hormone Research 13: 323, 1957.<br />

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CHAPTER THREE: FROM ANTIQUITY THROUGH THE FIRST FIFTH<br />

OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY<br />

(Setting of the Stage for the <strong>IADR</strong> Birth)<br />

Significant organizations do not come into existence de novo: they evolve through many phases before<br />

they attain long-range objectives, especially if those objectives are globally as well as altruistically conceived.<br />

Certainly the International Association for Dental Research was not born by springing forth into existence as<br />

Athene sprang forth (according to ancient Greek mythology);fully armed, shouting a triumphant cry of victory,<br />

and brandishing a sharp javelin, having emerged from the head of Zeus, who was said to have had an intolerable<br />

headache during this time.<br />

THE INTELLECTUAL SETTING<br />

A long series of events and conditions set the stage for the conception and eventual birth of this<br />

Association which was to so enhance dental research. Just how far back in the story of mankind is the thin<br />

thread of research interest discernible? Certain aspects of dental research can, indeed, be traced to the earliest<br />

recorded events in civilization.<br />

Since some kind of primitive dental treatment came into being in antiquity, there must have been a few<br />

nameless persons in those early civilizations who conducted a form of empirical research to separate facts from<br />

fantasies about man's dentition. The papyrus discovered at Thebes by Professor Ebers, dealing with medical<br />

diagnostic procedures accumulated between circa 3700 and 1550 B.C., listed eleven dental prescriptions.<br />

Moreover, the earliest historian, Herodotus, observed that dentistry in Egypt was practiced as a medical<br />

specialty. He wrote that "Egypt is quite full of doctors: those for the eyes, those for the head, some for the<br />

teeth..." One such doctor was Hesi-Ré, who is credited with being the first dentist. Sumerian clay tablets,<br />

Sanskrit records, and ancient Chinese writings attest that there were other persons who must at least empirically<br />

have carried out similar primitive research in order to achieve a few simple truths about the teeth. Between<br />

circa 1000-400 B.C., some of the Etruscans advanced dental prostheses from the "retentive" type of the<br />

Egyptians and Phoenicians to the "restorative" type. Etruscan practitioners used gold, carved artificial teeth, and<br />

fashioned bridges of an advanced design.<br />

It is certain that in the days of ancient Greece men made some accurate observations that were recorded<br />

and gradually separated from mythology. Aesculapius was credited with being the father of surgical tooth<br />

removal. Another Greek designed the odontagogon, an instrument so important for the extraction of teeth that it<br />

was kept in the Temple of Apollo at Delphi.<br />

It took some careful observations by Aristotle of Macedonia (384- 322 B.C.) to conclude that "figs when<br />

soft and sweet" produced damage to the dentition, causing a putrefactive process in teeth. Even Hippocrates<br />

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(400-300 B.C.), the "father of medicine", included dental illness in his teachings and writings in which he<br />

definitely separated truly effective treatment from religious practices.<br />

Thus, from the earliest investigations regarding teeth, progressive teachings, practice, and refinements in dental<br />

research spread throughout the Mediterranean basin and eventually far beyond.<br />

THE MIDDLE ERA<br />

Advances in disease curtailment usually marked the zenith of the various cultures. The Muslim world<br />

had its glorious sway around A.D. 1000, at a time when the Western world was just beginning to emerge into<br />

the High Middle Ages. In the area of health the outstanding luminary was Abul-Casem. A Moor born near<br />

CÑrdoba in Spain, his Westernized name was Abulcasis. He achieved the important post of physician to the<br />

Caliph ruling Spain, in which position he found time to write a magnificent work on medicine and surgery<br />

entitled Al Tasrif. His chapters on dentistry showed conversant knowledge and skill in surgery on the teeth, in<br />

dental stabilization with gold and silver wire, and in treatment of periodontal problems, including dental<br />

prophylaxis. Abulcasis is well remembered as Islam's great surgeon, as epitomized in the sketches of the many<br />

dental instruments he perfected.<br />

As the Western world was again activated in the generative period of the Renaissance, that eminent<br />

personage Leonardo da Vinci produced (circa 1509) his excellent anatomical drawings of the teeth and skull,<br />

recorded in his hidden and cryptographic notebooks. Especially noteworthy were his drawings on the<br />

proportions of the face to the rest of man, which opened a new phase of dental research.<br />

Some fifty years later in France, Ambroise Paré made manifold contributions to dental treatment. He<br />

devised stabilizing ligatures for jaw fractures, experimented with the replanting of avulsed teeth, and<br />

constructed simple fixed prostheses. Also in France, but 175 years later, in 1728, Pierre Fauchard published his<br />

notable work Le Chirugien-Dentiste ou Traité des Dents. This covered the entire scope of his extensive<br />

knowledge of every phase of dentistry, which he acquired by practical means. As a contemporary and<br />

compatriot of Fauchard, Robert Bunon published his Essai sur les Maladies des Dents, which emphasized oral<br />

hygiene as a means of preventing dental diseases.<br />

Additional dental studies were carried out in other countries during this period of great French influence.<br />

Philip Pfaff of Prussia a quarter of a century later, in 1756 while he was royal dentist to Frederick the Great,<br />

published a very comprehensive book, Abhandlung von den Zaehnen des Menschlichen Koerpers und deren<br />

Krankheiten. His major contributions were the first use of plaster of paris for model-making and the capping of<br />

a vital pulp prior to filling the carious tooth.<br />

In 1771 the Englishman John Hunter ** published his masterpiece Natural History of the Human Teeth.<br />

These writings and all the research upon which they were based initiated a new epoch in dentistry, especially in<br />

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Great Britain, where systematic scientific observations finally replaced haphazard empiricism. Some twentyfive<br />

years later, while the chemist Duchâteau and the dentist de Chémant together struggled in France to<br />

produce a denture of porcelain, they were visited by Giuseppangelo Fonziof Italy. By 1815, Fonzi had achieved<br />

considerable fame through his successful production of porcelain teeth securely attached to the denture base by<br />

precious metal pins. The fame of these "incorruptible teeth" spread from Fonzi's native Italy to the Bavarian<br />

court at Munich, to the Czar of Russia, and thence to the Spanish Bourbons.<br />

The French influence in dentistry also extended to America. James Gardette came to the colonies in<br />

1771, where he enjoyed a large practice and also taught many young men in the dental art. One of these was<br />

Josiah Flagg, additionally motivated by Paul Revere, who showed him the use of silver in dentistry. Flagg<br />

emphasized oral hygiene and proper diet and is said to have invented the first dental chair by adding an<br />

adjustable headrest to a Windsor chair. Captured during the War of 1812, he was transported to London, where<br />

he was permitted to practice dentistry and thereby spread his new knowledge in the Old World.<br />

A contemporary of Josiah Flagg in Boston was John Greenwood. As a young man, Greenwood learned<br />

dentistry in New York City from his brother and became so skillful that by 1789 he made the first of a number<br />

of dentures for George Washington, then President of the infant American Republic. He used considerable<br />

ingenuity in his work for Washington, whose one upper denture was probably the first swaged gold denture ever<br />

made in America, if not in the world.<br />

About 1840, in England, John Tomes conducted his historical investigation of dental enamel which led<br />

to his vivid description of the microstructure named after him, Tomes' fibrils. He also designed several forceps<br />

which replaced the dental keys used for extracting teeth up to this time. For these and other worthy efforts he<br />

was elected the first President of the British Dental Association.<br />

INNOVATIONS IN AMERICA<br />

By the middle of the nineteenth century, the geographic center of innovative achievements in Dentistry<br />

definitely turned to the United States, where it remained until the time of the <strong>IADR</strong> founding and beyond.<br />

(These many innovations were in essence applied research, while the more basic science research continued to<br />

flourish in Europe until a much later date, as pointed out in the first chapter.) This applied research, however<br />

empirically achieved, reverberated around the world. For example, it was on the 11th of December in 1844, that<br />

Horace Wells of Hartford, Connecticut, first demonstrated effective general anesthesia with nitrous oxide for<br />

the painless removal of one of his own molars. Less than two years later, 16 October 1846, a colleague, William<br />

T. G. Morton, demonstrated in the Massachusetts General Hospital that ether as an inhalant could produce<br />

anesthesia for general surgery; he had also extracted teeth quite painlessly with ether before this publicized<br />

public demonstration. Both these dentists had conducted applied research in their own unique way, but their<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 17


discoveries gave to suffering mankind an advancement immeasurably meritorious.<br />

Many such new achievements were occurring on the United States eastern seaboard near the middle of<br />

the nineteenth century (as emphasized in the next chapter relative to the <strong>IADR</strong> founding in New York City).<br />

The establishment of the world's first dental school in Baltimore in 1840 was a major factor in formally<br />

educating young men in both the art and the emerging science of dentistry. The very first man to receive the<br />

new school's diploma was Robert Arthur, who by 1855 had made known his discovery of the welding property<br />

of annealed gold foil by malleting. This method of filling small dental cavities with cohesive gold is still the<br />

most durable means of restoring a tooth.<br />

A contemporary, Simon Hullihen, became known as the Father of Oral Surgery because of his many<br />

new methods and accomplishments in the surgical field, including the innovation known as the "Hullihen<br />

splint".<br />

Also in the other area of early specialization, that of orthodontia, it was in America that progress was<br />

most striking. Norman Kingsley wrote his treatise on oral deformities in 1880, describing his many unique<br />

procedures for their correction. He also systemized the field, for which he was designated the Father of<br />

Orthodontia. Within the next two decades Edward Angle set the standard with his classification of malocclusion<br />

and the proper treatment for each condition without sacrifice of teeth. These achievements won international<br />

recognition for the new specialty.<br />

As a very profound landmark in dental research, but in the Middle West rather than on the eastern<br />

seaboard of the United States, the venerated name of G. V. Black must be cited. By his fiftieth year in 1886,<br />

Greene Vardiman Black had become the outstanding personality in the dental profession. His contributions to<br />

dental and oral pathology were extremely great, and his organizing and standardizing of operative procedures in<br />

dentistry were major achievements. From Chicago's Northwestern University, where he centered his activities<br />

from 1891 to 1915, his fame spread throughout the world.<br />

Another American from the Midwest who exerted a great influence on dentistry was W. D. Miller. His<br />

basic research on the bacterial acid dissolution concept of dental caries was widely accepted, especially in the<br />

United States, even though his research was conducted largely in Germany, where he was the first American to<br />

receive a professional appointment at the University of Berlin. Willoughby Dayton Miller studied bacteriology<br />

under Robert Koch and published a volume on his classic work, entitled Mikroorganismen der Mundhöhle, in<br />

1889. He returned to the United States in 1907 to the University of Michigan to accept the Deanship of the<br />

dental school.<br />

Both of these outstanding men, Black and Miller, were contemporaries of William J. Gies and .J. Leon<br />

Williams Unfortunately, both died before Gies founded the <strong>IADR</strong> and Williams became its first President. All<br />

four men had great interest in and knowledge about the fundamentals of dental caries, although they apparently<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 18


never worked together. Gies had done research on various biochemical aspects of caries, while Williams was<br />

the first to use the term and to describe dental plaque. It would not be an unwarranted assumption that, had they<br />

lived a little longer, both Black and Miller would have been early members and enthusiastic supporters of the<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> if not actually founding members.<br />

From this intellectual setting, it must be clear that dental research, in its early stages of observation,<br />

rational deduction, and application to disease treatment as well as prevention, began in antiquity and certainly<br />

became interdependently international in both occurrence and development.<br />

THE ENVIRONMENTAL SETTING<br />

The Association of research-minded persons with which this volume is concerned was founded in New<br />

York, a massive city with considerable cultural activity in a period of transition just at the very end of the<br />

second decade of this century. The United States had just concluded its expeditionary force of military and<br />

material might to culminate the world conflict in Europe. In its aftermath, an idealistic President Woodrow<br />

Wilson had gone abroad to set up a new society of nations, a "League of Nations", which most unfortunately his<br />

own country failed to understand and fully accept. So in 1920 the United States was on its way to a retreat from<br />

international problems toward an era of provincial "Normalcy"! But, as history was to emphasize in later<br />

decades, the world would not let the United States return to isolationism for more than a short generation.<br />

The Founder of this new Association to enhance dental research had wisely called the organization an<br />

"international body". Hence it is indeed pertinent to consider both the local and world environment, since it<br />

certainly had a bearing on dental research as to its motivation and acceptance in a nation and world not at all yet<br />

fully conscious of its multifold attributes and abilities.<br />

What was the immediate physical background in the United States at that time? The domestic scene in<br />

1920 was definitely different from that of a half-century later, at least with respect to its state of technology,<br />

which evolved rapidly over the next five decades. The iceman made his daily rounds every summer day, as well<br />

as the early-morning milkman—by horse and wagon. Yet there were in the United States 8 million automobiles<br />

in 1920, with the figure increasing tremendously thereafter, to 110 million half a century later. The auto brought<br />

about a major transformation in social patterns during the next two decades, as the rural area became accessible<br />

to the urban dwellers and the converse. The face of the land changed, with road-building in every direction. The<br />

clop of the horse's hoof, the trolley bell, and whistle of the steam locomotive were still in evidence in 1920 but<br />

were surely being superseded. Many technological changes as well as a few basic scientific ones were<br />

underway, as already pointed out in the first two chapters.<br />

In the year of the Founding, the conterminous United States population was 105,710,620, but the world<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 19


population was 1,694,096,000, some fifteen times larger. The center of population in the United States was<br />

computed to be eight miles south-southwest of Spencer, Owen County, Indiana. For the first time a decline in<br />

rural population to less than 50 percent of total population was noted. The actual number of farm residents had<br />

dwindled to less than 30 percent. Illiteracy was lowered to only 6 percent. Life expectancy as determined by the<br />

United States Bureau of Public Health was 54.09 years.<br />

THE STATE OF THE ARTS<br />

The pragmatic philosophy in education of John Dewey found militant expression in his Reconstruction<br />

in Philosophy.<br />

F. Scott Fitzgerald published his first novel, This Side of Paradise. Also published that year was Sinclair<br />

Lewis' Main Street.<br />

The Pulitzer Prize for drama was awarded to Beyond the Horizon by Eugene O'Neill.<br />

Conventions of the theatre were cast aside in the powerful production of Eugene O'Neill's Emperor<br />

Jones.<br />

Popular songs of the period were: "Margie", "Avalon", "Japanese Sandman", "Whispering".<br />

In tennis the Davis Challenge Cup was won 5-0 by the United States in Auckland, New Zealand.<br />

Albert Michelson at the University of Chicago (1892-1929) measured for the first time the diameter of a<br />

star with the aid of the interferometer which he invented. He demonstrated that the diameter of Alpha Orionis is<br />

260 million miles.<br />

The Federal Transportation Act was signed, returning the railroads to the former owners, since the<br />

United States Government had operated them during World War I. Railroad mileage in the United States was at<br />

an all-time peak of 253,000 miles, as contrasted with 31,000 at the end of the Civil War.<br />

As the "Roaring Twenties" began, the motorcar was a definite element in our standard of living,<br />

although transcontinental airmail had its beginning between New York and San Francisco.<br />

On 26 August the Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution was ratified, providing for woman<br />

suffrage; and they voted for the first time in the November presidential elections.<br />

National Prohibition (the Volstead Act) passed on 28 October over President Wilson's veto. It defined as<br />

intoxicating all beverages containing more than 1/2 percent alcohol.<br />

The Democratic National Convention assembled in San Francisco and nominated Governor James M.<br />

Cox of Ohio for President and Franklin D. Roosevelt for Vice-President. They were defeated, however, by<br />

Republicans Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge on 2 November. It had been a "front porch" campaign on<br />

the slogan "Back to Normalcy". Republican majorities returned to both houses of Congress. The electoral vote<br />

was 404 to 127 for Cox and Roosevelt, with the following breakdown in the popular vote:<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 20


Harding (Republican) 16,152,200<br />

Cox (Democrat) 9,147,533<br />

Debs (Socialist) 919,799<br />

Watkins (Prohibitionist) 189,408<br />

W. W. Cox (Socialist Labor) 31,175<br />

Christensen (Farmer-Labor) 26,541<br />

On 2 November Westinghouse arranged for the first general radio broadcast concerned with the United<br />

States election returns. This was so successful that on 30 November the same broadcasting company sent out by<br />

"wireless" its first regular evening program.<br />

On the world scene, there were many events of importance in 1920, but most were concerned with the<br />

aftermath of World War I. Events relative to advances in the sciences and arts were reflected by the Nobel Prize<br />

winners of 1920:<br />

Charles Guillaume (Switzerland), Physics<br />

Walther Nernst (Germany), Chemistry<br />

August Krogh (Denmark), Physiology or Medicine (discovery of capillary motor regulating mechanism)<br />

Knut Hamsun (Norway), Literature<br />

L³on Bourgeois (France), Peace<br />

General population growth and shifts were as follows: In 1920 London was clearly the world's largest<br />

city, with almost 7 1/2 million people, while New York, the city in which the <strong>IADR</strong> was founded, was second,<br />

with over 5 1/2 million. Berlin was third with 3,804,000, Paris had 2,906,000 while Chicago was a close fifth<br />

with 2,701,705, and Tokyo had 2,173,000. Half a century later, however, Tokyo emerged as the world's largest<br />

by far, with over 11 1/2 million persons. Shanghai apparently had over 8 million, while New York City, with an<br />

accurate 1970 census, had 7,798,757 and London now had a slightly smaller population. Taking these cities<br />

together with other urban as well as rural areas, the world population had climbed to 3,659,000,000—almost<br />

two billion greater than that of fifty years before. Thus the people of the world more than doubled in number<br />

during this span of time.<br />

THE FOUNDERS AND THE FOUNDING<br />

As with all things founded, there is almost always a single founder who initiates the event, although he<br />

may have induced others to share his enthusiasm and thus also to participate as founders. William J. Gies can<br />

clearly be cited as the founder of our Association, but he invited twenty-four other men to join him for the<br />

occasion.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 21


Who was this Professor of Biological Chemistry at Columbia University who took such an intensive<br />

interest in dental research? This man was deemed to be so important in the evolution of dental research and<br />

education that a separate biography of him is being written and will be published later. Thus only a very<br />

concise—though adequate—resumé of his biographical attributes is provided in this volume.<br />

William Gies was born in Reisterstown, Maryland, a century ago on 21 February 1872. As a young man<br />

he received his B.S. degree from Gettysburg College in 1891 and earned his Ph.D. at Yale in 1897. At<br />

Columbia University he served for many years as Professor and Chairman of the Biological Chemistry<br />

Department. Aside from his academic duties, he devoted himself for nearly half a century to the advancement of<br />

dentistry. William Gies lived a long and hardy life of eighty-four years, during which time he established<br />

himself as one of the greatest benefactors of dentistry, although not a dentist himself. For his innumerable and<br />

outstanding contributions, W. J. Gies received a great many honors from an appreciative dental profession.<br />

One of the concepts that must have impressed Gies to a profound degree in the period 1910-18 was that<br />

he, as a biochemist, had done research in the dental field with considerable initial success. He also had<br />

collaborated with other basic science personnel in bacteriology, with some additional fruitful publications. Thus<br />

the view must have developed in Gies' thinking that if an association could be organized, bringing together the<br />

clinically-minded dentists and scientists who had some research interest in the dental field, there could emerge<br />

from such a merger new ideas and approaches to many unsolved dental problems, which actually proved to be<br />

more complex than Gies' first impression led him to believe.<br />

Gies had by late 1918 consummated his plans for publishing the Journal of Dental Research as a<br />

prestigious outlet for the scientific endeavors of competent investigators in the dental field. Even though the<br />

Journal was ostensibly continuing the Journal of the Allied Dental Societies, it purported to be "a journal of<br />

stomatology; devoted to the advancement and dissemination of knowledge pertaining to the mouth and teeth,<br />

and to their relation to the body as a whole." (See also the chapter on the Journal of Dental Research, as well as<br />

"The History of the Journal of Dental Research". 1 )<br />

The Journal fulfilled the concept of merging basic scientists with men in dentistry only to the extent that<br />

it disseminated their research findings. But Gies' vision also included the formation of an organization in which<br />

there could be a meeting of minds on a person-to-person basis of all research-minded men to promote interest in<br />

dental research. Thus he laid his plans on a rather grand scale, as he stated later in the Journal: "Believing that<br />

such an association could best be formed as a federation of local societies, each to be in effect an autonomous<br />

section of a national division of the international organization, and confident that it could be projected<br />

effectually in the largest city in the United States, the writer corresponded or conferred orally with about one<br />

hundred of the leading dentists in New York regarding the feasibility of the general plan and personnel of the<br />

charter membership." 2 The prime meeting establishing the Association took place on Friday evening, 10<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 22


December 1920, at a dinner in the Columbia University Club. The weather 3 that evening was cloudy and dry<br />

with a westerly wind velocity of 24. The temperature was moderate, with a high of 40° and a low of 33.5°F,<br />

while the barometric pressure was 29.37.<br />

The purpose of the gathering was "to consider the advisability of promoting research by an international<br />

organization." The following men were in attendance: Adolph Berger, Theodor Blum, E. A. Bogue, George W.<br />

Clapp, Henry S. Dunning, William J. Gies, Henry W. Gillett, Milo Hellman, R. G. Hutchinson, Jr., Thaddeus P.<br />

Hyatt, Victor H. Jackson, F. C. Kemple, Arthur H. Merritt, Bissell B. Palmer, Jr., Frederick A. Peeso, M. L.<br />

Rhein, James P. Ruyl, Paul R. Stillman, Leuman M. Waugh, J. Leon Williams, and J. Lowe Young. Herman E.<br />

S. Chayes, William B. Dunning, M. I. Schamberg, and Frank T. Van Woert were unavoidably prevented from<br />

being present, but had indicated complete accord with the tentative plan for the organization of the proposed<br />

Association. 4 That same evening J. Leon Williams was selected as Chairman, with Leuman M. Waugh as<br />

Secretary.<br />

William J. Gies formally outlined the steps leading to this historic meeting, including a statement that<br />

dentists in Boston and Chicago who had been consulted earlier were ready to endorse the general proposal and<br />

hold meetings to organize regional Sections. Those present in New York then unanimously adopted the<br />

following Articles of Agreement, which had previously been approved by the earliest of the prospective<br />

members in Boston and Chicago.<br />

ARTICLES OF AGREEMENT 5<br />

EFFECTING THE ORGANIZATION AND PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF THE<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH<br />

Founded in New York City, December 10, 1920<br />

PREAMBLE<br />

In order to promote broadly the advancement of active research in all branches of dentistry, and in<br />

related phases of the arts and sciences that contribute directly to the development of dentistry; and, further, to<br />

encourage and facilitate coùperative effort and achievement by, and mutual helpfulness among, investigators in<br />

all nations in every division of stomatology—to the end that dentistry may render cumulatively more perfect<br />

service to humanity—we, the undersigned, assembled at the Columbia University Club, in New York City,<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 23


December 10, 1920, hereby establish the International Association for Dental Research, and, as its founders,<br />

subscribe to and adopt these Articles of Agreement for the provisional government of this Association.<br />

ARTICLE I.<br />

OFFICIALS<br />

SECTION 1. Provisional government. The provisional executive management of this Association shall<br />

be vested in a Council of eleven members, at least six of whom shall be elected at this meeting of<br />

organization.<br />

SECTION 2. Officers. The officers of the Council, to be elected by the Council itself, shall serve as the<br />

officers of the provisional government of this Association.<br />

ARTICLE II.<br />

INSTRUCTIONS TO THE COUNCIL<br />

SECTION 1. Preparation of a constitution. The Council to be elected is hereby instructed to prepare a<br />

constitution for our permanent government, to replace these Articles, and to submit to us such a<br />

constitution for formal consideration before February 1, 1921. The Council is also charged to consider<br />

ways and means for the permanent international establishment of this Association, and for the<br />

immediate progressive furtherance of the Association's purposes. The Secretary of the meeting at which<br />

these Articles are adopted shall transmit a copy of these Articles to each member of the Council to be<br />

elected.<br />

SECTION 2. Meetings of the Council. The Council may, by a majority vote of its total membership, call<br />

meetings of the Council after December 18, 1920; and, by such a vote, the Council may use any means<br />

at its discretion for prompt procedure toward attainment of the objects of this Association.<br />

ARTICLE III.<br />

MEETINGS<br />

SECTION 1. Next meeting. The next meeting of the Association shall be held at the Harvard University<br />

Club, on December 17, 1920, when three additional members of the Council may be elected. 2<br />

SECTION 2. Meetings of the Association may be called by the Council on its own initiative, and shall<br />

be called at the request of five members of the Association.<br />

ARTICLE IV.<br />

COLLEAGUES ELECTED TO CHARTER MEMBERSHIP<br />

Having indicated direct interest in the successful foundation of this Association, but having been<br />

unavoidably prevented from attending this meeting of organization, those of our colleagues who are<br />

named below, in this Article, are hereby unanimously elected to membership as founders of this<br />

Association:<br />

New York.—Herman E. S. Chayes, William B. Dunning, M. I. Schamberg, Frank T. Van Woert.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 24


Boston.—Robert R. Andrews, Lawrence W. Baker, George A. Bates, Fred R. Blumenthal, Percy<br />

R. Howe, A. Leroy Johnson, V. H. Kazanjian, L. M. S. Miner, William Rice, Alfred P. Rogers,<br />

H. Carlton Smith, Eugene H. Smith, Kurt H. Thoma, George H. Wright.<br />

Chicago.—Frederick B. Noyes.<br />

ARTICLE V.<br />

SECTIONS OF THE ASSOCIATION<br />

The members in any geographical group may organize local sections of this Association; but they may<br />

not do so prior to the adoption of a Constitution that will prescribe the relationships of such sections to<br />

the Association in general.<br />

ARTICLE VI.<br />

NEW MEMBERS<br />

Pending the adoption of a Constitution to replace these Articles of Agreement, new members may be<br />

elected by a majority vote of the members in any geographical section, subject to confirmation by a<br />

majority vote of the total membership of the Council.<br />

ARTICLE VII.<br />

QUORUM<br />

Nine members shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business by this Association until these<br />

Articles of Agreement for our provisional government will have been superseded by a Constitution, for<br />

our permanent government, adopted in conformity with these Articles.<br />

MEETINGS AT BOSTON AND CHICAGO<br />

On 17 December 1920, J. Leon Williams and William J. Gies traveled to the Harvard Club in Boston.<br />

This was termed the Second Meeting of the organization of the Association. Here Boston members named in<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 25


the previous Articles of Agreement laid the foundation for the Boston Section. Additional members of the<br />

Association (residents of Boston and Chicago) were elected.<br />

Shortly afterward, on 30 December 1920, William J. Gies appeared in person at the University Club of Chicago<br />

and presented the plan to these <strong>IADR</strong> members and their guests, who then took preliminary steps for the<br />

establishment of the Chicago Section.<br />

Thereafter the Council was organized by representatives of the New York, Boston, and Chicago<br />

Sections, so that by the spring of 1921 the Constitution (herein appended) had been adopted as part of the<br />

government of the Association. The By-Laws, however, were worked out at a somewhat later date.<br />

Even though these three Sections were to meet frequently within their own urban area, the parent body planned<br />

to meet annually, almost always in the United States. The name of the Association, implying international<br />

participation, was initially primarily a nominal concept, although it encouraged membership from Canada and<br />

from overseas.<br />

How has the <strong>IADR</strong> developed in its adherence to the objectives of the organization? The next chapter,<br />

by one of the prominent proponents of dental research with an extensive background of research in several<br />

continents, elaborates upon whether the objectives of the Association have been achieved.<br />

CONSTITUTION OF THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH 6<br />

ADOPTED IN CONFORMITY WITH THE PROVISIONS OF THE Articles of Agreement<br />

ON WHICH THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH WAS FOUNDED<br />

IN NEW YORK CITY ON DECEMBER 10, 1920, AND WHICH ARTICLES OF AGREEMENT THIS<br />

CONSTITUTION SUPERSEDES AND REPLACES<br />

ARTICLE I.<br />

NAME<br />

This organization is named: International Association for Dental Research.<br />

ARTICLE II.<br />

OBJECT<br />

The Association has been established (a) to promote broadly the advancement of active research in all<br />

branches of dental science and in related phases of the sciences that contribute directly to the<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 26


development of dentistry, and which add to the knowledge of the mouth and teeth and of their relations<br />

to the body as a whole; and further, (b) to encourage and facilitate cooperative effort and achievement<br />

by, and mutual helpfulness among, investigators in all nations in every division of stomatology; (c) to<br />

the end, particularly, that dentistry may render cumulatively more perfect service to humanity.<br />

ARTICLE III.<br />

PROHIBITION OF COMMERCIAL RELATIONSHIPS<br />

This Association shall in no way enter into, or foster, relations with commercial organizations, nor with<br />

makers of appliances or of anything else used in the art of dentistry by the dental profession, or in the<br />

care and treatment of the oral structures by the laity.<br />

ARTICLE IV.<br />

MEMBERSHIP<br />

SECTION 1. Eligibility. Any person who has conducted, and published an account of, a meritorious<br />

original investigation in dental science, or in any of the sciences contributory to stomatology, shall be<br />

eligible to membership in this Association, providing such person conforms to the recognized standards<br />

of professional ethics.<br />

SECTION 2. Nomination.<br />

(A) Nominations to membership may be made at any time by any member. Each nomination<br />

must be formally endorsed by two additional members, who know personally and certify from<br />

specific knowledge, that the candidate for membership is eligible, before the nomination can be<br />

registered for official presentation to the Association.<br />

(B) Each endorsed nomination for membership must be formally presented to the Council of the<br />

Association, with three copies each of one or more publications which show that the nominee<br />

meets the requirement of eligibility relating to research achievement.<br />

(C) The Council shall determine, in the case of each nomination, whether the nominee fully<br />

meets the requirements of eligibility. The Council shall report promptly to the Association the<br />

details of its findings in this relation, and also such recommendations as it may wish to offer with<br />

its report.<br />

SECTION 3. Election.<br />

(A) New members may be elected only at annual meetings of the Association.<br />

(B) Election to membership shall be by ballot by the individual members. A two-thirds<br />

affirmative vote of the ballots cast shall be necessary for election. Substitution of any other<br />

parliamentary procedure for that of a secret ballot shall invalidate all elections to membership<br />

that may be accomplished in such an irregular way.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 27


SECTION 4. Initiation. Initiation of membership in this Association requires (a) formal approval of a<br />

certified copy of this Constitution, signified to the Secretary of the Council; also (b) the member-elect's<br />

formally avowed acceptance of, and adherence to, all the provisions of this Constitution and of the bylaws<br />

of the Association. No member-elect can exercise the privilege of membership before these<br />

requirements are met.<br />

SECTION 5. Forfeiture. Membership in this Association may be terminated by a member at any time by<br />

formal notice, to the Secretary of the Council, of that member's withdrawal. Delivery of such a notice<br />

automatically effects that member's withdrawal from membership in this Association.<br />

The privilege and rights of membership may be terminated by the Association for any member at any<br />

time, by formal notice to a member, from the Secretary of the Council, of the Association's decision, at<br />

an annual meeting by a two-thirds vote of those present and voting, that the member's association is no<br />

longer desired. Delivery of such a notice to a member automatically terminates his or her membership<br />

in this Association.<br />

Annual dues for the fiscal year in which membership may be terminated by a member or by the<br />

Association shall be repaid or, if unpaid, shall not be demanded.<br />

ARTICLE I. DIVISIONS OF THE ASSOCIATION 3<br />

SECTION 1. Organization. The members in any nation, with the approval of the Association, may<br />

organize a Division of the Association, particularly for the national advancement of the objects of the<br />

Association.<br />

SECTION 2. Management. The national affairs of a Division shall be managed by its own members, but<br />

such management must conform in all respects with the requirements of this Constitution and of the bylaws<br />

of the Association.<br />

ARTICLE VI.<br />

SECTIONS OF THE ASSOCIATION<br />

SECTION 1. Organization. The members in any geographical center, with the approval of the<br />

corresponding national Division, may organize a Section of the Association, particularly for the local<br />

advancement of the objects of the Association.<br />

SECTION 2. Management. The affairs of the Sections shall be managed by their own members, but<br />

such management must conform in all respects with the requirements of this Constitution, with the bylaws<br />

of the Association, and with the by-laws of the corresponding national Division of the Association.<br />

ARTICLE VII.<br />

MEETINGS<br />

SECTION 1. Annual. The Association shall meet at least once annually, beginning with the calendar<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 28


year 1921, at times and places to be determined by the Association, or by the Council when it is<br />

authorized to act for the Association.<br />

SECTION 2. Special. Special meetings of the Association may be convened by the Council, and shall be<br />

called at the request of one-fifth of the total membership.<br />

ARTICLE III.<br />

OFFICIALS<br />

SECTION 1. Council.<br />

(A) Authority. During the periods between annual meetings, the executive management of the<br />

affairs of the Association shall be conducted by the Council, within the general authority voted to<br />

it by the Association.<br />

(B) Personnel.<br />

(a) The Council shall consist of three elected representatives of each national Division.<br />

Until the number of divisional representatives in the Council attains a total of at least<br />

fifteen, the number necessary to constitute that total shall be elected from the American<br />

Division of the Association.<br />

(b) With the adoption of this Constitution, the terms of all the members of the existing<br />

Council of the Association (selected on the basis of the provisional organization) shall<br />

close automatically, when it shall become the duty of each of the three existing and<br />

ratifying Sections 4 of the Association to elect by ballot five Councillors, the fifteen<br />

Councillors thus elected to serve as, and to be, the Council of the Association, until their<br />

successors will have been chosen in accordance with the provisions of this Constitution.<br />

(C) Election of the divisional representatives. The representatives of the national Divisions in the<br />

Council shall be elected by the respective national Divisions.<br />

(D) Length of the term of service. The length of the term of service of the individual<br />

representatives in the Council shall be determined by the respective national Divisions.<br />

SECTION 2. Officers.<br />

(A) Identical with those of the Council. The general officers of the Council shall be, also, the<br />

officers of the Association. They shall be nominated by the Council, preferably though not<br />

necessarily from its own membership, subject to formal confirmation by the Association.<br />

(B) Nomination. The list of nominations for the offices of the Council and Association, for a<br />

given term, shall be formally announced by the Council to each member of the Association at<br />

least three months prior to the date of the annual meeting at which the same nominations will be<br />

presented to the Association for its consideration.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 29


(C) Election. The Council's nominees for the offices in the Council and Association, if approved<br />

by a majority vote of those present and voting at the succeeding annual meeting, shall become<br />

the officers of the Council and of the Association. In the event, however, that the Association<br />

should record a majority vote against any of the Council's nominees for the general offices, the<br />

Council, at the same meeting, shall present one or more additional nominations for the<br />

corresponding offices, until the Association votes its approval. But should the Council fail to<br />

make satisfactory nominations, the Association may then and there, independently of the<br />

Council, complete the nomination and election of general officers of the Council and<br />

Association.<br />

(D) Elective term of service. The elective term of service in all the general offices of the Council<br />

and Association shall begin at the close of an annual meeting and shall terminate at the end of the<br />

next succeeding annual meeting.<br />

ARTICLE IX.<br />

FINANCES<br />

SECTION 1. Amount of dues. The annual dues, payable by each member, before the close of each<br />

annual meeting of the Association, shall not exceed five dollars ($5.00) or its approximate equivalent.<br />

SECTION 2. Payment of dues. The annual dues may be paid through the agency of national Divisions.<br />

SECTION 3. Restriction on the expenditure of funds. No funds of the Association may be expended by<br />

the Council without general authorization by, or approval of, the Association.<br />

ARTICLE X.<br />

BYLAWS<br />

By-laws of this Association may be adopted at any meeting of the Association by a two-thirds vote of<br />

the members present and voting.<br />

ARTICLE XI.<br />

QUORUM<br />

Fifteen members shall constitute a quorum of this Association.<br />

ARTICLE XII.<br />

AMENDMENTS<br />

SECTION 1. Constitution.<br />

(A) Presentation. Proposed amendments to this Constitution may be presented, at annual<br />

meetings of the Association, by and with the formal endorsement of five members. Statements of<br />

reasons for the adoption of proposed amendments must accompany the formal presentation of<br />

each such amendment.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 30


(B) Notification of all the members. It shall be one of the duties of the Council to deliver to each<br />

member of the Association, within six months of the date of the annual meeting at which an<br />

amendment was proposed,<br />

(a) a printed copy of each such suggested amendment, with the names of the sponsors and<br />

the reasons given formally for its proposed adoption; also<br />

(b) a blank ballot for the registration of a vote for or against the proposed amendment.<br />

(C) Adoption. At the next, or any, succeeding annual meeting, the foregoing conditions having<br />

been met in detail, a vote on the proposed amendment shall be in order; and the proposed<br />

amendment shall become a part of this Constitution if, and when, at least two-thirds of the entire<br />

membership of the Association vote for its adoption.<br />

SECTION 2. By-laws. Amendments to the By-laws may be adopted at any meeting of the Association<br />

by a two-thirds vote of those present and voting.<br />

[By-laws have not yet been adopted]<br />

Ratified for the Association, by the New York, Boston, and Chicago Sections, on May 27, 1921.<br />

Attest:<br />

J. Leon Williams, Leuman M. Waugh,<br />

President.<br />

Secretary.<br />

REFERENCES<br />

1. Orland, F. J.: The Fifty Year History of the Journal and the Biographical Directory of the <strong>IADR</strong>, J Dent<br />

Res 48: H-17, 1969 (Special Commemorative Supplement to the September 1969 issue of vol<br />

48).<br />

2. J Dent Res 6: 101, 1924-26; 8: 197, 1928.<br />

3. Communication DF5214 (1771), dated 14 September 1970, from the National Weather Records Center,<br />

Federal Building, Asheville, North Carolina.<br />

4. J Dent Res 6: 102, 1924-26; 8: 198, 1928.<br />

5. J Dent Res 6: 102-105, 1924-26; 8: 199-202, 1928.<br />

6. J Dent Res 6: 105-110, 1924-26; 8: 202-207, 1928.<br />

**Publisher's footnote: Since John Hunter was born near Glasgow, he should more accurately be referred to as a<br />

Scotsman. Our thanks to alert reader Jan Ledvinka, Newcastle, UK.<br />

2 At that meeting the members were authorized to hold a special meeting in Chicago, on December 30, 1920, to<br />

complete preliminaries of organization, including the election of two additional members of the Council.<br />

3 Divisions have not yet been organized.<br />

4 This was a formal recognition of the existence of the New York, Boston, and Chicago Sections, which until<br />

then were informal "groups."<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 31


CHAPTER FOUR: HAVE OBJECTIVES OF THE <strong>IADR</strong><br />

BEEN ACHIEVED DURING ITS FIRST FIFTY YEARS?<br />

REIDAR F. SOGNNAES,* L.D.S., D.M.D., PH.D<br />

PROFESSOR OF ANATOMY AND ORAL BIOLOGY, FOUNDING DEAN OF DENTISTRY, UNIVERSITY OF<br />

CALIFORNIA CENTER FOR THE HEALTH SCIENCES, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA.<br />

When an organization becomes fifty years old, it is just a little too old for its founders to personally<br />

verbalize the play-by-play story on its origin. Yet it is still young enough to permit word-of-mouth recollections<br />

by members who saw the founders in action during many of the earlier meetings.<br />

INTRODUCTORY<br />

Clearly, those creative pioneers who conceived the idea for this organization—the International<br />

Association for Dental Research—were devoted to and optimistic about their field of endeavor. They had to be,<br />

for what they set out to do had no precedent.<br />

First of all, it was a unique fact within the field of health research that an international association had<br />

its origin on American soil. To be sure, there had been many international congresses on various related<br />

subjects of medicine prior to the <strong>IADR</strong>'s establishment in 1920. But none were dental, nearly all were instituted<br />

in Europe, and the number of investigators from Central Europe far outnumbered those from the Englishspeaking<br />

world and certainly those from the United States of America.<br />

Initially it may also be said that the term association was hardly applicable to what really represented a<br />

very small group of individuals, who initially were largely centered around New York City. A specific<br />

concentration on dental matters certainly indicated a difference from many other health science developments in<br />

that the <strong>IADR</strong> had its initiation on this continent without any comparable precedent of a similar organization<br />

first exemplified abroad.<br />

There had been important individual pioneers in innovative dental affairs in France, Britain, Germany,<br />

Austria, and America before 1920. Prior to this time, however, there had been no comparable organized group<br />

devoted to dentistry in the field of scientific research.<br />

It is of further interest that the scientific orientation of the <strong>IADR</strong> was, from the very beginning, clearly<br />

defined as dental. The objectives were nevertheless not confined to any specific methodology or to any one<br />

basic or clinical discipline, as was true of most organizations and journals devoted to scientific progress of that<br />

time.<br />

The fact that the organization was not only organ-centered, that is, dental, but specifically aimed at the<br />

advancement of (dental) research represented a somewhat rare pioneering outlook. One is not aware of<br />

comparable organizations at that time labeled specifically as exclusively devoted to, let us say,<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 32


ophthalmological research, dermatological research, or head and neck research.<br />

OBJECTIVE<br />

With this preamble regarding the originality of its creation, one must now ask to what extent the<br />

objectives of the <strong>IADR</strong> have been met during its first fifty years. When one re-examines Article II of the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

Constitution, it is evident that the stated goals may be itemized under the following categories:<br />

A. To promote broadly<br />

1. Advancement of research in all branches of dental science<br />

2. Advancement of research in the related phases of sciences that<br />

a) Contribute to development of oral health service<br />

b) Add to knowledge of the mouth and the teeth<br />

c) Add to knowledge of bodily relations of the teeth<br />

B. To encourage and facilitate<br />

1. Cooperative effort between investigators<br />

2. Achievement by investigators<br />

3. Mutual helpfulness among investigators<br />

a) in all nations<br />

b) in every division of stomatology<br />

C. To the end that<br />

1. Dentistry may render cumulatively more perfect service to humanity<br />

A. ". . . to promote broadly . . ."<br />

In the early years the <strong>IADR</strong> meetings were mostly concerned with clinical studies supplemented with<br />

observations derived from the basic tools of anatomy, histology, and pathology. As the field developed, it is<br />

noteworthy that many innovations in research methodology were almost immediately applied to and in some<br />

cases even pioneered through studies on problems of dentistry. Thus we find that the utilization of the newest<br />

investigative approaches, such as radioactive isotopes, electron microscopes, and lasers, had remarkably prompt<br />

application to problems of dental research.<br />

Perhaps one of the most important impacts of the <strong>IADR</strong> was its wholesome influence on dentistry's<br />

ability to draw scientists from other fields into dental research and thus to provide stimulating associations<br />

between them and dentists involved in scholarly pursuits. In this connection one notes in the Constitution that<br />

such advancement of other sciences was expected to "contribute directly to the development of oral health<br />

service". In other words, the organizers of the <strong>IADR</strong> hoped to bring scientists from other fields into the<br />

organization in the hope of stimulating such colleagues to contribute directly to problems of oral health. This<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 33


indeed they did through many fields, both with respect to clinical and basic research, ranging from focal<br />

infection to fluoridation, and from radioisotope metabolism to electron microscopic ultrastructure of bones and<br />

teeth.<br />

Many <strong>IADR</strong> members were to become involved with the emerging story of fluoridation, with respect to<br />

biochemical, microbiological, and epidemiological aspects. It was also anticipated that related sciences would<br />

add to the basic knowledge of the mouth and teeth. There had been a significant precedent to this some years<br />

earlier in pioneering work in endocrinology, which constituted literally the experimental "discovery" of the<br />

rodent incisor. The Founder of the <strong>IADR</strong> had indeed come from the very new and basic science of<br />

biochemistry, and he brought his basic knowledge to bear on the chemistry of the teeth, notably the organic<br />

matrix of the enamel. In so doing, he chose what turned out to be a complex problem, still demanding the very<br />

best knowledge of fundamental scientists.<br />

Soon there were many colleagues from the general field of science who become deeply involved with<br />

dental science, using dental tissues to elucidate fundamental problems related to such fields as nutrition,<br />

endocrinology, and anthropology. Many leaders of the <strong>IADR</strong> came from outside the field of dentistry and<br />

brought their knowledge to bear on dental research, resulting in great contributions toward solutions of<br />

problems of the day. In addition, these leaders exerted a stimulating influence in their dealings with younger<br />

colleagues. Thus, many dentists who took up academic careers benefited greatly from those basic scientists who<br />

had shown an early interest in the Association and its progress.<br />

Related sciences were also instrumental in bringing further understanding of dental research in "relation<br />

to the body as a whole". This particular aspect was perhaps less significant than the basic research on the oral<br />

tissues themselves, for it is only more recently that metabolic diseases and general syndromes have been studied<br />

extensively with specific reference to dental research.<br />

B. ". . . to encourage and facilitate . . ."<br />

The original <strong>IADR</strong> Constitution emphasized the importance of cooperation at several levels, mutual<br />

helpfulness between investigators, in every division of stomatology, in all nations. It is well known from the<br />

participation in the annual sessions of the <strong>IADR</strong> that many cooperative efforts have evolved from formal and<br />

informal meetings. It is also evident that many if not all phases of stomatology have been represented in the<br />

organization. Yet the emphasis has been largely at the basic science level rather than at the clinical and medical<br />

levels, as suggested by the term stomatology. Furthermore, the cooperative efforts between investigators in all<br />

nations have probably been more limited than is indicated by the international title of the organization. This is<br />

largely due to the fact that most meetings have been held on the American continent, a matter now up for<br />

serious reconsideration in terms of future meeting plans.<br />

C. ". . . to the end that . . ."<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 34


The concluding statements in the Constitution listing the objectives of the <strong>IADR</strong> refer to the cumulative<br />

influence of all the former goals toward rendering a more perfect service to humanity. Clearly any one of all of<br />

the inputs alluded to above can and will have such a result. This ultimate question is perhaps the hardest one to<br />

answer when one ponders the question of the relative degree to which the <strong>IADR</strong>'s objectives have been<br />

achieved, according to its original Constitutional goals, during these first fifty years. Perhaps another way of<br />

responding to such a question would be to ask another one, namely: What would dental research (and for that<br />

matter, academic dentistry and even dentistry generally) have been like today were it not for the International<br />

Association for Dental Research?<br />

RETROSPECTIVE AND PROSPECTIVE<br />

Possibly the most significant dream (and ultimate accomplishment) of the pioneering <strong>IADR</strong> founders<br />

was, in retrospect, the international character of their American-born organization. Why would dentistry differ<br />

from other branches of the healing arts in having its initiation in such organized scholarly pursuits in this<br />

particular field in this particular part of the world? Was it merely that there were several very significant<br />

individuals on the scene in and around New York at the right time? This undoubtedly was of great importance;<br />

but these men undoubtedly would be the first to admit that they stood on the shoulders of their own<br />

predecessors who in all corners of the globe had been pioneers in the field of dentistry.<br />

Several of the pioneers had in fact been very close to home. For had not the first dental school been<br />

established on these shores south of New York—in Baltimore, many years earlier (1840), independent though it<br />

was of the university? Had not the American Academy of Dental Science a similarly early origin? Had not also<br />

the first university-affiliated dental school in the world been established north of New York—in Boston? Why,<br />

in the first place, should it come to bear that the first university-affiliated dental school was established in New<br />

England, rather than in old England; or for that matter, why not in France or in Germany or Austria? How much<br />

had this progress been influenced by special events surrounding the New England scene from the time of John<br />

Greenwood, Paul Revere, Horace Wells, William Morton, and ultimately Nathan Keep, who, following his<br />

chief testimony in the Parkman murder case, was to emerge in 1867 as the first Dean of Dentistry at Harvard,<br />

the first university-affiliated dental school in the world?<br />

There were, of course, also precedents for other international groups of scientists coming together to<br />

compare notes on their research developments. However, such international congresses in medical sciences<br />

initially developed exclusively in Europe and were completely dominated by German scientists for a great many<br />

years of the nineteenth century, before any large numbers of British, French, and, much later, American<br />

scientists entered the field. Thus it is significant that <strong>IADR</strong>'s organized dental research efforts and meetings<br />

should evolve with an international flavor from the very beginning, at least in principle. In fact, this particular<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 35


international aspect has only recently become true in practice. Indeed, so far, only one <strong>IADR</strong> President has been<br />

elected from outside North America.<br />

During the next fifty years the international aspect of <strong>IADR</strong> will undoubtedly undergo significant<br />

developments. There is yet to be an international annual meeting of the <strong>IADR</strong> held outside North America,<br />

except for special conferences on Oral Biology sponsored under <strong>IADR</strong> leadership. During the past fifty years,<br />

perhaps the most significant service of the <strong>IADR</strong> has been as a focal point for dental research, not just by<br />

members of the dental profession with a scientific background but by a great number of scientists coming from<br />

other fields of knowledge, bringing their talents to bear on our dental problems. In fact, there have been several<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> Presidents from non-dental backgrounds, in addition to the pioneering service of the Founder, who was a<br />

biochemist. The distinguished record both in research and in administration of many other colleagues from<br />

other fields of science are well-known in the memory of current members. They brought respectability to dental<br />

research, and they were cooperative with their colleagues in many ways, both directly and indirectly through<br />

education and training programs.<br />

ASSOCIATIONS WITH NATIONAL ASSOCIATIONS<br />

What would academic dentistry be like today without the <strong>IADR</strong>? This is perhaps the most interesting<br />

question that may be raised, at least as far as the American dental schools are concerned, where <strong>IADR</strong> has had<br />

its closest affiliations. During the initial years of the <strong>IADR</strong>, membership was limited to a very small group from<br />

a very small number of institutions. Today it can be fairly said that there is hardly any dental school in North<br />

America which is not represented by faculty holding membership in the <strong>IADR</strong> and presenting one or more<br />

reports to its annual meetings.<br />

In between these periods, however, this fifty-year reflection would not be wholly true were it to suggest<br />

that the <strong>IADR</strong>—particularly in terms of its individual members—had been held in particularly high regard<br />

among the administrators of dental schools except in very recent years. It is possible that the change in attitudes<br />

was not entirely related to a sudden change in the research efforts per se. Instead, it would appear that a<br />

significant change occurred in connection with the increased support for dental research and for dental<br />

researchers that followed World War II. Before this became generally apparent, there were times, indeed, where<br />

it might have appeared to <strong>IADR</strong> members that their affiliation in this group might have been considered<br />

incompatible with a career in academic dentistry, dealing with either teaching or administration, especially in<br />

matters of a clinical nature. Things are now quite different. We now have many dentists who are well-founded<br />

in basic sciences, and well-known for their contributions to the <strong>IADR</strong>, who are holding prominent, nationally<br />

recognized positions in research, teaching, and administration.<br />

When it came to <strong>IADR</strong>'s relationship as a whole with other organized groups of dentistry, the support of<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 36


the <strong>IADR</strong> was for many years either totally lacking or very late in coming. That this was true of the American<br />

Dental Association, representing at the time almost exclusively the practitioner, was perhaps not too surprising<br />

in terms of early history, aside from the fact that any early reluctance has certainly been made up for many<br />

times over in recent years. It is less readily understood that groups whose own objectives very specifically<br />

suggested a strong interest in supporting scholarly pursuits were not only very late in understanding the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

but actually never did come to recognize the importance, let alone the needs, of the <strong>IADR</strong>. This was notably<br />

true of the American College of Dentists, although it again has shown some signs of eye-opening interest in<br />

more recent years. But perhaps most surprising of all relationships was the illogical dichotomy between the<br />

dental research group, the <strong>IADR</strong>, and the principal group of dental educators, represented by the American<br />

Association of Dental Schools. In retrospect this would seem to be a great paradox in the field of dentistry; yet,<br />

over the years, the groups did begin to arrange overlapping meetings, with some overlapping of participants as<br />

well. Also, it is evident that administrators are beginning to look with increasing interest upon young members<br />

of the <strong>IADR</strong> and their presentations at the annual meetings. Without the existence of the <strong>IADR</strong> as a focal point<br />

and as a forum for researchers interested in this field, it is doubtful whether dentistry could have been ready for<br />

the postwar research developments. This began in the late 1940's, following the establishment of continuous<br />

research support from the United States Federal Government through the National Institute of Dental Research.<br />

Today, perhaps the greatest need for the International Association for Dental Research is to play an<br />

increasingly important role, not merely in organizing and conducting the annual meetings, but in serving as a<br />

national and international force in seeking greater support and more talent for the evolution of dental research<br />

during the next fifty years.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 37


CHAPTER FIVE: MILESTONES AND LANDMARKS<br />

The introductory sketch depicts the <strong>IADR</strong> historical roadway with decadal milestones. The simulated landmarks<br />

(on the right) housed significant events in the life of <strong>IADR</strong>: Columbia University Club, New York City (1920);<br />

Royal York Hotel, Toronto (1930); Jefferson Hotel, St. Louis (1941); Broadmoor Hotel, Colorado Springs<br />

(1952); Headquarters Building of the American Dental Association housing the <strong>IADR</strong> new Central Office (since<br />

1965); Americana Hotel, New York City (1970).<br />

MILESTONES AND LANDMARKS<br />

In essence, this is the cataloging chapter for the remainder of the book. The accompanying list provides<br />

a concisely capsulated resum³ of the fifty-year history of the <strong>IADR</strong>. These fifteen definitive statements are cited<br />

as Milestones.<br />

MILESTONES<br />

1. Founded in New York City 10 December 1920.<br />

2. First Annual Meeting held in New York City, 1922.<br />

3. First Annual Meeting outside United States: Toronto, 1930.<br />

4. Cosponsor, AAAS Nd Symposium since 1932.<br />

5. Journal of Dental Research (founded 1919) ownership offered to and accepted by <strong>IADR</strong>, 1934.<br />

6. Dental Materials Group affiliated with <strong>IADR</strong>, 1939.<br />

7. First Meeting of North American Division, 1952.<br />

8. First Meeting of the British Division (first Division abroad), 1953.<br />

9. Awards of the <strong>IADR</strong>:<br />

Dental Science and Dental Art Award was first presented as a Novice Award in 1953; it was renamed the<br />

Edward H. Hatton Award in 1957.<br />

Wilmer Souder Award, first presented in 1955 by the Dental Materials Group.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 38


Memorial Awards:<br />

H. Trendley Dean Memorial Award—since 1964<br />

Isaac Schour Memorial Award—since 1967<br />

Five Commercially Funded Awards established—from 1963 through 1967.<br />

Student Travel Awards established—since 1968.<br />

1. Sponsor, International Conferences on Oral Biology triennial meetings initiated in 1959 at New York;<br />

after that, abroad, as follows: 1962, Bonn; 1965, London; 1968, Copenhagen.<br />

2. Central <strong>IADR</strong> office established in the ADA headquarters building in Chicago, August 1965, with a fulltime<br />

Secretary-Treasurer and Staff.<br />

3. Craniofacial Biology Group established 1965.<br />

4. Periodontal Research Group established 1969.<br />

5. Fiftieth Anniversary Commemorative Program in New York City, 16 March 1970.<br />

6. First Fifty-Year History being written.<br />

As some milestones need further elucidation, additions termed landmarks have been included in this chapter<br />

to make the chronological epic of the Association more meaningful. The extensive documentation that is<br />

furnished throughout the book can be termed the hallmarks and benchmarks, depending on whether the data<br />

came from the Journal or from other sources, while the keystone of the whole endeavor has been the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

Constitution, with the By-Laws as cornerstones to guide the actions of the organization.<br />

Lamartine, the French orator and poet, said, "History is neither more nor less than biography on a large<br />

scale." In recognizing this view, names of persons active in <strong>IADR</strong> are cited whenever appropriate, but, since<br />

events are fashioned by persons under certain motivating circumstances, it is the events that are stressed in this<br />

chapter. Thus the salient historic occurrences have been cited chronologically, the more important of which are<br />

elaborated upon in subsequent chapters.<br />

THE EPIC OF THE <strong>IADR</strong><br />

The simple fact is that the <strong>IADR</strong> was organized with minimal fanfare on 10 December 1920. It seems<br />

logical to conjecture that the Association could not have been formed much earlier than the second decade of<br />

the twentieth century. Almost up to this very time, there were various omnibus societies concerned with broad<br />

areas of science in general. Somewhat later came societies organized to promote special fields and to support a<br />

single-topic journal.<br />

The concept of a society designed to enhance dental research was indeed unique—it was to cover a<br />

special area of the health sciences, yet it was an omnibus in the sense of covering all aspects of science which<br />

were even remotely related to Dentistry. Into this curious duality the <strong>IADR</strong> was born and surprisingly<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 39


flourished, although it floundered at first. It was to the everlasting credit of William J. Gies that he concerned<br />

himself with this unique area of endeavor. Yet one must be aware that he had prior experience in organizing<br />

such scientific groups and publications. He had more than a decade before helped to organize and served as<br />

Secretary of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine and was Editor of its Proceedings. He also was<br />

one of the founders of the American Society of Biological Chemists and was its first Secretary and Founder and<br />

Editor of its Proceedings. (These events are all documented in the biography of William J. Gies to be published<br />

later.)<br />

THE LANDMARKS<br />

A. The organizing meeting was in essence comprised of three regional parts: the primary one in New<br />

York City on 10 December 1920, followed by the one in Boston on 17 December and that in Chicago on<br />

30 December. Soon after, the Constitution was proposed and accepted. The first President of the<br />

Association was J. Leon Williams, 1921-23. There is very little documented evidence of his presidential<br />

role in the <strong>IADR</strong>; even his term of office is very tenuous. Williams was often ill or for other reasons did<br />

not attend all functions expected of current <strong>IADR</strong> Presidents. Sometime during 1923 Paul Stillman, also<br />

of the active New York Section, was apparently appointed as interim President. But the next man, Albert<br />

E. Webster of Toronto, was definitely elected for a regular term of one year in 1924. After this,<br />

Presidents served single terms from one annual meeting to the next, with the exception of Leroy Miner,<br />

who served two terms and Albert Webster, who was elected to a second term later. Somewhat<br />

astonishingly, after the Constitution was accepted in 1920, there was apparently quite a period of<br />

inactivity.<br />

B. It was not until twenty-four months later that the first general meeting was held on 21 December<br />

1922 in the Plaza Hotel in New York City. It fulfilled its objective of constituting the first of many<br />

annual scientific meetings; but it was indeed meager in its scientific content. (See chapter on "Meetings<br />

and Members".) Only two papers were presented, in contrast to the almost 1000 half a century later. Yet<br />

one should not be too dismayed at this slow start, since the Founder himself had stated that the<br />

Association was to function as a Federation, with the local Sections as the active components. These<br />

numbered four by the time of the First General Meeting in 1922. But there were eleven Sections at the<br />

conclusion of the Eighth General Meeting in Toronto in 1930, and these all held frequent local<br />

gatherings.<br />

C. The meeting in Toronto, which was the first meeting outside the United States, underscored the<br />

intention that the Association was to be international. Moreover, by that time there were several<br />

members from overseas, some organizing into small Sections, such as the one in Vienna.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 40


D. Another facet of the Association was demonstrated by its ability to sponsor additional scientific<br />

gatherings which could be cited as extracurricular. William Gies had established the Nd Section of the<br />

American Association for the Advancement of Science. Although the American College of Dentists<br />

sponsored it at first, the <strong>IADR</strong> co-sponsored it starting in 1932 and has done so ever since. (See chapter<br />

on "Other Research Gatherings".)<br />

E. The Journal of Dental Research, founded in 1919, was in existence eighteen months before the<br />

Association was organized and forty-two months before the first scientific papers were read at the 1922<br />

meeting. The JDR and <strong>IADR</strong> were at first rather distinct entities. Surprisingly, the Journal never printed<br />

a resum³ of Association activities until 1926, although in 1921 there was an incidental footnote in the<br />

JDR that alluded to the existence of the Association. (This delay is understandable only if one knows<br />

that Gies was intensely involved in his Survey on Dental Education during this period, as explained in<br />

his biography.)<br />

William Gies had full responsibility for the Journal. He received much meritorious credit as the<br />

Editor of a scholarly and principled publication, but he was also liable for all monetary problems,<br />

including the raising of funds to pay the recurring printing bills. Among the list of names donating to the<br />

Journal, there were several anonymous donors (who, it is suspected, were close friends, if not Gies<br />

himself) who contributed consistently to keep the publication solvent. Upon viewing the record of pages<br />

published, there were two years (1924 and 1925) in which no printing at all was possible for lack of<br />

funds. (See the chapter on the "History of the Journal".) The Journal was back in production in the<br />

following year, and by 1934 Gies found it propitious to present it to the <strong>IADR</strong> lock, stock, and barrel.<br />

The Association took months to meditate about this special offer before its acceptance. Finally it decided<br />

to accept the unique gift. This was during the period when W. J. Gies was approaching his retirement<br />

from Columbia University "for age".<br />

A young associate of Gies at Columbia, Theodor Rosebury, served as Editor for part of the year<br />

1935. The Great Depression finally hit the Journal hard, and it was not printed that year. Then a<br />

publication committee of young men at the University of Rochester was selected by the <strong>IADR</strong> in 1936.<br />

These were Hamilton Robinson, Harold Hodge, and Maynard Hine, with the first named becoming<br />

Editor.<br />

To gain much needed monetary support, Supporting Associates were recruited, beginning in<br />

1954. These were consistently listed in each issue of the Journal.<br />

William J. Gies, upon relinquishing the Editorship, which he had held for sixteen years, and the<br />

General Secretaryship (held for twelve years), was honored by being elected <strong>IADR</strong> President 1939-40.<br />

By then it was established by tradition that the Vice-President became President-Elect and then<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 41


President. However, the man who was President-Elect while Gies was President, Rudolf Kronfeld of<br />

Chicago, unfortunately died one month before entering office, so the previously logical sequence was<br />

somewhat upset. The only other time a Vice-President did not move up to the Presidency was when F.<br />

V. Simonton of San Francisco resigned from all academic endeavors in 1929, despite the fact that he had<br />

been slated as President-Elect according to notices sent out by the General Secretary at the time.<br />

F. After much correspondence and discussion between Gies and certain university-associated men in the<br />

field of dental materials, it was arranged to establish a Dental Materials Group as an affiliate of the<br />

<strong>IADR</strong>. By 28 July 1939 the Group had been fully approved by <strong>IADR</strong>. (See chapter on "History of the<br />

Groups".) William J. Gies wrote in the Program of the Twentieth General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong> in 1942 that<br />

the Dental Materials Group "was organized as the first of a prospective series of groups within the<br />

Association to advance research in various aspects of dentistry."<br />

G. The first documented meeting of the North American Division was held on 23 March 1952. Although<br />

this was merely a nominal meeting, by the end of the next two decades the NAD was finally ready for<br />

activation as an independent entity.<br />

H. The British Division was formed on 21 March 1953, an outgrowth of the earlier London Section.<br />

Other landmarks were the establishment of the Japanese Division in 1954, the Continental European<br />

Division in 1964, the South African Division in 1966, the Australia Division in 1968 (which became the<br />

Australia-New Zealand Division in 1969), and the Scandinavian-NOF Division in 1969. Upon the<br />

demise of William J. Gies on 20 May 1956, a moving tribute was read by Theodor Rosebury at the<br />

(next) Thirty-fifth General Meeting in 1957.<br />

I. The first Award established through the auspices of the Association was in 1948. (See chapter on<br />

"Awards".) The Dental Science and Dental Art Award was established in 1948 but was first presented as<br />

a novice award in 1953; however, it was renamed the Edward H. Hatton Award in 1957 at the banquet<br />

in Atlantic City honoring the Association's long-time Secretary in his eightieth year. In recent years it<br />

has been monetarily supported by the Warner-Lambert Pharmaceutical Company. The Wilmer Souder<br />

Award was begun in 1955 by the Dental Materials Group. (See also the history of the Dental Materials<br />

Group.) Two memorial awards were established: one in the name of H. Trendley Dean (1964), by Frank<br />

J. McClure, his close friend at NIDR-NIH; the other, the Isaac Schour Award (1967), by Schour's<br />

confreres at the University of Illinois College of Dentistry. Aside from these honorary awards, there<br />

were five commercially supported awards established over a span of years (1963-67), which are as<br />

follows: Research in Oral Therapeutics Award—supported by Cook-Waite Laboratories, Inc.; Research<br />

in Oral Science Award—supported by Procter & Gamble Company; Research in Periodontal Disease<br />

Award—supported by Colgate-Palmolive Company; Research in Biological Mineralization Award—<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 42


supported by Lever Brothers Company; Research in Prosthodontics Award—supported by Clark-<br />

Cleveland Inc. Additionally, since 1968 there have been Student Travel Awards supported by Johnson<br />

and Johnson.<br />

The idea of honoring individuals who were not <strong>IADR</strong> members occurred first in 1958, when<br />

Harold Hillenbrand of the American Dental Association was selected as the first Honorary Member. In<br />

1965 Congressman John C. Fogarty was the second person so honored.<br />

J. The <strong>IADR</strong> has sponsored the International Conference on Oral Biology every three years, beginning<br />

in 1959 at New York; after that, abroad as follows: 1962, Bonn; 1965, London; 1968, Copenhagen. The<br />

1971 meeting is planned for ZÙrich. The monetary sponsor, Colgate-Palmolive Company, will continue<br />

to support these outstanding triennial gatherings. (See chapter on "Other Research Gatherings".)<br />

The second meeting outside the United States was again held in Toronto, in 1965. At this<br />

significant meeting, Martin Rushton was the President of <strong>IADR</strong> and as such was the first member from<br />

beyond North America to hold the Presidency.<br />

K. Since the inception of the office of Secretary and later Secretary-Treasurer, this officer has had the<br />

burden of maintaining all records and carrying out many other administrative activities. This became<br />

overbearing as the Association grew. So in 1961 an agency was hired to assist with the record-keeping<br />

and routine activities: the American Institute of Biological Sciences. However, after a short two-year<br />

period this system collapsed. Hence, after much discussion, extending over many months, there was<br />

established the central <strong>IADR</strong> office located in the brand new ADA headquarters building on 1 August<br />

1965. This entailed a full-time Secretary-Treasurer and a staff of one full-time assistant. The Secretary-<br />

Treasurer selected was Arthur R. Frechette, an <strong>IADR</strong> member who retired from the Navy as the<br />

Commanding Officer of the Naval Dental School in Washington, D.C. (See chapter on "Administrative<br />

Aspects".)<br />

L. Additional Groups were established. (See chapter on "History of the Groups".) The Craniofacial<br />

Group was formed in July 1965.<br />

M. The Periodontal Research Group was organized in March 1969.<br />

N. The Fiftieth Anniversary Commemorative Program was held in New York City on Monday, 16<br />

March 1970. (See final chapter in this volume for all details.) All Divisional Presidents were invited, and<br />

they or their representative attended this Forty-eighth General Meeting. During this historic gathering,<br />

the President of the British Division, C. Howard Tonge, proposed that the 1975 <strong>IADR</strong> meeting be held<br />

in London, England, and this significant invitation was accepted and approved by the Council.<br />

O. The Council in 1967 approved an Ad Hoc <strong>IADR</strong> History Committee to be organized for the purpose<br />

of writing the half-century history of the Association. Frank J. Orland was selected Chairman, an office<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 43


he had also held in the earlier Archives Committee (established 23 March 1956, as cited in the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

Proceedings published in the Journal).<br />

With these memorable milestones and luminous landmarks along the long road by which the<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> has come, the reader should read the more comprehensive coverage in subsequent chapters.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 44


CHAPTER SIX: PAGES OF PRESIDENTS<br />

The following pages purport to portray the forty-seven different men who have guided the destiny of the<br />

Association during its first fifty years. Only their most notable attributes are cited, since other aspects of their<br />

respective biographies are recorded either in the Biographical Directory of Members (Special Commemorative<br />

Supplement, J Dent Res, vol. 48 [September-October, 1969]) or, if they are deceased, in chapter seventeen of<br />

this volume entitled "Who in <strong>IADR</strong> Was Who".<br />

Perhaps more important to the Association than the list of professional achievements which mark the<br />

outstanding attributes of these men as individuals, are the ideas expressed in the incoming and outgoing<br />

presidential addresses. These have sometimes given a profound insight into the chief officer's fundamental<br />

thinking and have often indicated his administration's contribution to the advancement of the <strong>IADR</strong>. Hence, in<br />

those cases in which such an address was presented and published, reference is cited, in order to provide the<br />

fullest background for each era in the Association's history.<br />

THE PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS<br />

The custom of presenting an address by the incoming or outgoing President during the annual meeting<br />

has grown over the years. In the early decades, little was made of the inaugural occasion. When J. Leon<br />

Williams became the first President, he did not present a formal address but alluded to and discussed the<br />

Association's problems in the introduction to a long scientific paper that he delivered at the meeting in which he<br />

took the office of his second year. For some time there were only "remarks" or "comments." On some occasions<br />

there were rather comprehensive retiring presidential addresses. Later there were inaugural addresses, although<br />

some were discourses upon travel or art forms. In recent times, however, almost all inaugural addresses, at least<br />

in part, carried the impact of rather profound thinking on the part of the incoming President.<br />

The outgoing addresses, remarks, or reports, although not frequent in recent years, have been even more<br />

meaningful to the Association, since they have often emphasized important problems encountered and<br />

sometimes solved during the administrative year of the current President. In the case of both incoming and<br />

outgoing presidential addresses, the tradition has developed that any subject could be discussed and later would<br />

be published in the Journal without editorial emendation.<br />

PAST-PRESIDENTS—A DIVERSE GROUP<br />

The Past-Presidents were indeed a diverse lot, although they had in common an intense loyalty to the<br />

Association and considerable interest, as well as ability, in dental research. The forty-seven men pictured in this<br />

chapter had an extensive academic background. Collectively they held a total of sixty-nine doctoral degrees. Of<br />

these, forty-one were dental degrees, while seventeen were Ph.D. degrees and ten of the latter were held by men<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 45


with dental degrees. One individual held only an M.D. degree, while six others had both dental and medical<br />

degrees. Another held both a Ph.D. and an M.D., and one had triple doctorates—D.D.S., Ph.D., M.D. A total of<br />

twenty-six men had Master's degrees. (All the foregoing were academically earned degrees; honorary degrees<br />

are not included, although they have been conferred upon <strong>IADR</strong> Past-Presidents to the extent of forty-two in<br />

number.)<br />

The variety of academic degrees, and the number of man-years involved in earning them, give some<br />

indication of the diversity and profundity in the backgrounds of the chief officers of the <strong>IADR</strong>. Moreover, these<br />

attributes of diversity and profundity have been the seat of strength and leadership in the Association.<br />

Individual traits of all the Past-Presidents during the first half-century cannot be elaborated upon here.<br />

However, group photographs of all those who attended the several annual Past-Presidents' Luncheons are<br />

presented for analysis of their physiognomy in chapter nine, "Honorary Status in the <strong>IADR</strong>".<br />

A complete listing of Past-Presidents of the <strong>IADR</strong>, with years in office and academic degrees, is given<br />

on the next two pages, followed by the pages of presidential profiles (photo registered, almost always, during<br />

term of office).<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> PAST-PRESIDENTS<br />

1921-22 J. LEON WILLIAMS, D.D.S., L.D.S.<br />

1922-23 J. LEON WILLIAMS, D.D.S., L.D.S.<br />

1923-24 PAUL R. STILLMAN, D.D.S.<br />

1924-25 ALBERT E. WEBSTER, D.D.S., M.D.<br />

1925-26 FREDERICK B. NOYES, D.D.S.<br />

1926-27 LEUMAN M. WAUGH, D.D.S.<br />

1927-28 LEROY M. S. MINER, D.M.D., M.D.<br />

1928-29 LEROY M. S. MINER, D.M.D., M.D.<br />

1929-30 ARTHUR D. BLACK, D.D.S., M.A., M.D.<br />

1930-31 U. GARFIELD RICKERT, M.S., D.D.S.<br />

1931-32 ALBERT E. WEBSTER (see 1924-25)<br />

1932-33 RUSSELL W. BUNTING, D.D.S., D.D.SC.<br />

1933-34 EDWARD H. HATTON, M.D.<br />

1934-35 JOSEPH L. T. APPLETON, D.D.S.<br />

1935-36 THEODORE B. BEUST, D.D.S., M.D.<br />

1936-37 WILLIAM G. SKILLEN, D.D.S.<br />

1937-38 PAUL C. KITCHIN, D.D.S., M.S.<br />

1938-39 THOMAS J. HILL, D.D.S.<br />

1939-40 WILLIAM J. GIES, M.S., PH.D.<br />

1940-41 WILMER SOUDER, A.M., PH.D.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 46


1941-42 ISAAC SCHOUR, D.D.S., M.S., PH.D.<br />

1942-43 CHARLES F. BODECKER, D.D.S.<br />

1943-44 PHILIP JAY, D.D.S., M.S.<br />

1944-45 H. TRENDLEY DEAN, D.D.S.<br />

1945-46 WALLACE D. ARMSTRONG, M.S., PH.D., M.D.<br />

1946-47 SAMUEL W. CHASE, A.M., PH.D.<br />

1947-48 HAROLD C. HODGE, M.S., PH.D.<br />

1948-49 ALLAN G. BRODIE, D.D.S., M.S., PH.D.<br />

1949-50 J. ROY BLAYNEY, D.D.S., S.M.<br />

1950-51 BASIL G. BIBBY, B.D.S., PH.D., D.M.D.<br />

1951-52 LEONARD S. FOSDICK, M.S., PH.D.<br />

1952-53 MAYNARD K. HINE, D.D.S., M.S.<br />

1953-54 FRANCIS A. ARNOLD, JR. D.D.S.<br />

1954-55 GEORGE C. PAFFENBARGER, D.D.S.<br />

1955-56 PAUL E. BOYLE, D.M.D.<br />

1956-57 JOSEPH F. VOLKER, D.D.S., M.S., PH.D.<br />

1957-58 REIDAR F. SOGNNAES, L.D.S., PH.D., D.M.D.<br />

1958-59 NED B. WILLIAMS, D.D.S., PH.D.<br />

1959-60 HAMILTON B. G. ROBINSON, D.D.S., M.S.<br />

1960-61 HOLMES T. KNIGHTON, D.D.S.<br />

1961-62 JAMES A. ENGLISH, D.D.S., M.S., PH.D.<br />

1962-63 SEYMOUR J. KRESHOVER, D.D.S., PH.D., M.D.<br />

1963-64 DAN Y. BURRILL, L.L.B., D.D.S., M.S.<br />

1964-65 MARTIN A. RUSHTON, M.A., L.D.S., M.B., M.D.<br />

1965-66 BARNET M. LEVY, D.D.S., M.S.<br />

1966-67 RICHARD S. MANLY, M.A., PH.D.<br />

1967-68 RALPH W. PHILLIPS, M.S.<br />

1968-69 JOHN B. MACDONALD, D.D.S., M.S., PH.D.<br />

1969-70 CLIFTON O. DUMMETT, D.D.S., M.S.D., M.P.H.<br />

1970-71 GORDON H. ROVELSTAD, D.D.S., M.S.D., PH.D.<br />

1971-72 FRANK J. ORLAND, D.D.S., PH.D.<br />

1972-73 GUNNAR RYGE, M.S., D.D.S<br />

1973-74 MOGENS ROY SKOUGAARD, D.D.S., D.M.SC<br />

1974-75 JAMES KNUCKEY AVERY, D.D.S., PH.D.<br />

1975-76 DAVID B. SCOTT<br />

1976-77 HAROLD MILTON FULMER, D.D.S<br />

1977-78 GEORGE SIMPSON BEAGRIE, D.D.S., D.SC<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 47


1978-79 FINN BRUDEVOLD, M.S., D.D.S<br />

1979-80 HARALD A. LOE, D.D.S.<br />

1980-81 JOHN A. GRAY, PH.D.<br />

1981-82 MARIE U. NYLEN, D.D.S.<br />

1982-83 ANTONY H. MELCHER, B.D.S., H.D.D., M.D.S.<br />

1983-84 ROBERT M. FRANK, D.D.S., M.D.<br />

1984-85 A. RICHARD TEN CATE, B.SC., PH.D., B.D.S.<br />

1985-86 PAUL GOLDHABER, D.D.S.<br />

1986-87 IVAR A. MJOR, B.D.S., M.S.D., M.S., ODONT.DR..<br />

1987-88 ROY CHRISTOPHER PAGE, D.D.S., PH.D.<br />

1988-89 WILLIAM DENNIS MCHUGH, L.D.S., B.D.S., D.D.SC., F.D.S., ODONT.DR.<br />

1989-90 ERNEST NEWBRUN, B.D.S., M.S., D.M.D., PH.D.<br />

1990-91 WILLIAM HENRY BOWEN, B.D.S., M.SC., PH.D.<br />

1991-92 ROBERT JOSEPH GENCO, D.D.S., PH.D.<br />

1992-93 JOHN CLIFFORD GREENE, D.M.D., M.P.H.<br />

1993-94 STEPHEN H.Y. WEI, D.D.S., M.D.S., M.S.<br />

1994-95 BARRY JOHN SESSLE, B.D.S., M.D.S., M.SC., PH.D.<br />

1995-96 RICHARD R. RANNEY, D.D.S., M.S.<br />

1996-97 JOHN S. GREENSPAN, B.S.C., PH.D.<br />

1997-98 PER-OLAF GLANTZ, D.D.S., PH.D., ODONT.DR.<br />

1998-99 MAMORU SAKUDA, D.D.S., D.D.SC/PH.D.<br />

1999-2000 SALLY J. MARSHALL, PH.D.<br />

2000-01 MARJORIE JEFFCOAT<br />

2001-02 GRAHAM EMBERY<br />

2002-03 JOHN CLARKSON<br />

2003-04 STEPHEN CHALLACOMBE<br />

James Leon Williams<br />

The First President, 1921-22, 1922-23<br />

• born 21 April 1852, Embden, Maine<br />

• died 23 February 1932, New York City<br />

(In Memoriam J Dent Res 12: 877-885, 1932)<br />

• Presidential remarks pertinent to the Association,<br />

made at a meeting of the New York Section of<br />

the <strong>IADR</strong>, 27 January 1922, at the New York Academy of Medicine, in the introductory aspects of the<br />

scientific paper "Disputed Points and Unsolved Problems in the Normal and Pathological Histology of<br />

Enamel"<br />

J Dent Res 5: 27-107, 1923<br />

• Journal of Dental Research Editorial Board, 1919-31<br />

• A Founder of <strong>IADR</strong><br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 48


Paul Roscoe Stillman<br />

The Second (Interim) President, 1923-24<br />

• born 4 June 1871, Greenwich, New<br />

York<br />

• died 15 December 1945<br />

• Faculty member:<br />

Columbia University<br />

New York University<br />

• President:<br />

American Academy of Periodontology<br />

Periodontology Section, Seventh International Dental Congress<br />

• Vice-President, First District Dental Society of New York<br />

• A Founder of <strong>IADR</strong><br />

Albert Edward Webster<br />

The Third President, 1924-25, 1931-32<br />

(Served two full but nonconsecutive terms)<br />

• born 1866, Canada<br />

• died 5 November 1936<br />

(In Memoriam J Dent Res 16: 359-360,<br />

1937)<br />

• Inaugural remarks delivered at Memphis,<br />

22 March 1931: "brief thanks"<br />

J Dent Res 11: 449, 1931<br />

• Farewell Address delivered at Columbus, Ohio, 20 March 1932:<br />

"The Value of Research in Dentistry"<br />

J Dent Res 12: 412-414, 1932<br />

• University of Toronto, 1893-1926<br />

Dean, Faculty of Dentistry, 1915-23<br />

• Canadian representative, International Dental Congress, 1904<br />

• President:<br />

American Institute of Dental Teachers<br />

Canadian Dental Association<br />

• Editor, Dominion Dental Journal, 1900-1935<br />

Frederick Bogue Noyes<br />

The Fourth President, 1925-26<br />

• born 22 August 1872, Chicago, Illinois<br />

• died 25 July 1961, Lake Worth, Florida<br />

• Northwestern University, 1897-1920<br />

Professor, Histology & Orthodontics<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 49


• University of Illinois College of Dentistry:<br />

Professor, Orthodontics, 1921-40<br />

Chairman, Department of Orthodontics, 1928-36<br />

Chairman, Department of Histology, 1928-35<br />

Dean, 1928-40<br />

• President:<br />

Chicago Section, <strong>IADR</strong>, 1920-28 (& Founder)<br />

Illinois State Dental Society, 1921-22<br />

Institute of Medicine of Chicago, 1943<br />

Leuman Maurice Waugh<br />

The Fifth President, 1926-27<br />

• born 6 March 1877, New Dundee, Ontario<br />

• died 6 May 1972, Betterton, Maryland<br />

(In Memoriam J Dent Res 51: 1321, 1972)<br />

• University of Buffalo, 1901-14<br />

Professor, Histology & Pathology<br />

• Columbia University, 1916-45:<br />

A founder of the School of Dental & Oral<br />

Surgery and the founder of its Graduate School<br />

of Orthodontics<br />

Professor, Orthodontics<br />

• Director, American Board of Orthodontics, 1949-53<br />

• President:<br />

Northeastern Society of Orthodontics, 1926<br />

American Association of Orthodontists, 1935<br />

American Board of Orthodontics, 1953<br />

New York Academy of Dentistry, 1931-33<br />

Dental Society of the State of New York, 1920-21<br />

• A Founder, Secretary Pro Tem, International<br />

Association for Dental Research, 1920<br />

Leroy Matthew Simpson Miner<br />

The Sixth President, 1927-28, 1928-29<br />

• born 13 April 1882, Chicago, Illinois<br />

• died 19 April 1964, Boston, Massachusetts<br />

• The First Presidential Address, delivered at<br />

Washington, 25 March 1928.<br />

Topic: A discussion of the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

J Dent Res 8: 395-400, 1928<br />

• The Second Presidential Address, delivered at Chicago, 23 March 1929.<br />

Topic: The need for dental education more relevant to research<br />

J Dent Res 9: 269-272, 1929<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 50


• Boston University School of Medicine (Stomatology), 1918-44<br />

• Harvard School of Dental Medicine Dean, 1922-44<br />

• President, American Dental Association, 1936-37<br />

Arthur Davenport Black<br />

The Seventh President, 1929-30<br />

• born 15 November 1870, Jacksonville, Illinois<br />

• died 7 December 1937, Evanston, Illinois<br />

(In Memoriam J Dent Res 17: 337-338, 1938)<br />

• Presidential Farewell Address delivered at<br />

Toronto, 25 March 1930:<br />

"A Dental Research Program"<br />

J Dent Res 10: 368-372, 1930<br />

• Northwestern University Dental School, 1900-1937<br />

Professor, Operative Dentistry & Dental Pathology<br />

• President:<br />

American Institute of Dental Teachers<br />

Illinois State Dental Society<br />

Chicago Centennial Dental Congress, 1933<br />

Ura Garfield Rickert<br />

The Eighth President, 1930-31<br />

• born 22 October 1879, Wadsworth, Ohio<br />

• died 22 October 1938, Ann Arbor, Michigan<br />

(In Memoriam J Dent Res 18: 293-294, 1939)<br />

• Presidential farewell remarks at Memphis, 22<br />

March 1931:<br />

"Several Urgent Problems in Dental Research"<br />

J Dent Res 11: 438-449, 1931<br />

• University of Michigan School of Dentistry<br />

Professor, Diagnostics, Therapeutics, & Radiology, 1916-38<br />

• President:<br />

American College of Dentists, 1932<br />

Michigan State Dental Society, 1937<br />

• (The next presidential year, 1931-32, was filled by Albert Webster's second term in office)<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 51


Russell Welford Bunting<br />

The Ninth President, 1932-33<br />

• born 2 June 1881, Ann Arbor, Michigan<br />

• died 22 November 1962, Ann Arbor, Michigan<br />

(In Memoriam J Dent Res 42: 2, 1963)<br />

• Presidential farewell remarks delivered at<br />

Chicago, 19 March 1933:<br />

"Certain Trends in Dental Research"<br />

J Dent Res 13: 175-181, 1933<br />

• University of Michigan School of Dentistry, 1903-50<br />

Professor, Secretary, & Dean, Dental Faculty<br />

• Director, Dental Caries Research Project of Children's Fund of Michigan<br />

• Secretary, AAAS Nd, 1950-58<br />

Edward Howard Hatton<br />

The Tenth President, 1933-34<br />

• born 2 April 1876, LaRose, Illinois<br />

• died 15 August 1959, Evanston, Illinois<br />

• Presidential farewell remarks delivered at<br />

Chicago, 18 March 1934:<br />

"Louis-Charles Malassez: 1842-1909"<br />

J Dent Res 14: 154-157, 1934<br />

• Northwestern University Dental School, 1916-59<br />

Chairman, Department of Oral Pathology<br />

• Secretary, 1938-41, <strong>IADR</strong><br />

Secretary-Treasurer, 1941-57, <strong>IADR</strong><br />

• Hatton (Novice) Award named in his honor<br />

Joseph Luke Teasdale Appleton<br />

The Eleventh President, 1934-35<br />

• born 18 September 1888, Albany, New York<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Chicago, 18 March<br />

1934 (not printed, but cited J Dent Res 14: 187,<br />

1934)<br />

• Farewell Address delivered at Chicago, 17 March<br />

1935.<br />

Topic: Relation of <strong>IADR</strong> to J Dent Res, indexing of dental literature, public welfare, and the welfare of<br />

dentistry<br />

J Dent Res 15: 140-147, 1935-36<br />

• Chairman, Council on Dental Research, American Dental Association, 1931-46<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 52


• University of Pennsylvania School of Dentistry, 1914-59<br />

Professor & Chairman, Department of Bacteriology<br />

Theodore Bernhard Beust<br />

The Twelfth President, 1935-36<br />

• born 14 January 1871, New Albany, Indiana<br />

• died 24 November 1937<br />

(In Memoriam J Dent Res 17: 336-337, 1938)<br />

• Presidential Address delivered at Chicago, 17<br />

March 1935. Topic: The importance of the<br />

Journal J Dent Res 15: 150-154, 1935-36<br />

• Farewell Address delivered at Louisville, 15 March 1936. Topic: On research and researchers<br />

J Dent Res 15: 296-299, 1935-36<br />

• University of Louisville College of Dentistry<br />

Professor, Dental Histology & Embryology, Comparative Dental Anatomy, Dental Bacteriology &<br />

Biology, 1917-37<br />

William Graham Skillen<br />

The Thirteenth President, 1936-37<br />

• born 6 November 1884, Toronto, Ontario<br />

• died 27 August 1958, Chicago, Illinois<br />

• Presidential Address delivered at Louisville,<br />

15 March 1936. Topic: Factors contributing<br />

to the success of the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

J Dent Res 15: 301-304, 1935-36<br />

• Farewell Address delivered at Baltimore, 14 March 1937. Topic: On preceptors—their importance and<br />

influence in dental research<br />

J Dent Res 16: 290-294, 1937<br />

• Northwestern University Dental School, 1912-58<br />

Professor, Histology<br />

Paul Clifford Kitchin<br />

The Fourteenth President, 1937-38<br />

• born 8 October 1891, Toledo, Ohio<br />

• died 16 June 1972, Fife Lake, Michigan<br />

(In Memoriam J Dent Res 51: 1524, 1972)<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Baltimore,<br />

14 March 1937: "brief thanks"<br />

J Dent Res 16: 295-297, 1937<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 53


• Farewell Address delivered at Minneapolis, 13 March 1938. Topic: On microscopy in dentistry<br />

J Dent Res 17: 274-289, 1938<br />

• Chairman:<br />

ADA Research Section, 1935<br />

NIDR Dental Study Section, 1946-49<br />

• National Advisory Council on Dental Research, NIH, 1949-52<br />

• Ohio State University College of Dentistry, 1925-57<br />

Professor, Oral Histology & Embryology<br />

• Secretary, AAAS Nd, 1940-44<br />

Thomas Joseph Hill<br />

The Fifteenth President, 1938-39<br />

• born 10 March 1886, Ebensburg, Pennsylvania<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Minneapolis, 13<br />

March 1938: "brief thanks"<br />

J Dent Res 17: 291-292, 1938<br />

• Farewell Address delivered at Cleveland, 19<br />

March 1939:<br />

"The Influence of Saliva upon the Growth of Oral Bacteria"<br />

J Dent Res 18: 214-224, 1939<br />

• Western Reserve University School of Dentistry<br />

Professor, Oral Pathology, 1909-55<br />

• Chairman:<br />

ADA Council on Dental Research, 1955-60<br />

Board of Scientific Review, Intramural Programs, NIDR, USPHS, 1957-60<br />

Committee on Research, Survey of Dentistry, 1957-60<br />

• President:<br />

Northern Ohio Dental Association, 1928<br />

American College of Dentists, 1958<br />

William John Gies<br />

The Sixteenth President, 1939-40<br />

• born 21 February 1872, Reisterstown, Maryland<br />

• died 20 May 1956, Lancaster, Pennsylvania<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Cleveland, 18<br />

March 1939. Topic: On other dental organizations<br />

and the needed changes in the organization of<br />

<strong>IADR</strong><br />

J Dent Res 18: 230-236, 1939<br />

• Farewell Address delivered at Philadelphia, 14 March 1940:<br />

"The Work & Functions of the <strong>IADR</strong>"<br />

J Dent Res 19: 258-266, 1940<br />

• Columbia University Professor, 1907-37<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 54


• Editor (& Founder), Journal of Dental Research, 1919-35<br />

• Secretary (& Founder), <strong>IADR</strong>, 1928-38<br />

• Secretary, AAAS Nd, 1936-39<br />

Wilmer Souder<br />

The Seventeenth President, 1940-41<br />

• born 21 February 1884, Salem, Indiana<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Philadelphia,<br />

14 March 1940. Topic: On exploitation of<br />

dentistry by manufacturers' false<br />

advertising claims<br />

J Dent Res 19: 276-278, 1940<br />

• Farewell Address delivered at St. Louis, 16 March 1941:<br />

"Loyalty to Our Association and to Our Protecting Nation"<br />

J Dent Res 20: 217-220, 1941<br />

• National Bureau of Standards, 1911-54<br />

Chief, Metrology Division, 1945-54<br />

• Souder (DMG) Award named in his honor<br />

Isaac Schour<br />

The Eighteenth President, 1941-42<br />

• born 11 January 1900, Efingar, Russia<br />

• died 5 June 1964, Chicago, Illinois<br />

(In Memoriam J Dent Res 43: 638,<br />

1964)<br />

• Presidential remarks delivered at St. Louis, 16 March 1941:<br />

"The Problem of Integration in Dental Research, Training and Clinical Practice"<br />

J Dent Res 20: 221-230, 1941<br />

• Farewell Address delivered at New York City, 14 March 1942:<br />

"The Work and Functions of the <strong>IADR</strong>"<br />

J Dent Res 21: 285-289, 1942<br />

• University of Illinois College of Dentistry, 1924-64:<br />

Professor, Histology, 1935-64<br />

Dean, 1955-64<br />

• Secretary, AAAS Nd, 1946-49<br />

• Schour (<strong>IADR</strong>) Award named in his honor<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 55


Charles Francis Bodecker<br />

The Nineteenth President, 1942-43<br />

• born 2 September 1880, New York City<br />

• died 11 February 1965, New York City<br />

(In Memoriam J Dent Res 44: 462, 1965)<br />

• Presidential Address delivered at New York City,<br />

14 March 1942.<br />

Topic: On the value of basic research<br />

J Dent Res 21: 291-295, 1942<br />

• Farewell Address delivered at Chicago, 14 March 1943.<br />

Topic: Research on commercial products<br />

J Dent Res 22: 191-192, 1943<br />

• Columbia University School of Dental and Oral Surgery<br />

Chairman, Department of Oral Histology, & Director of Research, 1923-46<br />

• Editor, New York State Dental Journal, 1948-65<br />

• (Presented very first research report before <strong>IADR</strong>, 21 December 1922)<br />

Philip Jay<br />

The Twentieth President, 1943-44<br />

• born 5 June 1898, Detroit, Michigan<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Chicago, 14<br />

March 1943.<br />

Topic: Some thoughts relative to growth of the<br />

Association and the annual scientific program<br />

J Dent Res 22: 194-195, 1943<br />

• Farewell Address delivered at Chicago, 19 March 1944.<br />

Topic: On the need for improvement in the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

J Dent Res 23: 181-183, 1944<br />

• University of Michigan School of Dentistry, 1929-68<br />

Professor, Dentistry, Department of Oral Biology<br />

Henry Trendley Dean<br />

The Twenty-first President, 1944-45<br />

• born 25 August 1893, Winstanley Park, Illinois<br />

• died 14 May 1962, Evanston, Illinois<br />

(In Memoriam J Dent Res 42: 3, 1963)<br />

• Presidential Address delivered at Chicago, 19 March<br />

1944.<br />

Topic: On progress in epidemiology<br />

J Dent Res 23: 183-188, 1944<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 56


• Farewell Address delivered at Chicago, 27 May 1945.<br />

Topic: <strong>IADR</strong> business administration improvements; comments on meeting cancellation<br />

J Dent Res 24: 189-191, 1945<br />

• First Dental Officer, National Institutes of Health, 1931<br />

• Dental Director, U.S. Public Health Service, 1945-53<br />

• First Director, National Institute of Dental Research, 1948-53<br />

• President, American Association of Military Dental Surgeons, 1937<br />

• H. Trendley Dean (<strong>IADR</strong>) Award named in his honor<br />

Wallace David Armstrong<br />

The Twenty-second President, 1945-46<br />

(The youngest <strong>IADR</strong> President)<br />

• born 8 July 1905, Celeste, Texas<br />

• Farewell remarks delivered at Kansas<br />

City, Missouri, 17 March 1946 (not<br />

printed, but cited<br />

J Dent Res 25: 173, 1946)<br />

• University of Minnesota College of Medical Science, 1932-:<br />

Professor, Biochemistry<br />

Head, Department of Biochemistry, 1946-<br />

Samuel Wood Chase<br />

The Twenty-third President, 1946-47<br />

• born 27 May 1892, Lowell, Massachusetts<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Kansas City,<br />

Missouri, 17 March 1946:<br />

"Dental Research in the Near Future"<br />

J Dent Res 25: 151-154, 1946<br />

• Western Reserve University School of Dentistry,<br />

1920-62<br />

Professor, Histology & Embryology<br />

Harold Carpenter Hodge<br />

The Twenty-fourth President, 1947-48<br />

• born 19 December 1904, Chicago, Illinois<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Chicago, 22<br />

June 1947:<br />

"Impressions of Operation Crossroads"<br />

J Dent Res 26: 435-439, 1947<br />

• Manhattan Project, 1943-47<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 57


Atomic Energy Project, 1947-58<br />

Chief, Division of Pharmacology & Toxicology<br />

• University of Rochester, 1937-70<br />

Chairman, Department of Pharmacology, 1958-70<br />

Allan Gibson Brodie<br />

The Twenty-fifth President, 1948-49<br />

• born 31 October 1897, New York City<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Rochester,<br />

New York, 20 June 1948:<br />

"Our Common Field of Research"<br />

J Dent Res 27: 717-723, 1948<br />

• University of Illinois College of Dentistry,<br />

1929-66:<br />

Professor & Head, Department of Orthodontics, 1931-66<br />

Dean, 1944-55<br />

• President:<br />

Chicago Association of Orthodontists<br />

International Society of Craniofacial Biology<br />

James Roy Blayney<br />

The Twenty-sixth President, 1949-50<br />

• born 28 July 1889, Alexis, Illinois<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Chicago, 26 June<br />

1949:<br />

"Dental Education and the <strong>IADR</strong>"<br />

J Dent Res 28: 627-631, 1949<br />

• University of Illinois, 1918-36<br />

Head, Department of Material Medical & Dental<br />

Therapeutics<br />

• University of Chicago<br />

Professor & Director, Zoller Memorial Dental Clinic, 1936-54<br />

• President:<br />

Illinois State Dental Society, 1941-42<br />

American Academy of Oral Pathology, 1950<br />

• Director, Evanston Dental Caries Fluoridation Study, 1946-61<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 58


Basil Glover Bibby<br />

The Twenty-seventh President, 1950-51<br />

• born 6 October 1904, Waipawa, New Zealand<br />

• Inaugural remarks delivered at French Lick Springs,<br />

Indiana, 26 March 1950:<br />

"The Scientific Emphasis in Dentistry"<br />

J Dent Res 29: 649-655, 1950<br />

• Farewell Address also delivered at French Lick Springs, 18 March 1951.<br />

Topic: On the needs of the Association<br />

J Dent Res 30: 455-458, 1951<br />

• Tufts University School of Dental Medicine Dean, 1940-47<br />

• Director, Eastman Dental Center, Rochester, New York, 1947-70<br />

• University of Rochester, 1947-70<br />

Professor, Dentistry<br />

Leonard Samuel Fosdick<br />

The Twenty-eighth President, 1951-52<br />

• born 7 November 1903, Chagrin Falls, Ohio<br />

• died 31 January 1969, Tucson, Arizona<br />

(In Memoriam J Dent Res 48: 172, 1969)<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at French Lick<br />

Springs, Indiana, 18 March 1951.<br />

Topic: On the chemistry of caries (not printed in Journal or anywhere else)<br />

• Northwestern University, 1927-69; Dental School, 1929-69<br />

Professor of Chemistry in the Dental School, 1936-69<br />

Maynard Kiplinger Hine<br />

The Twenty-ninth President, 1952-53<br />

• born 25 August 1907, Waterloo, Indiana<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Colorado Springs, 23<br />

March 1952.<br />

Topic: Education, research, & the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

J Dent Res 31: 455-458, 1952<br />

• University of Illinois College of Dentistry<br />

Faculty member, 1936-44<br />

• Indiana University School of Dentistry, 1944-68:<br />

Chairman, Department of Histopathology &<br />

Periodontia, 1944-45<br />

Dean, 1945-68<br />

• Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis Chancellor,<br />

1968-<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 59


• Editor, American Association of Dental Editors, 1941-47<br />

• Chairman, ADA Research Commission, 1952<br />

• President:<br />

American Association of Endodontists, 1946-47<br />

American Association of Dental Editors, 1949-50<br />

Indianapolis District Dental Society, 1952<br />

American Association of Dental Schools, 1953-54<br />

Fund for Dental Education, 1955-61<br />

Indiana State Dental Association, 1957-58<br />

American Academy of Periodontology, 1964<br />

American Dental Association, 1966-67<br />

Francis Arthur Arnold, Jr.<br />

The Thirtieth President, 1953-54<br />

• born 30 December 1910, Orrville, Ohio<br />

• died 1 December 1967, San Francisco,<br />

California<br />

(In Memoriam J Dent Res 47: 4, 1968)<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Philadelphia,<br />

22 March 1953:<br />

"Trends in Research"<br />

J Dent Res 32: 628-632, 1953<br />

• United States Public Health Service, 1936-67<br />

• National Institute of Dental Research:<br />

Associate Director, 1948-53<br />

Director, 1953-66<br />

• Honorary Editor, Archives of Oral Biology<br />

• Board of Editors, Public Health Reports<br />

George Corbly Paffenbarger<br />

The Thirty-first President, 1954-55<br />

• born 3 November 1902, McArthur, Ohio<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at French Lick<br />

Springs, Indiana, 21 March 1954:<br />

"The International Aspects of Our Association<br />

with Special Emphasis on Japan"<br />

J Dent Res 33: 637-643, 1954<br />

• National Bureau of Standards, 1929-40<br />

Senior Research Associate, American Dental Association, at NBS, 1946-70<br />

• President, William J. Gies Foundation for the Advancement of Dentistry, 1966-<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 60


Paul Edmund Boyle<br />

The Thirty-second President, 1955-56<br />

• born 20 April 1900, Somerville, Massachusetts<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Chicago, 20 March<br />

1955. (The Address was an illustrated narration of<br />

a trip to Burma.)<br />

• Harvard University Medical School & School of<br />

Dental Medicine, 1926-45<br />

• University of Pennsylvania, 1945-56<br />

Professor, Oral Histology & Pathology<br />

• Western Reserve University School of Dentistry<br />

Professor & Dean, 1956-69<br />

• President:<br />

American Academy of Oral Pathology, 1949-50<br />

Ohio Division, American Cancer Society, 1967<br />

Joseph Francis Volker<br />

The Thirty-third President, 1956-57<br />

• born 9 March 1913, Elizabeth, New Jersey<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at St. Louis, 24<br />

March 1956:<br />

"The Life of Magitot" (not printed, but cited J<br />

Dent Res 35: 817, 1956)<br />

• Tufts University School of Dental Medicine<br />

Dean, 1947-48<br />

• President, Alabama Academy of Science, 1953-54<br />

• University of Alabama at Birmingham:<br />

Dean, School of Dentistry, 1948-62<br />

Director of Research (& Graduate Studies), Medical Center, 1955-65<br />

Vice-President, Health Affairs, 1962-66<br />

Director, Medical Center, 1966-68<br />

Executive Vice-President, 1968-69<br />

President, 1969-<br />

• Director, Arizona Medical School Study, 1960-61<br />

Reidar Fauske Sognnaes<br />

The Thirty-fourth President, 1957-58<br />

• born 6 November 1911, Bergen, Norway<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Atlantic<br />

City, 22 March 1957:<br />

"A Precious Heritage: F ootnotes on Ivory Art and Dental Science"<br />

J Dent Res 37: 374-383, 1958<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 61


• Harvard School of Dental Medicine, 1945-60:<br />

Associate Dean, 1952-59<br />

Acting Dean, 1959-60<br />

• University of California at Los Angeles:<br />

Founder & Dean, School of Dentistry, 1960-69<br />

Professor, Oral Biology, Center for Health Sciences, 1960-<br />

Professor, Anatomy, Center for Health Sciences, 1963-<br />

• President, American Institute of Oral Biology, 1964-70<br />

• Secretary, AAAS Nd, 1959-62<br />

Ned Blanchard Williams<br />

The Thirty-fifth President, 1958-59<br />

• born 8 July 1912, Dayton, Ohio<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Detroit, 21 March<br />

1958:<br />

"The <strong>IADR</strong> and Communications"<br />

J Dent Res 37: 951-955, 1958<br />

• University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine, 1947-:<br />

Chairman, Department of Microbiology, 1947-72<br />

Chairman, University Senate, 1967-68<br />

Director, Center for Oral Health Research, 1967-<br />

Hamilton Burrows Greaves Robinson<br />

The Thirty-sixth President, 1959-60<br />

• born 16 February 1910, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at San Francisco, 21 March<br />

1959:<br />

"The Journal of Dent al Research, 1919-1958"<br />

J Dent Res 38: 640-649, 1959<br />

• Washington University School of Dentistry at St. Louis<br />

Professor, 1937-44<br />

• Ohio State University College of Dentistry<br />

Professor, Oral Pathology, 1944-58<br />

• University of Missouri at Kansas City:<br />

Professor & Dean, School of Dentistry, 1958-<br />

Acting Chancellor, 1967-68<br />

• Editor, Journal of Dental Research, 1936-58<br />

• President:<br />

Columbus (Ohio) Board of Health, 1946-54<br />

American Academy of Oral Pathology, 1953<br />

American Association of Dental Schools, 1967-68<br />

Pierre Fauchard Academy<br />

• First Vice-President, American Dental Association, 1971-72<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 62


Holmes Tutt Knighton<br />

The Thirty-seventh President, 1960-61<br />

• born 15 September 1902, Bellamy, Alabama<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Chicago, 19 March<br />

1960:<br />

"An Evaluation of Clin ical Research in Dentistry"<br />

J Dent Res 39: 649-652, 1960<br />

• University of Georgia<br />

Faculty member, 1933-34<br />

• Medical College of Virginia<br />

Faculty member, 1934-36<br />

• University of Louisville School of Dentistry<br />

Faculty member, 1936-46<br />

• Washington University at St. Louis<br />

Professor, Microbiology, 1946-50<br />

• Virginia Commonwealth University School of Dentistry, 1951-<br />

Professor, Dentistry & Microbiology<br />

James Andrew English<br />

The Thirty-eighth President, 1961-62<br />

• born 14 May 1910, Harrison Valley,<br />

Pennsylvania<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Boston, 25<br />

March 1961:<br />

"International Aspects of Dental Research"<br />

J Dent Res 40: 631-640, 1961<br />

• United States Navy Dental Corps, 1936-60<br />

Captain (retired)<br />

• State University of New York at Buffalo, School of Dentistry, 1960-:<br />

Professor, Radiology<br />

Dean, 1960-70<br />

Seymour Jacob Kreshover<br />

The Thirty-ninth President, 1962-63<br />

• born 22 June 1912, New York City<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at St. Louis, 17<br />

March 1962:<br />

"The Image of Dental Research"<br />

J Dent Res 41: 917-918, 1962<br />

• Virginia Commonwealth University School<br />

of Dentistry, 1949-56:<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 63


Professor, Oral Pathology & Diagnosis<br />

Director of Dental Research<br />

• National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Dental Research:<br />

Associate Director, 1956-66<br />

Director, 1966-<br />

• Secretary, AAAS Nd, 1963-66<br />

Dan Youngs Burrill<br />

The Fortieth President, 1963-64<br />

• born 9 May 1907, Chicago, Illinois<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Pittsburgh, 23<br />

March 1963.<br />

Topic: The need for Journal funding, and other<br />

organizational changes<br />

J Dent Res 42: 1053-1055, 1963<br />

• Northwestern University Dental School, 1942-46; 1957-<br />

Professor, Oral Diagnosis, & Chairman of Department, 1957-<br />

• University of Louisville, 1946-57<br />

Professor & Chairman, Department of Oral Medicine<br />

• Assistant Secretary-Treasurer, <strong>IADR</strong>, 1952-57<br />

• Secretary-Treasurer, <strong>IADR</strong>, 1957-61<br />

Martin Amsler Rushton<br />

The Forty-first President, 1964-65<br />

• born 29 March 1903, London, England<br />

• died 16 November 1970, London, England<br />

(In Memoriam J Dent Res 50: 327, 1971)<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Los Angeles,<br />

21 March 1964.<br />

Topic: The need for more internatio nality<br />

J Dent Res 43: 725-728, 1964<br />

• Guy's Hospital, London, 1937-67<br />

• University of London, 1946-67<br />

Professor, Dental Medicine & Pathology<br />

• Royal College of Surgeons, 1959-62<br />

Dean, Faculty of Dental Surgery<br />

• President:<br />

British Dental Association<br />

British Society for the Study of Orthodontics, 1947<br />

British Society of Periodontology, 1957<br />

Odontological Section, Royal Society of Medicine<br />

British Division, <strong>IADR</strong>,<br />

1960-62<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 64


Barnet Mortimer Levy<br />

The Forty-second President, 1965-66<br />

• born 13 January 1917, Scranton, Pennsylvania<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Toronto, 21 July<br />

1965:<br />

"The Climate of Research"<br />

J Dent Res 44: 1061-1064, 1965<br />

• Columbia University School of Dental & Oral<br />

Surgery<br />

Director, Research & Postgraduate Studies, 1949-57<br />

• University of Texas:<br />

Professor, Pathology, Dental Branch at Houston, 1957-<br />

Director, Dental Science Institute at Houston, 1964-<br />

• President:<br />

American Board of Oral Pathology, 1965-66<br />

American Academy of Oral Pathology, 1969-70<br />

Richard Samuel Manly<br />

The Forty-third President, 1966-67<br />

• born 31 May 1911, Malta, Ohio<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Miami<br />

Beach, 26 March 1966:<br />

"The Growth of Dental Research"<br />

J Dent Res 46: 5-8, 1967<br />

• Tufts University School of Dental<br />

Medicine<br />

Research Professor, Dentistry, 1945-<br />

• President, Westwood Research Laboratories, Inc., 1953-<br />

• Secretary, AAAS Nd, 1967-70<br />

Ralph Wilbur Phillips<br />

The Forty-fourth President, 1967-68<br />

• born 12 January 1918, Farmland, Indiana<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Washington,<br />

D.C., 16 March 1967:<br />

"The Stature of Dental Research in the<br />

Scientific Community"<br />

J Dent Res 46: 1125-1131, 1967<br />

• Indiana University School of Dentistry<br />

Research Professor, Dental Materials, 1940-<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 65


John Barfoot Macdonald<br />

The Forty-fifth President, 1968-69<br />

• born 23 February 1918, Toronto, Ontario<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at San<br />

Francisco, 21 March 1968:<br />

"Science Education: Backdrop for<br />

Discovery"<br />

J Dent Res 47: 855-859, 1968<br />

• Harvard University, 1956-62<br />

Professor, Microbiology<br />

• Director, Forsyth Infirmary, 1956-62<br />

• University of British Columbia President, 1962-67<br />

• Executive Director, Council of Ontario Universities, 1968-<br />

Clifton Orrin Dummett<br />

The Forty-sixth President, 1969-70<br />

• born 20 May 1919, Georgetown, British Guiana<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Houston, 20 March 1969:<br />

"Comprehensiveness, Too, in Research on Oral Health and<br />

Disease Prevention"<br />

J Dent Res 48: 985-989, 1969<br />

• Farewell remarks delivered at New York City, 15 March<br />

1970.<br />

Topic: On ad hoc committees and recommendations<br />

J Dent Res 49: 911, 914-917, 1970<br />

• Meharry Medical College School of Dentistry:<br />

Professor & Chairman, Department of Periodontology, 1942-45<br />

Dean & Director, Dental Education, 1945-49<br />

• VA Hospital, Tuskegee, Alabama:<br />

Chief of Dental Service, 1949-65<br />

Associate Chief of Staff, Research & Education, 1962-65<br />

• VA Research Hospital, Chicago<br />

Chief of Dental Service, 1965-66<br />

• Editor, American Association of Dental Editors, 1965-<br />

• Dental Director, Watts Neighborhood Health Center, Los Angeles, 1966-67<br />

• University of Southern California School of Dentistry:<br />

Health Center Director, 1967-68<br />

Chairman, Research Committee, 1968-70<br />

Professor & Chairman, Department of Community Dentistry, 1970-<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 66


Gordon Henry Rovelstad<br />

The Forty-seventh President, 1970-71<br />

(At the time the first <strong>IADR</strong> President younger than the <strong>IADR</strong> itself)<br />

• born 19 May 1921, Elgin, Illinois<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at New York City, 18<br />

March 1970:<br />

"The Next Fifty Years—New Goals"<br />

J Dent Res 49: 961-965, 1970<br />

• Northwestern University Dental School<br />

Chief, Dental Department, Children's Memorial<br />

Hospital of Chicago, 1948-53<br />

• Head of Dental Research Laboratory, USNTC, Bainbridge, Maryland, 1954-58<br />

• Head of Research and Science Division, Naval Dental School, Washington, D.C., 1960-65<br />

• Officer in Charge and Scientific Director, Naval Dental Research Institute, USNTC, Great Lakes,<br />

Illinois, 1965-69<br />

• Dental Research Program Director, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and Dental Research Adviser,<br />

Office of Naval Research, Department of the Navy, Washington, D.C., 1969-<br />

Frank J. Orland<br />

The Forty-eighth President, 1971-72<br />

• born 23 January 1917, Little Falls, NY<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Chicago,<br />

IL, 18 March 1971:<br />

"Historical Perspectives Are a Prologue<br />

to the Decades Ahead"<br />

J Dent Res 50(5 Suppl):993-996, 1971<br />

• Various academic posts, University of Chicago, 1941-1988<br />

• Professor emeritus, University of Chicago, 1988-<br />

• Director, Zoller Memorial Dental Clinic, 1954-1966<br />

• Author, The First Fifty-Year History of the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

Author, William John Gies„His Contributions to the Advancement of Dentistry<br />

• Editor, Journal of Dental Research, 1958-1969<br />

Gunnar Ryge<br />

The Forty-ninth President, 1972-73<br />

• born 15 December 1916, Copenhagen, Denmark<br />

• Inaugural remarks delivered at Las Vegas, NV, 23<br />

March 1972 (no address was presented because of<br />

special Keynote Lecture)<br />

• Royal Danish Dental School, 1939-1943, 1946-1950<br />

• Marquette University, 1950-1964<br />

• Branch Chief to Scientific Director, USPHS, Dental Health Center, 1964-1972<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 67


• University of the Pacific, 1972-1983<br />

Professor emeritus, University of the Pacific, 1984<br />

Mogens Roy Skougaard<br />

The Fiftieth President, 1973-74<br />

• born 21 July 1922, Copenhagen, Denmark<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Washington, DC, 10<br />

April 1973:<br />

"Challenge for Tomorrow"<br />

J Dent Res 52(5 Suppl):852-854, 1973<br />

• Visiting Scientist, Brookhaven National Laboratory,<br />

New York, 1963-64<br />

• Head and Founder, Institute for Graduate Studies, Royal Dental College, Copenhagen, 1970<br />

• Initiator and Director, Danish Child Oral Health Program in Kuwait, 1984-1999<br />

James Knuckey Avery<br />

The Fifty-first President, 1974-75<br />

• born 6 August 1921, Holly, CO<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Atlanta, GA, 21<br />

March 1974:<br />

"Internationalization of the International Association<br />

for Dental Research"<br />

J Dent Res 53(5 Suppl):954-957, 1974<br />

• Instructor, University of Rochester Medical and<br />

Dental School, 1952-54<br />

• Faculty, University of Michigan Medical and Dental School, 1954-1990<br />

• Professor emeritus, University of Michigan, 1991<br />

• Director, Dental Research Institute, 1975-1989<br />

David B. Scott<br />

The Fifty-second President, 1975-76<br />

• born 8 May 1919, Providence, RI<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at London, England,<br />

10 April 1975:<br />

"Through the Looking Glass"<br />

J Dent Res 54(Spec Iss C):C6-C8, 1975<br />

• Chief, NIDR Laboratory of Histology and<br />

Pathology, 1958-1965<br />

• Professor, Case Western Reserve University, 1965-1976<br />

• Director, NIDR, 1976-1981<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 68


Harold Milton Fullmer<br />

The Fifty-third President, 1976-77<br />

The Fifth President of the <strong>AADR</strong>, 1976-77<br />

• born 9 July 1918, Gary, IN<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Miami<br />

Beach, FL, 25 March 1976:<br />

"The Support of Dental Research"<br />

J Dent Res 55(Spec Iss D):D6-D9, 1976<br />

• National Institute of Dental Research, 1953-70<br />

• University of Alabama, Birmingham, 1970-1987<br />

Professor emeritus, UAB-Birmingham, 1987<br />

George Simpson Beagrie<br />

The Fifty-fourth President, 1977-78<br />

• born 14 September 1925, Peterhead,<br />

Scotland<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at<br />

Copenhagen, Denmark, 31 March 1977:<br />

"Why Research?"<br />

J Dent Res 56(Spec Iss D):D6-D9, 1977<br />

• University of Edinburgh Dental School, 1963-68<br />

• University of Toronto Dental School, 1968-1978<br />

Dean, Faculty of Dentistry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, 1978-88<br />

Dean emeritus, UBC, 1989<br />

Finn Brudevold<br />

The Fifty-fifth President, 1978-79<br />

• born 12 June 1910, Gjovik, Norway<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Washington,<br />

DC, 15 March 1978:<br />

"Broadening the Mission of <strong>IADR</strong>"<br />

J Dent Res 58(Spec Iss C):1180-1183, 1979<br />

• Eastman Dental Dispensary, 1940-41<br />

• University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, 1941-42<br />

• Tufts College Dental School, 1942-1949<br />

• University of Rochester, 1949-1958<br />

• Professor of Dentistry, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, 1958-1967<br />

• Forsyth Dental Center, 1958-1986<br />

Senior Member of Staff emeritus (Forsyth), 1989<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 69


Harald A. Löe<br />

The Fifty-sixth President, 1979-81<br />

• born 19 July 1926, Steinkjer, Norway<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at New Orleans,<br />

LA, 28 March 1979:<br />

"Scientific Revolutions in Dentistry"<br />

J Dent Res 58(Spec Iss D):2164-2168, 1979<br />

• School of Dentistry, Oslo University, 1952-55,<br />

1959-62<br />

• Norwegian Institute of Dental Research, 1956-62<br />

• Fulbright Research Fellow, University of Illinois-Chicago, 1957-58<br />

• Royal Dental College, Aarhus, Denmark, 1962-72<br />

• University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, 1972-74<br />

• University of Connecticut, Farmington, 1974-82, 1994-<br />

• Director, National Institute of Dental Research, 1983-94<br />

John A. Gray<br />

The Fifty-seventh President, 1980<br />

• born 13 August 1924, Waterbury,<br />

CT<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at<br />

Osaka, Japan, 5 June 1980:<br />

"Future of the <strong>IADR</strong>"<br />

J Dent Res 59(DI):1658-1661, 1980<br />

• Procter & Gamble, 1948-80<br />

• Executive Director, <strong>IADR</strong>/<strong>AADR</strong>, 1980-90<br />

Marie U. Nylen<br />

The Fifty-eighth President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 1981-82<br />

The Eighth President of the <strong>AADR</strong>, 1979-80<br />

• born 13 April 1924, Denmark<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Chicago, IL, 19<br />

March 1981:<br />

"<strong>IADR</strong> President-elect’s Speech"<br />

J Dent Res 60(C):1483-1485, 1981<br />

• The first woman elected President of the <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

• Royal Dental College, Copenhagen, Denmark, 1951-55<br />

• National Institute of Dental Research, 1949-51, 1955-89<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 70


Antony H. Melcher<br />

The Fifty-ninth President, 1982-83<br />

• born 1 July 1927, Johannesburg, South Africa<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at New Orleans,<br />

LA, 18 March 1982:<br />

"Growing Pains in a Sixty-year-old"<br />

J Dent Res 61(7):836-837, 1982<br />

• General practice, Johannesburg, 1949-61<br />

• Institute of Dental Surgery, Eastman Dental<br />

Hospital, London, England, 1961-64<br />

• Royal College of Surgeons of England, 1964-69<br />

• University of Toronto, ON, Canada, 1969-1993<br />

Professor emeritus, University of Toronto, 1993<br />

• Established and Directed the Medical Research Council in Periodontal Physiology, 1973-83<br />

Robert M. Frank<br />

The Sixtieth President, 1983-84<br />

• born 21 May 1924, Strasbourg, France<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Sydney,<br />

Australia, 1 August 1983:<br />

"The Need for an International Association<br />

for Dental Research"<br />

J Dent Res 62(11):1102-1103, 1983<br />

• Dental School, Strasbourg, 1947-52<br />

• Harvard School of Dental Medicine, 1958-59<br />

• Dental School, University of St. Andrews, Scotland, 1967<br />

• University of Manchester (England), 1979-85<br />

• Dental Research Center of Strasbourg, 1968-90<br />

• Professor, Dean, Facult³ de Chirurgie Dentaire, Universit³ Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg, 1970-92<br />

Professor emeritus, 1993<br />

• Editor, J Biol Buccale, Arch Oral Biol, Calcif Tissue Res<br />

A. Richard Ten Cate<br />

The Sixty-first President, 1984-85<br />

• born 21 October 1933, Accrington, Lancashire, England<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Dallas, TX, 15 March 1984:<br />

"Dental Research„More or Less"<br />

J Dent Res 63(7):942-943, 1984<br />

• Royal College of Surgeons of England, 1961-63<br />

• Guy's Hospital Medical School, University of London,<br />

1963-68<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 71


• Faculty of Dentistry, University of Toronto, ON, Canada, 1968-77<br />

Dean, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Toronto, 1977-89<br />

Vice Provost, Health Sciences, University of Toronto, 1989-94<br />

Paul Goldhaber<br />

The Sixty-second President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 1985-86<br />

The Second President of the <strong>AADR</strong>, 1973-74<br />

• born 16 March 1924, New York, NY<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Las Vegas, NV,<br />

21 March 1985:<br />

"From Mice to Men"<br />

J Dent Res 64(7):947-951, 1985<br />

• Harvard Medical School, 1948-50<br />

• School of Dental and Oral Surgery, Columbia University (NY), 1950<br />

• Harvard School of Dental Medicine, 1954-1990<br />

Dean, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, 1968-1990<br />

Emeritus Dean, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, 1990<br />

Ivar A. Mjör<br />

The Sixty-third President, 1986-87<br />

• born 18 September 1933, Norway<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at The<br />

Hague, The Netherlands, 26 June 1986:<br />

"The Impact of Dental Research on<br />

Dental Practice"<br />

J Dent Res 65(10):1194-1195, 1986<br />

• Dental Officer, Royal Norwegian Army,<br />

1957-58<br />

• University of Alabama Medical Center, 1959-61<br />

• Norwegian Institute of Dental Research, 1961-67<br />

• University of Oslo, 1968-73<br />

• Director, Scandinavian Institute of Dental Materials, 1973-93<br />

• College of Dentistry, University of Florida (Gainesville), 1993-<br />

• Editor, Norwegian Dental Journal, 1971-82<br />

Editor,in-Chief, Acta Odontol Scand<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 72


Roy Christopher Page<br />

The Sixty-fourth President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 1987-88<br />

The Eleventh President of the <strong>AADR</strong>, 1982-83<br />

• born 7 February 1932, Campobello, SC<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Chicago, IL, 11<br />

March 1987:<br />

"The International Association for Dental<br />

Research: A Vision of the Future"<br />

J Dent Res 66(7):1206-1209, 1987<br />

• Private practice, periodontics, Seattle, WA, 1963-<br />

• University of Washington Schools of Medicine and Dentistry, Seattle, 1967-<br />

Director of Research, University of Washington School of Dentistry, Seattle, 1976-94<br />

Associate Dean for Research, University of Washington School of Dentistry, Seattle, 1994-<br />

William Dennis McHugh<br />

The Sixty-fifth President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 1988-89<br />

The Twelfth President of the <strong>AADR</strong>, 1983-84<br />

• born 8 May 1929, Berwick-on-Tweed, England<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Montreal,<br />

Quebec, Canada, 9 March 1988:<br />

"Choice and Challenge"<br />

J Dent Res 67(7):978-979, 1988<br />

• Dundee (Scotland) Dental School, 1950-53<br />

• Royal Dental School, Malmù, Sweden, 1954-56<br />

• Royal Dental Hospital, London, England, 1956-58<br />

• University of Birmingham, England, 1958-59<br />

• St. Andrews (Scotland) University Dental School, 1959-70<br />

• Director, Eastman Dental Center, Rochester, NY, 1970-94<br />

Associate Dean for Dental Affairs, School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Rochester, NY,<br />

1970-94<br />

Director emeritus, Eastman Dental Center, Rochester, NY, 1994<br />

Professor emeritus, University of Rochester, NY, 1994<br />

Ernest Newbrun<br />

The Sixty-sixth President, 1989-90<br />

• born 1 December 1932, Vienna, Austria<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Dublin, Ireland, 28 June<br />

1989:<br />

"Dental Research: Problems, Progress, and Prognosis"<br />

J Dent Res 68(10):1377-1378, 1989<br />

• Eastman Dental Center, Rochester, NY, 1955-57<br />

• University of Alabama (Birmingham) Medical Center, 1957-59<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 73


• Institute of Dental Research, Sydney, Australia, 1960-61<br />

• University of California, San Francisco, 1961-94<br />

• Professor emeritus, UCSF, 1994<br />

• Editor, Fluorides and Dental Caries, 1986<br />

William Henry Bowen<br />

The Sixty-seventh President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 1990-91<br />

The Tenth President of the <strong>AADR</strong>, 1981-82<br />

• born 11 December 1933, Enniscorthy, Ireland<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Cincinnati, OH, 7<br />

March 1990:<br />

"Apathy"<br />

J Dent Res 69(7):1350-1351, 1990<br />

• Private dental practice, London, England, 1955-<br />

56<br />

• Royal College of Surgeons, London, England, 1956-59<br />

• Nuffield Foundation Fellow, 1962-65<br />

• Senior Research Fellow, 1965-69<br />

• Sir Wilfred Fish Fellow, 1969-1973<br />

• Acting Chief, Caries Prevention Branch, National Institute of Dental Research, 1973-79<br />

• Chief, Caries Prevention Branch, National Institute of Dental Research, 1979-82<br />

• Chairman, Dental Research, University of Rochester, NY, 1982-<br />

• Director, Cariology Center, University of Rochester, NY, 1984-<br />

Robert Joseph Genco<br />

The Sixty-eighth President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 1991-92<br />

The Fourteenth President of the <strong>AADR</strong>, 1985-86<br />

• born 31 October 1938, Silver Creek, NY<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Acapulco, Mexico, 17<br />

April 1991:<br />

"The Trust and the Agenda"<br />

J Dent Res 70(8):1102-1104, 1991<br />

• School of Dental Medicine, State University of New<br />

York, Buffalo, 1967-<br />

• Editor, J Periodontol, 1988-<br />

ADA Gold Medal Award, 1991<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 74


John Clifford Greene<br />

The Sixty-ninth President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 1992-93<br />

The Fifteenth President of the <strong>AADR</strong>, 1986-87<br />

• born 19 July 1926, Ashland, KY<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Glasgow,<br />

Scotland<br />

J Dent Res 71, 1992<br />

• USPHS Hospital, Chicago, 1952-53<br />

• USPHS Hospital, San Francisco, 1953-54<br />

• Asst. Regional Dental Consultant, Region IX, San Francisco, 1954-56<br />

• Asst. to Chief Dental Officer, USPHS, Washington, DC, 1958-60<br />

• Chief, Epidemiology Program, Dental Health Center, 1961-66<br />

• Deputy Director, Division of Dental Health, 1966-70<br />

• Director, Division of Dental Health, 1970-73<br />

• Acting Director/Director, Bureau of Health Resources Development, 1973-75<br />

• Chief Dental Officer, USPHS, 1974-81<br />

• Deputy Surgeon General, 1978-81<br />

• Professor and Dean, School of Dentistry, University of California, San Francisco, 1981-1994<br />

Professor and Dean emeritus, UCSF, 1994<br />

Stephen H.Y. Wei<br />

The Seventieth President, 1993-94<br />

• born 17 September 1937<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Chicago, IL, 10<br />

March 1993:<br />

"Promotion of Research Worldwide"<br />

J Dent Res 72(7):1060-1061, 1993<br />

• University of Iowa, 1967-83<br />

• University of California, San Francisco, 1983-84<br />

• Chair Professor and Head, Department of ChildrenÍs Dentistry and Orthodontics, Prince Philip Dental<br />

Hospital, Hong Kong, 1984-1993<br />

Dean, Faculty of Dentistry, and Director, Prince Philip Dental Hospital, Hong Kong (1989-1997)<br />

Professor emeritus, University of Hong Kong<br />

• Founding Editor-in-Chief, Editor emeritus, Pediatric Dentistry (1978-1982)<br />

Barry John Sessle<br />

The Seventy-first President, 1994-95<br />

• born 28 May 1941, Sydney, NSW, Australia<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Seattle, WA, 9<br />

March 1994:<br />

"Dental Research: Strategic Alliances and the<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 75


Issue of Quality"<br />

J Dent Res 73(7):1237-1240, 1994<br />

• University of New South Wales, 1965-68<br />

• National Institute of Dental Research, 1968-70<br />

• University of Toronto Dental School, ON, Canada, 1971-<br />

Dean, University of Toronto Dental School, 1990-<br />

Richard R. Ranney<br />

The Seventy-second President of the <strong>IADR</strong>,<br />

1995-96<br />

The Nineteenth President of the <strong>AADR</strong>, 1990-91<br />

• born 11 July 1939<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Singapore,<br />

28 June 1995:<br />

"Seventy-five and Growing"<br />

J Dent Res 74(7):1343-1345, 1995<br />

• Chief Dental Officer, USPHS Outpatient<br />

Clinic, Cincinnati, OH, 1964-66<br />

• University of Oregon Dental School, 1969-72<br />

• Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, 1972-86<br />

• Dean (1986-89) and Professor of Periodontics (1986-91), School of Dentistry, University of Alabama,<br />

Birmingham<br />

• Professor and Dean, Baltimore (MD) College of Dental Surgery, 1991-<br />

John S. Greenspan<br />

The Seventy-third President of the <strong>IADR</strong>,<br />

1996-97<br />

The Seventeenth President of the <strong>AADR</strong>,<br />

1988-89<br />

• born 7 January, 1938, London, England<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at San Francisco, CA, 13 March 1996:<br />

"If Not Us, Then Who?"<br />

J Dent Res 75(6):1336-1337, 1996<br />

• Royal Dental Hospital, London, England, 1962-75<br />

• School of Dentistry, University of California,<br />

San Francisco, 1976-<br />

• Director, Oral AIDS Center, UCSF, 1992-<br />

• Senior Editor, Oral Diseases, 1994-98<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 76


Per-Olof Glantz<br />

The Seventy-fourth President, 1997-98<br />

• born 23 July 1936, Lund, Sweden<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Orlando,<br />

FL, 19 March 1997:<br />

"<strong>IADR</strong> in Years to Come"<br />

J Dent Res 76(8):1431-1432, 1997<br />

• Royal Dental School, Malmù, Sweden,<br />

1963-68<br />

• University of Lund, Malmù, Sweden, 1967-73, 1977-98<br />

• University of Gùteborg, Sweden, 1973-77<br />

• University of California, San Francisco, 1977-78<br />

• Prorektor/Vice President, University of Lund, Malmù, Sweden, 1989-92<br />

Dean, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Lund, Malmù, Sweden, 1984-89, 1993-98<br />

Vice Chancellor/President, University of Malmù, Sweden, 1998-<br />

Mamoru Sakuda<br />

The Seventy-fifth President, 1998-99<br />

• born 11 May 1932, Shizuoka, Japan<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Nice, France,<br />

24 June 1998:<br />

"Advancing Dental Research in the 21 st<br />

Century"<br />

J Dent Res 77(9):1668-1669, 1998<br />

• Osaka University Faculty of Dentistry, 1968-1996<br />

Professor emeritus, Osaka University, 1996<br />

• Tokushima University School of Dentistry, 1996-97<br />

• Okayama University School of Dentistry, 1998-<br />

• Kyushu University, Fukuoka, 1999-<br />

Sally J. Marshall<br />

The Seventy-six President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 1999-2000<br />

The Twenty-first President of the <strong>AADR</strong>, 1992-93<br />

• born 8 January 1949<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Vancouver, BC,<br />

Canada, 10 March 1999:<br />

"The <strong>IADR</strong>: Mentor for Dental Research"<br />

J Dent Res 78(8):1384-1385, 1999<br />

• Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, 1970-87<br />

• University of California, San Francisco, 1987-<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 77


Marjorie K. Jeffcoat<br />

The Seventy-seventh President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 2000-2001<br />

The Twenty-fourth President of the <strong>AADR</strong>, 1995-96<br />

• born 14 June 1951<br />

• Inaugural Address delivered at Washington, DC,<br />

April 5, 2000<br />

"The World of Oral Research: How Do We Improve<br />

It?"<br />

J Dent Res 79(7):1448-1449, 2000<br />

• Harvard School of Dental Medicine, 1978-88<br />

• University of Alabama, Birmingham, 1988-<br />

Graham Embery<br />

The Seventy-eighth President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 2001-2002<br />

• born 20 August 1939, Clwyd, North Wales, UK<br />

• Inaugural address delivered at Chiba, Japan, June<br />

27, 2001<br />

"Dental Research¿Our Unique Contribution to<br />

Medical Science"<br />

J Dent Res 80:1688-1689, 2001<br />

• Senior Lecturer and Reader in Dental Science,<br />

University of Liverpool (1973-87)<br />

• Professor of Basic Science, University of Wales Dental School (1987-2001)<br />

• Professor of Dental Science and Dean, School of Dentistry, University of Liverpool, UK (2001-)<br />

• Past President, British Division of <strong>IADR</strong><br />

• Winner, <strong>IADR</strong> Distinguished Scientist Award in Oral Biology<br />

John Clarkson<br />

The Seventy-ninth President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 2002-2003<br />

• Born in Mullingar, Ireland, in 1941<br />

• Inaugural address delivered in San Diego, CA,<br />

USA, March 6, 2002<br />

“The Missions of the <strong>IADR</strong>”<br />

(J Dent Res 81:300-301, 2002)<br />

• BDS, University College, Dublin, Ireland, 1964<br />

PhD, University College, Cork, Ireland, 1987<br />

• Dean, Dental School & Hospital, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland (1998-)<br />

Executive Director, International and American Associations for Dental Research (1990-98)<br />

Deputy Chief Dental Officer, Ireland<br />

Professor/Consultant in Public Dental Health & Community Services<br />

Chair, Department of Public & Child Dental Health<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 78


Stephen Challacombe<br />

The Eightieth President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 2003-2004<br />

• Born April 5, 1946, London, UK<br />

• Inaugural address delivered in Göteborg,<br />

Sweden, June 25, 2003<br />

“Global Perspectives for the <strong>IADR</strong> and<br />

Dental Research” (J Dent Res 82:671, 2003)<br />

• Licentiate in Dental Surgery, Royal College<br />

of Surgeons, England (LDSRCS), 1968<br />

Bachelor of Dental Surgery, University of<br />

London (BDS), 1969<br />

Doctor of Philosophy, University of London (PhD), 1976<br />

Membership of the Royal College of Pathologists (MRCPath), 1981<br />

Fellowship of the Royal College of Pathologists (FRCPath), 1992<br />

Fellowship in Dental Surgery, Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh (FDSRCSEd), 1994<br />

Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences (FMedSci), 1998<br />

• Professor of Oral Medicine, University of London, UK<br />

Head, Division of Oral Medicine, Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, Guys,<br />

Kings & St. Thomas’ Medical and Dental School, London, UK<br />

Director, Centre for the Study of the Oral Manifestations of HIV Infection, London, UK<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 79


CHAPTER SEVEN: ADMINISTRATIVE ASPECTS OF <strong>IADR</strong><br />

Since <strong>IADR</strong> executive officers have been portrayed in the "Pages of Presidents", it is thus fitting to also<br />

cite the several Association Secretaries, Treasurers, and Secretary-Treasurers who have carried out the<br />

innumerable and important tasks of administrating Association affairs, especially between the annual meetings.<br />

Many of these men became the chief executive in a later year.<br />

Secretary Pro Tem:<br />

Leuman M. Waugh 1920<br />

Acting General Secretary:<br />

William J. Gies 1920-22 Leuman M. Waugh 1924<br />

Secretaries:<br />

Albert E. Webster 1927-28 Edward H. Hatton 1938-41<br />

William J. Gies 1928-38<br />

Treasurers:<br />

William C. Rice 1927-32 Bissell B. Palmer 1933-41<br />

Leroy S. M. Miner* 1932-33<br />

Secretary-Treasurers:<br />

Edward H. Hatton 1941-57 Gordon H. Rovelstad 1964-67<br />

Dan Y. Burrill 1957-61 Arthur R. Frechette 1967-<br />

Joseph C. Muhler 1961-64<br />

Assistant Secretary-Treasurers:<br />

Dan Y. Burrill 1952-57 Frances Kendrick 1964-65<br />

Edward H. Hatton 1957-60 Arthur R. Frechette 1965-67<br />

H. F. Campbell (AIBS) 1960-61† Gordon H. Rovelstad 1967-68<br />

Mildred Erickson (AIBS) 1961-62 Harvey W. Lyon 1968-70<br />

Barney O. Green (AIBS) 1962-63 John A. Gray 1970-73<br />

No person appointed 1963-64<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 80


The appointment of Arthur R. Frechette as the current and only full-time salaried Secretary-Treasurer of <strong>IADR</strong><br />

in charge of the efficient <strong>IADR</strong> Central Office has been hailed as a very significant achievement in the history of<br />

the Association. 2<br />

An <strong>IADR</strong> Central Office was established in 1965 on the sixteenth floor in Suite 1636 of the ADA Building at 211<br />

E. Chicago Avenue, Chicago, Illinois.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 81


TRUSTEES AND DIRECTORS<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> Trustees and the Board of Directors also had administrative roles. Although there had been none<br />

designated earlier, in 1933 three men were selected as <strong>IADR</strong> Trustees. They had assigned to them certain<br />

fiduciary duties in the Association. According to the 1940 By-Laws (Article IX, Sections 4a and 4b), 3 their<br />

primary activity seems to have been to look after the Endowment Fund for the Journal.<br />

The first trustees were named respectively to staggered terms of three-, two-, and one-year terms.<br />

However, these years of service were extended, and many of the trustees served terms of five years or longer.<br />

The <strong>IADR</strong> Trustees, chronologically, were Arthur D. Black (1933-38), Bissell B. Palmer (1933-42), Russell W.<br />

Bunting (1933-43, 1943-48), Arthur H. Merritt (1941-44), Edward H. Hatton (1941-50), Thomas J. Hill (1942-<br />

57), J. L. T. Appleton (1944-49), Leuman M. Waugh (1946-57), H. Trendley Dean (1948-57), Harold C. Hodge<br />

(1949-57) and Paul C. Kitchin (1950-57).<br />

In 1952 the Endowment Fund for the Journal was incorporated in New York as the William J. Gies<br />

Foundation for the Advancement of Dentistry. 4 This effected separation of the fund (which surpassed $50,000)<br />

from the <strong>IADR</strong>. Soon after, the Trustees as a body were discontinued when a Board of Directors was appointed<br />

to satisfy legal requirements related to incorporation (Thomas J. Hill, Chairman of the Committee on<br />

Incorporation, indicated in his report the desirability of incorporation) 5 of the <strong>IADR</strong>, which occurred in the State<br />

of Illinois on 12 April 1957. In addition to attending an annual meeting of the corporation, the practical duty of<br />

these Directors was to approve banks as repositories for <strong>IADR</strong> funds, including the Endowment Fund of the<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> for the Journal of Dental Research. This second fund for the Journal had a meager beginning, but by late<br />

1970 it amounted to over $5500. (See chapter sixteen.)<br />

The following nine men were reappointed by the Council to the Board of Directors every year from<br />

1959 through 1970: Paul E. Boyle, Reidar F. Sognnaes, Ned B. Williams, H. B. G. Robinson, Holmes T.<br />

Knighton, James A. English, Frank J. Orland, Thomas J. Hill, and Dan Y. Burrill. (All of these had served as<br />

Presidents of <strong>IADR</strong> except F. J. Orland, who was the Editor of long and substantial standing and who, by the<br />

wisdom of those in charge, must have been considered to possess no less a level of monetary horse sense than<br />

the Past-Presidents.)<br />

THE MONETARY HISTORY<br />

The unstinting donations of time and effort, the engendering of goodwill, and the accomplishments of<br />

volunteers have carried the Association a long way, especially in the early decades. However, money pervades<br />

all things, these days, and through good management the <strong>IADR</strong> has acquired a substantial monetary reserve.<br />

It was the consensus of the History Committee that 'twas unnecessary to present a specific monetary history of<br />

the Association in this volume. However, for those interested, a detailed record of almost all financial<br />

transactions can be found published in the Journal with the proceedings of each annual meeting. For example,<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 82


the financial picture for the 1970 Fiftieth Anniversary year is presented in considerable detail. 6 The earliest<br />

financial report that appeared in the Journal 7 was for the 1944 calendar year. Similar reports of the intervening<br />

years have been published with varying detail depending on preparations by the incumbent Secretary and/or<br />

Treasurer. While some early reports were published only in part, full reports were always available for<br />

inspection by members even if only in mimeographed form at the annual meetings.<br />

Needless to emphasize, during the recent years, monetary aspects paralleled the great growth in every<br />

phase of Association activity. Whereas dues were very meager in the early days, they are now substantial and<br />

stabilized at $30 per year including a subscription to the Journal of Dental Research. There was no registration<br />

fee for the annual meetings until 1955, when it became necessary to charge $2 (to cover the unexpected cost of<br />

professional slide projectionists who were necessary at that Chicago meeting). But, by contrast, registration at<br />

the annual meeting fifteen years later was $10 for members and $20 for nonmembers.<br />

While the Association income increased considerably, so did the expenditures; 8 nevertheless, with wise<br />

management, monetary assets, including those of the Journal, had grown to the substantial figure of $279,283<br />

by 1970. Funds of the Journal of Dental Research had always been maintained in a separate account and<br />

rightfully so, since the Journal had historically been a separate entity, requiring some independence in the use<br />

of its funds in order to rapidly and adequately publish its many scientific manuscripts. This sound financial<br />

situation is in vivid contrast to the meager Depression days of the 1930s when William Gies was said to have<br />

borrowed on his own life insurance in order to keep the Journal in existence.<br />

CONTRIBUTION OF TIME, EFFORT AND SPACE<br />

It should be noted that, over the decades, the custom evolved that the various Schools have the "honor"<br />

to donate portions of a professor's time to the cause of the <strong>IADR</strong>. Not uncommonly, and almost expectedly in<br />

academic circles, it is the unofficial concept that since scientific societies are well within the academic realm,<br />

certain activities within these societies may be considered part of the scholarly pursuit of the professor,<br />

especially when he becomes involved as an officer. As such, he should devote considerable academic (school)<br />

time and effort in addition to his personal time during evenings, weekends, and vacations to the activities of the<br />

Association. This has been especially true of the office of General Secretary, the Editorship, and also the<br />

Presidency. It seems opportune to cite this nonmonetary "labor of love" on the part of <strong>IADR</strong> members and also<br />

to commend the contribution of professorial time and physical space on the part of the respective universities<br />

where it has been so magnanimously provided.<br />

REFERENCES<br />

1. J Dent Res 36: 801, 1957.<br />

2. See "Views and News" in J Dent Res 44: 461, 1965 and "<strong>IADR</strong> Charg³ d'affaires" on page 626 of the<br />

same issue.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 83


3. J Dent Res 19: 341-342, 1940.<br />

4. Orland, F. J.: The Fifty Year History of the Journal and the Biographical Directory of the <strong>IADR</strong>, J Dent<br />

Res 48: H-13, 1969 (Special Commemorative Supplement to the September 1969 issue of vol 48).<br />

5. J Dent Res 34: 770, 1955.<br />

6. J Dent Res 50: 1023-1031, 1971; 51 1151-1159, 1972.<br />

7. J Dent Res 24: 210, 1945.<br />

8. J Dent Res 50: 1024, 1971. The $279,283 mentioned is the Statement of Income and Expenses and Fund<br />

Balances for the six months ending 30 June 1970 (this was at the transition from calendar-year to fiscalyear<br />

accounting, starting 1 July 1970). Total income $160,467 minus total expenses $138,620 equals<br />

$21,847, plus previous fund balance $257,436, equals $279,283.<br />

* Miner became Interim Treasurer when Dean Rice died in office on 23 November 1932.<br />

† Toward the end of Dan Burrill's tenure as Secretary-Treasurer, the Council of the Association concurred with<br />

Burrill's suggestion that a professional group be appointed to operate the routine business of the Association.<br />

The American Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS) was such a body that contracted to function in this<br />

capacity. (Actually, the <strong>IADR</strong> had voted affiliation with AIBS 1 on 23 March 1957.) Hence, one of the AIBS<br />

officers during the time of 1960-63 was appointed Assistant Secretary-Treasurer per se. Unfortunately, Howard<br />

F. Campbell, financial officer of the AIBS, died suddenly in January 1961, weakening the Institute's efficiency.<br />

During 1963 the AIBS could no longer fulfill its obligations to the <strong>IADR</strong>, and the contract was terminated.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 84


CHAPTER EIGHT: THE ORGANIZATION OF <strong>IADR</strong><br />

As a society organized to promote and communicate scientific endeavor, the <strong>IADR</strong> does not need any<br />

elaborate political machinery by which to function. The first President, J. Leon Williams, stated on 27 January<br />

1922 that "dental politics" should be kept out of the new organization. 1 The <strong>IADR</strong> certainly has been above the<br />

common political maneuvering that local, state, and national dental and medical societies are often said to<br />

indulge in.<br />

As a society of scientists and those professing an interest in science, the exact form of the governing<br />

rules should be as unimportant as the spirit behind them must be important. On <strong>IADR</strong> principles, there has<br />

always been concurrence among the officers, the councilors, and the many committeemen and -women. On the<br />

modus operandi, with enough free and open discussion, there has usually been achieved a meeting of minds.<br />

Thus, guide rules to expedite routine and new business of the <strong>IADR</strong> have been kept relatively simple. As<br />

Emerson said, "The less government we have—the better. . ." Yet simple but up-to-date constitution and bylaws<br />

are necessary.<br />

The first Constitution 2 (reproduced earlier in chapter three of this book) was written largely by William<br />

Gies, and it still serves as a basic instrument, although it has been modified through amendments and many bylaw<br />

changes. There were some major revisions of the Constitution in 1940, 1951, 1957, 1964, and 1967. These<br />

changes and relevant discussions were sometimes cited in the JDR for those respective years. But other polemic<br />

writings were found only in the reams of correspondence available to the primary author.<br />

Since the Journal almost never reprinted the Constitution in its entirety, although it was from time to time<br />

printed as a leaflet for general membership distribution, the latest version still being used in 1970 is being<br />

reprinted here as a matter of documentation.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH<br />

Constitution and Bylaws<br />

Adopted March 1957—Revised through March 1967<br />

CONSTITUTION<br />

ARTICLE I. Name<br />

This organization is named: International Association for Dental Research.<br />

ARTICLE II. Objects<br />

The association has been established to promote broadly the advancement of research in all branches of dental<br />

science, and in the related phases of the sciences that contribute directly to the development of oral health-<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 85


service, and which add to the knowledge of the mouth and teeth and of their relation to the body as a whole; and<br />

further, to encourage and facilitate cooperative effort and achievement by and mutual helpfulness among,<br />

investigators in all nations in every division of stomatology to the end that dentistry may render cumulatively<br />

more perfect service to humanity.<br />

ARTICLE III. Membership<br />

SECTION 1. Eligibility. Any individual who is interested in Dental Science and Dental Research shall be<br />

eligible to membership in this Association, provided such person conforms to the recognized standards of<br />

professional ethics.<br />

SECTION 2. Election. Any person who is eligible to membership under Article III, Section 1, who shall have<br />

been nominated in writing in due form by two members of the Association, and who shall have been certified<br />

by the Secretary-Treasurer or Assistant Secretary-Treasurer and approved by the Membership Committee of the<br />

appropriate division, non-divisional section or group shall become a member of the Association upon payment<br />

of dues.<br />

SECTION 3. Discontinuance.<br />

(A) Membership may be automatically terminated by a member, by delivery of a formal notice to the<br />

Secretary-Treasurer of that member's resignation.<br />

(B) Membership may be discontinued for any member by vote at an annual meeting by two-thirds of<br />

the members present and voting, followed by notice to the member from the Secretary-Treasurer<br />

that the membership has been terminated. The person whose membership is threatened with<br />

termination is entitled to appear before the Association or submit a written statement at the annual<br />

meeting to defend his rights to membership.<br />

ARTICLE IV. Divisions<br />

SECTION 1. Organization. Thirty or more members in any nation or group of nations on the same continent,<br />

with the approval of the Council, may organize a Division for the advancement of the objectives of the<br />

Association.<br />

SECTION 2. Management. The affairs of a Division shall be managed by its members in harmony with the<br />

Constitution and Bylaws of the Association.<br />

SECTION 3. Officers. Each Division shall elect a Secretary and such other officers and committees as may<br />

seem desirable.<br />

ARTICLE V. Sections and Groups<br />

SECTION 1. Sections. Each section shall consist of ten or more members of the Association. New sections<br />

may be organized only with the approval of the Division.<br />

SECTION 2. Groups. Members in any branch of dental science, or in fields related to dental science, with the<br />

approval of the Association may organize a group to further the objectives of the Association in special<br />

scientific or professional fields.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 86


SECTION 3. Management. The affairs of Sections and Groups shall be managed in harmony with the<br />

Constitution and Bylaws of the Association.<br />

ARTICLE VI. Meetings<br />

SECTION 1. Annual. The Association shall meet at least once each year unless prevented by circumstances<br />

not under the control of the members.<br />

SECTION 2. Special. Special meetings of the Association may be convened by the Council.<br />

SECTION 3. Division meetings. Each Division shall meet at least once each year unless prevented by<br />

circumstances not under the control of the members.<br />

ARTICLE VII. Officials<br />

SECTION 1. General officers. The general active officers of the Association shall be a President, a President<br />

Elect, a Vice-President, a Secretary-Treasurer, and an Editor. The Council shall appoint an Assistant Secretary<br />

Treasurer to serve at the request of, or in the absence of the Secretary-Treasurer for administrative matters.<br />

(A) Term of Office. The term of office for each officer of the Association excepting the Editor and the<br />

Secretary-Treasurer shall be the one Association year. The term of office of the Editor shall be two<br />

years. The term of office of the Secretary-Treasurer shall be no less than five years and may be<br />

renewed at the discretion of the Council.<br />

(B) Tenure of office. Each officer shall continue to serve until the installation of his duly elected<br />

successor.<br />

SECTION 2. Vacancies. An ad interim vacancy in any office shall be filled for the unexpired term by a<br />

majority vote of the Council. Any vacancy occurring at or during the progress of the ballot preceding an annual<br />

meeting shall be filled by the Association on recommendation by the Council, by vote of a majority of the<br />

members present and voting at the meeting.<br />

SECTION 3. Honorary officers. Honorary officers may be elected by the Association from nominations by<br />

the Council, or by divisions, sections or groups.<br />

ARTICLE VIII. Council<br />

SECTION 1. Personnel. The Council of the Association shall consist of the President, the immediate Past-<br />

President, the President-Elect, the Vice-President, the Secretary-Treasurer, the Editor, one Councillor from each<br />

section, one Councillor from each group, and two Councillors at large.<br />

(A) Division Representation. For the purposes of representation on the Council a division which does<br />

not include two or more sections shall be deemed a section.<br />

(B) Election of Councillors. Councillors from sections shall be elected for a term of one year by the<br />

members of the sections they represent.<br />

(C) Councillors at large. Members of the Association who are not members of any section for<br />

purposes of representation shall be represented on the Council by two Councillors at large who are<br />

not members of any section.<br />

(D) Election of Councillors at large. Two Councillors at large shall be elected for a term of one year<br />

by the Association in the manner by which general active officers of the Association are elected.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 87


SECTION 2. Duties of the Council. The Council shall exercise the functions set forth for it in this<br />

Constitution and the Bylaws of the Association, the functions delegated to it by vote of the Association, and<br />

such other functions as may be necessary in the conduct of the business of the Association.<br />

SECTION 3. Ad interim Committee. During the periods between meetings of the Association the executive<br />

management of the affairs of the Council shall be by an Ad interim Committee of the Council. The Ad interim<br />

Committee shall consist of the President, the immediate Past-President, the President-Elect, the Vice-President,<br />

the Secretary-Treasurer, the Editor, and two additional members to be designated by the Council.<br />

ARTICLE IX. Journal<br />

SECTION 1. Name of Journal. The official publication of the Association is the Journal of Dental Research.<br />

SECTION 2. Management of Journal. A Publication Committee shall be in charge of the Journal.<br />

(A) Publication Committee. The Publication Committee shall consist of the Editor as Chairman, the<br />

President, the President-Elect, and two special members elected by the Association. The Secretary-<br />

Treasurer shall be an ex officio member.<br />

(B) Terms of office. The terms of service of the two special members of the Publication Committee<br />

shall be two years, the terms so staggered that one is elected each year, except in case of vacancy.<br />

(C) Reports. Annually and at such other times as the Council may direct, the Publication Committee<br />

shall report to the Council and the Association concerning the conduct of the Journal.<br />

SECTION 3. Endowments. Endowments for the Journal shall be segregated from the other assets of the<br />

Association.<br />

SECTION 4. Authorization for expenditure. Expenditures of income from endowments for the Journal may<br />

be made only on authorization by the Association.<br />

SECTION 5. Endowment Trustees. If and when endowments for the Journal exceed $10,000, the Council<br />

shall appoint three endowment trustees to be custodians of the endowment assets. The terms of service of the<br />

endowment trustees shall be three years and the terms shall be so staggered that one new trustee is appointed<br />

each year. A trustee may not succeed himself.<br />

ARTICLE X. Nominations and Elections<br />

SECTION 1. Nominations by the Council. One or more nominations for each active and honorary office, for<br />

councillors at large, and for publication committeemen shall be made by the Council and announcement of the<br />

nominations shall be mailed to each member of the Association not less than three months before the date of the<br />

next annual meeting, and in a form to indicate that other nominations may be made by members.<br />

SECTION 2. Nominations by petition. Additional nominations may be made by petition signed by five<br />

members of the Association and received by the Secretary-Treasurer not more than 30 days after the mailing of<br />

the announcement of the Council nominations.<br />

SECTION 3. Notice of Nominations. Not less than one month before the next annual meeting, the<br />

nominations for each office shall be sent by the Secretary-Treasurer to all members of the Association on an<br />

official ballot form for a vote at that meeting.<br />

SECTION 4. Election. A plurality of votes cast shall elect to each office.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 88


ARTICLE XI. Finances<br />

SECTION 1. Dues. At each annual meeting of the Association, the amount of the annual dues to the<br />

Association and the subscription fee for the Journal of Dental Research shall be determined and announced by<br />

the Council. In case no annual meeting is held this function shall be exercised by the Ad interim Committee of<br />

the Council.<br />

SECTION 2. Expenditures. Funds of the Association may be expended only on general or specific<br />

authorization by the Association, except that if the annual meeting of the Association is not held the Ad interim<br />

Committee of the Council may authorize expenditure of funds.<br />

SECTION 3. Expenditures. The Ad interim Committee of the Council may authorize expenditure of funds of<br />

the Association to defray expenses for the business of the Association not foreseen at the time of the annual<br />

meeting.<br />

SECTION 4. Accounts. All accounts of assets belonging to the Association shall be audited annually by a<br />

certified public accountant.<br />

SECTION 5. Reports. All officers collecting, disbursing, or holding in trust assets belonging to the<br />

Association shall report annually to the Council and the Association in written form.<br />

ARTICLE XII. Bylaws<br />

Bylaws and amendments to Bylaws may be proposed at any annual meeting of the Association and may be<br />

adopted at the same meeting by a vote of two-thirds of the members present and voting, the Bylaws and<br />

amendments taking effect at the close of the meeting.<br />

ARTICLE XIII. Quorum<br />

At any regular meeting of the Association, or at any special meeting of the Association called by the Council of<br />

the Association, thirty members shall constitute a quorum provided members from at least three sections are<br />

present, and provided notice of the meeting shall have been mailed to all members at least 60 days prior to the<br />

date on which the meeting is called.<br />

ARTICLE XIV. Amendments to the Constitution<br />

SECTION 1. Proposal. A proposed amendment of this Constitution, formally endorsed by at least five<br />

members and accompanied by a statement of reasons for adoption, may be presented at any annual meeting of<br />

the Association, and thereupon becomes a special order of business for a vote at the succeeding annual meeting.<br />

SECTION 2. Notice and ballot. The Secretary-Treasurer shall mail to each member of the Association not<br />

less than one month before the meeting of the Association at which the amendment is to be voted upon: (a) a<br />

copy of the amendment, (b) the names of the sponsors and the stated reasons for its adoption, (c) a ballot for a<br />

vote on the amendment, and (d) a copy of this article (XIV) of this Constitution.<br />

SECTION 3. Adoption. A proposed amendment shall be adopted by a vote of not less than two-thirds of the<br />

members voting on the question at the meeting of the Association, and shall become a part of the Constitution at<br />

the close of the meeting at which it is adopted.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 89


BYLAWS<br />

SECTION A. Membership<br />

1. Nomination. Nominations for membership shall be signed by two members of the Association who shall<br />

attest to the eligibility of the nominee for membership.<br />

2. Eligibility. The words "individual who is interested in Dental Science and Dental Research" in Article III,<br />

Section 1 of the Constitution shall be interpreted as follows:<br />

(A) Active Member: (1) Persons who are conducting or have conducted research, or, (2) persons who<br />

have presented scientific papers based upon original research before national or international<br />

meetings, or, (3) persons who have had one or more scientific papers based upon original research<br />

published in scientific journals.<br />

(B) Sustaining Member: Persons of scientific training or attainment who are interested in the<br />

furtherance of dental research. The Sustaining Member shall have all rights and privileges of active<br />

membership but shall have no vote.<br />

(C) Affiliate Member: Science oriented persons who have a genuine interest in dental research<br />

although not active research workers. The Affiliate Member shall have all rights and privileges of<br />

active membership but shall have no vote.<br />

(D) Student Member: Predoctoral students enrolled in recognized universities and colleges and<br />

recommended for student membership by two faculty members who are acquainted with the<br />

scientific work of each candidate. Persons elected to student membership must meet the criteria for<br />

active, sustaining, or affiliate membership within five years or be dropped from membership. The<br />

Student Member shall have all the rights and privileges of active membership but shall have no<br />

vote.<br />

(E) Life Member: Any person who has attained the age of 65 and has been a member of the<br />

Association in good standing for at least 25 years. In the event of ill health forcing retirement, only<br />

the latter qualification will be necessary for Life Membership.<br />

3. Election. By unanimous vote of the members in attendance at a meeting, the Secretary may be instructed to<br />

cast a ballot, for the Association, for one or more nominees.<br />

4. Sections and Groups.<br />

(A) Assignment for a member to a section shall be optional.<br />

(B) Secretaries of the Sections shall notify the Secretary-Treasurer of the Association of changes in<br />

Section memberships.<br />

(C) Each section or group may elect as associate members in the section or group persons who are not<br />

members of the Association. Such persons may become members of the Association only if eligible<br />

and in the manner provided in the Constitution and Bylaws of the Association.<br />

5. Discontinuance of membership. Any member who has failed for three years in succession to pay his annual<br />

dues to the Association, and whose reason for the delinquency has not been accepted by the Council, shall, at<br />

the end of the third year of delinquency, automatically forfeit membership in the Association and shall be<br />

notified by the Secretary-Treasurer of the said termination.<br />

6. On April first of each year the Secretary-Treasurer shall cancel the subscription to the Journal of Dental<br />

Research for any member whose dues and subscription fee are not paid by that time.<br />

7. Honorary Membership.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 90


(A) One honorary member may be nominated each year by unanimous recommendation of the three<br />

most recent living past presidents of the Association. Such honorary membership shall have all the<br />

rights and privileges of membership, but shall not receive the Journal.<br />

(B) Honorary members shall be selected on the basis of the candidate's significant contributions to the<br />

advancement of dental research.<br />

SECTION B. Payment of Dues<br />

1. Dues and subscription fee to the Journal shall be paid by members of the Association to the Secretary-<br />

Treasurer or his appointed representative. These payments are due on January first of each year.<br />

2. Exceptions.<br />

(A) Annual dues for the year in which membership is terminated by a member or by the Association<br />

prior to the date of the annual meeting shall be refunded, or if unpaid, shall not be demanded.<br />

(B) Dues shall be remitted for Life Members.<br />

(C) Rights of membership shall not be affected by remission of dues, but members whose dues have<br />

been remitted shall receive the Journal of Dental Research only if the subscription fee charged to<br />

members has been paid.<br />

(D) In any year the Council may suspend payment of dues by members resident in countries outside<br />

North America, upon request from such members because of unwieldy foreign exchange relations,<br />

currency depreciation, or other conditions of like nature.<br />

SECTION C. Meetings<br />

1. Annual meeting. The place and time of each annual meeting, when not voted by the Association, shall be<br />

determined by the Council (VI, 1).<br />

2. Program.<br />

(A) The arrangements for each annual meeting of the Association shall be made in accordance with the<br />

instructions from the Association or the Council by a Program Committee consisting of the<br />

President-Elect, the President and the Vice-President, with the Secretary-Treasurer as a member ex<br />

officio.<br />

(B) The President-Elect shall be chairman of the Program Committee.<br />

3. Registration fee. With the approval of the Ad interim Committee of the Council a registration fee may be<br />

assessed for the annual meeting.<br />

SECTION D. Officials<br />

1. Duties.<br />

(A) The duties of the officers shall be those ordinarily associated with the official titles, and such other<br />

duties as the Association and the Council may assign.<br />

(B) Each general active officer shall report annually to the Council on the conduct of his office.<br />

(C) The Council shall report annually to the Association on the nature and scope of their proceedings.<br />

(D) The Council shall appoint an Assistant Secretary-Treasurer to serve at the request of, or in the<br />

absence of the Secretary-Treasurer for administrative matters.<br />

2. Installation. At the annual meeting of the Association an appropriate ceremony of installation shall<br />

inaugurate the term of service of each active officer of the Association.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 91


3. Bonding. The Council shall direct officers collecting, disbursing, or holding in trust assets belonging to the<br />

Association to be bonded by a reliable surety company and shall determine the amount of the bond.<br />

SECTION E. Journal<br />

1. Officers of the Publication Committee. In addition to the Editor, who is chairman of the committee, the<br />

Publication Committee may select other officers from the members of the committee and assign such duties as<br />

seem desirable.<br />

2. Executive assistants. The Publication Committee may appoint assistants not members of the committee,<br />

subject to approval by the Council.<br />

3. The Publication Committee is authorized to select the publisher or printer for the Journal of Dental<br />

Research, and to negotiate donations, contracts and agreements for or necessary in the conduct of the Journal,<br />

subject to the approval of the Council.<br />

4. The Council shall appoint an advisory editorial board of ten or more members who shall act as consultants<br />

to the Editor.<br />

5. All assets received by the Association from the conduct of the Journal, or for the support of the Journal,<br />

shall be disbursed for the support of the Journal in accordance with the rules and regulations of the Association.<br />

SECTION F. Committees<br />

1. Standing and special committees may be designated for particular functions by the Association, its<br />

President, the Council, or the Ad interim Committee of the Council.<br />

2. Appointments to membership in committees, excepting personnel specified in motions creating committees,<br />

shall be made by the President.<br />

3. Standing committees. In addition to the Program Committee and Publication Committee, the following<br />

additional standing committees shall be appointed:<br />

a. A Membership Committee of three to examine nominations to membership and report to the<br />

Council at the annual meeting.<br />

b. A Meeting Place Committee of three to determine the suitable time and place for the annual<br />

meeting and to report to the Council.<br />

c. A Nominating Committee of five members to advise the Council in the selection of members of<br />

the Association for nomination as candidates for offices on the official ballot of the Association.<br />

4. The members of the committees on membership and meeting places shall be appointed for three year terms,<br />

and the members of the committee on nominations for five year terms, the terms so staggered that one new<br />

member is appointed each year, except in case of vacancy.<br />

5. A Local Arrangements Committee shall have charge of the detailed arrangements for the annual meeting,<br />

under the direction of the Program Committee.<br />

SECTION G. Authorized Banks and Expenditures<br />

1. Funds of the Association shall be deposited in a bank or banks approved for the purpose by the Association.<br />

Authorized expenditures from the general funds of the Association shall be made by checks each of which must<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 92


e signed by the President or President-Elect or Vice-President and the Secretary-Treasurer or Assistant<br />

Secretary-Treasurer.<br />

2. Expenditures from the funds of the Journal of Dental Research of the Association shall be made by checks<br />

each of which must be signed by the Editor, and the President, or President-Elect, or Vice-President.<br />

SECTION H. Definitions<br />

1. Members of this Association for purposes of notice or other communications or actions are those persons<br />

who are members according to the latest information possessed by the Secretary-Treasurer at the time of<br />

mailing of the notice or communication, or the time of the action.<br />

2. Notice shall be considered to have been given to a member when written statement of the notice has been<br />

mailed to the member at the last address for the member known to the Secretary-Treasurer or Assistant<br />

Secretary-Treasurer at the time of mailing.<br />

Parliamentary procedure is used at all meetings, although in small informal gatherings it is largely truncated.<br />

Robert's Rules of Order was used as a guide, but very recently, the Sturgis Standard Code of Parliamentary<br />

Procedure 3 was adopted as the official manual for consultation.<br />

To understand the <strong>IADR</strong> as a functioning organization, a flow diagram can provide the most lucid and concise<br />

explanation. A display of such an organizational chart was exhibited at the 1970 New York <strong>IADR</strong> meeting. 4<br />

As has been explained in an earlier chapter, basically the Association consists of the large general<br />

membership which approves major decisions and elects the officers annually. The membership at the end of<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 93


1970 comprised fifty-two Sections, seven Divisions, and three Groups, plus another one recently approved, each<br />

of which had the right and privilege of sending a Councilor to the annual <strong>IADR</strong> Council meeting, where most of<br />

the deliberations are openly conducted. Although many Councilors do not attend, the body is still large and at<br />

times unwieldy. In the beginning, as many as five Councilors were elected from each of the few Sections. This<br />

number was later modified to two and then to a single person as the Sections grew in number.<br />

Now the Divisions are growing and becoming important by holding their own annual scientific and<br />

business meetings, except for the North American Division, whose equivalent meeting, in essence, has been<br />

held in conjunction with the annual <strong>IADR</strong> meeting, so far conveniently in North America. The current surging<br />

strength in the Divisions has provided a challenge for a change in the major governing rules of the Association.<br />

The planned change can best be explained by a new organizational chart.<br />

In essence, a series of amendments will need to be passed by the general membership. This would<br />

permit a new basis of representation in a newly constituted Council. The new international Council would be<br />

small and hence efficient, having representatives only from the Divisions plus all the <strong>IADR</strong> officers. The<br />

number of representatives would depend on membership size, but each Division would have at least one. Those<br />

with at least one hundred (10 2 ) members would have two representatives, and those with at least 1000 (10 3 )<br />

members, three. In the distant future, if a Division should reach 10 4 members, it would have four representatives<br />

on the Council. This is a unique form of democracy and could be termed "exponentially proportional<br />

representation".<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 94


REFERENCES<br />

1. J Dent Res 5: 28, 1923.<br />

2. J Dent Res 6: 102-110, 1924-26.<br />

3. Sturgis, A.: Sturgis Standard Code of Parliamentary Procedure, 2d ed, new and revised, New York:<br />

McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1966.<br />

4. J Dent Res 49: 940, 1970.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 95


CHAPTER NINE: HONORARY STATUS IN THE <strong>IADR</strong><br />

Over the decades it has seemed fitting to designate certain noteworthy individuals as "honorary". In the<br />

early years with reverence for the "founding father", William J. Gies was referred to as the Honorary President,<br />

1922-28.<br />

HONORARY VICE-PRESIDENTS<br />

It must have been appropriate to designate several <strong>IADR</strong> members active in remote regions as Honorary<br />

Vice-Presidents. These were labeled as such and are as follows: R. Gordon Agnew, Chengtu, 1935-37, 1939-44;<br />

Karel Cerný, Prague, 1938-39; J. Frank Colyer, London, 1932-33; Ernest B. Dowsett, London, 1939-40;<br />

Geoffrey Friel, Johannesburg, 1936-37; Bernhard Gottlieb, Vienna, 1932-33, Palestine, 1940-41; Otto Hofer,<br />

Vienna, 1937-38; Cyril H. Howkins, London, 1936-37; Jan Jesensk&ycute;, Prague, 1933-35; Ashley W.<br />

Lindsay, Chengtu, 1937-38; Harrison J. Mullett, Chengtu, 1938-39; František Neuwirt, Prague, 1939-40; J.<br />

Lewin Payne, London, 1937-39; Hans Pichler, 1933-34, 1939-42; George B. Pritchard, London, 1940-44; A.<br />

Martin Schwarz, Vienna, 1938-39; J. C. Middleton Shaw, Johannesburg, 1935-36, 1937-44; Evelyn C.<br />

Sprawson, London, 1934-36; József Szabó, Budapest, 1935-38; Karel Wachsmann, Sr., Prague, 1935-38; and<br />

Hermann Wolff, Vienna, 1934-37.<br />

Much later, there were a few more Honorary Vice-Presidents designated by the Council. Senator Lister<br />

Hill of Alabama (although not a member) was named for 1957-58, 1 and Edgar D. Coolidge of Chicago for the<br />

year 1958-59. 2 For special reasons, three men from European countries were named Honorary Vice-Presidents<br />

for 1967-68; these were Jens J. Pindborg from Copenhagen, S. Yngve Ericsson from Stockholm, and Hans R.<br />

Mühlemann from Zürich.<br />

HONORARY MEMBERSHIP<br />

Honorary membership became another avenue of honoring certain outstanding individuals in<br />

recognition of service to the cause of dental research on a broad scale, although they had not held <strong>IADR</strong><br />

membership before. The first such Honorary Membership was conferred upon Harold Hillenbrand 2 as Secretary<br />

of the American Dental Association in 1958. Later, at the Forty-third General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong> in Toronto in<br />

1965, Honorary Membership was conferred upon John E. Fogarty, Congressman from the Second<br />

Congressional District of Rhode Island and Chairman of the Subcommittee on Appropriations for the<br />

Department of Labor and Health, Education, and Welfare. 4<br />

Apparently, it was overlooked that Harold Hillenbrand was already an Honorary Member, so in his last<br />

year as Executive Director of the ADA, he was again designated an Honorary Member in Houston. 5 The<br />

following year in New York at the Fiftieth Commemorative Year of the Association, Honorary Membership<br />

was conferred upon Roger O. Egeberg, Assistant Secretary for Health and Scientific Affairs, Department of<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 96


Health, Education, and Welfare in the United States Federal Government. 6 (For the Egeberg presentation, see<br />

chapter eighteen on the "Fiftieth Anniversary Observance".)<br />

THE PAST-PRESIDENTS<br />

In a somewhat special sense, Past-Presidents of the Association have been held in honored esteem! They<br />

have had annual luncheons provided by the Association; at some, group photographs documented the occasion.<br />

These photographs are reproduced here for perusal. Past-Presidents appear to be a very erudite body, but as a<br />

group of past leaders they have not been taken seriously in their advice to current officers (except when a future<br />

President discreetly planned to designate the Past-Presidents as his Privy Council to learn their thoughts on<br />

Association problems).<br />

The list of Past-Presidents on page 98 cites those who passed away during the first half-century life of<br />

the Association. Their range of age at death was 57 to 89, in round figures, while their collective average age<br />

was 73.2 years.<br />

PAST-PRESIDENT LUNCHEON MEETINGS<br />

These sixteen Past-Presidents met on Saturday, 21 March 1964, in the Ambassador Hotel, Los Angeles,<br />

California. Clockwise: Ned B. Williams, Hamilton B.G. Robinson, Francis A. Arnold, Isaac Schour, Reidar F.<br />

Sognnaes, Wallace D. Armstrong, Paul E. Boyle, Seymour J. Kreshover, Basil G. Bibby, George C.<br />

Paffenbarger, James A. English, Holmes T. Knighton, Joseph F. Volker, Thomas J. Hill, Harold C. Hodge, and<br />

Maynard K. Hine.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 97


On this occasion, Saturday, 24 July 1965, eighteen Past-Presidents met in the British Columbia Room of the<br />

Royal York Hotel, Toronto, Canada. Clockwise: B. G. Bibby, H. T. Knighton, P. C. Kitchin, P. Jay, T. J. Hill, J.<br />

A. English, J. R. Blayney, A. G. Brodie, W. D. Armstrong, D. Y. Burrill, G. C. Paffenbarger, F. A. Arnold, S. J.<br />

Kreshover, R. F. Sognnaes, P. E. Boyle, N. B. Williams, H. C. Hodge, and H. B. G. Robinson.<br />

Photographs were not taken in the intervening years, but at the Forty-eighth General Meeting, held in the<br />

Americana Hotel, New York City, the following thirteen Past-Presidents were present: Standing: Sognnaes,<br />

Macdonald, English, Kreshover, Knighton, Levy, Phillips, and Manly. Seated: Paffenbarger, Armstrong,<br />

ROBINSON, BURRILL, AND BIBBY.<br />

DECEASED PRESIDENTS OF THE <strong>IADR</strong>, 1920-70<br />

Presidential Term Name Life Span Age Attained<br />

1921-23 J. Leon Williams 21 Apr 1852-23 Feb 1932 79yrs 10mo 2da<br />

1923-24 Paul R. Stillman 4 Jun 1871-15 Dec 1945 74yrs 6mo 11da<br />

1924-<br />

25<br />

1931-<br />

32<br />

} Albert E. Webster 1866-5 Nov 1936 70yrs<br />

1925-26 Frederick B. Noyes 22 Aug 1872-25 Jul 1961 88yrs 11mo 3da<br />

1927-29 Leroy M. S. Miner 13 Apr 1882-19 Apr 1964 82yrs 6da<br />

1929-30 Arthur D. Black 15 Nov 1870-7 Dec 1937 67yrs 22da<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 98


1930-31 U. Garfield Rickert 22 Oct 1879-22 Oct 1938 59yrs<br />

1932-33 Russell W. Bunting 21 Mar 1881-22 Nov 1962 81yrs 8mo 1da<br />

1933-34 Edward H. Hatton 2 Apr 1876-15 Aug 1959 83yrs 4mo 13da<br />

1935-36 Theodore B. Beust 14 Jan 1871-24 Nov 1937 66yrs 10mo 10da<br />

1936-37 William G. Skillen 6 Nov 1884-27 Aug 1958 73yrs 9mo 21da<br />

1939-40 William J. Gies 21 Feb 1872-20 May 1956 84yrs 2mo 29da<br />

1941-42 Isaac Schour 11 Jan 1900-5 Jun 1964 64yrs 4mo 25da<br />

1942-43 Charles F. Bodecker 2 Sept 1880-11 Feb 1965 84yrs 5mo 9da<br />

1944-45 H. Trendley Dean 25 Aug 1893-14 May 1962 68yrs 8mo 19da<br />

1951-52 Leonard S. Fosdick 7 Nov 1903-31 Jan 1969 65yrs 2mo 24da<br />

1953-54 Francis A. Arnold, Jr. 30 Dec 1910-1 Dec 1967 56yrs 11mo 1da<br />

1964-65 Martin A. Rushton 29 Mar 1903-16 Nov 1970 67yrs 7mo 18da<br />

REFERENCES<br />

1. J Dent Res 36: 801, 1957.<br />

2. J Dent Res 37: 962, 1958.<br />

3. J Dent Res 46: 1153-1154, 1967.<br />

4. J Dent Res 44: 1064, 1099-1103, 1965.<br />

5. Unfortunately, no mention is made in the Journal of Hillenbrand's actually receiving the Honorary<br />

Membership Plaque in 1969 at the conclusion of his Banquet Address (which is printed in J Dent Res<br />

48: 1059-1062, 1969).<br />

6. J Dent Res 49: 937, 1970.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 99


CHAPTER TEN: THE AWARDS<br />

The concept of presenting some tangible award of merit to outstanding researchers has many precedents.<br />

All awards in the world related to the dental field were described in a 1965 JDR Editorial. 1 The definition of an<br />

award in the sense applicable to <strong>IADR</strong> is an emblem conferred or bestowed upon a person after careful<br />

consideration by his peers. Be it a monetary or a nominal award, both symbolically draw attention to the<br />

recipient for his past achievements.<br />

Over the years the Association has developed a series of awards, beginning with the Novice Award in<br />

1953. By 1970 there were a total of eleven different categories of awards 2 which were presented at the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

banquet.<br />

THE HATTON AWARD<br />

Samuel M. Gordon, while Secretary of the Council on Dental Therapeutics of ADA, edited the widely<br />

read book Dental Science and Dental Art (Philadelphia: Lea & Febiger, 1938). At the 1940 <strong>IADR</strong> meeting,<br />

Gordon and the contributors to this book offered the income from it to the Association to establish grants-in-aid<br />

in dental research. 3 In 1948, with the income from the royalties, the <strong>IADR</strong> Council authorized the establishment<br />

of an award called the Dental Science and Dental Art Award for the best research presented by a novice. The<br />

commendation was unofficially shortened to the "Novice Award", with a stipend of $100. It was first presented<br />

in 1953 at the <strong>IADR</strong> meeting in Philadelphia.<br />

At the annual meeting at Atlantic City, on 22 March 1957, Edward H. Hatton, the long time Secretary-<br />

Treasurer, then age 80, was honored at the <strong>IADR</strong> banquet with a special program, giving a resumé of his<br />

extensive career in the fields of research and education. 4 At the conclusion of the event, the name of the Novice<br />

Award was permanently changed to the Edward H. Hatton Award.<br />

At present, four awards are made to young investigators judged as presenting the most meritorious<br />

papers on original research at each annual meeting. A first award of $500 and a second award of $250 are made<br />

in both predoctoral and graduate categories. These awards are now supported by the Warner-Lambert<br />

Pharmaceutical Company.<br />

Novice Award Winners<br />

1953 John J. Salley (U Rochester)<br />

1954 Leo Korchin (Maj., DC, US Army; Georgetown U)<br />

1955 Daniel E. Waite and C. E. Staley (U Iowa)<br />

1956 Barry G. Miller (U Ill)<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 100


Hatton Award Winners<br />

1957 Robert L. Smith (Ohio State U)<br />

1958 J.C. Beck, Jr. (Ind U)<br />

1959 Richard L. Hoffman (U Ill)<br />

1960 Reginald J. Andlaw (Eastman Dent Disp)<br />

1961 Jack G. Dale (Forsyth Dent Infirm)<br />

1962 Charles R. Jerge (U Pa)<br />

1963 Brigit Johansson (Forsyth Dent Infirm)<br />

1964 Robert E. Williamson (U Ill)<br />

Postdoc<br />

Robert E. Zager (Ind U)<br />

Predoc<br />

1965 Louis W. Ripa, Jr. (Eastman Dent Disp)<br />

1st postdoc<br />

William F. Malone (U Ill)<br />

2d postdoc<br />

Robert C. Dolven (U Minn)<br />

1st predoc<br />

Mildred Romans (Howard U)<br />

2d predoc<br />

1966 Arnett A. Anderson (Howard U)<br />

1st postdoc<br />

Arthur R. Johnson (U Minn)<br />

2d postdoc<br />

Murray E. Nickleborough (U Alberta)<br />

1st predoc<br />

Basil A. Richardson (Forsyth Dent Disp)<br />

2d predoc<br />

1967 David L. Russell (U Ala)<br />

1st predoc<br />

Burton A. Horowitz (Ind U)<br />

2d postdoc<br />

Sherman C. Sweeney (St. Louis U)<br />

1st predoc<br />

Stuart C. White (UCLA)<br />

2d predoc<br />

1968 Dick R. Lavender (NIDR)<br />

1st postdoc<br />

Mladen M. Kuftinec (Forsyth Dent Disp, Harvard U) 2d postdoc<br />

Marlin W. Walling (Harvard U)<br />

1st predoc<br />

Ronald L. Shuler (St Louis U)<br />

2d predoc<br />

1969 Yehoshia Shapira (Forsyth Dent Disp)<br />

1st postdoc<br />

Helen L. Blaine (U Mo—KC)<br />

2d postdoc<br />

Alan Lurie (U Rochester)<br />

1st predoc<br />

(Only three awards this year)<br />

1970 Richard M. Selmont (U So Calif)<br />

1st postdoc<br />

Benjamin Ciala (U Ala & U Conn)<br />

2d postdoc<br />

Michael E. Barkin (UCLA)<br />

1st predoc<br />

George P. Kelly (U Mich)<br />

2d predoc<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 101


Titles and papers (almost all were published) can be found among the Proceedings of each <strong>IADR</strong> annual<br />

meeting printed in the respective issue of the Journal of Dental Research.<br />

THE HATTON AWARD COMMITTEE<br />

The Hatton Award Committee has been listed in the Journal since 1962. Previously, <strong>IADR</strong> officers<br />

functioned in this capacity.<br />

W. Lefkowitz 1962-63 S. S Han 1969-74<br />

I. Schour 1962-63 H. M. Fullmer 1970-74<br />

K. Asgar 1962-65<br />

M. Lunin 1962-66 Chairmen:<br />

R. S. Manly 1962-66 W. Lefkowitz 1962-63<br />

J. R. Ring 1962-66 J. R. Ring 1963-64<br />

I. Zipkin 1963-67 K. Asgar 1964-65<br />

C. O. Dummett 1963-68 M. Lunin 1965-66<br />

J. K. Avery 1964-69 I. Zipkin 1966-67<br />

A. L. Morris 1966-68 A. L. Morris 1967-68<br />

R. L. Glass 1966-70 J. K. Avery 1968-69<br />

R. W. Broge 1967-71 R. W. Broge 1969-70<br />

G. W. Wade 1968-72 S. S. Han 1970-72<br />

E. Johansen 1968-73<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> SCIENCE AWARDS<br />

The following awards are made in recognition of a career of distinguished accomplishments in research<br />

and development. Certain details are provided for some years in the Journal under <strong>IADR</strong> Proceedings, but in<br />

the following pages a comprehensive citation is given for all awards and award committees.<br />

WILMER SOUDER AWARD<br />

This is the highest honor awarded to a person for outstanding achievement in the science of dental<br />

materials research. It is a plaque presented by the Dental Materials Group of the <strong>IADR</strong> in honor of Wilmer<br />

Souder, who is regarded as the father of modern dental materials research. (For more information, see chapter<br />

fifteen re "The Dental Materials Group", and see "Pages of Presidents" for information on Wilmer Souder.) The<br />

first such award was made at the Chicago 1955 <strong>IADR</strong> meeting.<br />

Souder Award Winners<br />

1955 Richard L. Coleman (JM Ney Co)<br />

1956 Eugene W. Skinner (NWU)<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 102


1957 Walter S. Crowell (SS White Co)<br />

1958 George C. Paffenbarger (ADA-NBS)<br />

1959 Ralph W. Phillips (Ind U)<br />

1960 William T. Sweeney (NBS)<br />

1961 Floyd A. Peyton (U Mich)<br />

1962 Alan R. Docking (U Melbourne)<br />

1963 George M. Hollenback (Loma Linda)<br />

1964 Norris Oslow Taylor (SS White Co)<br />

1965 John S. Shell (George M. Hollenback Res Assoc)<br />

1966 Gunnar Ryge (USPHS Dent Health Center, San Francisco)<br />

1967 David B. Mahler (U Ore)<br />

1968 Marjorie L. Swartz (Ind U)<br />

1969 Gerhard M. Brauer (NBS)<br />

1970 Kamal Asgar (U Mich)<br />

H. TRENDLEY DEAN MEMORIAL AWARD<br />

This Award for meritorious research in epidemiology and dental caries was established and supported by<br />

Frank J. McClure (author of Water Fluoridation: The Search and the Victory, NIDR-NIH, 1970) in memory of<br />

the late H. Trendley Dean. The award, consisting of a bronze plaque and a cash stipend of $200, is presented<br />

annually, provided that a worthy recipient is nominated. (For more information on H. Trendley Dean, see<br />

"Pages of Presidents".)<br />

Dean Award Winners<br />

1964 Francis A. Arnold, Jr. (USPHS, NIDR)<br />

1965 J. Roy Blayney (Prof Emer, U Chicago)<br />

1966 John W. Knutson (UCLA)<br />

1967 Wallace D. Armstrong (U Minn)<br />

1968 David B. Ast (Dent Bur, St of NY Dept Health)<br />

1969 Finn Brudevold (Forsyth Dent Center)<br />

1970 S. Yngve Ericsson (Karolinska Inst)<br />

ISAAC SCHOUR MEMORIAL AWARD<br />

As a means of honoring the late Isaac Schour (see "Pages of Presidents"), this award is supported by the<br />

College of Dentistry, University of Illinois, Isaac Schour Memorial Fund. The award, which is international in<br />

scope, consists of $300 and a plaque. It is presented annually to an individual who has made outstanding<br />

contributions in research or teaching or both in the field of anatomical sciences.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 103


Schour Award Winners<br />

1967 Harry Sicher (Loyola U)<br />

1968 Leo M. Sreebny (U Wash)<br />

1969 Arne Bjork (Royal DC, Copenhagen)<br />

1970 Jens J. Pindborg (Royal DC, Copenhagen)<br />

COMMERCIALLY SUPPORTED SCIENCE AWARDS<br />

Five additional science awards are available annually for outstanding research accomplishments in<br />

dental and related fields. Each award consists of $1000 and a plaque. A travel allowance also is provided for the<br />

recipients. The purpose of these five awards is to encourage and recognize outstanding achievements in basic<br />

research in areas of natural sciences having an important relationship to oral biology, periodontal disease,<br />

biological mineralization, and prosthodontics; in the prevention and treatment of disease involving any of the<br />

tissues related to the oral cavity; or in the development of applicable medicaments.<br />

BASIC RESEARCH IN ORAL SCIENCE AWARD<br />

SUPPORTED BY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE COMPANY<br />

1963 Richard C. Greulich (UCLA)<br />

1964 Herbert Wells (Harvard U)<br />

1965 George R. Martin (NIDR)<br />

1966 Stephen E. Mergenhagen (NIDR)<br />

1967 Ronald J. Gibbons (Forsyth Dent Center)<br />

1968 Samuel A. Leach (U Liverpool)<br />

1969 Seong S. Hah (U Mich)<br />

1970 Sigmund S. Socransky (Forsyth Dent Center)<br />

BASIC RESEARCH IN BIOLOGICAL MINERALIZATION AWARD<br />

SUPPORTED BY THE LEVER BROTHERS COMPANY<br />

1964 M. J. Glimcher (Harvard U)<br />

1965 William F. Neuman (U Rochester)<br />

1966 Wallace D. Armstrong (U Minn)<br />

1967 Reidar F. Sognnaes (UCLA)<br />

1968 David B. Scott (Western Reserve U)<br />

1969 John E. Eastoe (RCS, London)<br />

1970 Marie U. Nylen (NIDR)<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 104


BASIC RESEARCH IN ORAL THERAPEUTICS AWARD<br />

SUPPORTED BY COOK-WAITE LABORATORIES, INC.<br />

1964 Gerald J. Cox (U Pittsburgh)<br />

1965 Harold C. Hodge (U Rochester)<br />

1966 Finn Brudevold (Forsyth Dent Center)<br />

1967 S. Yngve Ericsson (Karolinska Inst & Stockholm DS)<br />

1968 Joseph C. Muhler (Ind U)<br />

1969 Frank J. McClure (NIDR)<br />

1970 Richard S. Manly (Tufts U)<br />

BASIC RESEARCH IN PERIODONTAL DISEASE AWARD<br />

SUPPORTED BY THE COLGATE-PALMOLIVE COMPANY<br />

1965 Jens Waerhaug (visiting disting sci, NIH)<br />

1966 Irving Glickman (Tufts U)<br />

1967 Helmut A. Zander (Eastman Dent Center & U Rochester)<br />

1968 Sigurd P. Ramfjord (U Mich)<br />

1969 Harald A. Löe (Royal DC, Århus)<br />

1970 Fermin A. Carranza, Jr. (U Buenos Aires)<br />

RESEARCH IN PROSTHODONTICS AWARD<br />

SUPPORTED BY CLARK-CLEVELAND, INC.<br />

1967 Julian B. Woelfel (Ohio SU)<br />

1968 Niels Brill (Royal DC, Copenhagen)<br />

1969 George C. Paffenbarger (ADA-NBS)<br />

1970 Louis J. Boucher (U Ga)<br />

THE SCIENCE AWARDS COMMITTEE<br />

In 1961 a committee on awards was appointed to carry on work started by an ad hoc committee with the<br />

purpose of planning a program of awards and seeking funds for such a program. 5 Thus the Awards Committee<br />

(now the Science Awards Committee) was formed. The Science Awards Committee has the responsibility of<br />

selecting worthy recipients from among the nominations submitted by Association members. The Committee<br />

consists of eight members, and for each science award (except the Souder Award) there is a subcommittee. The<br />

members of the committee are the chairmen of the subcommittees.<br />

D. Y. Burrill 1962-63 W. A. George 1966-71<br />

W. Lefkowitz 1962-65 R. M. Frank 1967-68<br />

B. M. Levy 1962-65 H. T. Knighton 1967-69<br />

R. S. Manly 1962-65 H. C. Hodge 1967-72<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 105


J. A. English 1962-67 F. A. Peyton 1968-70<br />

G. C. Paffenbarger 1962-68 J. L. Hardwick 1968-72<br />

S. S. Arnim 1965-66 F. Brudevold 1969-70<br />

G. Bevelander 1965-66 J. K. Avery 1969-71<br />

S. J. Kreshover 1965-66 L. Sreebny 1969-73<br />

F. A. Arnold, Jr. 1965-67 A. J. Darling 1970-71<br />

R. J. Gillette 1966-69 S. P. Ramfjord 1970-71<br />

J. Waerhaug 1966-69 S. Y. Ericsson 1970-74<br />

R. C. Greulich 1966-70<br />

Consultants to Committee, 1962-66:<br />

T. J. Hill H. C. Hodge<br />

Chairmen of the Science Awards Committee:<br />

R. S. Manly 1962-65 F. A. Peyton 1968-69<br />

G. C. Paffenbarger 1965-68 J. K. Avery 1969-72<br />

THE SUBCOMMITTEES<br />

H. Trendley Dean Award<br />

B. G. Bibby 1964-65 F. J. McClure 1964-69<br />

G. C. Paffenbarger 1964-<br />

S. Y. Ericsson 1965-66<br />

65<br />

R. F. Sognnaes 1964-65 F. A. Arnold, Jr. 1965-67<br />

T. J. Hill 1964-66 J. R. Blayney 1965-70<br />

O. Backer-Dirks 1966-68 Chairmen:<br />

J. W. Knutson 1966-71<br />

G. C. Paffenbarger 1964-<br />

65<br />

H. C. Hodge 1967-72 F. A. Arnold, Jr. 1965-67<br />

G. L. Slack 1968-73 H. C. Hodge 1967-72<br />

S. J. Kreshover 1969-74<br />

Isaac Schour Award<br />

L. R. Boling 1966-69 H. Sicher 1969-72<br />

R. J. Gillette 1966-69 G. N. Davies 1969-72<br />

J. H. Scott 1966-69<br />

R. O. Greep 1966-70 Chairmen:<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 106


C. F. Jerge 1966-71 R. J. Gillette 1966-69<br />

L. H. Sreebny 1969-71 L. H. Sreebny 1969-71<br />

Oral Science Award<br />

H. C. Hodge 1964-65 R. Ross 1968-73<br />

S. J. Kreshover 1964-66 H. Wells 1968-74<br />

H. W. Scherp 1964-67<br />

C. A. Ostrom 1964-68 Chairmen:<br />

R. C. Greulich 1964-70 S. J. Kreshover 1964-66<br />

A. I. Darling 1965-71 R. C. Greulich 1966-70<br />

F. A. Peyton 1966-69 A. I. Darling 1970-71<br />

G. Nikiforuk 1967-72<br />

Biological Mineralization Award<br />

W. E. Brown 1964-65 O. R. Trautz 1967-69<br />

M. Urist 1964-65 J. L. Hardwick 1967-72<br />

S. Wah Leung 1964-65 D. B. Scott 1968-73<br />

A. R. Sobel 1964-66 S. Matsumiya 1969-74<br />

W. D. Armstrong 1964-71<br />

G. Bevelander 1965-66 Chairmen:<br />

W. F. Neuman 1965-66 W. D. Armstrong 1964-65<br />

R. M. Frank 1965-68 G. Bevelander 1965-66<br />

I. Zipkin 1965-70 R. M. Frank 1966-68<br />

M. L. Moss 1966-67 J. L. Hardwick 1968-72<br />

Oral Therapeutics Award<br />

A. L. Russell 1964-65 J. C. Muhler 1969-72<br />

J. L. Hein 1964-66 S. Y. Ericsson 1969-74<br />

J. A. English 1964-67<br />

L. C. Hendershot 1964-69 Chairmen:<br />

H. R. Mühlemann 1964-71 J. A. English 1964-67<br />

H. C. Hodge 1965-68 H. T. Knighton 1967-69<br />

F. Brudevold 1966-70 F. Brudevold 1969-70<br />

H. T. Knighton 1967-72 S. Y. Ericsson 1970-74<br />

S. Pearlman 1968-73<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 107


Periodontal Disease Award<br />

N. B. Williams 1964-65 I. Glickman 1968-70<br />

S. S. Arnim 1964-66 S. Ramfjord 1968-73<br />

D. F. Mitchell 1964-66 H. Löe 1969-74<br />

G. Parfitt 1964-66<br />

D. A. Kerr 1964-67 Chairmen:<br />

E. M. Schaffer 1965-66 S. S. Arnim 1964-66<br />

J. Waerhaug 1965-69 J. Waerhaug 1966-69<br />

P. Goldhaber 1966-67 I. Glickman 1969-70<br />

B. G. Bibby 1966-71 S. Ramfjord 1970-73<br />

H. A. Zander 1967-72<br />

Prosthodontics Award<br />

J. E. Ziegler 1966-68 N. Brill 1969-74<br />

J. N. Anderson 1966-69<br />

D. A. Atwood 1966-70 Chairmen:<br />

W. A. George 1966-71 W. A. George 1966-70<br />

R. B. Lytle 1966-72 R. B. Lytle 1970-72<br />

J. B. Woelfel 1968-73<br />

STUDENT TRAVEL AID AWARDS<br />

Starting in 1968, funds were made available, though meager at first, to partly defray the cost of travel to<br />

the annual <strong>IADR</strong> meeting for a few dental students who had research potential and who would derive benefit<br />

from attending the scientific sessions of the annual meeting. This program was both successful and wellreceived,<br />

to the extent that, at present, twenty travel grants are available each year. Fifteen grantsof $100 each<br />

are available to students in North America, and five grants of $300 each are available to students outside North<br />

America. These students were selected by <strong>IADR</strong> officers until a formal committee was chosen for this task in<br />

1972. These awards were supported by the Association until 1971 when the Johnson and Johnson Dental<br />

Products Company began to support this worthy effort.<br />

SENIOR FOREIGN DENTAL SCIENTIST FELLOWSHIP<br />

This extensive program in essence provides the largest monetary awards of all. The idea was developed<br />

that it would be very opportune for an international association such as the <strong>IADR</strong> to bring dental scientists from<br />

abroad to the United States. This view was presented to the NIDR of the National Institutes of Health as a<br />

proposal for a grant. It has been funded rather extensively ever since its activation in 1967 and has permitted an<br />

interchange of persons and ideas among research personnel from various parts of the world.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 108


SENIOR FOREIGN DENTAL SCIENTIST COMMITTEE<br />

B. M. Levy 1967-72 R. W. Phillips 1967-72<br />

S. Pearlman 1967-72 R. S. Manly 1968-72<br />

G. H. Rovelstad 1967- W. D. Armstrong (Chairman, 1967-72)<br />

PARTICIPANTS IN SENIOR FOREIGN DENTAL SCIENTIST FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM<br />

Scientist Residence Host Institution Dates of Contract<br />

Björn Hedegard Stockholm, Sweden NWU 1 Jan 1967 - 31 Aug 1967<br />

Takara Yonaga Tokyo, Japan U Calif San Francisco 18 Mar 1967 - 17 Mar 1968<br />

Itzhak Gedalia Hadassah, Israel Harvard 1 June 1967 - 1 Dec 1967<br />

P. E. B. Calonius Helsinki, Finland U Md 1 Sept 1967 - 31 Aug 1968<br />

Stig D. Schultz-Haudt Oslo, Norway SUNY Buffalo 1 Jan 1968 - 30 June 1968<br />

Arje Scheinin Turku, Finland U Iowa 17 Mar 1968 - 16 Nov 1968<br />

Anna Pla ??ková Prague, Czechoslovakia U Ill 19 June 1968 - 17 June 1969<br />

Trevor H. Grenby London, England Eastman Dent Center 1 Nov 1968 - 30 Apr 1969<br />

Walter T. Klotzer Zürich, Switzerland U Conn 1 Oct 1969 - 30 Sept 1970<br />

Kazuo Nagai Tokyo, Japan U Ala 23 Oct 1969 - 19 Mar 1970<br />

REFERENCES<br />

1. J Dent Res 44: 307, 1965.<br />

2. J Dent Res 49: 913, 921-922, 940, 969, 1970.<br />

3. J Dent Res 33: 725, 1954.<br />

4. J Dent Res 36: 802, 1957.<br />

5. J Dent Res 40: 781, 1961.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 109


CHAPTER ELEVEN: MEETINGS AND MEMBERS<br />

The very essence of Association activity is its annual meeting, in which its members participate in many<br />

ways. Inversely, the primary units of the Association are its individual members (as expounded in one inaugural<br />

address 1 ), who can "getogether" en masse only at the annual meetings. Thus, these two essentials of the<br />

<strong>IADR</strong>—meetings and members—are intrinsically interdependent features of our Association and as such are<br />

elaborated upon in this chapter. Which came first, meetings or members? There must have been and was an<br />

initial meeting to which prospective members could come! Moreover, upon closer analysis, these two<br />

euphoniously compatible elements—meetings and members—are so interrelated that there can be no meetings<br />

without members, and members without meetings do not ipso facto constitute an organization. Theoretically,<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> members gathering for a purpose comprise a meeting. There are many kinds of meetings—committee<br />

meetings, Council meetings, Section meetings, Divisional meetings, Group meetings—but this chapter concerns<br />

only the one significant event—the annual general meeting—attended by a large portion of its members. Thus,<br />

what could well fill two chapters has been compressed into one.<br />

THE <strong>IADR</strong> MEETINGS<br />

There have been forty-eight general meetings since the <strong>IADR</strong> founding, but, since there has been so<br />

much planning ahead for future meetings, references are also cited for the Forty-ninth General Session held in<br />

Chicago 2 and the Golden Jubilee Session commemorated in Las Vegas, Nevada. 3<br />

In the early days, these meetings were meager affairs. They were designed to be held outside school<br />

days, so they usually occurred on Saturdays and Sundays; they now begin on a Thursday morning and continue<br />

through the full weekend, with Committee and Council meetings preceding the scientific meetings by a day or<br />

two.<br />

At the very first general meeting on Thursday, 21 December 1922, a mere two scientific reports were<br />

presented. The men with courage and reports of merit were Charles Bodecker and J. Leon Williams, the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

President. The very first report was on "The Dento-Enamel Circulation" presented by Bodecker; 4 the second<br />

was on "Permeability of Enamel". 5 By dramatic contrast, at the Fiftieth Annual Session held in Las Vegas in<br />

1972, there were 730 papers orally presented plus 221 read by title, which made a total approaching a thousand<br />

accepted research reports. At this Golden Jubilee gathering a record number of 350 attended an Awards<br />

Luncheon and a total of 2041 registered for the entire session.<br />

Preceding the general scientific meetings of the Association, there were for the record "three preliminary<br />

meetings for purpose of organization". 6<br />

City Site Date<br />

A New York City Columbia University Club 10 December 1920<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 110


B Boston Harvard Club 17 December 1920<br />

C Chicago University Club 30 December 1920<br />

(Nota bene: These have been designated by letter to distinguish them from the general scientific meetings that<br />

follow. "A" signifies New York, which remained for Gies the apple of his eyes. "B", as one can see, stands for<br />

Boston, while "C" can only mean Chicago, which made it under the wire before the year 1920 did retire.)<br />

ANNUAL <strong>IADR</strong> MEETINGS<br />

City Site Date<br />

1 New York Columbia University Club Thursday, 21 December<br />

1922<br />

2 Chicago Congress Hotel Friday, 7 March 1924<br />

3 Chicago Congress Hotel Friday, 20 March 1925<br />

4 Chicago Congress Hotel Friday, 26 March 1926<br />

5 New York Plaza Hotel Tuesday, 19 April 1927<br />

6 Washington, D.C. Mayflower Hotel Sun-Wed, 25-28 March 1928<br />

7 Chicago Dental School, Northwestern University Sat-Sun, 23-24 March 1929<br />

8 Toronto Royal York Hotel Mon-Wed, 24-26 March<br />

1930<br />

9 Memphis Hotel Peabody Sat-Sun, 21-22 March 1931<br />

10 Columbus Deshler-Wallick Hotel Sat-Sun, 19-20 March 1932<br />

11 Chicago* Northwestern University Dental School (nominal Saturday, 18 March 1933<br />

meeting)<br />

12 Chicago Stevens Hotel Sat-Sun, 17-18 March 1934<br />

13 Chicago Stevens Hotel Sat-Sun, 16-17 March 1935<br />

14 Louisville Brown Hotel Sat-Sun, 14-15 March 1936<br />

15 Baltimore Lord Baltimore Hotel Sat-Sun, 13-14 March 1937<br />

16 Minneapolis Hotel Nicollet Sat-Sun, 12-13 March 1938<br />

17 Cleveland Hotel Cleveland Sat-Sun, 18-19 March 1939<br />

18 Philadelphia Benjamin Franklin Hotel Wed-Thur, 13-14 March<br />

1940<br />

19 St. Louis Jefferson Hotel Sat-Sun, 15-16 March 1941<br />

20 New York Commodore Hotel Sat-Sun, 14-15 March 1942<br />

21 Chicago Drake Hotel Sat-Sun, 13-14 March 1943<br />

22 Chicago Drake Hotel Sat-Sun, 18-19 March 1944<br />

23 Chicago† Stevens Hotel (curtailed meeting) Sunday, 27 May 1945<br />

24 Kansas City Hotel Continental Sat-Sun, 16-17 March 1946<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 111


25 Chicago Drake Hotel Sat-Sun, 21-22 June 1947<br />

26 Rochester‡ Sheraton Hotel Fri-Sun, 18-20 June 1948<br />

27 Chicago Drake Hotel Fri-Sun, 24-26 June 1949<br />

28 French Lick<br />

Springs<br />

29 French Lick<br />

Springs<br />

French Lick Springs Hotel Fri-Sun, 24-26 March 1950<br />

French Lick Springs Hotel Sat-Mon, 17-19 March 1951<br />

30 Colorado Springs Broadmoor Hotel Fri-Sun, 21-23 March 1952<br />

31 Philadelphia Benjamin Franklin Hotel Fri-Sun, 20-22 March 1953<br />

32 French Lick<br />

Springs<br />

French Lick Springs Hotel Fri-Sun, 19-21 March 1954<br />

33 Chicago Morrison Hotel Sat-Mon, 18-20 March 1955<br />

34 St. Louis Jefferson Hotel Thur-Sat, 22-24 March 1956<br />

35 Atlantic City Claridge Hotel Thur-Sat, 21-23 March 1957<br />

36 Detroit Hotel Statler Thur-Sat, 20-22 March 1958<br />

37 San Francisco Sheraton-Palace Hotel Thur-Sun, 19-22 March<br />

1959<br />

38 Chicago Morrison Hotel Fri-Sun, 18-20 March 1960<br />

39 Boston Statler Hotel Thur-Sun, 23-26 March<br />

1961<br />

40 St. Louis Sheraton-Jefferson Hotel Thur-Sun, 15-18 March<br />

1962<br />

41 Pittsburgh Penn-Sheraton Hotel Thur-Sun, 21-24 March<br />

1963<br />

42 Los Angeles Ambassador Hotel Thur-Sun, 19-22 March<br />

1964<br />

43 Toronto Royal York Hotel Thur-Sun, 22-25 July 1965<br />

44 Miami Beach Americana Hotel Thur-Sun, 24-27 March<br />

1966<br />

45 Washington, D.C. Washington Hilton Hotel Thur-Sun, 16-19 March<br />

1967<br />

46 San Francisco San Francisco Hilton Hotel Thur-Sun, 21-24 March<br />

1968<br />

47 Houston Shamrock Hilton Hotel Thur-Sun, 20-23 March<br />

1969<br />

48 New York Americana Hotel Mon-Thur, 16-19 March<br />

1970<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 112


* In accordance with custom, the Eleventh General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong> was to have been coordinated, by<br />

agreement, with the annual meeting of the American Association of Dental Schools, and was to be held at the<br />

Stevens Hotel, Chicago, 18-19 March 1933, with that of the AADS to follow on 20-22 March. However, on 6<br />

March 1933 all banks in the United States were closed by order of President Roosevelt. Owing to the financial<br />

stringency created by the "bank holiday", the AADS meeting was indefinitely postponed. It was then decided<br />

that a nominal meeting of <strong>IADR</strong> was to be held on 18 March under the auspices of the Chicago Section at the<br />

Dental School of Northwestern University. At this meeting all the addresses and papers designated on the<br />

official program (115 units) were formally declared read by title. This nominal meeting was concluded by<br />

unanimous adoption of a motion to transfer the executive proceedings to a later meeting to be held under the<br />

auspices of the New York Section. This was held 25 May 1933 at the Western Universities Club, New York<br />

City. 7<br />

† On 5 January 1945 the Director of War Mobilization, acting to curtail nonessential railroad travel, requested<br />

that conventions and meetings involving more than fifty out-of-town persons and not specifically connected<br />

with the war effort be canceled. Thus, the Twenty-third General Meeting scheduled to be held at Kansas City,<br />

Missouri, 17-18 March 1945 was called off. Plans were then made to hold a "Curtailed War-Time Annual<br />

Meeting" in Chicago on 27 May 1945 at the Stevens Hotel. Thus, thirty-nine members of the Association met<br />

and conducted the annual executive proceedings, declared formally that all addresses and papers listed on the<br />

official program be declared read by title, and, finally, installed the new general officers. 8<br />

‡ This was the one year when the American Association of Dental Schools met in Buffalo instead of following<br />

the <strong>IADR</strong> meeting in Rochester. Moreover, in summation, it can be stated that the annual meetings have been<br />

the mainstay of the Association. During the past half-century, they have shown remarkable growth in size but<br />

great similarity in pattern—occurring almost always in the latter part of March over an extended weekend, and<br />

since 1924, preceding the annual meeting of the American Association of Dental Schools. 9<br />

The next table outlines the number of papers presented at each general meeting, or session, as the annual event<br />

will be termed. In contrast to the practice in the past, the term meeting is now being reserved for the many<br />

individual gatherings within the session, although in the early days, and until recent times, the total annual event<br />

was cited as the Meeting! Thus, a session will comprise a continuous day-to-day series of meetings. This newer<br />

view is defined by Robert's Rules of Order 10 as well as by two recent dictionaries, 11 although not by Sturgis. 12<br />

This is in contrast to the early meetings, when Gies termed each half-day gathering as a session and numbered<br />

the sessions with roman numerals. Nevertheless, beginning in 1971, the annual gathering will be termed the<br />

(Forty-ninth) General Session of <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

PAPERS AT ANNUAL MEETINGS<br />

Over the years, numbers of papers read at an annual meeting increased tremendously from two in 1922<br />

to 789 in 1970. However, it was difficult to ascertain the exact number that appeared on the program for certain<br />

meetings. This was because sometimes, but not always, special presentations such as Presidential inaugurations,<br />

greetings, banquet speeches, and symposia were also given a number among the scientific abstracts. Therefore,<br />

to keep standards consistent, these were not counted among the total scientific reports for each year as<br />

summarized here, but they may have been counted in various other reports cited elsewhere in the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

Proceedings in the Journal of Dental Research, or in the final report of the Commission on the Survey of<br />

Dentistry. 13 When available, the report of the Proceedings was further analyzed to learn how many late papers<br />

may have been added or withdrawn from the earlier totals for a final accurate count.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 113


(In 1923 no meeting was even planned. In 1933 only officers met, but all papers were declared "Read by<br />

Title"—as in 1945 à cause de la guerre.)<br />

The "Read by Title" category has been a nebulous phrase since it was originally used; it meant that titles<br />

of research reports, with the author's name(s) and institution, were printed in the official program, but the<br />

reports were never actually read or evaluated. In 1933 there were planned some forty-nine papers to be<br />

presented and sixty-five in the "Read by Title" category. But because only a nominal meeting occurred that<br />

year, the total of 114 papers were declared "Read by Title".<br />

The Association decided not to have a "Read by Title" category after 1958. However, it reversed itself in<br />

this matter, since it was planned that after 1971 there again would be a "Read by Title" category, but that it<br />

should be realistic in the sense that reports so named actually would be read by title by the Chairmen of the<br />

meetings in which they were included, since their abstracts had been evaluated, accepted, and were to be printed<br />

along with the other abstracts that were orally presented on the program.<br />

PAPERS PRESENTED ORALLY AND PAPERS READ BY TITLE AT <strong>IADR</strong> ANNUAL MEETINGS<br />

Year Orally Presented Read by Title Year Orally Presented Read by Title<br />

1922 2 0 1948 104 59<br />

1923 No meeting planned 0 1949 93 38<br />

1924 5 0 1950 82 41<br />

1925 9 0 1951 113 56<br />

1926 5 0 1952 104 42<br />

1927 4 0 1953 145 67<br />

1928 46 0 1954 154 47<br />

1929 35 0 1955 210 54<br />

1930 29 24 1956 207 36<br />

1931 45 33 1957 270 36<br />

1932 52 58 1958 242 65<br />

1933 0 (nominal meeting) 114 1959 256 0<br />

1934 45 65 1960 309 0<br />

1935 52 60 1961 374 0<br />

1936 63 46 1962 372 0<br />

1937 62 51 1963 434 0<br />

1938 52 51 1964 449 0<br />

1939 63 33 1965 461 0<br />

1940 56 31 1966 520 0<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 114


1941 72 34 1967 574 0<br />

1942 72 43 1968 641 0<br />

1943 50 31 1969 691 0<br />

1944 49 30 1970 789 0<br />

1945 0 (curtailed meeting) 33 —— ——<br />

1946 45 37 Total 8581 1342<br />

1947 74 27<br />

THE MEMBERS OF <strong>IADR</strong><br />

Increased attendance at the meetings is indicative of the increased number of members. Indeed,<br />

membership has grown stupendously over the past five decades. At that initial dinner meeting on the evening of<br />

10 December, there were twenty-one men actually present; four others residing in New York City, fourteen in<br />

Boston, and one in Chicago could not attend, but had expressed their commitment to the concept of the new<br />

organization and so were considered present in spirit. This made a total of forty Founders who had a meeting of<br />

minds resulting in the birth of the <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

Very unfortunately, there were no records available of the growth rate between 1920 until the time of the<br />

Sixth General Meeting in 1928. In the accompanying table on membership, wherever there are other gaps,<br />

records were not preserved for the categories cited—that is, members registered at meetings—or for total<br />

attendance.<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> MEMBERSHIP AND ANNUAL MEETING ATTENDANCE<br />

Annual<br />

Meeting<br />

Number Year<br />

Members Registered<br />

in Attendance<br />

at Meeting<br />

Total<br />

Attendance<br />

at Meeting<br />

Total<br />

Membership<br />

of <strong>IADR</strong><br />

6 1928 47 47 153<br />

7 1929 47 94 174<br />

8 1930 48 ? 228<br />

9 1931 32 87 240<br />

10 1932 58 114 280<br />

11 1933 (officers only) ? 302<br />

12 1934 72 ? 360<br />

13 1935 72 ? 379<br />

14 1936 77 ? 418<br />

15 1937 95 ? 438<br />

16 1938 122 ? 421<br />

17 1939 162 ? 495<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 115


18 1940 105 ? 540<br />

19 1941 146 ? 555<br />

20 1942 168 ? 588<br />

21 1943 90 ? 604<br />

22 1944 137 ? 628<br />

23 1945 39 (curtailed mtg) 39 633<br />

24 1946 130 ? 627<br />

25 1947 212 308 636<br />

26 1948 138 270 610<br />

27 1949 188 402 648<br />

28 1950 143 286 671<br />

29 1951 193 389 710<br />

30 1952 169 359 756<br />

31 1953 229 581 779<br />

32 1954 215 429 856<br />

33 1955 251 612 856<br />

34 1956 267 584 883<br />

35 1957 298 656 916<br />

36 1958 305 726 939<br />

37 1959 293 691 1003<br />

38 1960 381 820 1121<br />

39 1961 396 895 1097<br />

40 1962 ? 993 1385<br />

41 1963 ? 1206 1519<br />

42 1964 ? 1159 1580 (approx.)<br />

43 1965 ? 1298 1656<br />

44 1966 652 1245 2204<br />

45 1967 ? 1878 2403<br />

46 1968 946 1904 2840<br />

47 1969 ? 1790 2945<br />

48 1970 ? 2005 3140<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 116


1920 1970 Percentage Increase<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> 40 3,140 7750.0%<br />

United States 105,710,620 202,112,686 91.5<br />

World 1,694,096,000 3,659,000,000 116.0<br />

Over the years, and certainly before the age of computers, total membership count usually was taken at<br />

the end of each calendar year, but on other occasions there were counts at the end of the annual meetings.<br />

Exactly fifty years after its inception, membership had grown to 3140. This figure is close to a hundred-fold<br />

increase, which is tremendously greater than the somewhat less than doubling of the United States population<br />

and the somewhat more than doubling of the world population during (approximately) the same five decades.<br />

Despite this seven thousand, seven hundred and fifty percent increase in membership, standards of eligibility<br />

have not been materially lowered. The level of membership eligibility has changed somewhat, but not<br />

drastically. The first described attributes for membership were stated in the 1920 Constitution (Article IV,<br />

Section 1): "Any person who has conducted, and published an account of, a meritorious original investigation in<br />

dental science, or in any of the sciences contributory to stomatology, shall be eligible to membership in this<br />

Association, providing such person conforms to the recognized standards of professional ethics." 14 William J.<br />

Gies later paraphrased this concept 6 in his "Brief Review of the History of the International Association for<br />

Dental Research" in 1930. Over the years those requirements have been liberalized to the extent that it is not<br />

now essential for <strong>IADR</strong> candidates to have published or presented research reports at an annual meeting. The<br />

1957 Constitution (Article III, Section 1) states that any individual who is interested in Dental Science and<br />

Dental Research shall be eligible to membership in this Association, provided that such person conforms to the<br />

recognized standards of professional ethics. However, over the years there has been some variation of thought<br />

as to how profound that "interest" must be.<br />

It was possible to intensively study <strong>IADR</strong> membership as displayed in the Biographical Directory 15 plus<br />

its addendum, 16 which together comprised an inventory of all members and their attributes on the occasion of<br />

the Fiftieth Anniversary. The resultant findings demonstrated some rather impressive facts with revealing<br />

extrapolations, as cited elsewhere in part. 1 There have been some very young members and some very old<br />

members—some of whom are only one score old, while others have over fourscore years behind them. But<br />

what is the average age of all members? It is 45.65 years; indeed, at this average age, maturity and wisdom are<br />

hoped to be merits of our composite members. Biographical data also show that this has been a male-dominated<br />

organization. Depending on one's point of view, this may be considered unfortunate or otherwise. There has<br />

never been a woman holding a major Association office; they have rarely been chairmen of committees<br />

("chairwoman" or even "chairperson" is a strange word). Women have on occasion been councilors, and a few<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 117


have been active in local Sections and Groups; yet they comprise a little over 3 percent of our total membership.<br />

The total number at present is 95. Women are sometimes hesitant about stating their ages, but not our research<br />

women. The average age for ladies in the <strong>IADR</strong> is 43.7, whereas that for men is 45.7 years.<br />

The <strong>IADR</strong> has always been a conglomeration of individuals with a variety of academic backgrounds.<br />

This has been our basis of strength. The Association was founded by a professor of biochemistry at Columbia in<br />

conjunction with more than a dozen dentists and others, who were, for the most part, from New York City.<br />

Various conjectured opinions have been advanced over the years as to how many of our members hold dental<br />

degrees. From information in the Directory and Supplement, by actual count they number 2098, which is just<br />

under 78 percent of the total membership.<br />

What are the major fields of research interests among our members? Pathology was listed most often,<br />

followed by periodontics. Dental materials was third in frequency, preventive dentistry was next, followed by<br />

prosthodontics. The field of orthodontics came next and was followed closely by oral surgery. The basic science<br />

of biochemistry led those of physiology and microbiology in that order. A considerable number of persons,<br />

however, listed more than one field.<br />

In other areas, there are at least five members holding a chief administrative position in their university,<br />

as president or chancellor. A majority of deans of dental schools in the United States are <strong>IADR</strong> members. An<br />

even dozen past presidents of the American Dental Association have been members of the <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

Just as it is of interest and importance to know the center of population of a country and its geographic<br />

movements in the field of demography, so it is also informative to know the center of the <strong>IADR</strong> membership<br />

population! (By the use of standard mathematical methods and a calculator, the bivariate mean was derived<br />

from the arithmetic means of X and Y coordinates of all data points. These consisted of <strong>IADR</strong> sections or other<br />

membership concentrations within each geographic division. The same process was repeated with all nine<br />

continental <strong>IADR</strong> divisions or potential divisions, resulting in a single mean point for the world on a Mercator<br />

map divided at the International Date Line.) For the North American Division, which consists of many large<br />

sections in the United States but with some also in Canada and Mexico, the center point is located at 39° north<br />

latitude and 88° longitude west of Greenwich. This is in the town of Willow Hill, Jasper County, in Illinois.<br />

After additional effort in time and on (calculator) tape, it was determined that the world center of <strong>IADR</strong><br />

membership population is a point with a latitude of 33.3° N and a longitude of 50.3° W. This mean point is in<br />

the Atlantic Ocean approximately 1700 miles east of Charleston, South Carolina, and 2500 miles north of the<br />

mouth of the Amazon River, South America.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 118


Centers of <strong>IADR</strong> "Membershipopulation"<br />

At the founding of the Association, the center point of membership was in New York City. At the<br />

Twenty-fifth Anniversary it had moved westward to Chicago, but now after half a century the<br />

"membershipopulation" on a two-dimensional world map divided at the International Date Line has shifted its<br />

center point eastward and southward away from the United States. It thus behooved the <strong>IADR</strong> to consider<br />

modifying some of its organizational arrangements accordingly. (See chapter on "The Organization of <strong>IADR</strong>".)<br />

SPECIAL SPEAKERS AT MEETINGS<br />

The featured event of every annual meeting was usually the banquet and/or a special speaker. Not<br />

included in the following list are Inaugural and Retiring Presidential Addresses which are cited separately and<br />

also in chapter six on "Pages of Presidents", while the <strong>IADR</strong>-AADS Joint Meeting Speakers are listed later on<br />

the next pages.<br />

BANQUET SPEAKERS<br />

1942 "The Electron Microscope, A New Tool for the Research Worker"<br />

JAMES HILLIER, RCA, Camden, New Jersey<br />

1944 "Medico-legal Adventures of a Physical Anthropologist"<br />

WILTON M. KROGMAN, University of Chicago<br />

1955 DANIEL F. LYNCH, President of ADA, spoke on the topic of the role of research in dentistry<br />

J Dent Res 34: 666, 1955 (cited but not printed in Journal)<br />

1956 "The Antisocial Behavior of Cancer Cells"<br />

EDMUND V. COWDRY, Washington University of St. Louis<br />

J Dent Res 35: 817, 1956 (cited but not printed in Journal)<br />

1965 "International Partnership in Dental Research"<br />

JOHN E. FOGARTY, United States Congressman<br />

J Dent Res 44: 1099-1103, 1965<br />

1966 "Will You Walk a Little Faster?"<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 119


1968<br />

1969<br />

1970<br />

JOSEPH F. VOLKER, University of Alabama Medical Center<br />

J Dent Res 46: 94-98, 1967<br />

"Future Trends in Health Education and Health Care"<br />

JOHN F. MCCREARY, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia<br />

J Dent Res 47: 941-942, 1968<br />

"Research in Oral Disease: Portents for the Future"<br />

HAROLD HILLENBRAND, Executive Director, ADA<br />

J Dent Res 48: 1059-1062, 1969<br />

"The Future of Research in the Health Sciences"<br />

ROGER O. EGEBERG, Assistant Secretary for Health and Scientific Affairs, HEW<br />

J Dent Res 49: 905-908, 1970. (This was the keynote address presented not at a banquet but at the<br />

Fiftieth Commemorative <strong>IADR</strong> Program.)<br />

<strong>IADR</strong>-AADS JOINT MEETINGS: KEYNOTE SPEAKERS<br />

1954<br />

1955<br />

1958<br />

WILLARD FRANK LIBBY, University of Chicago, spoke on his epoch-making discovery that carbon<br />

14 determinations could be made a useful and accurate tool in dating the history of the world up to<br />

25,000 years ago.<br />

J Dent Res 33: 726, 1954 (not printed in Journal)<br />

"The Origin of the Solar System"<br />

HAROLD C. UREY, Nobel Laureate from the University of Chicago<br />

J Dent Res 34: 771, 1955 (not printed in Journal)<br />

Symposium Theme: Interrelationships between Research and Education in Modern Dentistry<br />

1. "The Broadening Spectrum of Dental Research"<br />

2. ROY O. GREEP, Dean, Harvard University School of Dental Medicine<br />

3. "The Impact of Research on Dental Education"<br />

4. HARRY LYONS, Dean, Medical College of Virginia<br />

5. "Some Comments on Support of Research Training from the Point of View of the National<br />

Institutes of Health"<br />

6. CASIUS J. VAN SLYKE, Associate Director, NIH<br />

1959<br />

Theme: Impact of Dental Research on the Teaching and Practice of Dentistry<br />

1. "Problem Areas in Dentistry and the Attacks"<br />

2. NED B. WILLIAMS, University of Pennsylvania<br />

3. "Contributions of Research in the Physical Sciences"<br />

4. RALPH W. PILLIPS, Indiana University<br />

5. "Contributions of Research in Human Biology"<br />

6. JOHN B. MACDONALD, Forsyth Dental Infirmary for Children<br />

7. "Contributions of Research to the Teaching of Dentistry"<br />

8. RAYMOND J. NAGLE, New York University<br />

9. "Contributions of Research to the Practice of Dentistry"<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 120


10. BERYL T. RITCHEY, Colorado Springs, Colorado<br />

1962<br />

1965<br />

1966<br />

1967<br />

Theme: Animal Experimentation as an Approach to Oral Health Problems<br />

1. "Germfree Animal Studies"<br />

2. R. J. FITZGERALD<br />

3. "Periodontal Disease"<br />

4. J. B. MACDONALD<br />

5. "Radiobiology"<br />

6. W. D. ARMSTRONG<br />

7. "Transplantation Biology"<br />

8. H. D. HALL<br />

"The Contributions of Social and Behavioral Sciences to the Health Sciences"<br />

MURRAY G. ROSS, President, York University, Toronto<br />

J Dent Res 44: 1104-1111, 1965<br />

Panel Discussion: Interrelation of Dental Research and Education<br />

"The Challenges Identified at the National Conference on Dental Research and Education"<br />

Panelists:<br />

JOHN D. COOPER, Dean of Sciences, Northwestern University<br />

MAURICE J. HICKEY, University of Washington<br />

BARNET M. LEVY, University of Texas<br />

HOWARD M. MYERS, University of California at San Francisco<br />

HAMILTON B. G. ROBINSON, University of Missouri at Kansas City<br />

"The Future of Higher Education and Research"<br />

LOGAN WILSON, American Council on Education<br />

J Dent Res 46: 1216-1221, 1967 (presented at the <strong>IADR</strong>-AADS Joint Banquet)<br />

PRESIDENTIAL SPEAKERS<br />

The Presidential Address presented at the annual meetings has always been a highlight, since it offers to<br />

the audience an unusual insight into the President's thinking about the Association, its Journal, and/or dental<br />

research. Whether an inaugural or a retiring address has been the more profound and comprehensive has<br />

depended upon a man's aspirations before undertaking the office of President and upon his accomplishments or<br />

regrets upon leaving this high office. The content of these addresses is often very revealing, and some future<br />

historian may want to further analyze each address; hence expeditious references are provided.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 121


PRESIDENTIAL INAUGURAL ADDRESSES<br />

Date Speaker Title or Topic J Dent Res<br />

Reference<br />

22 Mar<br />

1931<br />

18 Mar<br />

1934<br />

17 Mar<br />

1935<br />

15 Mar<br />

1936<br />

14 Mar<br />

1937<br />

13 Mar<br />

1938<br />

19 Mar<br />

1939<br />

14 Mar<br />

1940<br />

16 Mar<br />

1941<br />

14 Mar<br />

1942<br />

14 Mar<br />

1943<br />

19 Mar<br />

1944<br />

27 May<br />

1945<br />

17 Mar<br />

1946<br />

22 Jun<br />

1947<br />

20 Jun<br />

1948<br />

26 Jun<br />

1949<br />

26 Mar<br />

1950<br />

Webster Brief thanks 11: 449, 1931<br />

Appleton (Not printed in Journal or anywhere else) 14: 187, 1934<br />

Beust The importance of the Journal 15: 150-154, 1935-<br />

36<br />

Skillen Factors contributing to the success of <strong>IADR</strong> 15: 301-304, 1935-<br />

36<br />

Kitchin Brief thanks 16: 295-297, 1937<br />

Hill Brief thanks 17: 291-292, 1938<br />

Gies<br />

Other dental organizations and the <strong>IADR</strong>; needed changes in the<br />

organization of <strong>IADR</strong><br />

18: 230-236, 1939<br />

Souder Exploitation of dentistry by manufacturer's false advertising claims 19: 276-278, 1940<br />

Schour<br />

"The Problem of Integration in Dental Research, Training and<br />

Clinical Practice"<br />

20: 221-230, 1941<br />

Bodecker The value of basic research 21: 291-295, 1942<br />

Jay<br />

Some thoughts relative to growth of Association and annual<br />

scientific papers<br />

22: 194-195, 1943<br />

(Synopsis only)<br />

Dean Progress in epidemiology 23: 183-188, 1944<br />

Armstrong (No inaugural address given; explanation on p. 198)<br />

Chase "Dental Research in the Near Future" 25: 151-154, 1946<br />

Hodge "Impressions of Operation Crossroads" 26: 435-439, 1947<br />

Brodie "Our Commons Fields of Research" 27: 717-723, 1948<br />

Blayney "Dental Education and the <strong>IADR</strong>" 28: 627-631, 1949<br />

Bibby "The Scientific Emphasis in Dentistry" 29: 649-655, 1950<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 122


18 Mar<br />

1951<br />

23 Mar<br />

1952<br />

22 Mar<br />

1953<br />

21 Mar<br />

1954<br />

20 Mar<br />

1955<br />

24 Mar<br />

1956<br />

22 Mar<br />

1957<br />

21 Mar<br />

1958<br />

21 Mar<br />

1959<br />

19 Mar<br />

1960<br />

25 Mar<br />

1961<br />

17 Mar<br />

1962<br />

23 Mar<br />

1963<br />

21 Mar<br />

1964<br />

21 Jul<br />

1965<br />

26 Mar<br />

1966<br />

16 Mar<br />

1967<br />

21 Mar<br />

1968<br />

20 Mar<br />

1969<br />

18 Mar<br />

1970<br />

Fosdick<br />

(Not printed in Journal or anywhere else)<br />

Hine Comments on education, research, and the <strong>IADR</strong> 31: 455-458,<br />

1952<br />

Arnold "Trends in Research" 32: 628-632,<br />

1953<br />

Paffenbarger "The International Aspects of Our Association with Special<br />

Emphasis on Japan"<br />

33: 637-643,<br />

1954<br />

Boyle Narration of trip to Burma (not printed in Journal) 34: 666, 1955<br />

Volker "The Life of Magitot" (not printed in Journal) 35: 817, 1956<br />

Sognnaes "A Precious Heritage: Footnotes on Ivory Art and Dental Science" 37: 374-383,<br />

1958<br />

Williams "The <strong>IADR</strong> and Communications" 37: 951-955,<br />

1958<br />

Robinson "The Journal of Dental Research, 1919-1958" 38: 640-649,<br />

1959<br />

Knighton "An Evaluation of Clinical Research in Dentistry" 39: 649-652,<br />

1960<br />

English "International Aspects of Dental Research" 40: 631-640,<br />

1961<br />

Kreshover "The Image of Dental Research" 41: 917-918,<br />

1962<br />

Burrill Need for Journal funding; other organizational changes 42: 1053-1055,<br />

1963<br />

Rushton Need for more internationality 43: 725-728,<br />

1964<br />

Levy "The Climate of Research" 44: 1061-1064,<br />

1965<br />

Manly "The Growth of Dental Research" 46: 5-8, 1967<br />

Phillips "The Stature of Dental Research in the Scientific Community" 46: 1125-1131,<br />

1967<br />

Macdonald "Science Education: Backdrop for Discovery" 47: 855-859,<br />

1968<br />

Dummett<br />

"Comprehensiveness, Too, in Research on Oral Health and<br />

Disease Prevention"<br />

48: 985-989,<br />

1969<br />

Rovelstad "The Next Fifty Years—New Goals" 49: 961-965,<br />

1970<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 123


RETIRING PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESSES<br />

Date Speaker Title or Topic<br />

27 Jan<br />

1922<br />

25 Mar<br />

1928<br />

23 Mar<br />

1929<br />

25 Mar<br />

1930<br />

22 Mar<br />

1931<br />

20 Mar<br />

1932<br />

18 Mar<br />

1933<br />

18 Mar<br />

1934<br />

17 Mar<br />

1935<br />

15 Mar<br />

1936<br />

14 Mar<br />

1937<br />

13 Mar<br />

1938<br />

19 Mar<br />

1939<br />

14 Mar<br />

1940<br />

16 Mar<br />

1941<br />

14 Mar<br />

1942<br />

14 Mar<br />

1943<br />

19 Mar<br />

1944<br />

Williams<br />

"Disputed Points and Unsolved Problems in the Normal and<br />

Pathological History of Enamel"<br />

J Dent Res<br />

Reference<br />

5: 27-107, 1923<br />

Miner A discussion of the <strong>IADR</strong> 8: 395-400, 1928<br />

Miner The need for dental education more relevant to research 9: 269-272, 1929<br />

Black "A Dental Research Program" 10: 368-372,<br />

1930<br />

Rickert "Several Urgent Problems in Dental Research" 11: 438-449,<br />

1931<br />

Webster "The Value of Research in Dentistry" 12: 412-414,<br />

1932<br />

Bunting "Certain Trends in Dental Research" 13: 175-181,<br />

1933<br />

Hatton "Louis-Charles Malassez: 1849-1909" 14: 154-157,<br />

1934<br />

Appleton<br />

The relation of <strong>IADR</strong> to the JDR; indexing of dental literature; public<br />

welfare and the welfare of dentistry<br />

15: 140-147,<br />

1935-36<br />

Beust Research and researchers 15: 296-299,<br />

1935-36<br />

Skillen Preceptors—their importance and influence in dental research 16: 290-294,<br />

1937<br />

Kitchin On microscopy in dentistry 17: 274-289,<br />

1938<br />

Hill "The Influence of Saliva upon the Growth of Oral Bacteria" 18: 214-224,<br />

1939<br />

Gies "The Work and Functions of the <strong>IADR</strong>" 19: 258-266,<br />

1940<br />

Souder "Loyalty to Our Association and to Our Protecting Nation" 20: 217-220,<br />

1941<br />

Schour "The Work and Functions of the <strong>IADR</strong>" 21: 285-289,<br />

1942<br />

Bodecker Research on commercial products 22: 191-192,<br />

1943<br />

Jay The need for improvement in the <strong>IADR</strong> 23: 181-183,<br />

1944<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 124


27 May<br />

1945<br />

17 Mar<br />

1946<br />

18 Mar<br />

1951<br />

15 Mar<br />

1970<br />

Dean<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> business administration improvements; comments on meeting<br />

cancellation<br />

24: 189-191,<br />

1945<br />

Armstrong Remarks (not printed in Journal or anywhere) 25: 173, 1946<br />

Bibby The needs of the Association 30: 455-458,<br />

1951<br />

On ad hoc committees and recommendations 49: 911, 914-917,<br />

1970<br />

ANECDOTES—ABOUT MEMBERS AT MEETINGS<br />

Anecdotes. . . are rich treasures to the man of the world.—GOETHE<br />

Regarding the absence of a presidential inaugural address by Wallace Armstrong: Some years later he<br />

explained the unique reason. At the very time he was ready to give his inaugural address at the curtailed annual<br />

meeting in Chicago, Sunday, 27 May 1945, it just so happened that a parade came down Michigan Avenue past<br />

the old Stevens Hotel. Apparently it was a World War II "Victory in Europe" parade, with bugles blaring and<br />

drums rolling. Since these outdoor sounds drowned out the meeting anyway, everyone rushed to the windows to<br />

see the parade. After about fifteen minutes, when it was over, all returned to their seats, and the Chairman, now<br />

being very concerned about the schedule, looked at both the agenda and his watch, and proceeded to call for the<br />

next report—completely ignoring the President-Elect's inaugural address! Being the youngest man ever to be<br />

President, and being much more timid than at present, Wallace tucked his paper back into his coat pocket and<br />

remained utterly speechless. Thus, his address was never presented, acknowledged, or published.<br />

Allan Brodie, as a young man at the University of Illinois, related how he was impressed with the<br />

importance of early <strong>IADR</strong> meetings. It was the biggest event in the research life of his orthodontic department.<br />

So, when he was preparing his first report, his mentor, Frederick Noyes, stressed how he must rehearse his<br />

presentation many times to be letter-perfect and certainly within the fifteen-minute time limit which he thought<br />

was absolute. By the time of the big event, Allan's report was well-nigh perfect, and he presented it in like<br />

manner—especially the timing—since he finished with a half-minute to spare. However, a real letdown<br />

occurred when the next presentation was by an old-timer who spoke off-the-cuff about his "research"<br />

experiences in the dental clinic. He rambled on for at least a half-hour, boring everyone but drawing no<br />

admonishment from the Chairman, who must have forgotten his stopwatch.<br />

How did it come to pass that the recent Past-Editor served for an odd number of years (eleven in all)<br />

when he was elected for consecutive two-year terms? Well, the explanation is unique. Sometime during his<br />

Journal stewardship, one of the Editor's two-year terms had been only half-served, when, quite inadvertently,<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 125


the then current <strong>IADR</strong> Secretary-Treasurer placed the Editor's name on the ballot for another two-year term.<br />

When the Editor discovered that his name appeared on his own mailed ballot one year too soon, he promptly<br />

called the Secretary's attention to the matter, but the latter exclaimed, "For God's sake and mine, don't mention<br />

it or it will cost the Association dozens of dollars and weeks of delay in recalling all the ballots and printing<br />

new ones before the coming annual meeting. And anyway—what's the difference—didn't you know you are<br />

serving for life?"<br />

As stated by Ronald Hartles: Deans, especially those who are <strong>IADR</strong> members, never really die—they<br />

merely lose their faculties.<br />

Heard at a recent <strong>IADR</strong> meeting: What's the definition of that strange-looking creature, the camel? Well,<br />

it's really a horse, but it was put together by an <strong>IADR</strong> committee.<br />

REFERENCES<br />

1. Orland, F. J.: Historical Perspectives Are a Prologue to the Decades Ahead, J Dent Res 50: 993-996,<br />

1971.<br />

2. Proceedings of the Forty-ninth General Session of <strong>IADR</strong>, J Dent Res 50: 989-1238, 1971.<br />

3. Proceedings of the Fiftieth General Session of <strong>IADR</strong>, J Dent Res 51: 1107-1318, 1972.<br />

4. J Dent Res 6: 113-116, 1924-26; 8: 210, 1928.<br />

5. J Dent Res 8: 211, 1928.<br />

6. Gies, W. J.: A Brief Review of the History of the International Association for Dental Research, J Dent<br />

Res 11: 56-57, 1931.<br />

7. J Dent Res 13: 173-175, 1933.<br />

8. J Dent Res 24: 189-190, 1945.<br />

9. J Dent Res 41: 935, 1962.<br />

10. Robert, H. M.: Robert's Rules of Order Revised for Deliberative Assemblies, 1943 ed, Chicago: Scott,<br />

Foresman and Company, pp 22-23.<br />

11. Webster's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary, Springfield, Massachusetts: G. & C. Merriam Company,<br />

1965, pp 527, 793; The American Collegiate Dictionary, New York: Random House, 1962, pp 757,<br />

1107.<br />

12. Sturgis, A.: Standard Code of Parliamentary Procedure, 2d ed, new and revised, New York: McGraw-<br />

Hill Book Company, 1966, p 109.<br />

13. Hollinshead, B. S. (ed): Survey of Dentistry: The Final Report of the Commission on the Survey of<br />

Dentistry in the United States, Washington, D.C.: American Council on Education, 1961, pp 436, 575.<br />

14. J Dent Res 8: 202-203, 1928.<br />

15. Orland, F. J.: The Fifty Year History of the Journal and the Biographical Directory of the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

(Special Commemorative Supplement to the September 1969 issue of vol 48 of the Journal).<br />

16. Orland, F. J., and Mitchell, D. F.: Addendum to the Biographical Directory of Members of the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

(Special Supplement to the March 1971 issue of vol 50 of the Journal).<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 126


<strong>IADR</strong> GLOBAL MEMBERSHIP AS OF 1 MARCH 1970<br />

Country Total Members Country Total Members<br />

Argentina 51 Malta 1<br />

Australia 105 Mexico 31<br />

Belgium 3 Mozambique 2<br />

Brazil 20 Netherlands 7<br />

Canada 72 New Zealand 21<br />

Chili 4 Nicaragua 1<br />

Colombia 16 Nigeria 1<br />

Czechoslovakia 1 Norway 14<br />

Denmark 25 Panama 1<br />

Egypt 1 Paraguay 3<br />

England 189 Peru 2<br />

Ecuador 1 Philippines 6<br />

Finland 19 Puerto Rico 13<br />

France 13 South Africa 51<br />

Germany 28 Scotland 28<br />

Greece 3 Singapore 1<br />

Hungary 1 Spain 2<br />

India 5 Sweden 14<br />

Iran 2 Switzerland 17<br />

Ireland 11 Syria 1<br />

Israel 21 Thailand 1<br />

Italy 11 Turkey 1<br />

Japan 112 United States 1,999<br />

Korea 2 Venezuela 28<br />

Luxembourg 1 Wales 10<br />

During the final year of the <strong>IADR</strong>'s first half-century, the above geographic distribution existed. The total<br />

membership of almost 3000 included one honorary member, fifteen student members, and ninety-two life<br />

members (who had reached age 65 and had been regular members in good standing for the previous quarter of<br />

a century).<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 127


Originals of these growth curves were on display as part of an informal exhibit by F. J. Orland in the<br />

Headquarters Room of the <strong>IADR</strong> at its Fiftieth Commemorative Meeting in New York City, 1970.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 128


CHAPTER TWELVE: OTHER RESEARCH GATHERINGS<br />

Members comprising <strong>IADR</strong> have such diversity of interest that many have been participating in<br />

meetings of other scientific societies and associations. Aside from the extensive annual <strong>IADR</strong> session with its<br />

composite meetings, there are two other series of orally oriented ongoing meetings which the <strong>IADR</strong> has always<br />

sponsored. One of these is the Nd Section (Dentistry) of the American Association for the Advancement of<br />

Science. These gatherings began in 1932.<br />

The contents of many of the Nd programs were published. References for these are listed in the<br />

footnotes to the enclosed comprehensive table and also in a list that follows. For information on programs and<br />

participants, see the September issue of each specific year of Science, the official publication of AAAS. The<br />

Official Proceedings of the AAAS is the only other source of this information, although the Nd programs and<br />

proceedings were consistently announced in the Journal of Dental Research between the years 1958-68 while<br />

Frank J. Orland was Editor.<br />

The other series of <strong>IADR</strong>-sponsored gatherings—the International Conference on Oral Biology<br />

meetings—started in 1959 and, except for the first, have been held outside North America. The contents of the<br />

ICOB gatherings were published as supplements to the JDR, while announcements of them appeared in<br />

editorials during the F. J. O. Editorship.<br />

THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE<br />

"Through Gies' efforts, the American Association for the Advancement of Science gave dentistry an<br />

Associate relationship in 1931, and four years later admitted the North American Division of the <strong>IADR</strong> to<br />

affiliate accreditation, permitting a representative on the Council of the AAAS." 1 The AAAS was persuaded to<br />

provide a meeting for discussions in the field of Dentistry, with emphasis on the basic sciences. It was the<br />

American College of Dentists, with which Gies was also connected, that conducted the earliest of these<br />

meetings. 2 The dental programs at these meetings of 1932, 1933, and 1934 were conducted by the American<br />

College of Dentists, with the cooperation of members of the International Association for Dental Research, the<br />

American Dental Association, and the American Association of Dental Schools. In April 1935 the AAAS<br />

created in Section N (Medical Sciences) the Subsection on Dentistry (N 1 —later designated Nd), to consist of the<br />

official representatives of said four dental organizations. 3 In those days being cosponsor meant paying the bills<br />

for the meetings. In assimilating these past programs, it was learned that they varied considerably in quality as<br />

well as in length, with none appearing in some years (1935, 1942, 1943, and 1945). However, the first program<br />

presented was in Atlantic City in 1932 on "phases of dental science having particular interest for medical men".<br />

Arthur D. Black was the motivator, with Leuman Waugh as Co-Chairman of the meeting.<br />

It may be interesting to know that the <strong>IADR</strong> was the mainspring of the symposia, since it was the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 129


members almost exclusively who were program officers and participants. For additional information, see the<br />

comprehensive resumé of W. J. Gies 4 and also that of George C. Paffenbarger, 5 as a former member of the<br />

AAAS Council.<br />

In addition to the official publications of the AAAS Nd Section by the AAAS, on the one hand, the<br />

publications appearing as supplements of the Journal of Dental Research and those appearing elsewhere have<br />

been the various reports published soon after each Nd meeting. These have been fairly well documented in the<br />

Journal of the American College of Dentists. Another source is the JDR. For all those programs not footnoted in<br />

the table as having been published (with references at the end of the chapter), the reader is referred to the AAAS<br />

publication Science issued the year of the Symposium, usually in the September number before the meeting.<br />

Following the very comprehensive table, there are blocks of references, so that the reader can more easily<br />

recognize the different publications which covered and cited the AAAS Nd symposia in different years,<br />

depending on specific topic interests and available funds.<br />

REFERENCES<br />

1. Orland, F. J.: The Fifty Year History of the Journal and the Biographical Directory of the <strong>IADR</strong>, J Dent<br />

Res 48: H-10, 1969 (Special Commemorative Supplement to September 1969 issue of vol 48).<br />

2. Brandhorst, O. W.: The History of the American College of Dentists, St. Louis: American College of<br />

Dentists, 1971, p 234.<br />

3. JACD 3: n79-80, 1936.<br />

4. Scientific Proceedings of the First Meeting of a Dental Organization with the American Association for<br />

the Advancement of Science, Atlantic City, N.J., 30 December 1932, J Dent Res 13: 135-139, 1933.<br />

5. Paffenbarger, G. C.: The Influence of William J. Gies in the Recognition of Dentistry by the American<br />

Association for the Advancement of Science, JACD 24: 180-182, 1957.<br />

AAAS ND PROGRAMS<br />

View Table<br />

SPECIAL AAAS ND SYMPOSIA PUBLISHED BY THE AAAS<br />

1. Published as Fluorine<br />

and Dental Health,<br />

AAAS, 1942.<br />

2. Published as Fluorine<br />

and Dental Caries,,<br />

AAAS Pub. No. 25,<br />

1946.<br />

3. Published as<br />

Fluoridation as a Public<br />

Health Measure, AAAS<br />

Pub. No. 38, 1954,<br />

reprinted 1955.<br />

4. Published as Advances in<br />

7. Published as<br />

Fundamentals of<br />

Keratinization, AAAS<br />

Pub. No. 70, 1962.<br />

8. Published as<br />

Mechanisms of Hard<br />

Tissue Destruction,<br />

AAAS Pub. No. 75,<br />

1963.<br />

9. Published as<br />

Environmental<br />

Variables in Oral<br />

Disease, AAAS Pub.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 130


Experimental Caries<br />

Research, AAAS Pub.<br />

(nor numbered), 1955.<br />

5. Published as<br />

Calcification in<br />

Biological Systems,<br />

AAAS Pub. No. 64,<br />

1960.<br />

6. Published as Aging,<br />

AAAS Pub. No. 65,<br />

1960.<br />

No. 81, 1966.<br />

10. Published as The<br />

Biology of the Mouth,<br />

AAAS Pub. No. 89,<br />

1968.<br />

11. Published as Adhesion<br />

in Biological Systems,<br />

New York: Academic<br />

Press, Inc., 1970.<br />

PROCEEDINGS AND ABSTRACTS OF THE AAAS ND SECTION<br />

1932 J Dent Res 13: 135-172, 1933<br />

1933 JACD 1: 44-62, 1934<br />

1934 JACD 2: 106-120, 1935<br />

1936 (January meeting) JACD 3: 79-95, 1936<br />

1936 (December meeting) JADA-Dent Cos 24: 1130-1138, 1937<br />

1937 JACD 5: 73-77, 1938<br />

1938 JACD 6: 56-70, 184-187, 1939<br />

1939 JACD 7: 74-87, 1940<br />

1940 JACD 8: 44-61, 1941<br />

1941 JACD 9: 229-259, 1942<br />

1942 (canceled meeting) JACD 10: 62-75, 1943<br />

1944 JACD 12: 47-67, 1945<br />

1946 JACD 14: 207-231, 1947<br />

1950 JACD 18: 203-204, 1951<br />

1952 JACD 20: 14-18, 1953<br />

1953 JACD 21: 303-317, 1954<br />

1954 JACD 22: 109-115, 1955<br />

1955 JACD 23: 186-196, 1956<br />

1956 JACD 24: 180-207, 1957<br />

1957 JACD 25: 285-300, 1958<br />

1958 JACD 26: 184-186, 1959<br />

1959 JACD 27: 137-140, 1960<br />

1960 JACD 28: 147-149, 1961<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 131


1961 JACD 29: 46-47, 1962<br />

SPECIAL ND SYMPOSIA PUBLISHED BY THE Journal of Dental Research<br />

1. Conference on Genetic Aspects of Oral Structures. Denver, 27 December 1961. Proceedings in J Dent<br />

Res 42: 1259-1369, 1963.<br />

2. Symposium on Growth and Development of the Face, Teeth, and Jaws. Cleveland, 26-27 December<br />

1963. J Dent Res 44: 147-306, 1965.<br />

3. Symposium on the Behavioral Sciences in Dentistry and the Interdisciplinary Symposium on Materials<br />

Science in Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmacy. Berkeley, 27-29 December 1965. J Dent Res 45: 1583-<br />

1827, 1966.<br />

Resumés of AAAS Nd meetings were published in "Editorial Views and News" in the Journal while Frank J.<br />

Orland was Editor: J Dent Res 37: 989, 1958; 38: 1059, 1959; 39: 1081, 1960; 40: 863, 1961; 41: 1247-1248,<br />

1962; 42: 1371, 1963; 43: 637, 1964; 44: 1217, 1965; 45: 1685, 1966; 46: 995, 1967; 47: 677, 1968.<br />

THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCES ON ORAL BIOLOGY<br />

These Conferences sponsored by the <strong>IADR</strong> have reoccurred triennially.<br />

The four individual oral biology conferences that have been consummated provide strong evidence of<br />

the intense and international motivation in conducting research as a basic discipline in the oral area per se. They<br />

also have given evidence of the wide interest in dental health and applied research aimed at the improvement of<br />

health for the peoples of the world. Monetary support was provided by the Colgate-Palmolive Company of<br />

Jersey City, New Jersey, for all the Conferences and for subsequent publication of their contents in the Journal<br />

of Dental Research.<br />

The First ICOB was held in New York City on 7-9 September 1959. Titles of the Conference were:<br />

"Enamel", "Biochemical and Nutritional Factors in Dental Caries", "Oral Soft Tissues", "Oral Environment",<br />

and "Bone". 1<br />

The Second ICOB was held in Bonn, West Germany, on 2-5 July 1962. Titles were "Epidemiologic<br />

Research in Dentistry", "Forensic Dentistry", "Investigations on Oral Neoplasia", "Growth and Development<br />

Problems", "Progress in Research in Preventive Dentistry", and "Oral Microbiology". 2<br />

The Third ICOB was held 14-16 June 1965 in London, England. Titles were "Connective Tissue",<br />

"Repair", "Neoplasia", "Genetics", "Fluid Environment of Teeth", and "Tooth Form and Structure". 3<br />

The Fourth ICOB was held on 15-17 July 1968 in Copenhagen, Denmark. The title was "Interface Biology of<br />

the Oral Structures". 4<br />

Planning was completed during 1970 for the Fifth Conference, on "Enzymology," to be held in Zürich,<br />

Switzerland, on 8-10 September 1971. Subsequently, the proceedings were published. 5<br />

ICOB PROCEEDINGS<br />

1. Abstracts of the First International Conference on Oral Biology, J Dent Res 39: 1083-1097, 1960.<br />

2. Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Oral Biology, J Dent Res 42: 184-559, 1963.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 132


3. Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Oral Biology, J Dent Res 45: 419-746, 1966.<br />

4. Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Oral Biology, J Dent Res 48: 609-856, 1969.<br />

5. Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Oral Biology, J Dent Res 51: 209-442, 1972.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 133


CHAPTER THIRTEEN: HISTORY OF THE DIVISIONS<br />

By simplest denotative definition, a division is simply "a state of being divided". More specifically, it is<br />

the "separation of members of a deliberative body" from other members of the same body. In the current <strong>IADR</strong><br />

connotative sense, "Division" implies separate large bodies of members that have organized on different<br />

continents of the world and have at present considerable autonomy, although their members clearly recognized<br />

them as constituents of the parent organization.<br />

In the beginning, William Gies, the Founder, envisioned 1 that the Association ". . . could best be formed<br />

as a federation of local societies, each to be an autonomous section of a national division of the international<br />

association. . ."<br />

However, through the first decade, Sections were the only components cited which became increasingly<br />

important active units of the <strong>IADR</strong>. In a paper presented in full 2 entitled "A Brief Review of the History of the<br />

<strong>IADR</strong>", William Gies stated that "divisions and sections are autonomous in accordance with the limitations of<br />

ordinary federation. Members. . . may organize divisions in any nation and sections in any division." Later, in a<br />

letter dated 2 March 1936, Professor Gies pointed out that the "<strong>IADR</strong> consists of 26 sections in eight nations"<br />

and that "the sections in a nation constitute that nation's division" and that "the financial affairs of a section of a<br />

division are its own concern." He also stated that "The American Division, which is merely one of the eight [of]<br />

which the Association is composed, was formally organized last spring. Its affairs are as independent of the<br />

Association's control as are those of, say, the New York Section." Moreover, in the Journal of Dental Research<br />

during 1940 on the inside front cover of the issue, there appeared a list of the eight national Divisions referred<br />

to in that letter. These were Canada, China, England, Germany, Hungary, Palestine, South Africa, and the<br />

United States.<br />

It must emphatically be pointed out, however, that in 1940 there were no divisional organizations as<br />

such. The names merely meant that the countries cited had one or more Sections within their borders. The one<br />

exception was the one termed by Gies "the American Division". (It is not clear whether this body was supposed<br />

to include Canadian members.) The American Division had as its Treasurer B. B. Palmer—the Treasurer of<br />

<strong>IADR</strong>, who according to Gies' letter, thus had "two separate and distinct responsibilities." (See chapter on<br />

"Administrative Aspects of <strong>IADR</strong>".)<br />

The other named Divisions apparently were only paper entities and never functioned per se. The first<br />

recorded meeting designated specifically for North American members was on Sunday, 23 March 1952, at 11<br />

A.M. in Colorado Springs, Colorado. 3 Thereafter, each year during the annual <strong>IADR</strong> business meetings, a short<br />

meeting of the North American Division was convened to transact the separate North American minimal<br />

business. Edward Hatton, as the <strong>IADR</strong> Secretary-Treasurer, called for these gatherings. The North American<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 134


Division had no officers until 1966 when some of the officers of the Association were designated also officers<br />

of the NAD (Manly, President; Rovelstad, Secretary-Treasurer). 4 This duality, as a practical measure, was<br />

followed until the NAD was fully activated with its own elected officers after 1970.<br />

By contrast, other Divisions, notably the British Division, has had independent officers and meetings<br />

since 1953. It emerged from the former London Section. Japanese members organized directly into a Division<br />

in 1954, and the Continental European Division was organized in 1964. Later South Africa reorganized from<br />

fragments of the demised Johannesburg Section and formed a Division in 1966. Two years later, in 1968,<br />

Australian <strong>IADR</strong> members reorganized into the Australian Division, which was joined by the New Zealand<br />

Section in 1969 to become the Australia-New Zealand Division. That same year (1969). Scandinavian members<br />

along with the NOF (Nordisk Odontologisk Förening) reorganized and became the Scandinavian-NOF Division<br />

of <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

Now at the close of the first fifty years of <strong>IADR</strong>, the Divisions have become significant bodies which<br />

are fully represented in the proposed reorganized Council of <strong>IADR</strong>. Specific Division histories as received are<br />

reproduced as follows with some editing.<br />

THE AUSTRALIA-NEW ZEALAND DIVISION<br />

The first <strong>IADR</strong> organization to be formed in Australia was the "Victorian Section of the Dental<br />

Materials Group". Following a preliminary meeting in October 1950, the Materials Group was officially<br />

founded in the state of Victoria in 1951. The first office-bearers were Howard K. Worner, Chairman; Edward<br />

Marks, Vice-Chairman; and Alan R. Docking, Honorary Secretary. By 1969 there were fifty-one members; the<br />

Australian DMG Representative was J. A. Chong. In 1970 the Chairman was Alan A. Grant.<br />

The second <strong>IADR</strong> organization to be formed in Australia was the Australia Section of <strong>IADR</strong>. The first<br />

meeting was held in Sydney 18 August 1961. The meeting consisted of a welcome address, an inaugural<br />

business meeting, election of officers, and an address by Kei Enoki (then President of the Japanese Division,<br />

<strong>IADR</strong>). There followed the presentation of six scientific papers. The meeting was held in conjunction with an<br />

Australian Dental Congress. Elected officers were David A. Cameron, Chairman, and Geoffrey S. Molyneux,<br />

Secretary. Approximately twenty members attended this first meeting. Membership grew rapidly, and by the<br />

end of 1970 there were about 130 full members and thirty associate members.<br />

Initially the body was known as the Australia Section of the <strong>IADR</strong>, with annual meetings being held in<br />

turn, in Sydney, Melbourne, and Adelaide. Now Brisbane is included, and the venue for the 1970 meeting was<br />

Perth. Australia sought Divisional status in 1968, which was granted. The Eighth Annual Meeting of the<br />

Australia Section (now, however, a Division) was held at the University of Adelaide on 20-22 August 1968<br />

with thirty-four scientific papers presented. 5 At this time, the New Zealand Section suggested combination, and<br />

by 1969 the Division had become the Australia-New Zealand Division of the <strong>IADR</strong>. The Ninth Annual Meeting<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 135


of the Australia and New Zealand members, now the ANZ Division, was held 27-29 August 1969 at the<br />

University of Queensland in Brisbane. There were forty abstracts printed in the Journal that year. 6 At the Tenth<br />

Annual Meeting held 26-28 August 1970 in Melbourne, there were forty-three papers presented. 7<br />

This Division now consists of the New Zealand, Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, and Perth<br />

Sections, each with its own President or Chairman, Secretary, and committee. (See chapter fourteen, "History of<br />

Sections".) Geographical barriers and financial problems at present make it difficult to hold annual meetings in<br />

Perth and in New Zealand (which currently functions independently). This situation will change, since the<br />

Divisional Annual Meeting is planned for New Zealand in 1973. The Divisional Secretary now holds office for<br />

a three-year term, and organizes the newsletters, circulars, and clerical and publication work, as well as<br />

publication of the Programme and Abstracts. Arrangements for annual meetings are in the hands of the<br />

appropriate local committee.<br />

By the end of 1970, the officers of the Division were Ken F. Adkins, President; and Barrie R. D.<br />

Gillings, Secretary.<br />

BARRIE R. D. GILLINGS, B.D.S., M.S.<br />

University of Sydney Faculty of Dentistry<br />

Sydney, New South Wales, Australia<br />

THE BRITISH DIVISION<br />

The history of the British Division dates back to the period before the Second World War, with the<br />

formation of a London Section in 1931. Founding members were Arthur Bulleid, J. Frank Colyer, F. N.<br />

Doubleday (Editor), Eric W. Fish (who later became Sir Wilfred Fish), Evelyn Charles Sprawson (Secretary),<br />

and Joseph G. Turner. These British research workers had earlier attended the Eighth Annual Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong><br />

in Toronto in 1930. The Section grew as other British workers became members of <strong>IADR</strong>, namely, Herbert C.<br />

Malleson in 1934, Ernest B. Dowsett, Cyril H. Howkins, and George B. Pritchard in 1935, and John Lewin<br />

Payne in 1937. Other enthusiastic dental workers in the London Section were Humphrey F. Humphreys and<br />

Martin A. Rushton, the latter being the last member elected to the Section just before World War II in 1939. (He<br />

was later elected President of <strong>IADR</strong>, 1964-65.)<br />

Several of the London Section members were designated Honorary Vice-Presidents of the <strong>IADR</strong> for<br />

their meritorious work. (See chapter on "Honorary Status in the <strong>IADR</strong>" re Honorary Vice-Presidents.) They<br />

were J. Frank Colyer, 1932-33; Joseph G. Turner, 1933-34; Evelyn C. Sprawson, 1934-36; Cyril H. Howkins,<br />

1936-37; J. Lewin Payne, 1937-39; Ernest B. Dowsett, 1939-40; and George B. Pritchard, 1940-44.<br />

During the Second World War, activities of the London Section came to a halt, but in 1953 the formation of a<br />

British Division 8 was authorized at the request of M. A. Rushton, A. Bulleid, and H. F. Humphreys. The first<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 136


meeting of the Division was held at Guy's Hospital Dental School in London on Saturday, 21 March 1953, at<br />

which meeting fourteen papers were read under the chairmanship of Professor Rushton.<br />

Members of the British Division reside in the countries of England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland,<br />

and the Republic of Eire. The Division has grown continuously since its founding, and at its Eighteenth Annual<br />

Meeting in Birmingham, England, in 1970, 139 papers were read. The membership at this time was 272.<br />

ANNUAL MEETINGS OF THE BRITISH DIVISION<br />

First<br />

Second<br />

Third<br />

Fourth<br />

Fifth<br />

Sixth<br />

Seventh<br />

Eighth<br />

Ninth<br />

Tenth<br />

Eleventh<br />

Twelfth<br />

Thirteenth<br />

Fourteenth<br />

Fifteenth<br />

Sixteenth<br />

21 March 1953, Guy's Hospital, London<br />

17 abstracts, J Dent Res 32: 729-736, 1953<br />

2-3 April 1954, School of Dental Surgery, University of Birmingham<br />

15 abstracts + 3 read by title, J Dent Res 33 729-736, 1954<br />

15-16 April 1955, London Hospital Dental School, Whitechapel<br />

23 abstracts + 2 read by title, J Dent Res 34: 776-785, 1955<br />

13-14 April 1956, School of Dentistry, University of Liverpool, Liverpool<br />

27 abstracts + 3 read by title, J Dent Res 35: 954-967, 1956<br />

11-12 April 1957, Institute of Dental Surgery, University of London<br />

33 abstracts + 1 read by title, J Dent Res 36: 805-817, 1957<br />

10-11 April 1958, Sutherland Dental School, King's College, Newcastle-upon-Tyne<br />

37 abstracts, Dent Res 37: 748-761, 1958<br />

9-10 April 1959, Turner Dental School, University of Manchester, Manchester<br />

57 abstracts, J Dent Res 38: 1213-1234, 1959<br />

7-8 April 1960, Royal Dental Hospital, London School of Dental Surgery, London<br />

42 abstracts, J Dent Res 39: 1098-1113, 1960<br />

6-7 April 1961, University of Bristol<br />

49 abstracts, J Dent Res 39 1275-1290, 1961<br />

12-13 April 1962, University of Sheffield<br />

62 abstracts, J Dent Res 41 1249-1271, 1962<br />

4-6 April 1963, Guy's Hospital, London<br />

81 abstracts J Dent Res 1079-1116, 1963<br />

9-10 April 1964, University Dental School, Edinburgh, Scotland<br />

77 abstracts, J Dent Res 43: 945-974, 1964<br />

8-9 April 1965, University Dental School, Leeds<br />

90 abstracts, J Dent Res 44: 1155-1190, 1965<br />

14-15 April 1966, London Hospital Medical College<br />

90 abstracts, J Dent Res 46: 103-133, 1967<br />

6-7 April 1967, Queen's College, Dundee, Scotland<br />

112 abstracts, J Dent Res 46: 1261-1299, 1967<br />

3-5 April 1968, Dental School, Welsh National School of Medicine, Cardiff, Wales<br />

124 abstracts, J Dent Res 47: 965-1008, 1968<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 137


Seventeenth 10-11 April 1969, University College, London<br />

115 abstracts, J Dent Res 48: 1095-1135, 1969<br />

Eighteenth<br />

8-10 April 1970, University of Birmingham<br />

139 abstracts, J Dent Res 50: 653-699, 1971<br />

OFFICERS OF THE BRITISH DIVISION<br />

President<br />

Martin A. Rushton, 1959-62<br />

Arthur I. Darling, 1962<br />

James L. Hardwick, 1965-68<br />

Cecil H. Tonge, 1968-71<br />

Secretary-Treasurer<br />

Maurice V. Stack, 1953-57<br />

Cecil H. Tonge, 1957-65<br />

H. Stuart M. Crabb, 1965-69<br />

Norman B. B. Symons, 1969-<br />

(Secretary)<br />

H. Stuart M. Crabb, 1969-<br />

(Treasurer)<br />

Councilor<br />

Martin A. Rushton, 1953-59<br />

Arthur I. Darling, 1959-62<br />

James L. Hardwick, 1962-65<br />

Cecil H. Tonge, 1965-68<br />

Ronald L. Hartles, 1968-71<br />

There was no President of the British Division in the years 1953-58; there was only a Senior Officer, namely,<br />

Martin A. Rushton as Councilor.<br />

Editors of the Division have been Albert E. W. Miles, 1953-57; Ivor R. H. Kramer, 1957-65; Edward D.<br />

Farmer, 1965-68; and J. H. Allan, 1968-.<br />

H. STUART M. CRABB, B.D.S., M.D.S., PH.D.<br />

University of Leeds Dental School and Hospital<br />

Leeds, England<br />

THE CONTINENTAL EUROPEAN DIVISION<br />

A Continental European Division of forty-three members was approved as a Division on 19 March 1964<br />

at the Forty-second General Meeting of the <strong>IADR</strong>. 9 This Division was effectively established at the Institut<br />

Dentaire, Faculté de Médecine in Strasbourg, France, on 12 September 1964. Forty-one members were present,<br />

and the First Annual Meeting was held on 12-13 September at the Institut. Twenty-one papers were presented at<br />

this meeting and were abstracted in the Journal. 10 A workshop on electron microscopical technics in dental<br />

research was given in the research center of this laboratory. The Division was created by a Board composed of<br />

the following persons: Adolf Kröncke and Rudolf Naujoks (West Germany), Hans Mühlemann (Switzerland),<br />

Giovanni Amici (Italy), and Robert Weill and Robert M. Frank (France). Hans Mühlemann was elected the first<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 138


Chairman. He was also later designated an Honorary Vice-President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 1967-68. The motivation for<br />

creating the Division was to bring all dental research workers from Continental Europe together once a year.<br />

Members come from France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Switzerland,<br />

Czechoslovakia, Greece, and Hungary.<br />

The Second Annual Meeting 11 of the CED was held at the Dental School of the University of Zürich,<br />

25-26 September 1965. Workshops in electromyography, electron microscopy, tooth mobility, and computer<br />

sciences were given. There were seventeen abstracts that year. The Third Annual Meeting 12 was held at the<br />

Dental School of the University of Würzburg in West Germany, 24-25 September 1966, with a workshop on<br />

bacteriology and biochemistry of dental caries. There were twenty-two abstracts published. The next annual<br />

meeting was in conjunction with the XIV World Dental Congress of the Fédération Dentaire Internationale in<br />

Paris, 12-13 July 1967. "The Fourth Annual Meeting was held in an unusual manner this year. Members and<br />

guests presented table demonstrations only, and therefore there were no abstracts of papers to be published for<br />

the autumn 1967 meeting. . . ." 13 The Fifth Annual Meeting 14 was located at the Dental School of the Sacred<br />

Heart Catholic University of Rome, 5-6 October 1968, with a workshop on histochemistry. There were twentyeight<br />

papers read. The Sixth Annual Meeting 15 was in the Solid State Physics Department of the University of<br />

Groningen in the Netherlands with a workshop on biophysical methods used in dental research. The meeting<br />

was held 27-28 September 1969, and there were twenty-five abstracts. A year later, on 19 September 1970, the<br />

Seventh Annual Meeting 16 was at the University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, West Germany, with twenty-seven<br />

papers presented.<br />

Only persons who have worked effectively in dental research and who have published several papers are<br />

admitted into this Division. Membership by 1969 had doubled since the creation in Strasbourg. The following<br />

year there were eighty members. There are no Sections in this Division, and the researchers from the several<br />

continental European nations have functioned very well in unity and harmony within this truly inter-nationrelated<br />

organization.<br />

Presidents of the Division have been Hans Mühlemann, 1964-65; Rudolf Naujoks, 1965-66; Robert<br />

Weill, 1966-67; Antonio Baratieri, 1967-68; Wiepko G. Perdok, 1968-69; Adolf Kröncke, 1969-70; and Giorgio<br />

Cimasoni, 1970-71. Robert M. Frank was Secretary of the Division, 1964-71; moreover, he was to be elected<br />

President of the Division for 1972-73. Councilors of the Division were Rudolf Naujoks, 1964-65; Giovanni<br />

Amici, 1965-66; Antonio Baratieri, 1966-67; Jarmil Köstlan, 1967-68; Adolf Kröncke, 1968-69; Giorgio<br />

Cimasoni, 1969-70; and Klaus G. König, 1970-71. König was expected to be elected President of the Division<br />

for 1971-72.<br />

ROBERT M. FRANK, CHIR. DENT., DR. MÉD.<br />

Dean, Institut Dentaire, Faculté de Médecine<br />

Strasbourg, France<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 139


THE JAPANESE DIVISION<br />

The Japanese Division of the <strong>IADR</strong> was founded on 6 November 1954 at a meeting held at the School<br />

of Dentistry of the Tokyo Medical and Dental University.<br />

At the invitation of Kei Enoki, sixteen researchers were present at this initial meeting. Their membership<br />

in the <strong>IADR</strong>, and the establishment of a Japanese Section, were confirmed at the Thirty-second Annual Meeting<br />

in 1954 when George C. Paffenbarger became President of <strong>IADR</strong> 17 Edward H. Hatton, then Secretary-Treasurer<br />

of the Association, stated in a letter dated 6 May 1954, ". . . The officers and members hope that this<br />

relationship will be of long standing and of great advantage both to you and to us. . . ."<br />

Previous to this event, the organization of a Japanese Section had been encouraged by Paffenbarger on<br />

his visit to Japan in June of 1950 as part of a dental mission sent by the United States government. During this<br />

time he met with researchers and educators in order to evaluate the state of dental sciences in Japan.<br />

Japanese Division officers elected at this initial meeting were Shinjiro Takahashi, President; Kei Enoki,<br />

Secretary; and Masao Onisi, Editor. A Constitution was drawn, modeled after that of the <strong>IADR</strong>. The newly<br />

elected President delivered his inaugural address. A message from <strong>IADR</strong> President George C. Paffenbarger was<br />

read by Col. John S. Oartel, Chief of Dental Services at the Tokyo Army Hospital, who also spoke on the<br />

"History and Present Activities of the <strong>IADR</strong>". Masaru Nagao, President of the Tokyo Medical and Dental<br />

University, gave a congratulatory speech in which he noted that a paper of his written in 1919 was the first<br />

contribution to the Journal from Japan. 18<br />

Eighteen meetings have been held by the Japanese Division since 1954, and the number of members<br />

grew to 115 by the end of 1970. Abstracts of papers presented have been published in the Journal of Dental<br />

Research.<br />

Because the <strong>IADR</strong>'s General Meetings have all been held in North America, members of the Japanese<br />

Division have been largely unable to participate in <strong>IADR</strong> activities, and the converse also was true. Recognizing<br />

the need for "cross-fertilization", Seiichi Matsumiya, a member of the International Relations Committee of the<br />

<strong>IADR</strong>, formed the Pan-Pacific Congress of Dental Research to promote the exchange of ideas in that part of the<br />

world. The organizing committee of the PCDR included Seiichi Matsumiya as President, and Yojiro Kawamura<br />

and Masao Onisi. The first meeting of the PCDR was held in Tokyo on 14-16 April 1969.<br />

Recently, Matsumiya as President of the Japanese Division of the <strong>IADR</strong> did participate in the Fortyeighth<br />

General Meeting of the <strong>IADR</strong> in New York City in 1970. On this occasion of the Fiftieth Year<br />

Observance of the <strong>IADR</strong>, he presented greetings and a brief statement of activities of the Japanese Division.<br />

(See chapter eighteen, this book.)<br />

The following men have been President of the Japanese Division: Shinjiro Takahashi, 1954-59; Seiichi<br />

Matsumiya, 1959-61 and 1969-71; Iwao Nagai, 1961-63; Rokuro Suhara, 1963-65; Isamu Nakazawa, 1965-67;<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 140


and Iwao Yamamoto, 1967-69. Secretaries of the Division have been Kei Enoki, 1954-63; Toshihiko Niikuni,<br />

1963-65; and Masao Onisi, 1965-. Councilors of the Division have been Gen Minoguchi, 1955-64, and Yojiro<br />

Kawamura, 1964-72. Editors have been Masao Onisi, 1954-59; Shosaburo Takuma, 1959-61; and Yojiro<br />

Kawamura, 1961-.<br />

ANNUAL MEETINGS OF THE JAPANESE DIVISION<br />

First<br />

Second<br />

Third<br />

Fourth<br />

Fifth<br />

Sixth<br />

Seventh<br />

Eighth<br />

Ninth<br />

Tenth<br />

Eleventh<br />

Twelfth<br />

Thirteenth<br />

Fourteenth<br />

Fifteenth<br />

Sixteenth<br />

6 November 1954, School of Dentistry, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Tokyo<br />

6 April 1955, School of Medicine, University of Kyoto, Kyoto<br />

11 October 1955, Hotel Seiunso, Hakone<br />

5 abstracts, J Dent Res 36: 652-653, 1957<br />

13 October 1956, Nihon University School of Dentistry, Tokyo<br />

8 December 1957, School of Dentistry, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Tokyo<br />

1 November 1958, Osaka University Faculty of Dentistry, Osaka<br />

11 abstracts + 1 read by title, J Dent Res 38: 200-205, 1959<br />

26 October 1959, Tokyo Dental College, Tokyo<br />

16 abstracts, J Dent Res 40: 223-231, 1961<br />

14 November 1960, Hill-Top Hotel, Tokyo<br />

17 abstracts, J Dent Res 41: 503-509, 1962<br />

9-10 December 1961, Kaganio Hotel, Wakayama<br />

22 abstracts, J Dent Res 41: 729-738, 1962<br />

23 November 1962, Osaka University Dental School<br />

16 abstracts, J Dent Res 42: 753-762, 1963<br />

7 December 1963, Nihon University School of Dentistry, Tokyo<br />

17 abstracts, J Dent Res 43: 936-944, 1964<br />

6 December 1964, Nihon University School of Dentistry, Tokyo<br />

18 abstracts, J Dent Res 44: 1146-1154, 1965<br />

5 December 1965, School of Dentistry, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Tokyo<br />

23 abstracts, J Dent Res 46: 134-142, 1967<br />

4 December 1966, School of Dentistry, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Tokyo<br />

23 abstracts, J Dent Res 46: 1251-1260, 1967<br />

3 December 1967, Osaka University School of Dentistry, Osaka<br />

26 abstracts, J Dent Res 47: 955-964, 1968<br />

16-17 November 1968, Osaka University School of Dentistry, Osaka<br />

30 abstracts, J Dent Res 49: 675-685, 1970<br />

Seventeenth 22 November 1969, Tokyo Dental College, Tokyo<br />

21 abstracts, J Dent Res 49: 667-674, 1970<br />

Eighteenth 28-29 December 1970, Tokyo Dental College, Tokyo<br />

23 abstracts, J Dent Res 50: 1142-1150, 1971<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 141


MASAO ONISI, B.D.S., D.M.SC.<br />

Department of Preventive Dentistry<br />

Tokyo Medical and Dental University<br />

Tokyo, Japan<br />

THE NORTH AMERICAN DIVISION<br />

In essence, the North American Division came into being in various subtle stages, but it is now proposed<br />

that it be activated so as to exist in full and final autonomy.<br />

In early correspondence, William J. Gies often referred to the "American Division", which by innuendo<br />

was more officially named the North American Division (as explained in the introduction to this chapter). The<br />

formation of the NAD became official on 23 March 1952 in Colorado Springs. 3 Thereafter there were nominal<br />

NAD meetings. Officers were designated (but not elected until 1972, when individuality was proposed for this<br />

newly activated Division). Such designated Presidents have been those of the <strong>IADR</strong>, but were specifically<br />

named: Richard S. Manly, 1966-67; Ralph W. Phillips, 1967-68; John B. Macdonald, 1968-69; Clifton O.<br />

Dummett, 1969-70; and Gordon H. Rovelstad, 1970-71. NAD Secretary-Treasurers were designated as follows:<br />

Gordon H. Rovelstad, 1966-67, and Arthur R. Frechette, 1967-.<br />

From a practical standpoint, because of vast numbers of members, their activity and monetary support in<br />

the United States, the weight of continuity and importance of the parent body, the <strong>IADR</strong> was carried for many<br />

decades by this Division. (This kind of support was not unlike the earliest years of <strong>IADR</strong> when the New York<br />

Section in effect was the most active component of the parent body.) In 1970 there were 2102 members<br />

belonging to the North American Division, which included the United States, Canada, and Mexico. This<br />

enormous Division, which for so long existed only on paper, consisted of thirty-seven Sections with Councilors<br />

to the <strong>IADR</strong>, but not to the Division until the NAD activation in 1972. (See the chapter on "History of Sections"<br />

for an elaboration of the many grass-roots components in the various research communities, especially in the<br />

United States.) All the General Secretaries, Treasurers, and Secretary-Treasurers of the Association as well as<br />

all the Editors of the Journal were from the North American Division. All the Presidents of <strong>IADR</strong> except one<br />

were from this Division, and the vast monetary effort to operate both the Journal and the Association came<br />

from this Division to date, but much more international participation is planned and expected in the second<br />

fifty-year <strong>IADR</strong> history.<br />

THE SCANDINAVIAN-NOF DIVISION<br />

According to records, approval was given by the <strong>IADR</strong> Council to the Norway and Denmark Sections<br />

on 22 March 1958 at its Thirty-sixth General Meeting to form a Scandinavian Division. 19 Apparently this was<br />

never activated by the Scandinavians at that time. However, a Division of <strong>IADR</strong> per se was recently established<br />

officially in 1969, even though its membership and its forerunning organization has a long history indeed. The<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 142


Nordisk Odontologisk Förening (NOF) was founded 7 January 1917 in Gothenburg, Sweden. The objectives of<br />

NOF were, and are, to promote the advancement of dental science and the teaching of dentistry. The first annual<br />

meeting was held the same year in Stockholm, Sweden, on 31 August. The President was the Swedish Uno<br />

Hylin, who also was President at the second meeting in Oslo in 1918.<br />

Although the number of members was small in these first years, the association was ambitious enough to<br />

take over the journal Odontologisk Tidsskrift (OT), which in 1918 became the property and also the<br />

responsibility of the NOF.<br />

Since 1917, thirty-four annual meetings have been held; the meeting places have rotated between the<br />

four Scandinavian countries: Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden. In the years 1939-45 no meetings were<br />

held because of World War II. The meeting places and Presidents of the NOF since then are listed below:<br />

1946 Oslo: Guttorm Toverud 1952 Oslo: Rolf Wang-Norderud<br />

1947 Copenhagen: Kai O. Mehlsen 1954 Copenhagen: Poul O. Pedersen<br />

1948 Gothenburg: Olof Osvald 1955 Gothenburg: Östen Kling<br />

1950 Malmoe: Erik Nilsson 1957 Helsinki: Erik Vaenerberg<br />

1951 Helsinki: Per von Bonsdorff 1958 Oslo: Tormod Mörch<br />

1960 Copenhagen: Jens J. Pindborg 1965 Bergen: K. Karlsen<br />

1961 Stockholm: Helge Berggren 1967 Gothenburg: Nils Sällström<br />

1962 Århus: Asger Frandsen 1968 Turku: Kalervo K. Koivuma<br />

1963 Helsinki: Kalervo K. Koivuma<br />

In 1967 the Danish Section of NOF proposed to the general meeting that NOF should contact the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

and seek recognition as the Scandinavian Division of <strong>IADR</strong>. As a result of the discussion at the general<br />

meeting, a committee was appointed. The Committee Chairman was Mogens Skougaard, and the commission<br />

was to prepare amendments to the NOF Constitution necessary for the possible association of NOF with the<br />

<strong>IADR</strong>. The result of the committee work was several proposed amendments to the Constitution. These were<br />

submitted for the general meeting in Turku, Finland, in 1968 and passed almost unanimously on condition that<br />

the association was approved by the Council of the <strong>IADR</strong>. At the Forty-seventh General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong> in<br />

Houston, Texas, in March 1969, the following request was placed before the <strong>IADR</strong> Council:<br />

On behalf of Nordisk Odontologisk Förening (NOF), we hereby request that a proposal regarding NOF joining<br />

the <strong>IADR</strong> be placed before the <strong>IADR</strong> Council Meeting. Depending on the acceptance by the <strong>IADR</strong> Council,<br />

NOF has made amendments to its Constitution necessary for an association. The amendments are as follows:<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 143


1. Name: the name of NOF should be changed to NOF-Scandinavian Division of <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

2. In each of the Scandinavian countries, Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden should be founded a<br />

Section of this association. [EDITOR'S NOTE.—An <strong>IADR</strong> Section was founded in Denmark in 1950, in<br />

Finland and Norway in 1953, and in Sweden in 1969. These Sections merged with the NOF Sections in<br />

those countries in 1969.]<br />

Each Section elects a Chairman, Secretary, Treasurer and two additional committee members. At least<br />

three of the committee members in each Section must be individual members of <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

These committee members are appointed as President, Secretary, and Councilor of their own Section of<br />

<strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

The journal OT is the property of NOF. The name should be: OT-Scandinavian Journal of Dental<br />

Research.<br />

Abstracts of papers given at the annual meeting are published in the Journal of Dental Research in the same<br />

issue as abstracts from. . . [the other] Divisions.<br />

It is our hope that the proposed association of the two organizations will be accepted by <strong>IADR</strong> and will promote<br />

international cooperation within dental research.<br />

The <strong>IADR</strong> Council unanimously approved that the Nordisk Odontologisk Förening and its Danish,<br />

Finnish, Norwegian, and Swedish Sections (and the merger with the Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden<br />

Sections of <strong>IADR</strong>) constitute the Scandinavian Association for Dental Research as the Scandinavian-NOF<br />

Division of <strong>IADR</strong>. The officers in 1969 were Nils Sällström as President and G. Oldén as Secretary.<br />

The first annual meeting of NOF as the Scandinavian Division was held 21-23 August 1970 in<br />

Copenhagen. The Secretary of the Division was Erik Hjørting-Hansen. The President was Mogens R.<br />

Skougaard (who was to be elected President of the <strong>IADR</strong> for the year 1973-74). The meeting was an all-time<br />

record; a total of 106 papers were presented, and the meeting was attended by 450 members and guests.<br />

Abstracts of eighty papers were published in the Journal. 20<br />

Also in 1970, the NOF journal changed its name from Odontologisk Tidsskrift (OT) to the Scandinavian<br />

Journal of Dental Research. It gained a new Editor (J. J. Pindborg) and underwent a facelifting and a new<br />

editorial policy: all papers are now published in English.<br />

MOGENS R. SKOUGAARD, D.D.S., DR. ODONT.<br />

Institute for Graduate Studies<br />

Royal Dental College<br />

Copenhagen, Denmark<br />

THE SOUTH AFRICAN DIVISION<br />

The earliest appearance of <strong>IADR</strong> activity in South Africa was the formation of a Johannesburg Section<br />

in 1934. Founding Johannesburg members were Geoffrey Friel, John C. Middleton Shaw, and W. A. Wilson.<br />

Other early members, according to Professor Julius Staz (himself a member) were Thomas W. B. Osborne, R.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 144


Dart, Teunis Ockerse (presently a life member of <strong>IADR</strong>), J. N. Noriskin, James T. Irving, and Alfred J.<br />

Clement. Two members were honored by being designated Honorary Vice-Presidents of <strong>IADR</strong>—Geoffrey<br />

Friel, 1936-37, and John C. Middleton Shaw, 1935-36 and 1937-44.<br />

Correspondence indicates that there were long periods of dormancy during the life of the early<br />

Johannesburg Section. After a planned scientific meeting in 1955 failed to materialize, the Section seemed to<br />

"fade away and die" according to one correspondent. It disappeared from the Journal's roster of Sections in<br />

1963.<br />

Mervyn Shear of Johannesburg while in Chicago was invited by Isaac Schour to attend a meeting of the<br />

Chicago Section while on a visit to the United States in 1963. Elected to honorary membership in the Chicago<br />

Section, Mervyn Shear discussed with Dan Y. Burrill (then <strong>IADR</strong> President) an idea which had been on his<br />

mind for a long time. This was the resuscitation of the Johannesburg Section or the establishment of a South<br />

African Division. President Burrill was in wholehearted agreement. After his return to South Africa, Mervyn<br />

Shear corresponded with Barnet M. Levy (who succeeded Dan Burrill as <strong>IADR</strong> President) and Arthur R.<br />

Frechette, <strong>IADR</strong> Secretary-Treasurer, and finally he conferred with his fellow academicians in Johannesburg.<br />

The outcome of all these discussions was the issuance in 1966 of 1200 invitations to attend a meeting on 22<br />

September 1966 to constitute the new Division. Thirty-two South African <strong>IADR</strong> members were present at the<br />

meeting; responses favoring the action were received from a number who were unable to attend. A. E. Dodds,<br />

Dean of the Faculty of Dentistry at the University of the Witwatersrand, was elected President of the Division.<br />

Mervyn Shear was elected Secretary and Councilor. Committee members were T. R. Barrowman, Cornelius<br />

Dreyer, Johannes van Reenen, and John Lemmer.<br />

The first scientific meeting of the South African Division was held at the Oral and Dental Hospital,<br />

University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg on Saturday, 16 September 1967. There were eighteen papers<br />

read at that meeting. 21 The Guest of Honor was Ralph W. Phillips, who was then <strong>IADR</strong> President. (Photo in<br />

chapter eleven & in JDR. 22 ) Colgate-Palmolive, Ltd., of South Africa, which made Professor Phillips' visit<br />

possible, also awards an annual prize to a South African Division member under age thirty-five whose paper is<br />

judged to be the best as presented at the annual Divisional meeting.<br />

The Second Annual Meeting was held on 21 September 1968 in the city of Pretoria. There were fourteen<br />

abstracts that year. 23 The next year the University of the Witwatersrand was again the site of the Division's<br />

annual meeting. The Third Annual Meeting was on 20 September 1969. There were seventeen abstracts printed<br />

in the Journal from this meeting. 24 The Fourth Annual Meeting was held in the city of Cape Town on 18-19<br />

September 1970 with an all-time high of twenty-two abstracts. 25 By this time there were fifty-one regular<br />

members and five associate members in the Division.<br />

Presidents of the Division have been A. E. Dodds, 1966-68; Johannes van Reenen, 1968-70; and<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 145


Mervyn Shear, 1970-. (The correct title of the Secretary of the SAD is in fact, "Honorary Secretary". The<br />

adjective is customarily used in South Africa to indicate that the individual holds the post of Secretary in an<br />

unpaid capacity. In other parts of the world, "Honorary" means the person does no work in the office, but holds<br />

it as an honor while someone else conducts the duties of the office.) Mervyn Shear was Honorary Secretary,<br />

1966-70. D. H. Retief has had the office, 1970-. Mervyn Shear has also been Councilor, 1966-70, while<br />

Johannes van Reenen is Councilor now, 1970-72.<br />

MERVYN SHEAR, B.D.A., H.D.D., M.D.S.<br />

Oral and Dental Hospital<br />

University of the Witwatersrand<br />

Johannesburg, South Africa<br />

REFERENCES<br />

1. J Dent Res 6: 101, 1924-26; 8: 197, 1928.<br />

2. J Dent Res 11: 55-59, 1931.<br />

3. J Dent Res 31: 522, 1952.<br />

4. J Dent Res 45: 1573, 1966.<br />

5. J Dent Res 48: 1083-1094, 1969. [ EEDITOR'S NOTE.—The Journal erroneously refers to the Eighth<br />

Annual Meeting as the Sixth.]<br />

6. J Dent Res 49: 649-662, 1970.<br />

7. J Dent Res 50: 735-750, 1971.<br />

8. [ EDITOR'S NOTE.—The British Division, although formed as a Division in 1953, is first mentioned as<br />

an entity in the Journal in 1955 (J Dent Res 34: 776, 1955). Previous to this time it is referred to as the<br />

Great Britain Section in the 1953 roster on the inside cover of the Journal and in their Scientific<br />

Proceedings in J Dent Res 33: 729, 1954.]<br />

9. J Dent Res 43: 736, 1964.<br />

10. J Dent Res 44: 1129-1137, 1965.<br />

11. J Dent Res 44: 1138-1145, 1965.<br />

12. J Dent Res 46: 1241-1250, 1967.<br />

13. J Dent Res 47: 1009, 1968.<br />

14. J Dent Res 48: 1135-1147, 1969.<br />

15. J Dent Res 49: 686-695, 1970.<br />

16. J Dent Res 50: 752-763, 1971.<br />

17. J Dent Res 33: 637, 1954. [EDITOR'S NOTE.—The Japanese Division as an entity is first mentioned in<br />

the Journal in the published Abstracts of its Third Annual Meeting of 1955 appearing in J Dent Res 36:<br />

652-653, 1957. On the inside cover of the Journal in the roster, Japan appeared as a Non-Divisional<br />

Section for a few initial years until the Association and especially its Journal became aware that Japan<br />

achieved enough members for Divisional status. Then it was listed as a Division in the roster by mid-<br />

1960.]<br />

18. J Dent Res 1: 159-202, 1919.<br />

19. J Dent Res 37: 958, 1958.<br />

20. J Dent Res 50: 705-730, 1971.<br />

21. J Dent Res 47: 949-954, 1968.<br />

22. J Dent Res 46: 1556, 1967.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 146


23. J Dent Res 48: 1155-1159, 1969.<br />

24. J Dent Res 49: 696-701, 1970.<br />

25. J Dent Res 50: 764-822, 1971.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 147


CHAPTER FOURTEEN: HISTORY OF SECTIONS<br />

A section of anything is obviously a part of the whole. In <strong>IADR</strong> parlance, a Section in the earliest days<br />

meant the local body of members functioning somewhat independently in the several cities such as New York,<br />

Boston, and Chicago. These three Sections were established within the same month of <strong>IADR</strong> organization,<br />

namely December 1920. In the next few years the Section in Toronto and a few others were established. Later,<br />

with the development of Divisions consisting of members residing at first in a nation and then on an entire<br />

continent, the various Sections became parts of the respective Divisions rather than Sections of the Association<br />

as originally defined in the Constitution.<br />

New York City was the site of the first Section; available records, however, do not show just when or<br />

where it was formally organized, but it can be deduced that at the meeting of organization of the <strong>IADR</strong> itself on<br />

10 December since all the members were from New York, they coincidentally constituted a New York Section.<br />

On 17 December the Boston Section was founded, and then on 30 December the Chicago Section.<br />

WHAT CONSTITUTES A SECTION?<br />

On this matter of Sections, the 1920 as well as the revised 1940 Constitution stated, "Members in any<br />

geographical center, with the approval of the corresponding national Division, may organize a Section for the<br />

local advancement of the objects of the Association." But the 1956 proposed Constitution and By-Laws, more<br />

specifically, cites that "Each section shall consist of ten or more members of the Association. New Sections may<br />

be organized only with the approval of the National Division." By 1930 the following cities contained Sections<br />

of the <strong>IADR</strong>: New York, Boston, Chicago, Toronto, Ann Arbor, San Francisco, Halifax, Minneapolis,<br />

Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, Vienna, Cleveland, New Haven, and Winnipeg. Records of the founding<br />

dates of all the Sections were located with some effort. Sections in existence at the end of 1970 and their<br />

founding dates follow.<br />

Similarly to the listing on the <strong>IADR</strong> pages in the Journal of Dental Research, these Sections are grouped<br />

respectively by Division: Australia-New Zealand, British, North American, Scandinavian-NOF, and Non-<br />

Divisional. Dates given are usually the date when the Sections were formally recognized by the Association,<br />

rather than preliminary organizational dates. A second date indicates reactivation.<br />

Adelaide 1968 New Orleans 1937; 1967<br />

Brisbane 1969 New York 1920<br />

Melbourne 1969 North Carolina 1963<br />

New Zealand 1963 Philadelphia 1928<br />

Perth 1969 Pittsburgh 1928<br />

Sydney 1969 Portland 1966<br />

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Richmond 1933; 1960<br />

Birmingham-Bristol-Cardiff 1970 Rochester 1933<br />

Rocky Mountain 1969<br />

Ann Arbor 1923 (now Frederick S. McKay Section)<br />

Augusta 1969 St. Louis 1928<br />

Baltimore 1933; 1962 San Antonio 1968<br />

Birmingham 1952 San Francisco 1924<br />

Boston 1920 Seattle 1966<br />

British Columbia 1966 Southern California 1950<br />

(formerly Vancouver Section) Toronto 1921<br />

Buffalo 1965 (now Ontario Section)<br />

Chicago 1920 Washington, D.C. 1931<br />

Cincinnati 1964 Wisconsin 1960<br />

Cleveland 1930<br />

Columbus 1932 Denmark 1950<br />

Houston 1939 Finland 1953<br />

Indianapolis 1941 Norway 1953<br />

Iowa 1936 Sweden 1969<br />

Kansas City 1950<br />

Kentucky 1965 Argentina 1967<br />

Lincoln-Omaha 1965 Caracas 1969<br />

Mexico 1948-62; 1969 Israel 1940; 1967<br />

Minnesota 1928 (formerly Palestine Section)<br />

Nashville 1937; 1967 Maracaibo 1969<br />

EXTINCT SECTIONS<br />

Unfortunately, as in the case of members, there also have been deaths among Sections. In fact, a total of<br />

ten are now in the discontinued category. The following Sections which disappeared completely are here listed<br />

with the dates of their life spans: Budapest, 1934 to World War II; Chengtu, 1934-49; Detroit, 1937-53; Halifax,<br />

1928-52; Louisville, 1932-57; New Haven, 1930-40; Prague, 1932 to World War II; Tennessee, 1944-53;<br />

Vienna, 1929-40; and Winnipeg, 1930-53. The dates of birth are definite and exact, but the dates of demise are<br />

quite uncertain except in the case of the Chengtu and New Haven Sections. Most just faded away, and the date<br />

when the Journal ceased listing them among the living is accepted as the final date of demise.<br />

Some Sections are no longer on the roster because they changed their name or status. The Iowa City<br />

Section became the Iowa Section. The Oregon-Washington Section (begun in 1948) had become the Pacific<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 149


Northwest Section by 1952 and in 1966 split three ways into the Vancouver (now British Columbia) Section,<br />

the Seattle Section, and the Portland Section. The London Section (begun in 1931) grew into the British<br />

Division, and the Johannesburg Section (begun in 1934) grew into the South African Division. The Australia<br />

Section (begun in 1961) became a Division in 1968 and amalgamated with the New Zealand Section in 1969 to<br />

become the Australia-New Zealand Division. The Palestine Section originated in 1940 and later became the<br />

present Israel Section. After 1970 the Rocky Mountain Section became the Frederick S. McKay Section and<br />

Toronto became the Ontario Section.<br />

A few Sections or potential Sections never were activated, even though approved by the <strong>IADR</strong>. At the<br />

Thirtieth General Meeting in 1952, new Sections were approved for three key locations in South America:<br />

Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro, and Uruguay. 1 At the Thirty-second General Meeting, the newly elected<br />

President in the opening of his Inaugural Address mentioned that an <strong>IADR</strong> Section in Germany had been<br />

accepted. 2<br />

CONTRIBUTORS AND SOURCES<br />

Contributors of the various Sectional histories were usually the respective 1970 Secretaries, although in<br />

some cases the Presidents responded. In other instances, where no data were forthcoming from a Section, the<br />

Editor and his Assistant, David P. James, gleaned information from other sources, especially the Journal. Then<br />

there was almost always some background material provided by the "old-timers" whose memories bridged at<br />

least a generation, but this required many letters and phone calls. Persons other than current officers sometimes<br />

wrote adequate histories, such as Merrill G. Wheatcroft of Houston, Gerald J. Cox of Pittsburgh, Robert S.<br />

Redman of Minnesota, Basil G. Bibby of Rochester, Joseph L. T. Appleton of Philadelphia, Ellery C. Stowell of<br />

Southern California, Howard M. Myers of San Francisco, George C. Paffenbarger of Washington, D.C., Frances<br />

Krasnow of New York, and Sholom Pearlman of the F. S. McKay Section. Peter Adler of Hungary contributed<br />

much to his histories of the extinct Budapest and Vienna Sections, and R. Gordon Agnew contributed the<br />

history of the extinct Chengtu Section.<br />

An effort was made to document rather extensively the Sections' more important programs and<br />

presented papers when known. Titles and some abstracts of papers read at local Section meetings were<br />

sometimes published in the Journal of Dental Research for the respective years. During the period of F. J.<br />

Orland's Editorship, 1958-69, they were always published and usually in separate supplements of the Journal<br />

along with the Proceedings of the <strong>IADR</strong> and all the Divisional Meeting programs.<br />

THE AUSTRALIA-NEW ZEALAND DIVISION<br />

THE ADELAIDE SECTION<br />

When the Australian Section was advanced to Divisional status at the Eighth Annual Meeting of the<br />

Australian Section in August 1968, there were sufficient interested members in Adelaide to form a Section<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 150


immediately. The founding members were A. M. Horsnell, J. C. Thonard, M. J. Barrett, J. A. Cran, E. A.<br />

Fanning, T. Brown, N. G. Clarke, O. F. Makinson, T. Gotjamanos, G. Heithersay, J. Lavis, R. Aladjem, R.<br />

Hume, and W. Wiebkin.<br />

Office-bearers for 1969 were Tasman Brown, President; John G. Waterson, Vice-President; Frederick R.<br />

Henning, Secretary-Treasurer; and John C. Thonard, Councilor. At the end of 1970 the officers were James A.<br />

Cran, President; Frederick R. Henning, Vice-President; Tasman Brown, Secretary-Treasurer; and John C.<br />

Thonard, Councilor.<br />

There have been several scientific meetings per year with visiting as well as local speakers contributing.<br />

THE BRISBANE SECTION<br />

The inaugural meeting of the Brisbane Section was held at the Dental College, University of<br />

Queensland, on Friday, 5 September 1969. Founding members were B. J. Kruger (Chairman), B. T. Homan<br />

(Secretary-Treasurer, Councilor), K. F. Adkins, G. Brown, J. P. Brown, G. N. Davies, J. D. Jago, N.<br />

Livingstone Ward, E. Marlay, K. H. Martin, D. J. MacGibbon, F. N. Monsour, K. Romaniuk, S. Roveda, J. A.<br />

Sagar, G. L. Simmonds, J. M. Smyth, L. Stevens, and B. A. Shrimpton.<br />

Monthly meetings have been held at which both visiting speakers and members of the Section have<br />

discussed research methods and specific projects.<br />

The officers at the end of 1970 were Neil Livingstone Ward, Chairman; John P. Brown, Secretary-<br />

Treasurer; and Bernard T. Homan, Councilor.<br />

THE MELBOURNE SECTION<br />

In February 1969 a group of twenty dentists met at the School of Dental Science, University of<br />

Melbourne, and agreed to form a Melbourne Section. This group included the following members of the <strong>IADR</strong>:<br />

H. F. Atkinson, D. S. Barker, M. J. A. Campbell, A. R. Docking, A. A. Grant, J. K. Harcourt, J. E. L. Jeffrey, A.<br />

V. Leong, W. A. McDougall, B. G. Radden, E. Storey, P. R. N. Sutton. Henry F. Atkinson was elected<br />

Chairman and David S. Barker Secretary and Councilor.<br />

The first scientific meeting of the Section was held on Thursday, 29 May 1969, at the School of Dental<br />

Science, where three research papers were presented. At the 1969 Annual Meeting of the Australia-New<br />

Zealand Division in Brisbane on August 28, the formation of the Melbourne Section was ratified.<br />

The second annual meeting of the Melbourne Section was held at the School of Dental Science on 29<br />

April 1970. Bryan G. Radden was elected Chairman, David S. Barker reelected Secretary, and Harry A.<br />

McIntosh elected Councilor. The elections were followed by a scientific meeting during which two papers were<br />

presented.<br />

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THE NEW ZEALAND SECTION<br />

The inaugural meeting of the New Zealand Section was held in Christchurch on 20 July 1963. Founding<br />

members of this Section were T. G. Ludwig, L. J. Coxhead, C. M. Littlejohn, M. R. Kean, H. S. Gray, H. N.<br />

Aitken, F. R. Shroff, A. Smillie, G. H. Leslie, R. Malthus, B. Healy, J. Gavin, D. J. Beck, I. Short, M. McCann,<br />

D. Watt, M. E. Bell, G. N. Davies, V. Cooper, and Sir John Walsh.<br />

Meetings have been held annually since 1963, with venues in Christ-church, Auckland, Wellington, and<br />

Dunedin. The city of Dunedin, the location of New Zealand's only Dental School, was the most frequent host to<br />

the Section meeting. Student and postgraduate participation at meetings has been encouraged.<br />

On several occasions the idea had been put forward that the New Zealand Section amalgamate with the<br />

Australian Division of <strong>IADR</strong> to form an Australia-New Zealand Division, with New Zealand becoming a<br />

Section within this framework. In 1969 both Australian and New Zealand members unanimously declared their<br />

support for the formation of such a joint Division. The <strong>IADR</strong> Council, meeting in Houston, Texas, March 1969,<br />

gave their full approval for the formation of a joint Australia-New Zealand Division of <strong>IADR</strong> with New<br />

Zealand being a Section within the new Division.<br />

By the end of 1970 officers of the New Zealand Section were Martin R. Kean, President; Terence W.<br />

Cutress, Secretary; and Harry G. Huxley, Councilor. The membership numbered twenty-five.<br />

The New Zealand Section looks forward to being host to the Division meeting to be held in August<br />

1973.<br />

THE PERTH SECTION<br />

Western Australia is far removed from the eastern seaboard where all the other Sections are located. But<br />

in 1969 motivation to form a Section came from R. F. Stockwell and P. J. Henry. Together with D. J. Cock,<br />

they called a meeting of interested parties, and it resulted in the eventual formation of the Section.<br />

The Perth Section was approved by the Australia-New Zealand Division in 1969. The 1969 and 1970<br />

officers were David J. Cock, President; Rodney F. Stockwell, Secretary; and Patrick J. Henry, Councilor.<br />

THE SYDNEY SECTION<br />

A Section was constituted in 1969 by <strong>IADR</strong> members residing in the Sydney urban area. It was<br />

approved at the Australia-New Zealand Divisional Meeting that same year. Its office-bearers for 1969 and 1970<br />

have been Eric M. Bevan, President; Barrie R. D. Gillings, Secretary; and Peter D. Barnard, Councilor.<br />

THE BRITISH DIVISION<br />

THE BIRMINGHAM-BRISTOL-CARDIFF SECTION<br />

At the request of members living in the area of Birmingham and Bristol, England, and Cardiff, Wales, a<br />

Section was formed at the Eighteenth Annual General Meeting of the British Division in April 1970. The<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 152


members in the area of these three cities felt that one annual meeting per year of the British Division did not<br />

provide sufficient opportunity for current exchange of ideas. As the sole function of the Birmingham-Bristol-<br />

Cardiff Section was entirely to provide a forum for further scientific discussion, it was deemed unnecessary that<br />

the Section should possess officers.<br />

THE NORTH AMERICAN DIVISION<br />

THE ANN ARBOR SECTION<br />

This Section received early recognition at the University of Michigan and therefore was the fifth to be<br />

organized as part of the <strong>IADR</strong> in 1923. Soon thereafter, U. G. Rickert assumed the duties of Section Secretary.<br />

The first known record of <strong>IADR</strong> members of the Ann Arbor Section is recorded in the Journal of Dental<br />

Research in 1928. 3 Early members were Russell W. Bunting, Marcus L. Ward, Chalmers J. Lyons, and Erman<br />

O. Scott. The first scientific contribution from this Section to an annual <strong>IADR</strong> meeting was made by Bunting at<br />

the fourth meeting, held in Chicago, 26 March 1926. It was on one of his favorite topics, entitled "Studies of the<br />

Relation of Bacillus Acidophilus to Dental Caries".<br />

In 1927 Russell Bunting was elected Vice-President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, and uniquely was reelected to this<br />

office in 1930, becoming President in 1932.<br />

On 10 May 1928 the Ann Arbor Section held its first local <strong>IADR</strong> scientific meeting, having both<br />

afternoon and evening sessions. The following year Philip Jay joined and became coeditor of the Ann Arbor<br />

Section; Marcus Ward was the other coeditor. At this time Ura Rickert was selected President-Elect of <strong>IADR</strong><br />

and became President, 1930-31.<br />

The second local meeting was held on 16 May 1929 with two papers presented in afternoon and evening<br />

sessions; membership of the Ann Arbor Section increased to nine soon after. Following the death of Rickert in<br />

1938, secretarial duties were assumed by Philip Jay, who remained in that post for many years and in 1943 was<br />

elected President of <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

Studies of the effect of fluorine on mottling of enamel and caries was an early investigation at the<br />

University of Michigan under Jay. Under the direction of Ward, other developments included prosthodontic<br />

materials, cements, amalgams, gold alloys and substitutes, chromium-cobalt alloys, colloidal and polymeric<br />

impression materials, refractory investments for casting, and corrosion studies.<br />

By 1950 cephalometric studies to measure growth were being conducted by George C. Moore as well as<br />

studies involving the diagnosis and treatment of oral cancer. Measurements of the vibration of dental hand<br />

pieces, and of temperature rise in tooth tissue during cutting, as well as improvements in dental burs and studies<br />

involving stress analysis of restorations and prosthetic devices, were being made.<br />

During the late 1950s, in addition to extending many of the previously mentioned studies, there have<br />

been studies of the electromyography of oral and facial muscles, transplantation of teeth, thermal conductivity<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 153


of tooth substances and filling materials, cell biology, electron microscopy, dental X-ray techniques, shell<br />

casting, and differential thermal analysis of dental materials.<br />

Several members of the Ann Arbor Section have been honored by the <strong>IADR</strong> for their contributions to<br />

dental progress and to the organization. Floyd A. Peyton and James K. Avery have served as chairmen of the<br />

Science Awards Committee. Peyton and Kamal Asgar have been recipients of the Souder Award, while Seong<br />

S. Han received the Oral Science Award and Sigurd P. Ramfjord received the Basic Research in Periodontal<br />

Disease Award. (See chapter on "Awards".)<br />

By the end of 1970 the officers were M. M. Ash, Chairman; Edward W. Tillitson, Secretary; and Seong<br />

S. Han, Councilor. The membership was thirty-eight.<br />

THE AUGUSTA SECTION<br />

The Augusta Section was founded in 1969 in Georgia. Charter members were the following: J. E.<br />

Williams, J. Weatherred, D. E. Beaudreau, T. J. Zwemer, Louis J. Boucher, B. Fritz, D. F. Bowers, Leon<br />

Leonard, T. R. Dirksen, J. E. Grasso, W. B. Hammer, D. Gardner, J. C. Hickey, George W. Burnett, Steve<br />

Kolas, William Wege, B. M. Pennel, R. G. Topazian, B. H. Rice, L. P. Gangarosa, and A. O. Rahn.<br />

As a new Section its meetings have been of an organizational nature, yet its membership reached<br />

eighteen.<br />

The officers at the end of 1970 were Thomas R. Dirksen, President; William R. Wege, Secretary; and<br />

Louis P. Gangarosa, Councilor.<br />

THE BALTIMORE SECTION<br />

This Section was first organized in 1933. Founding members were M. S. Aisenberg, E. C. Dobbs, E. V.<br />

McCollum, and A. H. Shultz. Other early members were G. M. Anderson, J. Ben Robinson, H. Goldstein, and<br />

H. E. Kelsey. The Baltimore Section hosted the <strong>IADR</strong> annual meeting in 1937.<br />

Due to later inactivity, the Section was reorganized in 1962. Members at this time were Irving<br />

Abramson, Alvin D. Aisenberg, Myron S. Aisenberg, George M. Anderson, Edward C. Dobbs, Frank A. Dolle,<br />

A. Bernard Eskow, Conrad C. Ferlita, Alvin F. Gardner, William E. Hahn, William Kress, H. Berton McCauley,<br />

Jose E. Medina, George Piavis, Kryle W. Preis, D. Vincent Provenza, Norton M. Ross, Douglas J. Sanders,<br />

Joseph H. Seipp, Jr., and Donald E. Shay.<br />

The officers at the end of 1970 were Martin J. Lunin, President; Donald J. Forrester, Secretary; and<br />

Donald E. Shay, Councilor. Membership numbered thirty-three.<br />

THE BIRMINGHAM SECTION<br />

The Birmingham Section of the <strong>IADR</strong> was established at the University of Alabama Medical Center in<br />

the autumn of 1951, with five members. The founding officers were J. F. Volker, President and Councilor; L. H.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 154


Robinson, Secretary; and J. P. Lazansky, Editor. In the intervening years the Section has grown considerably<br />

and in 1970 the membership was forty-four.<br />

The principal and continuing activity of the Section has been to sponsor seminars and lectures on oral<br />

research. These programs expanded substantially with the establishment of the Institute of Dental Research at<br />

the University of Alabama in Birmingham School of Dentistry. There also have been conferences organized and<br />

sponsored by the Birmingham Section. One of these, though cosponsored by other groups, was a world report<br />

on new research findings entitled "Diet and Oral Health" held 23 April 1956. Another notable gathering on 25-<br />

27 September 1959 had essayists from the local Section as well as O. Backer-Dirks of the University of Utrecht,<br />

F. S. Mehta, Secretary of the All-India Dental Association, and Bengt Gustafsson of Lund University.<br />

Birmingham's primary member, Joseph F. Volker, became <strong>IADR</strong> President in 1956-57.<br />

At the end of 1970 the officers were Sidney B. Finn, President; John M. Shackleford, Secretary; and<br />

Arthur H. Wuehrmann, Councilor.<br />

THE BOSTON SECTION<br />

The Boston Section was founded on Friday, 17 December 1920 at the Harvard Club of Boston. Among<br />

those founding members were Robert R. Andrews, Lawrence W. Baker, George A. Bates, Fred R. Blumenthal,<br />

Percy R. Howe, A. Leroy Johnson, V. H. Kazanjian, L. M. S. Miner, William Rice, Alfred P. Rogers, H.<br />

Carlton Smith, Eugene H. Smith, Kurt H. Thoma, and George H. Wright. Also attending this meeting were<br />

Frederick B. Noyes of Chicago and William J. Gies of New York. (The dinner bill for the occasion came to<br />

$58.60 for sixteen dinners, cigars, and even cigarettes.)<br />

Other early members were W. G. Bridge, F. P. Chillingworth, H. DeW. Cross, Adelbert Fernald, and C.<br />

E. Hatch.<br />

In the late 1920s and early 1930s, a great deal of acrimony was evidenced between William J. Gies and<br />

the Section concerning the responsibility for the collection of subscriptions to the Journal of Dental Research of<br />

which Gies was Editor.<br />

After the Second World War, the membership increased to forty by 1948, and by 1970 it consisted of<br />

115 members. Notable members during this period were F. Brudevold, P. Boyle, J. M. Dunning, P. Goldhaber,<br />

H. Goldman, R. O. Greep, J. Hein, J. Irving, P. Keyes, J. Macdonald, R. S. Manly, H. Majerison, C. Moorrees,<br />

P. Munson, J. Shaw, and R. Sognnaes, among others.<br />

The Boston Section was host to the <strong>IADR</strong> annual meeting in 1961.<br />

Three members were honored by election to the <strong>IADR</strong> Presidency: Leroy M. S. Miner, for two terms,<br />

1927-28 and 1928-29; Reidar F. Sognnaes, 1957-58; and Richard S. Manly, 1966-67.<br />

Currently, an annual award is made at the spring meeting for the best paper presented by a novice<br />

student, who would therefore likewise participate at the annual meeting.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 155


As dental research has grown, so has the number of institutions currently represented by the<br />

membership, which is now drawn from Boston University, Forsyth Dental Center, Harvard University,<br />

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Tufts University.<br />

At the end of 1970, the officers of the Section were Poul Grøn, President; Edward A. Sweeney,<br />

Secretary; and Irving Glickman, Councilor.<br />

THE BRITISH COLUMBIA SECTION<br />

The history of the British Columbia Section is brief because of its recent formation. The Section initially<br />

developed within an amalgamation of <strong>IADR</strong> members in Oregon and Washington as the Pacific Northwest<br />

Section. The first meeting as a separate Section was held in 1966; for three years the Section existed without a<br />

legal constitution, due to an oversight on the part of some officers. However, this was no impediment to the first<br />

combined meeting of the Northwest regional members and the new Section which met at the new Faculty of<br />

Dentistry of the University of British Columbia in 1967. While there were a few pioneer members of the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

in British Columbia for many years prior to the formation of a Dental Faculty in Vancouver, the Section's<br />

history parallels the development of this recent addition to dental education in Canada. The Faculty responsible<br />

for the initial development of the Section were Leon Kraintz, the initial Chairman of the Section; Dan G.<br />

Middaugh, initial Secretary of the Section; and Dean S. Wah Leung, Councilor since the inception of the<br />

Section; John B. Macdonald, President of the University of British Columbia; and Richard H. Roydhouse.<br />

The Section must always be grateful for the material support and use of facilities provided by the<br />

University of British Columbia. One of the clear objectives both of the Faculty and <strong>IADR</strong> has been the fostering<br />

of research. The success of their aims, due to the leadership of the Dean and the provision of funds and facilities<br />

by the University and the National and Medical Research Councils of Canada, is clearly shown in the<br />

"Catalogue of Dental Research Projects in the United States and Canada Fiscal Year 1970". 4 Thirteen projects at<br />

the University of British Columbia are listed, a greater number than at any University in Canada and exceeded<br />

only by a half-dozen or so other universities in North America. Thus the Section claims to be active, perhaps<br />

not in formal meetings, but certainly as individuals in research endeavor.<br />

The officers at the end of 1970 were Richard H. Roydhouse, Chairman; Shadi L. Khanna, Secretary; and<br />

S. Wah Leung, Councilor; members numbered fourteen.<br />

THE BUFFALO SECTION<br />

The Buffalo Section was founded on 30 March 1965 at the Dental School of the State University of New<br />

York at Buffalo. The original members were S. A. Ellison, F. Emmings, J. A. English, S. L. Fischman, J.<br />

Guttuso, S. P. Hazen, K. Langeland, M. E. Neiders, G. T. Phipps, S. E. Sorenson, P. H. Staple, and R. P.<br />

Wagner. Officers elected that year were Solon A. Ellison, President; Mirdza E. Neiders, Vice-President and<br />

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Secretary; and Grant T. Phipps, Councilor. At the end of 1970 the officers were the same, and membership<br />

totaled thirty-eight.<br />

THE CHICAGO SECTION<br />

On Thursday evening, 30 December 1920, there was a meeting at the University Club of Chicago at<br />

which William J. Gies cited the need for organization among dental research-minded persons. The following<br />

men had been invited by Frederick B. Noyes to attend: Ludvig Hoektoen, Frederick B. Moorehead, Arthur D.<br />

Black, William H. Welker, William G. Skillen, Edward H. Hatton, and Newton G. Thomas. Professor Gies<br />

presented in detail the features of the organization under the name of the International Association for Dental<br />

Research with the purpose of relating, under that name, local societies organized in various communities<br />

throughout the world. National organizations were to be known as Divisions and community organizations as<br />

Sections of the Association.<br />

After the presentation of William Gies and a very thorough discussion which ensued, a motion was<br />

adopted that a Section be organized in Chicago to affiliate with the International Association for Dental<br />

Research. 5 Elected to membership that evening were William Bebb, William G. Skillen, and Newton G.<br />

Thomas. Officers were then also elected: Frederick B. Noyes, President; Newton G. Thomas, Secretary; and<br />

Ludvig Hoektoen and Arthur D. Black, Councilors.<br />

At the next two meetings, 31 March and 2 June 1921, the <strong>IADR</strong> original Constitution was discussed and<br />

approved. Since the new Constitution called for more Councilors, the following five were elected from the<br />

Chicago Section: Thomas L. Gilmer, Frederick B. Noyes, Arthur D. Black, William H. Welker, and Newton G.<br />

Thomas. At the next meeting (the fourth in 1921 and all held at the University Club in downtown Chicago) the<br />

first scientific presentation was made by Edward H. Hatton of Northwestern University. Subsequent meetings<br />

were regularly held about four times a year in those early years. There were a few presentations at each<br />

gathering, and the gatherings grew with the years. 6<br />

On 14 December 1945 a Silver Anniversary dinner meeting was held. A letter from William J. Gies was<br />

read, as well as one from Wallace D. Armstrong, then <strong>IADR</strong> President. Frederick B. Noyes, now Dean Emeritus<br />

of the College of Dentistry, University of Illinois (and who was called the Father of the Chicago Section in<br />

Gies' letter), reviewed the birth and development of the Chicago Section. Edward H. Hatton discussed current<br />

activities and J. Roy Blayney, Director of the Zoller Memorial Dental Clinic, prepared a paper entitled<br />

"Research in the Future". Sectional meetings thereafter were usually held at the dental schools of Northwestern<br />

University, University of Illinois, and Loyola University, and at the Zoller Memorial Dental Clinic, University<br />

of Chicago.<br />

By the end of the thirtieth year of activity of the Chicago Section of <strong>IADR</strong>, there had been held ninetythree<br />

meetings at which there had been presented 333 scientific reports by 211 different investigators. A Thirty-<br />

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Year Summary with all the minutes, meeting programs, and members' names, including all the officers, was<br />

bound in a volume presented to the Institute of Medicine of Chicago, of which the Chicago Section had been an<br />

affiliate member since 1954. Later volumes 7 are likewise being prepared by Frank J. Orland, an active past<br />

office-bearer of this versatile Section.<br />

An <strong>IADR</strong> Honorary Vice-Presidency was conferred upon Edgar D. Coolidge (1958-59) for great activity<br />

as a member and researcher.<br />

Titles of papers read at the Chicago Section meetings were often, though not regularly, published in the<br />

Proceedings of the Institute of Medicine and the Journal of Dental Research. 8<br />

The Chicago Section was host to the annual <strong>IADR</strong> meeting for a record fourteen times 9 through 1970.<br />

Section members formed the Local Arrangements Committee of <strong>IADR</strong> on these significant occasions. (See<br />

chapter on "Meetings and Members" for exact dates and sites.)<br />

This Section was also honored by having the most men elected to the <strong>IADR</strong> Presidency while they were<br />

members of the Section: Frederick B. Noyes, 1925-26; Arthur D. Black, 1929-30; Edward H. Hatton, 1933-34;<br />

William G. Skillen, 1936-37; Isaac Schour, 1941-42; Allan G. Brodie, 1948-49; J. Roy Blayney, 1949-50;<br />

Leonard S. Fosdick, 1951-52; Dan Y. Burrill, 1963-64; and Gordon H. Rovelstad, who was elected while in<br />

Chicago but was transferred to Washington, D.C., where he served his term of 1970-71. It should be mentioned<br />

that there might have been another <strong>IADR</strong> President from the Chicago Section; unfortunately, Rudolf Kronfeld,<br />

who was President-Elect, 1939-40, died 13 February 1940, exactly one month before his inauguration as<br />

President.<br />

One of the highlights of the Section was its Fiftieth Anniversary Dinner Meeting held (almost on its<br />

birth date) on 28 December 1970. In addition to many members and wives, several guests attended from other<br />

Sections who were in Chicago for the AAAS Nd Section Meeting down the street (see chapter on "Other<br />

Gatherings" for topics and site). After the cutting of the elaborate birthday cake, F. J. Orland, President-Elect of<br />

<strong>IADR</strong>, portrayed the total though concise history of the Chicago Section in chart form. Next on the historical<br />

program, G. H. Rovelstad, <strong>IADR</strong> President, spoke on "The Next Fifty Years".<br />

The officers of the Chicago Section at the end of 1970 were H. William Lyon, President; Allen F.<br />

Goldberg, Secretary; John P. Waterhouse, Treasurer; and Patrick D. Toto, Councilor.<br />

Moreover, there were at the time of the Section's Fiftieth Anniversary Meeting a total of 165 members<br />

(more than in any other Section), ninety-five of whom were regular <strong>IADR</strong> members and seventy associate<br />

members.<br />

THE CINCINNATI SECTION<br />

The Cincinnati members of <strong>IADR</strong> voted to form a Section in January 1964. It was recognized by the<br />

parent organization in March of the same year at the Forty-second General Meeting in Los Angeles, California.<br />

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Founding members were J. A. Gray (President), R. W. Broge (Councilor), A. W. Radike (Secretary), J.<br />

Ennever, W. E. Cooley, O. P. Sturzenberger, W. W. Briner, M. D. Francis, W. J. Griebstein, and A. H. Meckel.<br />

The officers at the end of 1970 were Marion D. Francis, President; Robert W. Lehnhoff, Secretary; and<br />

James S. Widder, Councilor. Membership added up to an even twenty.<br />

THE CLEVELAND SECTION<br />

The Cleveland Section was founded in 1929 and approved in 1930. Some of the founding members were<br />

Samuel Chase, Frederick Waite, Robert P. Dressel, Weston Price, and Victor Meyers. Shortly after the Section<br />

was formed, Thomas J. Hill and T. Wingate Todd joined as members. Among later additions to the Section was<br />

William L. Wylie in 1946 who became Dean of Western Reserve University School of Dentistry.<br />

The Seventeenth <strong>IADR</strong> General Meeting was held in Cleveland in 1939, and the Cleveland Section<br />

served as host at that time.<br />

Several members of the Cleveland Section have been recognized for their distinguished contributions to<br />

dental research. In the 1940s, Carl Sheu conducted significant research on hygroscopic investment materials,<br />

and E. Carl Miller did clinical research on silver amalgam restorations. He expanded the original work of James<br />

T. Sweeney by investigating such factors as cavity design, matrix preparation, and mercury-alloy ratios.<br />

In 1968 the <strong>IADR</strong> award for basic research in biological mineralization was conferred on David B. Scott, now<br />

Dean of the School at WRU.<br />

Several Cleveland Section members served distinguished terms as President of the <strong>IADR</strong>: Thomas J.<br />

Hill served in 1939-40; Samuel Chase, whose research of the development of the tooth bud is internationally<br />

known, was President in 1946-47; and Francis A. Arnold, who later became Director of the National Institute of<br />

Dental Research, held the position in 1953-54, but while a member of the Washington Section. The eminent<br />

oral pathologist and previous Dean of Case Western Reserve University School of Dentistry, Paul E. Boyle, was<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> President in 1955-56.<br />

The distinguished records of these outstanding scientists have reflected great credit on the Cleveland<br />

Section in the past. The Section is currently quite active, and makes several yearly contributions to the dental<br />

research literature. Currently, the Cleveland Section meets with the Columbus and Cincinnati Sections in the<br />

spring each year prior to the <strong>IADR</strong> meeting for a scientific and social program. This practice has helped to<br />

foster better communications with the other two Ohio Sections.<br />

The officers at the end of 1970 were James R. Swancar, President; Robert T. Ferris, Secretary; and<br />

Lawrence J. Scaletta, Councilor. There were twenty-three members at this time.<br />

THE COLUMBUS SECTION<br />

The Columbus Section of <strong>IADR</strong> was founded in 1932 in the Ohio State University Colleges of Dentistry<br />

and Medicine. The Section hosted the <strong>IADR</strong> annual meeting that same year. The charter members were H. C.<br />

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Brown, A. J. Bush, H. V. Cottrell, Bernice T. Horton, S. J. Randall, R. D. McFarland, and P. C. Kitchin. Past-<br />

Presidents of the Section have been H. V. Cottrell, F. Starr, L. F. Edwards, C. O. Boucher, S. Arnim, H. B. G.<br />

Robinson, P. Weisenstein, C. Conroy, D. Permar, J. Woelfel, D. McConnell, S. Kolas, G. App, and W. Bruce.<br />

Paul C. Kitchin, while an active Columbus member, became <strong>IADR</strong> President in 1937-38, which truly was an<br />

honor for the Section.<br />

Since 1964, the Columbus Section has participated with two other active Sections, those of Cleveland<br />

and Cincinnati, in a yearly "Ohio Sections Meeting" which has traditionally consisted of an exchange of<br />

professional reports and exchange of fellowship among the members, twenty-three of which currently belong to<br />

this Section.<br />

The officers at the end of 1970 were William A. Bruce, Chairman; George G. Blozis, Chairman-Elect;<br />

Dennis W. Foreman, Secretary; and Samuel Rosen, Councilor.<br />

THE HOUSTON SECTION<br />

The Houston Section was established in 1939. The charter members were W. H. Scherer (President),<br />

Emmerich Kotanyi (Councilor, Editor, and Secretary), and F. C. Elliott, Dean of the University of Texas Dental<br />

School. In addition to the three members, the dentists of Houston were invited to attend the first meeting. At this<br />

meeting President Scherer presented a brief discussion of the <strong>IADR</strong>, including its founding, its aims, and other<br />

interesting announcements, such as that subscriptions to the Journal of Dental Research could be obtained for<br />

$5 per year. Emmerich Kotanyi was the principal speaker of the evening, presenting a paper entitled "The<br />

Morphological Origin of Most of the Cysts in the Jaw and Their Clinical Aspects". This versatile man had been<br />

a member of the Vienna Section for ten years and served as its Secretary for five years prior to coming to the<br />

United States.<br />

In 1969 the Houston Section was host to the <strong>IADR</strong> annual meeting.<br />

The officers at the end of 1970 were Kenneth O. Madsen, President; James J. Vogel, Secretary; and<br />

Edwin L. Smith, Councilor. Members added up to fifty-one at this time.<br />

THE INDIANAPOLIS SECTION<br />

The Indianapolis Section was initiated in September 1940 by William H. Crawford, Dean of the Indiana<br />

University Dental School, as Editor, and Virgil D. Cheyne as Councilor. Hannah E. Silberstein was the first<br />

Secretary. It was not until 30 July 1941, however, that the Charter was granted.<br />

The first business meeting was held 3 March 1942, and the membership had grown to include Thomas<br />

D. Speidel, Harry J. Healy, Glen Pell, and Thaddeus G. Gregory. By 15 October 1942 the membership consisted<br />

of nine members and was a growing concern. Meetings were held biannually from 1942 to 1955.<br />

When the <strong>IADR</strong> general meetings were held in French Lick Springs, Indiana, in 1950, 1951, and 1954,<br />

the Indianapolis Section made the arrangements and played host.<br />

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The Section meetings had a tenor of research in the reports of scientific investigation given at each<br />

meeting. A sample program could be taken from the 13 March 1957 meeting at which papers to be presented<br />

before the annual <strong>IADR</strong> meeting were read and discussed. There were seventeen such papers, ranging from<br />

"The Effect of Thyroid Gland Function on Salivary Flow and Viscosity in the Rat" by William G. Shafer to<br />

"Studies on the Solubility of Certain Dental Materials" by Richard D. Norman.<br />

Membership has remained active in basic and clinical research as inspired by the founding fathers. By<br />

1970 there were fifty members in the Indianapolis Section.<br />

Some of the members who have been President of the Section are Ralph W. Phillips, 1958-61; S. Miles<br />

Standish, 1962-63; David Bixler, 1963-64; Charles L. Howell, 1964-65; and Richard D. Norman, 1965-71.<br />

Past-Secretaries of the Section are Hannah E. Silberstein, 1941-42; Ralph W. Phillips, 1944-45; Henry M.<br />

Swenson, 1945-56; Charles L. Howell, 1956-58; Marjorie L. Swartz, 1958-64; and LaForrest D. Garner, 1964-<br />

70.<br />

The activities of the Indianapolis Section have included support programs held in conjunction with the<br />

Dental Research Council, as well as special research programs during which time papers are read in preparation<br />

for annual <strong>IADR</strong> presentations.<br />

The Indianapolis Section has been honored by the election of Maynard K. Hine (1952-53) and Ralph W.<br />

Phillips (1967-68) to the Presidency of the <strong>IADR</strong>. Hine, Dean of the School at IU, has been active in many<br />

facets of the Association and helped guide the scientific growth of the <strong>IADR</strong> during his term as President.<br />

Phillips, likewise, has had a varied background of experience in organizational affairs and helped direct basic<br />

organizational changes during a rapid membership growth period of the Association. On the occasion of his<br />

election, a testimonial dinner was held in his honor, with 110 people responding by their presence.<br />

All in all, the Indianapolis Section of <strong>IADR</strong> has had extremely good success in stimulating active<br />

clinical and basic research at Indiana University School of Dentistry over the past twenty-nine years.<br />

The officers at the end of 1970 were Richard D. Norman, President; LaForrest D. Garner, Secretary; and<br />

Marjorie L. Swartz, Councilor.<br />

THE IOWA SECTION<br />

The Iowa Section was formally initiated in 1936. The founding members were C. L. Drain (Secretary),<br />

A. W. Bryan (Councilor), G. S. Easton (Editor), L. B. Higley, A. O. Klaffenbach, and R. H. Volland. Other<br />

early members were W. J. Simon and K. E. Wessels. Since that time, the Section has increased from six to<br />

thirty-five members.<br />

On 8 December 1937, L. B. Higley presented a paper entitled "A New and Scientific Method of<br />

Producing Temporomandibular Articulation Radiograms." Thirty-three years later, some Iowa Section members<br />

are still involved in the same type of research.<br />

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The Iowa Section is an active component of <strong>IADR</strong> with a considerable number of young researchers,<br />

which contributes greatly to the dental profession. The entire membership of this Section, which includes the<br />

administration, faculty, and students of the University of Iowa College of Dentistry, is currently looking<br />

forward to the completion of new dental facilities so they can increase their contribution to dental research.<br />

The officers at the end of 1970 were Narendar N. Soni, President; Leslie H. Higa, Secretary; and<br />

William H. Tade, Councilor.<br />

THE KANSAS CITY SECTION<br />

An organizational meeting of the proposed Kansas City Section was held 27 April 1950 at the<br />

University of Kansas City School of Dentistry, Kansas City, Missouri. The following officers were elected by<br />

unanimous vote: Hugh I. Myers, Councilor; Ben W. Warner, Secretary; and Leon J. Kramer, Editor. It was<br />

decided to hold meetings at least once every two months. Speakers on science, research, and related fields were<br />

to be scheduled for future meetings. It was suggested by Leon Kramer that the membership in the Section be<br />

built by electing associate members interested in this field. The vote for the Section's first honorary member<br />

was extended to the Dean of the School of Dentistry, Roy James Rinehard.<br />

In 1946 the <strong>IADR</strong> annual meeting was in Kansas City, and the Section was the gracious host.<br />

Soon after transferring to this Section as the new Dean, Hamilton B. G. Robinson, who had been Editor<br />

of the Journal for over two decades, was elected President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 1959-60.<br />

By 1969 the Kansas City Section consisted of nineteen active members; however, meeting attendance is<br />

usually around thirty-five. Three or four dinner meetings are held each year, and the programs consist of<br />

speakers from the group or outside speakers who might be in the area at the time. Officers are elected for threeyear<br />

terms. By the end of 1970 the officers were Jack L. Stewart, President; Robert L. Briggs, Secretary-<br />

Treasurer; and Viola D. Flanagan, Councilor.<br />

THE KENTUCKY SECTION<br />

The first Section in Kentucky was the Louisville Section, established in 1932, but it became extinct in<br />

the late 1940s (re Louisville Section, see "Extinct Sections" further on in this chapter). Interest in reestablishing<br />

a Section in Kentucky appears to have been generated in 1962. Alvin L. Morris, then Dean of the College of<br />

Dentistry at the University of Kentucky, and Norbert J. Burzynski of the Dental Faculty at the University of<br />

Louisville were the proponents of this new contemplated Section originating in Lexington. Emmett R. Costich<br />

and Raymond C. Bard set about the task of determining the requirements and procedures necessary to organize<br />

those individuals in the Kentucky region, concerned with dental research, into a body eligible for affiliation<br />

with the <strong>IADR</strong>. Although it was determined by the end of 1963 that there was a sufficient number of qualified<br />

individuals to create a Kentucky Section, it was decided to postpone the final organizational meeting until after<br />

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the 1964 meeting of <strong>IADR</strong>. This permitted those individuals approved for membership in the <strong>IADR</strong> during its<br />

spring meeting to be included in the initial meeting.<br />

In August 1964, A. L. Morris appointed Sheldon Rovin, Donald E. Knapp, and John R. Mink to the<br />

nominating committee, charged with the duty of preparing a slate of provisional Section officers to be presented<br />

at the first formal organizational meeting which was held on 3 September 1964. At this meeting Wesley O.<br />

Young was elected Chairman; N. J. Burzynski, Vice-Chairman; Harmon C. Bickley, Secretary-Treasurer; and<br />

Emmett R. Costich, Councilor. Subsequently, a petition was sent to the <strong>IADR</strong> but was referred to the North<br />

American Division for official recognition. At the business meeting of the NAD held in Toronto, Canada, July<br />

1965, the organization of the Kentucky Section was finally approved.<br />

At the end of 1970 the officers were Raymond P. White, Chairman; William K. Elwood, Secretary; and<br />

Donald A. Welk, Councilor. Membership totaled fifty-six, which included nineteen young associate members.<br />

THE LINCOLN-OMAHA SECTION<br />

This Section of the <strong>IADR</strong> was organized in 1965 by Richard P. Suddick of Creighton University in<br />

Nebraska. Charter members of the Section were R. P. Suddick, T. J. Urban, R. E. Bradley, D. O. deShazer, R.<br />

L. Ireland, B. Kutler, V. E. Levine, K. W. Bruce, J. J. Buresh, W. S. Kramer, R. M. Knapp, and S. Weinstein.<br />

The first officers were Richard E. Bradley, President; Theodore J. Urban, Secretary; and Richard P. Suddick,<br />

Councilor. Since then, the Section has met three times each year to hear presentations of original research from<br />

its members. One of these meetings is held in conjunction with the Nebraska Academy of Science's annual<br />

meeting in April of each year. Two of the Section members hold positions in the Nebraska Academy (T. J.<br />

Urban on the Policy and Educational Program Committee and D. O. deShazer on the Editorial Board) which<br />

facilitates these cooperative undertakings. Abstracts of the dental research papers are published in the Annual<br />

Proceedings of the Academy, while full papers are eligible for publication in the Transactions of the Academy.<br />

Membership of the Section has expanded greatly since 1965; by mid-1970 there were forty members<br />

plus ten associate members. The officers at this same time were Theodore J. Urban, President; J. Ursick,<br />

Secretary; and Richard P. Suddick, Councilor.<br />

THE MEXICO SECTION<br />

According to <strong>IADR</strong> records, there were thirteen members in Mexico in 1947, but the next year a<br />

Mexican Section was approved at the Twenty-sixth General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong>. The Section in 1948 consisted of<br />

seven members: Honorata V. Acosta, Ramon Cordova, Samuel Fastlicht, Ramon S. Gamboa, Felix R. Leycegui,<br />

Miguel D. Mercado, and Carlos E. Pomes. Serving on the Editorial Board of the Journal of Dental Research<br />

(1950-57) representing Mexico was Samuel Fastlicht. There was a considerable period of inactivity, and records<br />

show that Sectional status was lost in 1962.<br />

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In 1967 there were again thirteen members but no Section. But in 1969 when membership increased to<br />

twenty-five, the Section was reorganized and approved at the Forty-seventh General <strong>IADR</strong> Meeting. There were<br />

thirty-one regular members and twenty-four associate members listed in 1970, and the officers at the end of the<br />

year (who were also officers in 1969) were Jesus A. Sarabia Aguilar, President; Eduardo Galindo Benton,<br />

Secretary; Roberto Villegas Malda, Editor; and Manuel Rey Garcia, Councilor.<br />

The first Seminario Anual was held 19-23 October 1969; some of the participants were Barnet Levy, Ira<br />

Shannon, and William From, who all came from Houston.<br />

The second Seminario Anual 10 was held 29 August-2 September 1970 in San José de Purua, Michoacán,<br />

Mexico. This elaborate meeting was presided over by Jesus A. Sarabia, Presidente Sección Mexicana. Martin<br />

Cattoni was awarded "un Diploma de Honor". Arthur R. Frechette, Secretario-Tesorero of the parent <strong>IADR</strong>,<br />

presented the Declaratoria Inaugural.<br />

THE MINNESOTA SECTION<br />

The Minnesota Section was founded on 2 May 1927. It was approved by the <strong>IADR</strong> Council in 1928.<br />

Chronologically, it was the tenth Section of the Association and has remained one of the most active<br />

components. Its first meeting was held in the Men's Union on the Minneapolis campus of the University of<br />

Minnesota. The ten charter members as recorded for election to membership in the Sixth General Meeting of the<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> in March 1928 were as follows: Elmer S. Best, Herman A. Maves, Frederick S. Meyer, William D. Vehe,<br />

Carl W. Waldron, Daniel E. Ziskin, Boyd S. Gardner, Irwin A. Epstein, Carl J. Grove, and George S. Monson.<br />

William Vehe was elected President, and Daniel Ziskin, the primary organizer, was elected Secretary-Treasurer.<br />

The research interests of the Section were quite diverse from its inception. This is readily apparent from<br />

the activities and interests of the charter members. Elmer Best's interest in research had led him to organize,<br />

some years prior to the founding of the <strong>IADR</strong>, the Academy of Pierre Fouchard as well as its publication.<br />

Herman Maves and Fred Meyer were interested in clinical research in crown and bridge; Bill Vehe, in fused<br />

porcelain techniques; Carl Waldron, in maxillofacial surgery, and Dan Ziskin, in hospital dentistry. It seems<br />

significant that Boyd Gardner, from the Mayo Clinic, espoused a view of dental health as part of the patient's<br />

general health according to Irwin Epstein, one of the few remaining charter members.<br />

During the first years a pattern of meetings became established which has been continued ever since: a<br />

spring meeting being conducted at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester and at least one other meeting in Minneapolis<br />

or St. Paul.<br />

For many years the programs were informal affairs, consisting of dinner, a brief business meeting, and<br />

an exchange of the members' research ideas and experiments. There were no formal presentations; rather, there<br />

was a mutual encouragement and constructive criticism of one another's research enterprise. The encouragement<br />

was important because neither the College of Dentistry nor the Mayo Clinic Department of Dentistry had much<br />

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in the way of funds or facilities for doing research. Indeed, some of the administrators actually discouraged their<br />

faculty and staff from engaging in research because they felt it would interfere with teaching and other staff<br />

activities.<br />

Despite these difficulties, many of the members were able to accomplish significant research and<br />

provide leadership in showing the relationship between research and improvements in dental practice.<br />

Because of his interest in mineral metabolism in calcified tissues, it was logical that Wallace D. Armstrong<br />

became a member of the Minnesota Section soon after taking a position in the Department of Biochemistry in<br />

the School of Medicine. In 1935 Armstrong was elected Secretary-Treasurer of the Minnesota Section; he had<br />

subsequently held, at one time or another, all of the offices of the Section, as well as the Presidency of the<br />

<strong>IADR</strong>, 1945-46. His research on fluorides and teeth is well known; what may not be as widely recognized are<br />

his administrative and organizational talents. Very probably, he was instrumental in having the <strong>IADR</strong> hold its<br />

annual meeting in Minneapolis in 1938.<br />

As private and government funds provided increasingly better support for dental research, both the<br />

number and the academic credentials of individuals that were attracted to careers in dental research improved.<br />

The number of members increased from the initial ten in 1928 to twenty-five in 1948 and sixty-one at present.<br />

Currently, members include faculty of the University of Minnesota Schools of Dentistry and Medicine, faculty<br />

and staff of the Mayo Graduate School of Medicine and the Mayo Clinic Section of Dentistry, as well as dental<br />

researchers in the Minnesota Department of Health and in industry.<br />

Since 1961 abstracts of papers presented at Section meetings have been published in Northwest<br />

Dentistry, official journal of the state dental associations of Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota. This<br />

has been a valuable service to the members of both the dental associations and the Minnesota Section.<br />

In March 1947 the Section donated $100 to the Minnesota Dental Foundation, Inc., a nonprofit<br />

organization which provides small grants and otherwise promotes research and teaching in dentistry. The<br />

Section also established the William H. Crawford Award in 1963 as a memorial to the man who served the<br />

School of Dentistry as Dean from 1945 to 1964. Dean Crawford encouraged the faculty to excel in research<br />

endeavors while continuing to provide the finest kind of teaching and service.<br />

The officers of the Minnesota Section at the end of 1970 were Lars E. A. Folke, President; E. Severn<br />

Olsen, Secretary; and Burton J. Shapiro, Councilor.<br />

THE NASHVILLE SECTION<br />

The Nashville Section was organized 5 December 1967 at Meharry Medical College in Tennessee and<br />

was approved by the <strong>IADR</strong> Council at its annual meeting in San Francisco in 1968. (An earlier <strong>IADR</strong> Section in<br />

the state was the extinct Tennessee Section, 1944-53.) The founding members of the Nashville Section were<br />

Albert G. Berry, Theodore E. Bolden, W. J. Bryant, Arturo Buenahora, Paul D. Elcan, Fred C. Fielder, James L.<br />

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Martin, Katherene M. Massey, Eugenia L. Mobley, Henry A. Moses, Elisha R. Richardson, and John C. Taylor.<br />

The officers at the end of 1970 were Elisha R. Richardson, President; Katherene M. Massey, Secretary;<br />

and Fred C. Fielder, Councilor. Membership amounted to twelve.<br />

THE NEW ORLEANS SECTION<br />

The first New Orleans Section of the <strong>IADR</strong> was organized in 1937 by four dentists: Sidney L. Tiblier, C.<br />

S. Tuller, Frederick J. Wolfe, and Alton D. Brashear. In the 1942-43 academic year, Harold W. Peterson, James<br />

T. Ginn, and Emmerich Kotanyi (from the Vienna Section) became members. But Kotanyi left to become a<br />

charter member of the Houston Section, and Ginn left to become Dean at the University of Tennessee Dental<br />

School. During 1945-46 Thomas F. Spiedel, Alton K. Fisher, and Duane W. Lovett became members of the<br />

Section. Harry Clausen, Thomas L. Hagan, and C. C. Bass were inducted into the local Section at the 29<br />

January 1948 meeting. Titles of papers presented at some of these meetings were: "Fibrous Dysplasia of Facial<br />

Bones" and "Amelogenesis" by A. K. Fisher; "Enamel Attachment Cuticle" and "Calcification of the Dental<br />

Enamel" by C. C. Bass. Later in 1948, T. F. Spiedel left for the Minneapolis Section and Alton K. Fisher<br />

transferred to the Iowa Section.<br />

Early meetings were open to guests of members and other interested individuals. All members were<br />

urged to be active participants. Lively discussions were held at monthly meetings. Other members taken into the<br />

Section in 1949 were Harold Fullmer and Paul Cook, but Fullmer left in 1953 for the NIDR and transferred to<br />

the Washington, D.C. Section.<br />

The New Orleans Section became somewhat inactive, but was reinstated in 1967 at the Forty-fifth<br />

General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong>. The new and active officers were: Malbern N. Wilderman, President; Kurt J. S.<br />

Odenheimer, Secretary; and Victor Halperin, Councilor.<br />

At the end of 1970 officers were Victor Halperin, President; Rosa I. Carvel, Secretary; and Kurt J. S.<br />

Odenheimer, Councilor. At the same time, there were thirty-two Section members.<br />

THE NEW YORK SECTION<br />

The New York Section was in effect the earliest and had been one of the most significant of the<br />

Sections. Since New York City was the site of the founding of the <strong>IADR</strong> itself, 11 the same men, almost all<br />

residing in the largest city of the United States, formed the nucleus of this early Section. There is on record, as<br />

William J. Gies pointed out in statements from his "Brief Review of the History of the <strong>IADR</strong>" in 1930, that:<br />

"On May 27, 1921 the groups in these three cities by adopting the Constitution now in force, formally created<br />

the New York Section, the Boston Section and the Chicago Section as of the respective dates of the first<br />

meetings of the Association in these three cities." 12<br />

The New York Section's first scientific meeting took place exactly eight months later, on 27 January<br />

1922. This is a well-recorded fact, unlike much other information about the New York Section. There was<br />

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somewhat of an intermingling pattern with the parent <strong>IADR</strong>, since it was at this meeting of the Section on<br />

January 27 that J. Leon Williams, then President of <strong>IADR</strong>, made the only vital statement regarding <strong>IADR</strong><br />

during his term of office. These remarks, duly documented elsewhere, preceded his lengthy scientific<br />

presentation on "Disputed Points and Unsolved Problems in the Normal and Pathological Histology of<br />

Enamel". 13<br />

This successful first public meeting of the New York Section was chaired by Arthur H. Merritt and was<br />

attended by its members as well as by several notable guests from as far away as Boston, Buffalo, Washington,<br />

D.C., and San Francisco. 14<br />

By the end of March 1928, the following had become members of the New York Section: C. F.<br />

Bodecker, L. A. Cahn, M. W. Carr, J. D. Eby, W. K. Gregory, J. M. Inouye, M. Karshan, Frances Krasnow, H.<br />

J. Leonard, J. O. McCall, F. S. McKay, E.G. Miller, Jr., H. F. Osborn, Alfred Owre, and B. W. Weinberger, thus<br />

bringing the total membership up to thirty-six.<br />

There is meager information as to early officers. Leuman Waugh was Secretary of the Section in 1927,<br />

while Bissell B. Palmer was Secretary in 1928 and 1929.<br />

In 1930 the membership had grown to forty, and by the end of the year on December 10 there was a<br />

special tenth-anniversary meeting at the Columbia University Club. Here William J. Gies gave the first address<br />

of the evening, and it proved to be noteworthily on the ten-year history of the <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

In the twentieth anniversary year of 1940, there were sixty-nine members. The anniversary meeting of<br />

the New York Section was held on December 20 at the St. Moritz Hotel. Editor Frances Krasnow recorded the<br />

interesting details for the Journal. 15 Speakers for the occasion, introduced by Chairman Charles G. Darlington,<br />

were Charles Bodecker, E. M. Bluestone, Brigadier General Leigh C. Fairbank, and, of course, William J. Gies.<br />

In 1945 Frances Krasnow compiled the proceedings of the twenty-fifth anniversary meeting 16 which was held at<br />

the Men's Faculty Club, Columbia University. Daniel E. Ziskin was Chairman of the Section. As before,<br />

William J. Gies spoke on the origin and history of the Association. Other speakers were John R. Dunning,<br />

discussing atomic energy, and the attorney, Emanuel D. Becker, "who won the case for the New York Section<br />

in proving that any presentation before its scientific sessions may be questioned by the Association [i.e., the<br />

New York Section] and can be withheld from inclusion in its published proceedings if so determined." (This<br />

was probably the only time a legal situation had arisen. A paper had been presented before the New York<br />

Section on 8 June 1943, but was rejected for inclusion in the published proceedings due to "its lacking any<br />

newness". Court action had been instituted, but the case was won by the Section as stated.)<br />

In succeeding years there were many well-planned scientific meetings, usually in the spring and autumn,<br />

especially during the Chairmanship of Frances Krasnow (1947-49) and thereafter.<br />

The New York Section had been host to the <strong>IADR</strong> annual meeting quite a few times (four and a half) in<br />

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December 1922, April 1927, May 1933 (business meeting only—because of the Depression), March 1942, and<br />

the Fiftieth Anniversary Meeting in 1970. (See chapter on "Meetings and Members".)<br />

Five men of the New York Section were honored in the earlier days by elevation to the Presidency of<br />

<strong>IADR</strong>: J. Leon Williams, 1921-23; Paul R. Stillman (for an interim period when J. L. Williams was ill), 1923-<br />

24; Leuman M. Waugh, 1926-27; William J. Gies, 1939-40; and Charles F. Bodecker, 1942-43.<br />

Soon after the demise of William J. Gies in 1956, a Tribute to him who had meant so much to the New York<br />

Section was written by Harry H. Shapiro; in part it eulogizes:<br />

To adequately express the feeling of loss at the passing of our guiding spirit, Dr. William J. Gies, is<br />

impossible. He epitomized the essence and meaning which underlie the scientific method and he remains an<br />

inspiration to those of us, fortunate enough to have been included among his colleagues.<br />

On behalf of the membership body of the New York Section of the International Association for Dental<br />

Research we wish to express our devotion to his ideals and our everlasting indebtedness to him, who was our<br />

constant friend and advisor. . . .<br />

The New York Section did indeed devote itself to the ideals of the Founder by continuing with its<br />

scientific meetings down to current times when its membership reached almost one hundred.<br />

Current officers at the close of the first fifty years in 1970 were David J. Smith, Chairman; Eli D.<br />

Goldsmith, Secretary; and Leo Zach, Councilor.<br />

THE NORTH CAROLINA SECTION<br />

The North Carolina Section was approved at the Forty-first General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong> on 23 March<br />

1963. Presidents of the Section have been Clifton E. Crandell, 1963-66, and Duane F. Taylor, 1967-72.<br />

Secretaries of the Section have been D. F. Taylor, 1963-66; J. B. Sowter, 1967-72. Councilors to the <strong>IADR</strong> have<br />

been Robert B. Sager, 1963-66, and Andrew D. Dixon, 1967-72. Members added up to thirty-two by the end of<br />

1970.<br />

THE PHILADELPHIA SECTION<br />

The leading dental society of Philadelphia (founded in the early 1890s) was the Academy of<br />

Stomatology. It had a reserve sum amounting to about $10,000. The Academy established a Committee on<br />

Research and authorized the income from that fund to be used for supporting research. Small allotments were<br />

made to cover costs of making and printing photographs, typing, and purchase of research reprints. Other<br />

evidence of the early climate of research in the city was that the library of the College of Physicians of<br />

Philadelphia afforded a rich background of literature and that a genetically homogeneous strain of the albino rat<br />

with specimens of known ages fortunately was available at the Wistar Institute.<br />

In 1927 Joseph L. T. Appleton, who was conducting bacteriological research at the School of Dentistry,<br />

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University of Pennsylvania, was asked by William J. Gies if he would be interested in organizing a Philadelphia<br />

Section of the <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

Soon after, there was a meeting of the <strong>IADR</strong> in Washington, D.C., in March 1928. Several individuals<br />

residing in the Philadelphia metropolitan area, who reported on scientific projects at this meeting, asked<br />

Professor Gies what were the proper steps to be taken for the formal establishment of the Philadelphia Section<br />

of the <strong>IADR</strong>. With his help this was accomplished with little delay. William J. Gies was the Secretary of the<br />

Organizing Committee; the other members were J. L. T. Appleton, E. Driscoll, and William A. Jacquette. Thus<br />

the Philadelphia Section was formally organized later in 1928, although there had been earlier preliminary<br />

meetings. The founding members were J. L. T. Appleton, Carrie K. Bryant (Secretary), J. A. Detlefsen, R. H.<br />

Ivy, Joseph McFarland, J. V. Mershon, W. R. Pentz, Hermann Prinz, A. Hopewell-Smith, and C. R. Turner.<br />

The Philadelphia Section was host to the annual <strong>IADR</strong> meeting on two occasions, in 1940 and in 1953. Two<br />

Section members were honored by election to the <strong>IADR</strong> Presidency: Joseph L. T. Appleton (1934-35) and Ned<br />

B. Williams (1958-59).<br />

There were many meetings held, usually at the University of Pennsylvania School of Dentistry. Invited<br />

speakers were often asked to present their latest research to the members, University faculty, and graduate<br />

students. For example, F. J. Orland from the University of Chicago was asked to present his unique research on<br />

the germ-free animal dental caries project; this he did on the eve of 9 May 1955 in the School's Evans Dental<br />

Institute.<br />

At the end of 1970 there were seventy members, and the officers were Joseph J. Aleo, Chairman; Arthur<br />

S. Miller, Secretary; and Irving M. Shapiro, Councilor.<br />

THE PITTSBURGH SECTION<br />

In the Journal of Dental Research, for December 1928, it is stated that since the Sixth Annual Meeting<br />

". . . additional sections have been organized successively in Pittsburgh, St. Louis, Halifax, Minneapolis, and<br />

Philadelphia." The first meeting of the Pittsburgh Section was held on 30-31 March 1928. Members of the<br />

Section were listed as T. W. Brand, Kaethe W. Dewey, F. C. Friesell, H. E. Friesell, W. F. Swanson, L. E. Van<br />

Kirk (Secretary), and W. H. Wright (all now deceased).<br />

The Pittsburgh Section has continued its meetings since its founding. An outstanding meeting was held<br />

on 18 May 1931, in which, by invitation, H. V. Churchill, a chemist of the Aluminum Company of America,<br />

presented a paper on water fluoride as the cause of mottled enamel, and F. C. Friesell, Dean of the School of<br />

Dentistry, University of Pittsburgh, read a paper sent for presentation by Margaret C. Smith, Edith Lantz, and<br />

Howard V. Smith of the University of Arizona, Tucson, on fluoride as the cause of mottled enamel in St. David,<br />

Arizona. These papers were published in the February 1932 issue of the Journal of Dental Research. So it was<br />

at this Pittsburgh Section meeting that the true cause of mottled enamel was first revealed.<br />

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From time to time, the Pittsburgh Section sponsored symposia concerned with recent developments. One<br />

such symposium on dental caries was held 23 June 1932 under the Section's auspices at the Mellon Institute.<br />

Another conference with many <strong>IADR</strong> members participating was held 19 April 1950, also at the Mellon<br />

Institute, on dental caries and periodontal disease. (See photos in chapter on "Meetings and Members".)<br />

Moreover, the <strong>IADR</strong> Annual Meeting was held in Pittsburgh in 1963.<br />

By the end of 1970, officers were Robert Rapp, President; Daniel H. Fine, Secretary; and David Platt,<br />

Councilor. Membership was forty-eight.<br />

THE PORTLAND SECTION<br />

In 1946 Harold J. Noyes had come from Chicago to the University of Oregon as Dean of its Dental<br />

School. Under his guidance and leadership a Section of <strong>IADR</strong> was founded. In 1948 the Oregon-Washington<br />

Section was organized at the University of Oregon Dental School by C. R. Baker, J. C. Brauer, V. D. Cheyne,<br />

E. B. Jump, D. B. Law, H. J. Noyes, M. L. Snyder, and B. O. A. Thomas. It soon became known as the Pacific<br />

Northwest Section. It can be surmised that, from the first meeting onward, Dean Noyes saw the need for better<br />

communication between the West Coast schools on the subject of dental research and teaching. Consequently<br />

there followed a series of three annual conferences hosted in turn by the Universities of Oregon, Washington,<br />

and British Columbia from 1949 to 1951.<br />

In 1966 the Northwest Section was reorganized into the Portland, Seattle, and Vancouver (later British<br />

Columbia) Sections. Annual meetings have been continued, however, on a collective basis, now rotating among<br />

the three cities. The original officers of the Portland Section were Walter B. Hall, President; John C. Mitchem,<br />

Secretary; and Ellis B. Jump, Councilor. Recently the Section has taken over the responsibility of a Faculty<br />

Research Club at the University of Portland and thus expanded its local usefulness.<br />

At the end of 1970, there were fifty-six members, and officers were Oscar N. Lucas, President; John C.<br />

Mitchem, Secretary; and Ellis B. Jump, Councilor.<br />

THE RICHMOND SECTION<br />

The Richmond Section was founded in 1933. Founding members were Harry Bear, Sigmund F. Bradel,<br />

and J. C. Forbes. The following year Harry Lyons and J. B. Williams joined.<br />

Due to inactivity in the late 1950s, the Section was reorganized in 1960 on 9 September at a luncheon<br />

meeting held in the Campus Room at the Medical College of Virginia. Membership at this time was comprised<br />

of Charles Barr, Alton D. Brashear, George W. Burke, Jr., O. Wendell Clough, Herbert D. Coy, William M.<br />

Feagans, John C. Forbes, Roscoe D. Hughes, Holmes T. Knighton, Harry Lyons, Alexander L. Martone, John J.<br />

Salley, and Harold M. Syrop. Those actually present for the meeting were Burke, Clough, Feagans, Hughes,<br />

Knighton, Salley, and Syrop. The following officers were elected: Harold M. Syrop, Chairman; George W.<br />

Burke, Secretary; and John J. Salley, Councilor.<br />

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The Richmond Section had again become rather inactive except for electing officers. On 8 May 1970 the<br />

Section met and elected the following officers: Philip J. Modjeski, President; Douglas B. Knuckles, Secretary;<br />

and Charles B. Sabiston, Councilor. At this meeting a Constitution and By-Laws (the first) were adopted. The<br />

Richmond Section now includes the Richmond area, which brought in three <strong>IADR</strong> members from the<br />

University of Virginia in Charlottesville. All members now pay $2 annual dues—another first. The Section and<br />

Holmes Knighton were honored when he was elected to the <strong>IADR</strong> Presidency, 1960-61. On 3 November 1970<br />

there were fourteen regular members and twelve associate members in the Richmond Section.<br />

THE ROCHESTER SECTION<br />

Like the Association itself, the Rochester Section in upstate New York had humble and informal<br />

beginnings. It was approved on 25 May 1933 at the General Meeting of the <strong>IADR</strong> held at the Western<br />

Universities Club in New York City. This New York gathering was essentially a business meeting to take care<br />

of matters not taken up in conjunction with the scientific session, which was held in Chicago two months<br />

earlier. The four founding members of the Rochester Section were Basil G. Bibby, Cyril D. Marshal-Day,<br />

Harold C. Hodge, and H. J. Sedwick, all of whom were dental fellows at the School of Medicine and Dentistry<br />

at the University of Rochester. The first-named served as Secretary of the Section, but there was no formal<br />

appointment of officers.<br />

With the exception of two interested dental practitioners, Ralph Voorhees and Paul Lalone, membership<br />

of the Rochester Section was composed almost entirely of Research Dental Fellows at the University of<br />

Rochester. In addition to those already named, membership during the first decade included A. D. Brashear, R.<br />

E. Brawley, W. E. Taylor, H. T. Knighton, G. Van Huysen, M. K. Hine, M. LeFevre, H. B. G. Robinson, J. F.<br />

Hall, M. W. McCrea, R. S. Manly, V. D. Cheyne, and J. F. Volker. Meetings of the Rochester Section were<br />

called each year, generally in conjunction with one of the afternoon dental research seminars at the School. The<br />

meeting prior to the annual meeting of the <strong>IADR</strong> was designated as the time that the election of officers would<br />

take place for the following year. It became policy to elect new officers at least every other year, so as many as<br />

possible of the dental research trainees would gain experience in the workings and problems of a scientific<br />

association.<br />

A large expansion of membership took place following the initiation of research activities at the<br />

Eastman Dental Center, and in recent years the majority of the members have been associated with that<br />

institution. It has become policy to alternate the annual meetings of the Rochester Section between the Dental<br />

Center and the University and to divide the responsibilities and honors of office as well.<br />

When the Journal of Dental Research underwent its crisis in late 1935 and early 1936, it was decided at<br />

the March <strong>IADR</strong> meeting that it be put under management of certain members of the Rochester Section.<br />

Hamilton B. G. Robinson accepted responsibility for the editorship and business management of the Journal<br />

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and with Harold C. Hodge and Maynard K. Hine helped to put it on a more secure basis. In 1948 the Rochester<br />

Section hosted the annual meeting of the <strong>IADR</strong> (the only time) independently of the American Association of<br />

Dental Schools which met in nearby Buffalo, New York. There were many original members of the Rochester<br />

Section who had been elected President of the <strong>IADR</strong>. However, the only two who were Section members at the<br />

time were Harold C. Hodge (1947-48) and Basil G. Bibby (1950-51).<br />

In the Fiftieth Anniversary year, officers of the Rochester Section were Richard E. Stallard, President;<br />

James E. Kennedy, Secretary; and Erling Johansen, Councilor. At the end of that same year, 1970, there were<br />

twenty-six regular <strong>IADR</strong> members in the Section.<br />

THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN SECTION<br />

The Rocky Mountain Section (which later became the Frederick S. McKay Section) was organized in<br />

Denver, Colorado, on 20 November 1968. The Section was approved officially at the <strong>IADR</strong> annual meeting in<br />

1969. Founding members were Leslie R. Burrows, Gordon J. Christensen, R. P. Dunkley, G. P. Ivancie,<br />

Webster S. Jee, George A. Krikos, Jack Kring, Sholom Pearlman, H. R. Raper, R. G. Schallhorn, Charles L.<br />

Wilson, and Jaime Yrastorza.<br />

The Section encompassed two major academic foci of dental research at the University of Utah in Salt<br />

Lake City and at the University of Colorado Dental School in Denver, and a third important focus at Colorado<br />

State University in Fort Collins.<br />

The Section meetings alternate across the Continental Divide from year to year, and they already are<br />

serving an important function in bringing together dental investigators who would not ordinarily make the<br />

opportunity for such intensive scientific communication.<br />

Dental research in the Rocky Mountain region has never received the visibility that it deserves. The<br />

basic epidemiology of fluorosis had its American origins in this locality through the efforts of Frederick S.<br />

McKay. Years later, significant research activity was conducted over a long period by Balint Orban, Beryl T.<br />

Ritchey, and others in Colorado Springs; and a substantial number of independent practitioners have continually<br />

generated numerous contributions in periodontal research, operative dentistry, and other important areas of<br />

endeavor.<br />

Members of the Section expressed a desire to call attention to dental research more vigorously<br />

throughout the region and make it more meaningful to the public and professional community. Accordingly, it<br />

was planned to rename the Section in honor of Frederick S. McKay. (He began to study mottled teeth in<br />

Colorado as early as 1902. These observations led to the discovery of fluorosis in 1931, and the later beneficial<br />

effect on caries prevention when minimal fluoride is in drinking water.) It was then decided that Section<br />

members would hold a special dedicatory ceremony at their Denver meeting in March 1971 with Mrs. McKay<br />

as special guest of honor. A personal history of the late F. S. McKay was presented by Robert A. Downs,<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 172


Assistant Director of the Colorado Health Department, who had known and worked with McKay over a long<br />

period of time. A brief outline of the magnitude and significance of McKay's contribution was presented by<br />

Sholom Pearlman.<br />

With the establishment of the University of Colorado School of Dentistry, membership in this Section<br />

may be expected to grow apace. It is the only unit of the <strong>IADR</strong> in the vast region of the Rocky Mountains and at<br />

present has twelve active members.<br />

Officers at the end of 1970 (who were also the founding officers in 1969) were George A. Krikos,<br />

President; Robert G. Shallhorn, Secretary; and Sholom Pearlman, Councilor.<br />

THE ST. LOUIS SECTION<br />

The St. Louis Section of <strong>IADR</strong> was founded in 1928. Founding members were B. E. Lischer, E. B.<br />

Owen, G. B. Winter, and C. O. Simpson (who was Secretary of the Section, 1928-36). In 1930 the following<br />

were new members: W. A. Chamberlain, E. H. Hayes, Howard R. Raper, Russell C. Wheeler, and J. D. White.<br />

In 1935 Otto Brandhorst became a significant member. In 1936 E. P. Brady and L. R. Main were added<br />

to the group, while in 1937 H. B. G. Robinson transferred from the Rochester Section to St. Louis, bringing the<br />

Journal of Dental Research with him as Editor. He also became Secretary of the St. Louis Section that year.<br />

Leroy R. Boling, Edward Hampp, W. E. Koch, and W. B. Gurley were added to the rapidly growing<br />

membership in 1938. In the early 1940s William Bauer from Innsbruck, Austria, joined the Section.<br />

Barnet M. Levy was a member of the St. Louis Section from 1944-49, as was Holmes T. Knighton,<br />

1946-50. Theodor Rosebury joined the Section in 1949 and served several terms as a very active Councilor. It<br />

was he who presented an excellent tribute to William J. Gies upon his demise. 17<br />

The St. Louis Section has hosted several <strong>IADR</strong> annual meetings, in 1962, 1956, and notably the one on<br />

15 March 1941. (See especially that 1941 banquet photograph in the chapter on "Meetings and Members".)<br />

Sectional meeting sites alternate between St. Louis University and Washington University Dental Schools. The<br />

faculties and graduate as well as some undergraduate students produce many of the scientific papers presented.<br />

Semiannual scientific sessions are attended by thirty to forty regular and associate members.<br />

In 1928 there were only four members, but by 1948 there were twenty-one, and thirty-three by the end<br />

of 1970, when the officers were Bruno W. Kwapis, President; Richard W. Brand, Secretary; and John R. Ring,<br />

Councilor.<br />

THE SAN ANTONIO SECTION<br />

The organizing date of the San Antonio Section was 24 May 1968. Motivation behind the organization<br />

was the presence of a major military dental research organization, two very active and productive dental<br />

residency programs, and a private foundation that conducts dental research. The Dental Sciences Division of the<br />

USAF School of Aerospace Medicine is the military research unit, the Wilford Hall USAF Medical Center and<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 173


the Brooke Army Medical Center are the residency programs, and the Southwest Foundation for Research and<br />

Education is the private foundation. It was felt to be highly desirable to have a forum for the presentation and<br />

discussion of all the research being conducted in the San Antonio area.<br />

The original members of the San Antonio Section were Arden G. Christen, Gaylord L. Hall, Andrew G.<br />

Hendricks, Malcolm D. Jendresen, Albert C. Jerman, Roland M. Meffert, Charles D. Miller, Robert M. Morrow,<br />

O. M. Reed, James E. Richardson, Vincent A. Segreto, and Robert K. Wettlaufer.<br />

Since its organization, the San Antonio Section has conducted two program meetings, one at Lackland<br />

Air Force Base and one at the USAF School of Aerospace Medicine, Brooks Air Force Base. Ten papers of<br />

original research were presented at each meeting preceding a dinner meeting where a featured paper was<br />

presented.<br />

Because the majority of the members of the San Antonio Section are in the Armed Forces, there has<br />

been a continual change in the membership due to transferral in and out of San Antonio. By May 1970 the<br />

membership was fourteen. It is hoped that with the presence of a new dental school in San Antonio, now under<br />

construction, the membership will be greatly increased.<br />

Officers at the end of 1970 were Vincent A. Segreto, President; Albert C. Jerman, Secretary; and O. M.<br />

Reed, Councilor.<br />

THE SAN FRANCISCO SECTION<br />

Founded in 1924 as the sixth Section of the Association, the San Francisco Section has had continuing<br />

representation at the annual meetings. Founding members were J. S. Shell (Secretary), H. M. Bean, J. A.<br />

Marshall, E. H. Mauk, G. S. Millberry, F. H. Orton, and F. V. Simonton. Among the more prominent members<br />

over the past fifty years have been R. G. Agnew, L. H. Baume, H. Becks, W. C. Fleming, H. E. Frisbie, H. M.<br />

Leicester, J. H. Nuckolls, W. L. Wylie, H. M. Myers, and G. Ryge.<br />

In the early years, the California Stomatological Research Group was a center for intense activity, which<br />

added to the Section's membership.<br />

In 1953 the Section was deeply involved in a symposium on Diet and Dental Caries which received<br />

widespread national and international attention. The symposium was sponsored by the California Dental<br />

Association and brought outstanding figures to the area for several days of vigorous debate.<br />

In 1960 D. H. Copp presented a paper at a Section meeting prior to its publication which described his<br />

discovery of calcitonin.<br />

As a guest of the San Francisco Section, one of the recipients of the Senior Foreign Scientist Fellowship<br />

of the <strong>IADR</strong> was Takara Yonaga of the Tokyo Medical and Dental University. He spent the year 1967 in San<br />

Francisco, where he presented papers on his vital Pb staining technique, which he also discussed at New York<br />

and Boston Section meetings.<br />

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The Section was pleased to be host for the annual <strong>IADR</strong> meeting in both 1959 and 1968.<br />

A member of the San Francisco Section, Gunnar Ryge, was elected Vice-President of the <strong>IADR</strong> during<br />

1970. This marks the second time a local member was elected to this office; F. V. Simonton was Vice-President<br />

(1928-29) but then resigned from all academic endeavors, while Ryge was later elected <strong>IADR</strong> President (1972-<br />

73).<br />

Officers at the end of 1970 were Herschel S. Horowitz, President; L. D. Cagnone, Secretary; and Isadore<br />

Zipkin, Councilor. Membership climbed to ninety-three.<br />

THE SEATTLE SECTION<br />

The Seattle Section initially developed within an amalgamation of <strong>IADR</strong> members known as the Pacific<br />

Northwest Section, which trichotomized in 1966. (See the histories of the British Columbia and Portland<br />

Sections in this chapter.) The first meeting as a separate Section was held late in 1966. Officers elected were<br />

Irving B. Stern, President; Martha H. Fales, Secretary; and Patricia J. Keller, Councilor.<br />

The officers at the end of 1970 were A. Ian Hamilton, President; Benjamin C. Moffett, Secretary; and<br />

Leo M. Sreebny, Councilor, while membership was an even thirty.<br />

THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA SECTION<br />

The Southern California Section was founded in the latter part of 1949 at a meeting held at the Dental<br />

School of the University of Southern California. Included in the group of founders were Spencer Atkinson,<br />

Lucien Bavetta, Sol Bernick, Jean Brauer, Ben Ershoff, Ben Rabinowitch, Robert Rutherford, Max Shapiro, and<br />

Norman Simmonds. Bavetta was elected Secretary. Rabinowitch became Councilor shortly thereafter, when<br />

Brauer moved to Australia. After two or three years of activity, interest waned and the Section became inactive.<br />

As a new decade approached, fresh impetus to dental research in Southern California was provided from several<br />

areas. The School of Medicine at UCLA was well established and growing rapidly, and plans for a dental school<br />

were taking shape. An increasing number of the faculty at Loma Linda University Dental School were actively<br />

pursuing research interests. W. W. Wainwright was brought to the University of Southern California to launch a<br />

program in basic dental research. In collaboration with J. B. Taylor, Chief of Dental Service at the VA Hospital,<br />

Long Beach, he initiated a study of microleakage of restorations, as part of the program of the Veterans<br />

Administration to contribute materially to dental research throughout the country. With the arrival of Reidar<br />

Sognnaes as Dean of the future School of Dentistry at UCLA, and of Harold Dute as Chief of Dental Service at<br />

the VA Center in Los Angeles, conditions were ripe for a reactivation of this <strong>IADR</strong> Section. Due largely to the<br />

initiative of Wainwright, the second phase in the history of the Southern California Section was launched with a<br />

meeting in the temporary quarters of the UCLA Dental School on 3 November 1960. A panel including H.<br />

Dute, R. F. Sognnaes, E. C. Stowell, J. B. Taylor, and W. W. Wainwright presented a program on the<br />

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applications of isotopes to oral problems. Three meetings a year were held thereafter until recently, when the<br />

schedule became more irregular.<br />

Sognnaes has served as Councilor since the reactivation; Wainwright was Secretary until his departure,<br />

when he was succeeded by McGaughey. The President was Harold Dute; since then, the office has rotated<br />

between the three dental schools and the Long Beach VA Hospital.<br />

The program format has ranged from multiple short papers to a full presentation of original studies or a<br />

survey of a particular field. In recent times it has sponsored student research competitions with grants of $100.<br />

The Section served as host to the <strong>IADR</strong> meeting held in Los Angeles in March 1964.<br />

In 1967 the Section became affiliated with the Pacific division of the AAAS in time to participate jointly<br />

with the San Francisco Section in a symposium on the role of fluorides in skeletal tissues at the regional AAAS<br />

meeting held at UCLA. The symposium took place 19 June 1967 with John Knutson as moderator and included<br />

papers by Herschel Horowitz, Henry Leicester and Paul Thomassen, John Bethune, Howard Myers, and Richard<br />

Mumma.<br />

Despite geographical separation from other <strong>IADR</strong> Sections, interest and participation in this Section has<br />

been maintained, and further growth is expected in the immediate future.<br />

A member of this Section was very recently honored by election to the <strong>IADR</strong> Presidency: Clifton O.<br />

Dummett, 1969-70. (Reidar F. Sognnaes had also been President in 1957-58, but this was before he came to<br />

California.)<br />

The officers at the end of 1970 were Harold C. Slavkin, President; C. G. McGaughey, Secretary; and<br />

Reidar F. Sognnaes, Councilor. Membership had increased to ninety-seven by this time.<br />

THE TORONTO SECTION<br />

In Canada the Toronto Section was established in 1921—the fourth Section of the <strong>IADR</strong>. It was the first<br />

Section organized beyond United States borders, thus providing practical meaning to William Gies'<br />

international concept of the parent Association. Moreover, Albert E. Webster of the University of Toronto was<br />

elected and served as President of the <strong>IADR</strong> in 1924-25. Toronto members by 1928 were J. F. Adams, G. R.<br />

Anderson, H. K. Box, A. J. Broughton, Thomas Cowling, W. E. Cummer, A. W. Ellis, C. J. Fraser, Andrew<br />

Hunter, F. C. Husband, A. J. McDonagh, E. W. Paul, H. S. Thomson, W. C. Trotter, and Albert E. Webster,<br />

who was uniquely honored a second time by being reelected President of the <strong>IADR</strong> in 1931.<br />

On two occasions the Toronto Section was host to the <strong>IADR</strong> annual meeting. This was in 1930 and<br />

again thirty-five years later; the 1965 occasion was especially significant because of an excellent meeting 18<br />

presided over by Martin A. Rushton of England, who was the <strong>IADR</strong> President that year and the first man to<br />

hold that office from outside North America. (See chapter on "Meetings and Members" as well as the "Pages of<br />

Presidents".)<br />

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Another Toronto man was elected to the <strong>IADR</strong> Presidency. This was John B. Macdonald in 1968-69,<br />

who, before returning to Toronto, had been active in the British Columbia and Boston Sections.<br />

Officers by the end of 1970 were M. C. Johnston, President; Arthur T. Storey, Secretary; and Robert M.<br />

Grainger, Councilor. The Toronto Section, which had twenty-four members, became known as the Ontario<br />

Section after 1970, as it gained more members beyond the city of Toronto.<br />

THE WASHINGTON, D.C. SECTION<br />

In 1931 William J. Gies, while Secretary of the <strong>IADR</strong>, asked George C. Paffenbarger to organize a<br />

Washington, D.C. Section, since he, Arthur B. Crane, Robert A. Keilty, Wilmer Souder, William T. Sweeney,<br />

Norris O. Taylor, and F. E. Rodriguez were all <strong>IADR</strong> members from the Washington, D.C. area. An<br />

organizational meeting of this, the seventeenth <strong>IADR</strong> Section, was held 13 October 1931 with the<br />

aforementioned persons.<br />

Arthur B. Crane was elected Chairman of the Section and George C. Paffenbarger, Secretary-Treasurer;<br />

both continued to serve in these positions until 1936. In 1932 C. Willard Camalier, H. Trendley Dean, Aaron<br />

Isaacs, Clinton T. Messner, and Harry Kaplan were elected to membership in <strong>IADR</strong> and became members of<br />

the Washington Section, along with Henry Klein and E. V. McCallum of Johns Hopkins University from<br />

Baltimore, which had no Section at that time. Usually two meetings were held annually, a business and an<br />

academic one, with the latter usually featuring an outstanding scientist.<br />

The Section grew with the admission of the following <strong>IADR</strong> members elected in 1933-36: Aleš<br />

Hrdlicka, Harrey E. Harvey, Eugene R. Stone, Roland Barber, Harold W. Krogh, Daniel F. Lynch, Joseph L.<br />

Bernier, B. Edwin Erikson, Luzerne G. Jordon, Sterling V. Mead, and Irl C. Schoonover.<br />

At the eleventh meeting of the Section on 9 April 1936, the following officers were elected: George C.<br />

Paffenbarger, Chairman; Harold W. Krogh, Secretary-Treasurer; B. Edwin Erickson, Councilor; and Eugene R.<br />

Stone, Editor. At this time, plans were made for annual joint scientific meetings with the District of Columbia<br />

Dental Society.<br />

The well-known oral and plastic surgeon V. H. Kazanjian was guest essayist at such a joint meeting on<br />

12 April 1938. These combined meetings were continued until 1948 with the following guest speakers: Isaac<br />

Schour, Philip Jay, J. Roy Blayney, Thomas J. Hill, Stanley D. Tylman, Wilmer Souder, William T. Sweeney,<br />

and George C. Paffenbarger.<br />

In 1938 there were twenty-three members of the Section, with the addition of Francis A. Arnold, who<br />

transferred from the Cleveland Section, and J. E. Ash, LeRoy P. Hartley, and John R. Beall.<br />

During these early years the Washington Section was engaged in a number of activities that aggressively<br />

promoted and fostered dental research.<br />

In 1953 the Washington Academy of Sciences accepted the Washington Section of the <strong>IADR</strong> as an<br />

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affiliated society of the Academy, and thus in the Washington area dental research and researchers were<br />

recognized by their peers in other research fields. Of course, prior to this, many dental researchers were<br />

members of the Washington Academy of Sciences.<br />

It became the custom to have Section meetings at the National Bureau of Standards, the Cosmos Club,<br />

the U.S. Public Health Service, the Army Medical Museum, the Army Institute of Pathology, Walter Reed<br />

Army Medical Center, Georgetown University, Howard University, and the National Institute of Dental<br />

Research. At many of these meetings brief reports of research being conducted by the host laboratory were<br />

presented by their respective staffs. Some of these meetings attracted an attendance of 125 including guests,<br />

while Section membership attained a high of sixty-five (1968-69).<br />

Thus, the Washington, D.C. Section in its thirty-nine years of continuous activity has stimulated<br />

collaborative research in dentistry with a host of other researchers who were trained in a great variety of<br />

disciplines and who became participating members of the Washington Section.<br />

Washington Section members who had the honor to serve as <strong>IADR</strong> President were: Wilmer Souder,<br />

1940-41; H. Trendley Dean, 1944-45; Francis A. Arnold, 1953-54; George C. Paffenbarger, 1954-55; James A.<br />

English, 1961-62; Seymour J. Kreshover, 1962-63; and Gordon H. Rovelstad, 1970-71 (who became President-<br />

Elect while still in the Chicago Section). The Washington Section was host to the <strong>IADR</strong> annual meeting twice<br />

in the past—in 1928 and 1967—and the 1973 meeting is planned to be held in Washington, D.C. as well. (See<br />

chapter on "Meetings and Members".)<br />

At the end of 1970 membership was reported as twenty-two, while the officers were Walter E. Brown,<br />

President; Eugene F. Huget, Secretary-Treasurer; and Harold M. Fullmer, Councilor.<br />

THE WISCONSIN SECTION<br />

Previous to 1960 there were a few members of the <strong>IADR</strong> located throughout the state of Wisconsin.<br />

Some were active at the national level and participated in annual scientific sessions.<br />

After initiation of graduate programs in the School of Dentistry, Marquette University, a Wisconsin<br />

Section of <strong>IADR</strong> was formed. Members of the faculty felt that a group through which each member could<br />

develop and improve his research skills was needed for guidance of graduate students.<br />

In part through efforts of members of the Dental Materials Department (which had a vigorous research<br />

program) and partly through efforts of other members of the dental faculty interested in research and graduate<br />

education, a Wisconsin Section was formed in 1960. From among the eleven charter members, officers were<br />

elected and regular meetings held.<br />

Early programs consisted of subjects dealing with statistics, research methodology, research problems,<br />

and also guest presentations. In preparation for the annual <strong>IADR</strong> meetings, papers scheduled for presentation<br />

were rehearsed.<br />

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Membership grew in the following years. Invitations were extended to interested colleagues throughout<br />

the state, as well as to faculty members, graduate students, and allied scientists.<br />

Past-Presidents since 1960 are C. W. Fairhurst (1960-61), R. V. Winders (1962), L. J. Boucher (1963),<br />

C. J. Wilson (1964-65), K. Leinfelder (1966-69), and P. S. Sharma (1970-73). Those who have served as<br />

Councilors since 1960 are G. Ryge (1960-61), R. Brown (1962-63), R. W. Moss (1964-65), R. Brown (1966-<br />

69), and F. J. Knap (1970-73). Past Secretary-Treasurers since 1960 are R. Winders (1960), L. Boucher (1961-<br />

62), C. J. Wilson (1963), L. J. Boucher (1964), D. Weber (1965- 69), and R. Winders (1970-73).<br />

During the formation of the Wisconsin Section, it would seem appropriate to recognize the initial thrust<br />

applied by Gunnar Ryge, then Chairman of the Dental Materials Department, Marquette School of Dentistry,<br />

and other members of his department. Ryge's continued support for and participation in the activities of the<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> have been an inspiration to many. His current ascension to the Vice-Presidency of the parent organization<br />

is further testimony to his efforts, although he transferred to the San Francisco Section.<br />

The Wisconsin Section, after enjoying an active beginning, became less active during the later 1960s.<br />

Departmental and faculty changes at Marquette University displaced many of the charter members.<br />

However, a resurgence has occurred in 1970; in an effort to reactivate the Section, meetings and<br />

programs have been held and a recruitment drive is under way. Members totaled nineteen at the end of 1970.<br />

It is hoped that the Wisconsin Section of the <strong>IADR</strong> can continue to be an effective forum for dental research in<br />

the state of Wisconsin and further contribute to the <strong>IADR</strong> with dedicated members and worthy scientific efforts.<br />

THE SCANDINAVIAN-NOF DIVISION<br />

THE DENMARK SECTION<br />

Before World War II, P.O. Pedersen had corresponded with William Gies about initiating a Danish<br />

Section of <strong>IADR</strong>. In a letter to Edward H. Hatton, <strong>IADR</strong> Secretary-Treasurer, dated 12 March 1950, Pedersen<br />

again asked the <strong>IADR</strong> to consider this matter. The Denmark Section was approved at the Twenty-eighth<br />

General <strong>IADR</strong> Meeting in 1950. Later, in another letter to Hatton (11 February 1952), Poul Pedersen mentioned<br />

that the Denmark Section had elected the following: Johannes J. Holst, Councilor; Poul O. Pedersen, Secretary;<br />

and Will Krogh-Poulsen, Editor. Other members at this time were Ove Brinch, Halfdan Eggers-Lura, Frode E.<br />

Hilming, and Jens J. Pindborg, who was designated as Honorary Vice-President of <strong>IADR</strong>, 1967-68. By the end<br />

of 1970 the officers were, Erik Hjørting-Hansen, Secretary, and, as President, Mogens R. Skougaard, who later<br />

was to be elected to the <strong>IADR</strong> Presidency (1973-74).<br />

THE FINLAND SECTION<br />

The Helsinki Section of <strong>IADR</strong> was approved in 1953 at the Thirty-first General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong>. Some<br />

members in 1953 of this far northeasterly Section in Europe were Mauri Pohto and Yrjö V. Paatero, with Kalevi<br />

Koski as Secretary.<br />

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The Helsinki Section was renamed the Finland Section during 1969 because more and more members of<br />

this Section came from outside Helsinki, as from the city of Turku, where they belonged to the Turun<br />

Yliopiston hammaslääketieteen laitos (Institute of Dentistry, University of Turku).<br />

The officers at the end of 1970 were Kalervo K. Koivumaa, President, and Lennart Forstén, Secretary.<br />

THE NORWAY SECTION<br />

In 1939 Ingjald Reichborn-Kjennerud wrote to Edward H. Hatton about forming an <strong>IADR</strong> Section in<br />

Norway. However, World War II broke out, and during the next five years of occupation, Norway was isolated<br />

from the research world. On 12 July 1945 three Norwegians met to organize an active Norwegian Section and<br />

appoint officers. They were Guttorm Toverud, Secretary; Ingjald Reichborn-Kjennerud, Councilor; and Reidar<br />

F. Sognnaes, Editor. That same day they sent a letter to Wallace D. Armstrong, then President of <strong>IADR</strong>,<br />

informing him of their meeting. However, there was a lack of interest in Norway in the ensuing years because<br />

the functions of arranging annual research meetings and publishing a scientific journal were taken care of by the<br />

Nordisk Odontologisk Förening. The Section was not officially approved until the Thirty-first <strong>IADR</strong> General<br />

Meeting in 1953. Some members at this time were Thorvald Kvam, Birger Nygaard-Ostby, Kaare Reitan,<br />

Harald F. Sand, Reidar Selmer-Olsen, Jens Waerhaug, Egil P. Harvold, and Guttorm Toverud (Secretary).<br />

Even after establishing the Norway Section in 1953, Norwegians had little interest or activity in the<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> because of NOF activity in that country. This situation changed, however, in 1969 when the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

Council approved an agreement by which NOF assumed the functions of a Scandinavian Division of <strong>IADR</strong>. At<br />

the same time, the Norwegian Section of NOF merged with the Norway Section of <strong>IADR</strong>. (See chapter on<br />

"History of the Divisions".)<br />

Officers at the end of 1970 were Knut A. Selvig, President; Sigurd H. From, Secretary; and Tore<br />

Kristoffersen, Councilor.<br />

THE SWEDEN SECTION<br />

The Sweden Section was approved in 1969 at the same time that the Scandinavian-NOF Division was<br />

established. (See "History of the Divisions" for details.) One of Sweden's outstanding researchers, S(ten) Yngve<br />

Ericsson of the Karolinska Institute, was designated an Honorary Vice-President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 1967-68. The<br />

officers of this Section in 1969 as well as at the end of 1970 were Nils Sällström, President, and G. Oldén,<br />

Secretary.<br />

THE NON-DIVISIONAL SECTIONS<br />

THE ARGENTINA SECTION<br />

During 1959 and 1960, the Argentine Society of Periodontology (Sociedad Argentina de<br />

Periodontología) held research meetings devoted mainly to periodontal problems but also to other fields. These<br />

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events motivated a relatively large number of investigators to have an organization that would concentrate their<br />

scientific efforts, thus offering an open forum for discussion.<br />

As a result of these successful meetings, a group of investigators in dental sciences met on 14 December<br />

1961 at the Faculty of Dentistry, University of Buenos Aires, and resolved the creation of the Sociedad<br />

Argentina de Investigación Odontológica (SAIO—the Argentine Society of Dental Research). After that, this<br />

Society met yearly (1962- 67) for presentation and discussion of scientific papers, with membership increasing<br />

from eleven founding members in 1961 to forty-eight in 1967.<br />

After conversations between Fermín A. Carranza, Jr., Secretary-Treasurer of the SAIO, and Gordon H.<br />

Rovelstad, Secretary-Treasurer of the <strong>IADR</strong>, it was agreed to establish the Argentina Section of <strong>IADR</strong> on the<br />

basis of the existent local society. This was accepted by the <strong>IADR</strong> Council in March 1967. Then, on 24<br />

November, 1967, the Argentine Society of Dental Research was dissolved.<br />

The first annual meeting of the Argentina Section was held on 29 November 1968, and fifty-eight papers<br />

were presented. Actually, it was the ninth meeting of the same group of investigators. For reference, abstracts of<br />

papers presented before the meetings of the Argentine Society of Periodontology (1959 and 1965) and the SAIO<br />

(1961-67) have been published in "Revista de la Asociación Odontológica Argentina".<br />

In 1968 the Argentina Section of <strong>IADR</strong> had fifty-four members, but at the end of 1970 there were<br />

seventy-six members. Officers then were Fermín A. Carranza, Jr., Presidente, and Francisco C. H. Devoto,<br />

Secretario. Margarita Muruzábal, who has been active in the area of scientific literature as Director of the<br />

Library of the Asociación Odontológica Argentina, was to become the President-Elect in 1972.<br />

THE CARACAS SECTION AND THE MARACAIBO SECTION<br />

The two main cities of Venezuela have <strong>IADR</strong> Sections, both of which were approved by the Council in<br />

1969. The Caracas officers for 1969 and 1970 were W. O. Hohn H., President; Ernesto Muller M., Secretary;<br />

and Hugo Paolini R., Councilor. The Maracaibo officers for 1969 and 1970 were G. Jiminez, President, and F.<br />

Martinez, Secretary.<br />

Both Sections continue to be active and hold regular annual meetings, usually in combination. At the<br />

end of 1970 Maracaibo had fourteen members and Caracas had seventeen.<br />

THE ISRAEL SECTION<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> members in Palestine began in late 1939 to organize the Palestine Section, which was approved in<br />

1940. Founding members were Heinrich Berger, Hugo Brasch, Samuel Lewin-Epstein, Erwin Mansbach,<br />

Abraham Sussman, Jacob Yardeni, Bernhard Gottlieb, and Ernst Kellner (the latter two had been active in the<br />

Vienna Section). Officers for 1939-40 were Bernhard Gottlieb as Chairman, Councilor, and Editor, with Samuel<br />

Lewin-Epstein as Secretary. Moreover, Gottlieb was further honored by being designated as an Honorary Vice-<br />

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President of the <strong>IADR</strong> in 1940-41, as he also had been in 1932-33 while at the University of Vienna. (See<br />

chapter nine on "Honorary Status in the <strong>IADR</strong>".)<br />

Due to inactivity, the Palestine Section slowly faded away despite attempts at revitalization and<br />

reorganization in 1952. It had disappeared completely by 1958, when efforts were made to establish an Israel<br />

Section. In October 1965, Kurt A. Rosenzweig, Head of the Department of Pedodontics, Hebrew University-<br />

Hadassah School of Dental Medicine in Jerusalem, contacted all <strong>IADR</strong> members in Israel in order to learn their<br />

interest in forming a local Section. Ino Sciaky, Dean of the School, initiated a campaign aiming to provoke the<br />

interest of these members into organizing. When positive views were obtained, the members voted in January<br />

1966 to elect Mario Ulmansky as President and Edith Kaye as Secretary-Treasurer. By March 1967 the Section<br />

had been approved by <strong>IADR</strong> Council. Late in April 1967 the Section was informed by <strong>IADR</strong> Secretary-<br />

Treasurer Frechette of the necessity of preparing a constitution and by-laws for the Section. Activities in this<br />

respect were interrupted by the outbreak of the Six Day War and its sequelae. But by December 1967, when<br />

Arthur R. Frechette visited Jerusalem, a constitution and by-laws had been worked out.<br />

The first Sectional meeting took place on 5 January 1968. It was a combination business and scientific<br />

meeting. The constitution was voted upon and approved. Ino Sciaky was elected as first Councilor of the<br />

Section and J. Yardeni as Honorary Member. A number of new members were accepted to the Section.<br />

By the end of 1970 the officers were Edith Kaye, President; Shlomo Shapiro, Secretary; and Mario<br />

Ulmansky, Councilor. The membership totaled eighteen at this time.<br />

EXTINCT SECTIONS<br />

THE BUDAPEST SECTION<br />

The Budapest Section was begun by Béla Bonyhárd and Ferenc Köszeg in 1934. Other founding<br />

members were Károly Balogh, István Bánhegyi, János Brand, Béla De Simon, Károly Ferenczy, Elek Földi,<br />

Dezsö Hattyasy, Oszkár Kaufmann (who soon hungaricized his name to Kömüves), Ervin Lörinczy-Landgraf,<br />

Gusztáv Morelli, Rudolf Rehák, Henrik Salamon, Lászlo Sugár, József Szabó, Steven Varga, and Dénes von<br />

Máthé. József Szabó was designated Honorary Vice-President of the <strong>IADR</strong>, 1935-36. By 1947 the Journal<br />

listed the Section as inactive, and at the Thirty-first General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong> in 1953, the "inactivation" of the<br />

Budapest Section was approved by the <strong>IADR</strong> Council. 19<br />

The main reason for the death of the Budapest Section was the deaths of so many of its members who<br />

were victims of the terror of World War II, such as Bonyhárd, Kömüves, Köszeg, and indirectly, probably<br />

Salamon. Szabó and Földi died during the war years, and "natural" deaths were recorded for Bánhegyi and von<br />

Máthé. Rudolf Rehák died in late 1969. As of 1970, Ferenczy, Sugár, Hattyasy, Balogh, and Lörinczy-Landgraf<br />

were still alive. Ferenczy was at that time lecturer on dental roentgenology at the University Dental Faculty of<br />

Budapest and received the Arkövy Medal of the Budapest Dental Faculty that is awarded every two years for an<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 182


outstanding accomplishment: in his case, it was for an excellent textbook on dental and oral roentgenology.<br />

Lászlo Sugár is lecturer in periodontology and oral diseases at the same school and in 1970 was Secretary-<br />

General of the Hungarian Dental Association. Balogh and Hattyasy are professors emeriti in Budapest;<br />

Lörinczy-Landgraf is just retiring from the aforementioned school.<br />

Despite the demise of the Budapest Section, there is one extremely versatile <strong>IADR</strong> member in Hungary,<br />

and that is Peter Adler of Debrecen.<br />

THE CHENGTU SECTION<br />

The inauguration of the "China Section of the <strong>IADR</strong>" took place in 1934 at the School of Dentistry of<br />

the College of Medicine and Dentistry, West China Union University, at Chengtu, the capital of the densely<br />

populated province of Szechwan in western China. This large city has a history extending far back into the life<br />

of ancient China. Its high walls and great gates stood massively in a fertile plain, the basin of a prehistoric lake,<br />

surrounded by mountains. For long centuries, Chengtu has been one of the three major educational and cultural<br />

centers of China (Peking in the North, Nanking in the East, and Chengtu in the West). It was through perhaps<br />

fortuitous circumstance that this western center was the site of the first organized and university-level school of<br />

Dentistry in the whole of China. In this large and originally Western-sponsored university there was a fine<br />

medical school with excellent basic science teaching. A Canadian missionary dentist, Ashley W. Lindsay, in<br />

1918 sensed the basic need in China for formal, standard-creating dental education. Over some years, other<br />

Western dental educators from different countries, and in other fields, participated. Qualified male and female<br />

Chinese students were given instructional and research training, often including overseas study and experience.<br />

Their degrees of M.D. or of D.D.S. were also recognized by the Board of Regents of the University of the State<br />

of New York, which facilitated subsequent graduate study in America. The courses interrelated so closely that a<br />

common and creatively linked biological and clinical foundation was provided. Graduates in Dentistry, many<br />

with extensive graduate training, are now active in dental education and in scientific investigation in various<br />

parts of mainland China and abroad.<br />

The <strong>IADR</strong> Section, although never large in number, included members from the Faculties of Dentistry,<br />

Medicine, and Science. For example, in 1937 the membership consisted of Mary C. (Mrs.) Agnew, R. Gordon<br />

Agnew, H. Bruce Collier, Leslie G. Kilborn, Ashley W. Lindsay, and Harrison J. Mullett. Three of these men<br />

were honored by being designated Honorary Vice-Presidents of the <strong>IADR</strong>: R. G. Agnew, 1933-37, 1939-44; A.<br />

W. Lindsay, 1937-38; and H. J. Mullett, 1938-39. Research in dentistry, while actively conducted by Western<br />

professors familiar with occidental patterns of investigation, had, of course, to be encouraged, and gradually<br />

over the years the enthusiasm for orderly scientific enquiry grew very considerably, and publications of merit<br />

have appeared in the literature.<br />

In terms of field research, the Tibetan mountains and plateaus offered great incentive from the<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 183


standpoint of investigations relevant to Dentistry—dental and oral epidemiology, systemic interrelations,<br />

ecologic factors of habitat (high altitudes, living conditions, diet, occupation, communication), of overall health<br />

and disease, of psychologic and philosophic status. (For example, R. Gordon Agnew, Professor of Pathology,<br />

West China Union University, 1924-46, conducted some seven expeditions into Eastern Tibetan country.)<br />

The political changes since 1949 in mainland China, and the collapse of communication, have unhappily closed<br />

doors to the Western World, to the detriment of all concerned. Thus, the Chengtu Section was doomed, and it<br />

involuntarily dissolved in 1949.<br />

The stimulus, guidance, and "excitation" offered to Dentistry through the <strong>IADR</strong> has been increasingly<br />

productive in many parts of the world. The existence of the Chengtu Section was symbolic of a much-needed<br />

professional and scientific discipline in the development of Dentistry in China.<br />

R. G. Agnew, now Professor Emeritus, University of California, San Francisco campus, School of<br />

Dentistry and School of Medicine, looks forward hopefully to an early opportunity to revisit mainland China<br />

and to offer assistance toward the reestablishment of communication and cooperation in research and education<br />

between mainland China, America, and dental centers internationally.<br />

THE DETROIT SECTION<br />

This Section was founded in 1937, by Charles Lane, S. J. Lewis, and Percy C. Lowery. Later members<br />

were Horton D. Kimball, Thomas L. Patterson, and Edwin S. Smyd. This Section was last listed in the 1953<br />

roster in the Journal and had certainly disappeared before 1958. Yet the <strong>IADR</strong> General Meeting for 1958 was<br />

held in Detroit, since plans for annual meetings have to be made years in advance.<br />

THE HALIFAX SECTION<br />

This Section was established in Nova Scotia, Canada, in 1928. The founding members were J. Stanley<br />

Bagnall, Alden W. Faulkner, W. G. Dawson, Warren C. Oxner, S. G. Ritchie, R. P. Smith, and George K.<br />

Thomson. Other members who joined later were R. J. Bean, E. G. Young, A. B. Haverstack, Donald Mainland,<br />

Oliver W. Clough, and H. M. Eaton. Almost all of these were on the staff at the Dalhousie University Faculty of<br />

Dentistry in Halifax. The Section was listed on the <strong>IADR</strong> roster until mid-1952.<br />

THE LOUISVILLE SECTION<br />

The first organizational meeting of the Louisville Section was held on 19 April 1932. The founding<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> members were Theodore B. Beust, Raymond E. Myers, and John T. O'Rourke. The next meeting was<br />

held on 2 November 1932 at the School of Dentistry of the University of Louisville. There were seven abstracts<br />

presented at this meeting. 20<br />

The Section was honored, as was its most active early member, when Theodore B. Beust was elected to<br />

the <strong>IADR</strong> Presidency in 1935-36. Moreover, the <strong>IADR</strong> General Meeting was held in Louisville in 1931 with the<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 184


Section and School acting graciously as hosts.<br />

Through the next ten years, others joined the Section. They were William M. Randall, Brooks Juett,<br />

Holmes T. Knighton, Kenneth R. Pfeiffer, George B. Diefenbach, Dan Y. Burrill, William R. Wolfe, and Henry<br />

M. Wilbur. Though still listed in the Journal in the 1950s, the Section was somewhat inactive. From Dan<br />

Burrill, it was learned that in 1946 when Burrill first came to the University of Louisville, the Section was<br />

already relatively inactive, although Raymond Myers, Dean of the School, who was interested in dental<br />

materials research, would at times try to upgrade the Louisville Section, of which he was Secretary and Burrill<br />

was Councilor and Editor. According to the best records available, there were no meetings held in some of its<br />

years before the Section's demise. It probably became nonexistent in the early 1950s. When D. Y. Burrill left<br />

Louisville to come to Chicago in 1957, and F. J. Orland, the new Editor of the JDR, heard that the Section was<br />

defunct, it was finally removed from the official Journal listing.<br />

THE NEW HAVEN SECTION<br />

As early as 1930, a New Haven Section was founded in Connecticut. Charter members were C. G. Burn,<br />

A.M. Crosby, R. G. Hussey, W. G. Downs, Jr., J. P. Pigott, and G. H. Smith. Other early members were B. G.<br />

Anderson, H. A. Miller, J. J. Wolfe, S. S. Arnim, David Weisberger, and L. W. Burket.<br />

There were five abstracts presented at the 12 February 1931 meeting of the Section. 21 At this meeting B.<br />

G. Anderson presented a preliminary paper entitled "Incidence of Dental Caries among the Chinese". The<br />

complete paper ("A Study of the Incidence of Dental Caries in One Thousand Chinese") was presented at the 3<br />

October 1932 meeting. 22 Meanwhile, at the Section meeting of 7 December 1931, Bert G. Anderson presented a<br />

paper, "An Endemic Center of Mottled Enamel in China". 23 The material for this paper was collected while the<br />

author was a member of the staff of the Peiping Union Medical College, Peiping, China.<br />

By the late 1930s membership had dwindled due to death, resignation, and members transferring to<br />

other Sections. In early 1940 the last surviving member was active Bert G. Anderson, who painfully<br />

recommended to Edward H. Hatton that the New Haven Section be formally discontinued. It was officially<br />

inactivated later that year.<br />

THE PRAGUE SECTION<br />

The Prague Section was organized in 1932. The founding members were Karel Cerný, Jan Jesenský,<br />

František Kostecka, A. E. Loos, Friedrich Neumann, František Neuwirt, and Karel Wachsmann. By 1934 there<br />

were two Karel Wachsmanns (father and son) in the Section. Others who joined the Section that year were<br />

Jaromir Krecan, V. F. Náprstek, Cestimir Parma, Josef Pribyl, Ferdinand Škaloud, and Hans Wermuth. In 1937<br />

Karl Haupl joined the Section. In 1938 Karel Wachsmann, Sr., died. During World War II more and more<br />

members died, so that by 1948 there were only nine members: Cerný, Kostecka, Krecan, Neumann, Neuwirt,<br />

Parma, Pribyl, Škaloud, and Wermuth. The Section became inactive in the postwar period, and the<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 185


1953. 19 Some of the founding members of the Section had been honored by being designated as Honorary Vice-<br />

"inactivation" of the Prague Section was approved by the <strong>IADR</strong> Council at the Thirty-first General Meeting in<br />

Presidents of <strong>IADR</strong>: Jan Jesenský, 1933-35; Karel Wachsmann, Sr., 1935-38; Karel Cerný, 1938-39; and<br />

František Neuwirt, 1939-40.<br />

In 1970 there was only one <strong>IADR</strong> member left in Prague: Anna Placková, who was awarded an <strong>IADR</strong><br />

"Senior Foreign Dental Scientist" Fellowship. This enabled her to come to Chicago in 1968-69 and participate<br />

in several <strong>IADR</strong> research meetings while traveling in the United States to visit a few dental research centers.<br />

THE TENNESSEE SECTION<br />

In 1931 the Ninth <strong>IADR</strong> Annual Meeting was held in Memphis, Tennessee, but this did not provoke any<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> members to organize a Section there that early. However, a Section was founded in 1944 in Tennessee.<br />

The founding members were M. Don Clawson (Professor and Director of Dental Education and later President<br />

of Meharry Medical College), Marguerite Dean, R. A. Dean, E. A. Jasper, O. A. Oliver, H. P. Steinmeyer, and<br />

C. R. Wood. Other early members were Clifton O. Dummett and J. T. Ginn, both Deans at different periods in<br />

the history of the College. The Tennessee Section was last listed in the 1953 roster of the Journal and probably<br />

disappeared shortly thereafter.<br />

THE VIENNA SECTION<br />

The Vienna Section came into existence in 1929, in all probability due to the personal influence of<br />

Balint Orban, who during a stay in the United States became quite interested and active in the Chicago Section<br />

of <strong>IADR</strong>, serving as its Secretary-Treasurer, 1928-29. Consequently, after the Seventh General Meeting of<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> held in Chicago in March 1929, a Section in Vienna, Austria, was organized. The founding members of<br />

this Vienna Section were Bernhard Gottlieb, Ernst Kellner, Emmerich Kotanyi, Rudolf Kronfeld, Moriz Leist,<br />

Arthur M. Schwarz, Georg Stein, Joseph Weinmann, and Hermann Wolf, all of Wien, Austria. Kotanyi was the<br />

first Secretary of the Section.<br />

In 1930 several new members emerged in the Section, namely, Arved Berg, Karl Breitner, Fritz Driak,<br />

Richard Grohs, Otto Hofer, Balint Orban (who had returned by then to Vienna), Hans Pichler, Otto Preissecker,<br />

Franz Schönbauer, Harry Sicher, Karl Spring, and Richard Trauner. Among the fifty-one abstracts listed at the<br />

Eighth General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong>, eight came from the Vienna Section. 24<br />

At this time Pichler was elected to a professorship in dentistry and to the Directorship of the<br />

Zahnärztliches Universitätsinstitut of the University Medical School of Vienna. Pichler, a graduate of this<br />

school, had earlier studied dentistry at Northwestern University Dental School under G. V. Black's<br />

preceptorship and had translated Black's Operative Dentistry into German. When the University Dental School<br />

moved to a freshly adapted wing of the old Vienna Garrison Hospital, a special department came into existence,<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 186


headed by B. Gottlieb, that might be termed a department of experimental oral biology. It was in this<br />

department that M.D. graduates who specialized in dentistry aggregated around Pichler and Gottlieb and also<br />

joined the <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

Thus, the new Vienna Section flourished, as demonstrated by the growing number of abstracts presented<br />

at the general meetings of the Association. At the Tenth General Meeting in 1932, Abstracts Nos. 54-73 came<br />

from the Vienna Section. 25 In fact, all but three members of the Section submitted papers. A variety of topics<br />

were discussed, not only from the field of experimental oral biology, but also from clinical oral surgery. Some<br />

of the papers were published in extenso in German, not only in dental journals, but sometimes in surgery<br />

specialty journals. At the Eleventh General Meeting, Abstracts Nos. 57-71 were also published in the Journal<br />

from this active Section. 26<br />

In 1934 Fritz Driak became Secretary of the Section, and Hermann Mathis joined the Section. At the<br />

Twelfth General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong>, Abstracts Nos. 48-61 were sent from the Vienna Section to be read by<br />

title. 27 Moreover, at the Thirteenth General Meeting, Abstracts Nos. 62-79 were from Vienna, 28 while at the<br />

Fourteenth General Meeting, Abstracts Nos. 75-93 were also from this versatile Section. 29<br />

It is noteworthy that the influential nature of the Vienna Section and its members was instrumental in<br />

originating the <strong>IADR</strong> Sections in Budapest as well as in Prague.<br />

In 1936 there were personal contacts with visitors from the United States to Vienna because of the<br />

Congress of the Fédération Dentaire Internationale held in the city. There were seventeen papers read by title at<br />

the Fifteenth General Meeting in 1937 sent in from Vienna. 80<br />

Several Vienna men were designated as Honorary Vice-Presidents of the <strong>IADR</strong>. They were Bernhard<br />

Gottlieb, 1932-33; Hans Pichler, 1933-34 and 1939-42; Hermann Wolf, 1934-37; Otto Hofer, 1937-38; and<br />

Arthur M. Schwarz, 1938-39.<br />

The worsening political atmosphere in Central Europe, especially in Austria, adjacent to Hitler's Drittes<br />

Reich, led to a reduction in the number of papers submitted to the Sixteenth General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong> 31<br />

(Abstracts Nos. 65-74). Moreover, the membership list decreased by one as Balint Orban moved to the United<br />

States permanently in late 1937.<br />

The German occupation of Austria in March 1938 (Anschluss) and the imminent threat of a new World<br />

War prevented the remaining members from keeping in contact with organizations in the free world, especially<br />

the United States. Thus at the Seventeenth General Meeting in 1939 there were no papers from the Vienna<br />

Section per se, though former members who had emigrated from Austria presented papers from their new<br />

Sections. Membership of the Vienna Section dropped from twenty before the German occupation to fourteen in<br />

1939 and twelve in 1940. No abstracts were submitted to the Eighteenth General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong>, and no<br />

further contact whatever existed with the Vienna Section through the years of World War II.<br />

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After the war and liberation of Austrian territory, with reestablishment of the Republic of Austria, Fritz<br />

Driak (who became First Deputy Director of the University Dental School) attempted to revive the Vienna<br />

Section. The formal revival, under the name of the Austria Section (Vienna Center), was accomplished in the<br />

early 1950s. By 1956 <strong>IADR</strong> members in the Section were A. Berg, F. Driak (Honorary Vice-President of the<br />

Section in 1953 and 1954), R. Grohs (Secretary in 1953 and 1954), O. Hofer, O. Preissecker, F. Schoenbauer,<br />

A. M. Schwarz, and R. Trauner. Recently deceased members at this time were H. Pichler, W. Demuth, and K.<br />

L. Spring. There were also fifteen associate members apparently elected locally, including E. Zitka, who had<br />

been Secretary of the Section since 1954. Driak functioned as Councilor during this final period. It is difficult to<br />

say what activity the Section had, as communication between the Section and the <strong>IADR</strong> Office seemed almost<br />

nonexistent. The Section faded away, and its name was finally removed from the Journal roster in mid-1962.<br />

The Vienna Section of <strong>IADR</strong> had been very productive and gained an excellent reputation, developing<br />

many outstanding personalities of the dental profession who migrated to other parts of Europe and, especially,<br />

to the United States. Hence, the Vienna Section was a very active link between Central Europe and the United<br />

States, a link that proved to be of extreme value in promoting the systemic disease concept with regard to the<br />

oral area. 32<br />

THE WINNIPEG SECTION<br />

This Section was founded in 1930. Charter members were E. Roy Bier, Fred T. Cadham, Matthew H.<br />

Garvin, Kenneth Johnson, Anne G. E. Mackenzie, Howard J. Merkeley, and W. J. Riley. Later, G. A. Buchanan<br />

became an associate member of the Section. By 1940, due to moving away, devoting interests elsewhere, or<br />

enlisting in the Canadian Army Dental Corps, there were only three members left: Bier, Riley, and Merkeley. In<br />

a letter to Edward Hatton, <strong>IADR</strong> Secretary, dated 9 February 1940, E. Roy Bier discussed the situation that<br />

prevailed in the Winnipeg Section. He told Hatton what had happened to various members and mentioned that<br />

Fred Cadham had withdrawn his financial and scientific interest earlier. In addition, he wrote that William Gies,<br />

who was <strong>IADR</strong> President, had somehow refused to drop his name or allow new election of members. Bier also<br />

said,<br />

I tried and succeeded by correspondence to create interest in forming an Edmonton, Alberta Sectional<br />

division of the <strong>IADR</strong> where the only dental teaching faculty exists in Western Canada, but to my knowledge Dr.<br />

Gies also blocked that constitutionally.<br />

I do not believe very much dental research will ever be carried on without a dental teaching faculty and<br />

or a dental college supplying research workers or interns to carry on detailed experiments. Winnipeg has no<br />

dental faculty in our University. The Medical faculty will not co-operate due to pressure of their own work. . . .<br />

You may think the status of our Winnipeg Section moribund and you can take such action as you see fit.<br />

Thus this early Section died a dismal death! The Section was last listed in the 1953 roster of the Journal<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 188


ut had probably disappeared before then.<br />

REFERENCES<br />

J Dent Res 31: 521, 1952.<br />

J Dent Res 33: 637, 1954.<br />

J Dent Res 8: 697, 1928.<br />

Catalogue of Dental Research Projects in the United States and Canada Fiscal Year 1970, DHEW Publication<br />

No. (National Institutes of Health) 72-101.<br />

J Dent Res 8: 7-9, 1928.<br />

J Dent Res 8: 613-614, 1928; 9: 609-610, 1929.<br />

These volumes will be available for study at the Library of the Institute of Medicine of Chicago, 332 South<br />

Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60604.<br />

J Dent Res 34: 790-793, 1955; 37: 762-763, 1958; thereafter, titles of all papers were published annually in a<br />

supplement to the Journal.<br />

J Dent Res 50: 993, 1971.<br />

J Dent Res 50: 751, 1971.<br />

J Dent Res 6: 101, 1924-26.<br />

J Dent Res 11: 55-59, 1931.<br />

J Dent Res 5: 27-107, 1923.<br />

J Dent Res 5: 107-108, 1923.<br />

J Dent Res 20: 1-4, 1941.<br />

J Dent Res 25: 293-296, 1946.<br />

J Dent Res 36: 800, 1957; not printed in the Journal, but see Rosebury, T.: The Challenge to Dentistry: A<br />

Tribute to William J. Gies, Science 126: 1056-1058, 1957.<br />

See the Proceedings of the Forty-third General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong>, J Dent Res 44: 1065-1095, 1965.<br />

J Dent Res 32: 717, 1953.<br />

J Dent Res 13: 275-280, 1933.<br />

J Dent Res 11: 235-236, 1931.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 189


J Dent Res 12: 709-712, 1932.<br />

J Dent Res 12: 591-593, 1932.<br />

J Dent Res 10: 406-413, 1930.<br />

J Dent Res 12: 483-512, 1932.<br />

J Dent Res 13: 213-222, 1933.<br />

J Dent Res 14: 187-206, 1934.<br />

J Dent Res 15: 192-203, 1935-36.<br />

J Dent Res 15: 344-360, 1935-36.<br />

J Dent Res 16: 335-344, 1937.<br />

J Dent Res 17: 320-324, 1938.<br />

More background about the contributions of Vienna in this field relating to research and teaching can be found<br />

in the folio written by F. J. Orland in association with the silver and gold commemorative medal entitled "The<br />

Vienna School in the U.S.A." issued as part of The Medallic History of Dentistry by the Medical Heritage<br />

Society.<br />

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CHAPTER FIFTEEN: HISTORY OF THE GROUPS<br />

The concept of Groups within the <strong>IADR</strong> did not enter into the thinking of the founding fathers or of any<br />

one else in the early life of the <strong>IADR</strong>. By its very nature, the Association name indicated it was ". . . for Dental<br />

Research". But dental research even then was a very broad area taking on the aura of the earlier omnibus<br />

societies in that it covered a great expanse of a scientific as well as a clinical field. Yet the Association had little<br />

impetus to subdivide into separate disciplines during most of its first two decades.<br />

The urge to recognize academic categories came more from outside than from within the <strong>IADR</strong>. An<br />

active body of men in dental materials research had begun corresponding and had loosely organized by 1938<br />

seeking affiliation with the <strong>IADR</strong>. Not all of the "materials men" were bona fide <strong>IADR</strong> members, and many<br />

were employees of companies selling dental products. A long period of negotiation commenced between<br />

several of these men and William Gies. (In those days Professor Gies took a very strong paternal view of "his"<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> and did not want any contamination with commercialism.) Finally Gies was convinced, however, that the<br />

affiliation could be a favorable event. Then "materials" members formed a Group of the <strong>IADR</strong> in late 1938. It<br />

was officially approved in 1939 and later became known by the acronym DMG. The success of this one large<br />

group proved a vital point in basic policy—that it could be acceptable to present research findings even if the<br />

investigative work was supported by funds from a commercial source or if the investigator was an employee of<br />

a profit-making agency.<br />

The revised Constitution of 1940 (Article V, Section 3) provided a definition of a Group 1 "Members in<br />

any branch of dental science, with the approval of the Association, may organize a Group for the group<br />

advancement of the objects of the Association." The proposed Constitution of 1956 (Article V, Section 2)<br />

rephrased the definition 2 "Members in any branch of dental science, or in fields related to dental science, with<br />

the approval of the Association may organize a group to further the objectives of the Association in special<br />

scientific or professional fields." Although others were thus encouraged to so organize, the next body to be<br />

designated as a Group, comprising all those members concerned with craniofacial biology research, was not<br />

organized until 1965, some twenty-six years after DMG. The Periodontal Research Group was accepted in 1969<br />

and the Behavioral Sciences Group not until 1971, although it formed a preliminary organization before the end<br />

of 1970. Several other academic disciplines were contemplating Group formation, but only the histories of the<br />

three Groups that were in existence within the first fifty-year life span of <strong>IADR</strong> follow in the order of official<br />

Association listing, which is alphabetical.<br />

THE CRANIOFACIAL BIOLOGY GROUP<br />

The nucleus for the Craniofacial Biology Group was formed at the Orthodontic Workshop held at the<br />

University of Michigan in June 1958. The report of the research section of that workshop carried a<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 191


ecommendation that an International Society for Orthodontic Research be established. The following June, at<br />

the meeting of the Pacific Coast Society of Orthodontists, this suggestion was pursued in private discussion<br />

with George M. Anderson, then President-Elect of the American Association of Orthodontists, and his support<br />

for a research society was obtained.<br />

In 1959 two meetings were held in which further interest was rallied for an International Society for<br />

Orthodontic Research. In July of that year the Second Cephalometric Workshop convened at Western Reserve<br />

University, bringing together orthodontists, anatomists, and physical anthropologists. In December of that year<br />

the Gatlinburg symposium on congenital anomalies of the face provided an additional gathering for the core<br />

group of biologists that formed this society.<br />

In April 1960, during the annual meeting of the American Association of Orthodontists in Washington,<br />

D.C., George M. Anderson, then President of the Association, provided for a facility for the organizational<br />

meeting of an international society for orthodontic research. It is noteworthy that at that meeting a lively<br />

discussion developed as to whether the best interests of this embryonic research society would be served by<br />

affiliation with the International Association for Dental Research or whether it should continue under the aegis<br />

of the American Association of Orthodontists. After this meeting, a conference on growth funded by a gift from<br />

the Tweed Foundation for Orthodontic Research and sponsored by the organizational committee of the new<br />

society was held at the Kenwood Country Club near Washington, D.C.<br />

On 16 April 1961 the first program and organizational meeting of the proposed International Society for<br />

Orthodontic Research was held in Denver, Colorado 3 The meeting was held in conjunction with the annual<br />

meeting of the American Association of Orthodontists and was sponsored by the Research Section of the<br />

Association. The major address of that meeting was delivered by William L. Straus, Jr., Professor of Anatomy<br />

and Anthropology at Johns Hopkins University. He spoke on "Evolution of the Head". The discussers included<br />

Bertram S. Kraus and Melvin L. Moss.<br />

At the organizational meeting that followed, the name of the society was changed to the International<br />

Society for Craniofacial Biology to provide a broader base of representation in the biological sciences and to<br />

limit the identification with a given discipline. The officers elected included Allan G. Brodie, Sr., President;<br />

Wilton M. Krogman, President-Elect; Bertram S. Kraus, Vice-President; Samuel Pruzansky, Secretary-<br />

Treasurer; and Melvin L. Moss, Editor.<br />

The Executive Committee included the following: A. Lundstrom of Stockholm, J. F. Bosma, N. A.<br />

DiSalvo, W. L. Straus, Jr., M. V. Stack of London, and R. E. Moyers. The Membership Committee was chaired<br />

by C. F. A. Moorrees and included S. M. Garn, M. L. Moss, and J. D. Subtelney. The Constitution of the<br />

Society was fully accepted in 1962.<br />

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In 1964 the Society became truly international by virtue of a joint meeting with the European<br />

Orthodontic Society in Athens, Greece. A second joint meeting with the European Orthodontic Society was<br />

held in Bern, Switzerland, in 1967. The scientific program for that occasion was extremely well organized by<br />

Coenraad Moorrees of Harvard and attracted outstanding papers from a variety of disciplines.<br />

The first joint meeting with the <strong>IADR</strong> was held in Toronto 4 in 1965. An affiliation with this major research<br />

society in the dental sciences was sought to attract a more diverse membership to its annual meetings. To<br />

conform with the organizational structure of the <strong>IADR</strong>, it was renamed the Craniofacial Biology Group of<br />

<strong>IADR</strong>. Since that time it has continued to meet on an annual basis in affiliation with the parent organization.<br />

The Group has continued to attract clinical and laboratory investigators from several disciplines, all joined in a<br />

common interest in the biology of craniofacial structures.<br />

As a Group, it may be said that the membership is concerned with problem-solving in areas that can not<br />

be confined to conventional specialistic categories. As individuals, they possess pluralistic interests and<br />

temperaments that make for effective communication across the barriers of jargon and tradition that separate the<br />

disciplines.<br />

On the occasion of the Fiftieth Anniversary Meeting of the <strong>IADR</strong> in 1970, the Craniofacial Biology<br />

Group convened four different sessions at which forty-eight papers were read. 5 It has sponsored and will<br />

continue to plan to sponsor a special luncheon session with a distinguished guest speaker at these annual <strong>IADR</strong><br />

sessions.<br />

The growth and continued interest in the forum created by the Craniofacial Biology Group attests to its<br />

value within the structure of the International Association for Dental Research, though it will continue to plan<br />

occasional joint meetings with other professional societies. There were 127 members in 1970.<br />

OFFICERS OF THE CRANIOFACIAL BIOLOGY GROUP<br />

President<br />

1966 Sam Weinstein (University of<br />

Nebraska)<br />

1967 Samuel Pruzansky (University<br />

of Illinois)<br />

1968 Coenraad F. A. Moorrees<br />

(Harvard University)<br />

1969 Robert J. Gorlin (University of<br />

Minnesota)<br />

1970 Robert E. Moyers<br />

Secretary<br />

1966 Saul M. Bien (New York<br />

University)<br />

1969 Howard Adus (University of<br />

Illinois)<br />

1967 Saul M. Bien 1970 Howard Adus<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 193


1968 Saul M. Bien<br />

Councilor<br />

1966 Robert E. Moyers (University of<br />

Michigan)<br />

1968 Samuel Pruzansky<br />

1969 Samuel Pruzansky<br />

1967 Robert E. Moyers 1970 Samuel Pruzansky<br />

SAMUEL PRUZANSKY, D.D.S.<br />

Director, Center for Craniofacial Anomalies<br />

University of Illinois at the Medical Center<br />

Chicago, Illinois<br />

THE DENTAL MATERIALS GROUP<br />

INTRODUCTION<br />

Dental research studies and clinical practice may be considered generally as being concerned with both<br />

preventive and restorative operations. Studies related to prevention are directed to the causes and effects of<br />

dental disease or the means to avert it, while restorative practice deals with the replacement of natural tissues<br />

that are lost by accident or disease. Such restorations are fashioned from the natural or synthetic materials<br />

available to the dental profession. Thus, it always has been that missing teeth and oral tissues are replaced by<br />

artificial restorations fabricated from contemporary materials, manipulated and adapted to provide a functional,<br />

aesthetic replacement of the lost tissues.<br />

During the period from 1900 to 1935-40, in the years before the Dental Materials Group was organized,<br />

research studies on restorative materials were being conducted in limited amounts, and reports of some studies<br />

appeared in a variety of scientific journals. Results of studies on materials were being described from some of<br />

the dental schools, such as the University of Michigan, 6-8 Northwestern University, 9-10 the University of<br />

California, 11 and others. 12-14 Some reports had appeared in the literature from investigators associated with the<br />

dental trade. 15-18 Reports of studies conducted by private practitioners and clinic teachers in dental schools also<br />

were in the literature. 19-21 Valuable results and reports were provided from the program of testing,<br />

standardization, and research related to restorative materials at the National Bureau of Standards and<br />

encouraged by the action of the Research Commission of the American Dental Association to establish the first<br />

research fellowship in 1928. 22-25<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 194


BACKGROUND FOR ORGANIZATION OF THE DENTAL MATERIALS GROUP<br />

As indicated by the titles of textbooks, 26-29 the early courses taught in this field in the dental schools<br />

usually were described as dental metallurgy. Such courses for dental students continued until about 1930-40,<br />

when interest was extended to include other types of materials, their characteristic properties, and the influence<br />

of manipulative technics on their performance in service. 30-32 It was during this period that interest in all<br />

restorative dental materials was initiated and the change from dental metallurgy to a broader coverage of the<br />

dental materials science was recognized.<br />

Books on dental materials now, 33-35 thirty years later, recognize the period from 1930-40 as a decade<br />

when several new materials and modified technics were introduced into restorative practice. These include,<br />

among others, the reversible agar hydrocolloid impression material, chromium cobalt casting alloys for<br />

removable partial dentures, acrylic type plastics for complete dentures and other types of restorations, as well as<br />

the copper electroforming process. In addition, there were, for the first time, specifications and accepted<br />

standards being formulated for amalgam alloys, casting investments, waxes, impression compounds, gold<br />

casting alloys and wires, and dental cements, as a result of the joint efforts of the American Dental Association<br />

Research Fellowship and the National Bureau of Standards. During these years, therefore, the interest in dental<br />

materials increased, and persons interested in production, teaching, and application of materials to dental<br />

practice developed, with increased interest in research, quality control, and the proper manipulation of all types<br />

of restorative materials.<br />

By 1935 there were thirty-five to forty persons involved in teaching, research, production, or the practice<br />

of dentistry, who were primarily concerned with the nature of restorative materials. These persons were both<br />

dentists and nondentists with training in chemistry, physics, metallurgy, engineering, or other sciences and were<br />

associated with a variety of institutions, such as dental schools, private or government laboratories, and private<br />

practice.<br />

It was recognized by these persons with a common interest in the improvement of materials for dental<br />

practice that little opportunity existed at that time for exchange of information in the field, except on an<br />

individual basis. Some useful studies were not being reported in the scientific literature because the<br />

investigators either were not dentists or were not eligible because of scientific background to be members of<br />

recognized and established dental societies. Existing organizations often were not entirely appropriate to receive<br />

such technical materials discussions. Mixed dental audiences were not always too interested in the technical<br />

discussions, and the technical societies outside dentistry were too far removed from the subject to appreciate its<br />

significance. This group of people felt, therefore, that a technical materials research group within the dental<br />

field was desirable for the scientific exchange of the specialized information being accumulated, which would<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 195


e beneficial to the dental profession, avoid duplication of effort, and lead to a uniform development of the<br />

dental materials science.<br />

DENTAL MATERIALS GROUP ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING<br />

During the first days of March 1938, preceding the Sixteenth General Meeting of the International<br />

Association for Dental Research in Minneapolis, Eugene W. Skinner wrote a letter to Floyd A. Peyton<br />

expressing concern that many able research people in dental materials were not being given the opportunity to<br />

present the results of their studies because of the training or professional affiliation of the investigator.<br />

Unwittingly, as it developed later, this letter was the spark that lighted the torch which developed into the<br />

Dental Materials Group.<br />

In this first letter Skinner pointed to a ruling then in effect that at the annual <strong>IADR</strong> meeting, research<br />

studies might not be reported "unless the research was supported by a nonprofit institution". This did not affect<br />

presentations either by Skinner or Peyton, but it discouraged those whose studies were supported by profitmaking<br />

agencies. In his initial letter Skinner continued, "I think something should be done about this. What is<br />

your idea?" 36<br />

In his reply of 5 March 1938, Peyton stated that he opposed the ruling and had discussed the matter wtih<br />

U. G. Rickert of the Ann Arbor Section, Past-President of <strong>IADR</strong>, who was sympathetic and agreed to raise the<br />

question at the <strong>IADR</strong> Council Meeting in Minneapolis on 12-13 March. Gene Skinner again wrote to Floyd<br />

Peyton on 23 March 1938, saying that Ura Rickert had presented the question at the Minneapolis meeting and<br />

William Gies, the President-Elect, announced that "there was no intention of shutting out the men in the<br />

industries from the presentation of papers". This encouraging thought from Professor Gies was indeed helpful.<br />

It is stated in the Reports of Officers and Committees of the Executive Proceedings of the Sixteenth General<br />

Meeting in Minneapolis that "Discussion of desirability of including, on the oral program, papers on industrial<br />

research resulted in further allusions to need for restrictions to prevent overcrowding and in reaffirmation of<br />

standing rule to exclude such papers unless in the judgment of Program Committee, special conditions warrant<br />

exceptions in individual instances". 37 While this did not exclude anyone from submitting a paper to be read, and<br />

placed the responsibility for acceptance entirely on the program committee, it was somewhat less than<br />

enthusiastic in its encouragement to investigators outside nonprofit institutions.<br />

The private encouragement given Rickert and Skinner by Gies in Minneapolis, although minimal,<br />

permitted Peyton to pursue the matter further. In reply to the letter of 23 March 1938, F. A. Peyton again wrote<br />

to E. W. Skinner on 25 March, expressing some doubt about the existing dental organizations being entirely<br />

suited to the needs of dental materials investigators. In part he wrote as follows:<br />

For several weeks I have planned to write to you regarding your opinion on the advisability of<br />

establishing an organization whose primary purpose is research on dental materials. I believe we can get<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 196


twenty-five men or more who are interested in presenting discussions of their problems before this<br />

group, and I am sure that everyone would benefit from the contacts and discussions. As you know, at<br />

present there is nothing to do but report such research before a mixed dental audience. Many in the<br />

profession are not especially interested and those who are interested hesitate to discuss the subject since<br />

they feel it is slightly out of place to get technical at such a meeting.<br />

If a group could be established with research on dental materials as its main object, in which a program<br />

of discussion included several subjects like golds, amalgams, cements, porcelains and all the others<br />

where research is really being done, I believe the meeting would be well attended.<br />

I believe that such a group should be open to those who are doing research in the industries, as well as<br />

those of us who are in Dental Schools and in the profession. . . . If you are interested in seeing such a<br />

group get started, let me hear from you soon, and any suggestions you may have will be much in order.<br />

Peyton pointed out that this action was stimulated by the encouragement received from discussions with<br />

several people in the materials research field.<br />

In his reply of 6 April 1938, Skinner quite properly expressed cautious enthusiasm for such a plan and<br />

described some of the potential hazards and problems. He had discussed the project with several persons and<br />

"met with considerable enthusiasm in all cases". He concluded by saying, "I am heartily in favor of your<br />

plan. . . . Both our shoulders are pretty broad and I shall be very glad to join with you if any kicks are<br />

forthcoming."<br />

When it became apparent that a real interest existed in organizing a group oriented primarily to research<br />

on dental materials, correspondence was initiated with William Gies, General Secretary of <strong>IADR</strong>. First it was<br />

sent through Ura Rickert of the Ann Arbor Section and by Gene Skinner through the Chicago Section, then later<br />

directly to William Gies. The first letter from Professor Gies on 19 July 1938 is reproduced on the next page.<br />

With this encouragement from Gies and others who were contacted, Skinner and Peyton continued to<br />

develop the plans for an initial meeting of interested people. This resulted in a list of twenty persons, whose<br />

names and affiliations are given below, getting together at the Mayfair Hotel in St. Louis, Missouri, on 24<br />

October 1938.<br />

The photographs of these persons were assembled at the time of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the<br />

Dental Materials Group in 1963. Some were <strong>IADR</strong> members, but several were not. Twelve of the twenty were<br />

still living in 1969 and continue to maintain interest in dental materials. These, along with the list of all officers<br />

and a Statement of Purposes, were neatly compiled into a folio that was printed as a memento of the occasion.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 197


PERSONS ATTENDING THE FIRST MEETING OF THE DMG<br />

J. R. BEALL, ADA, Research Section, Washington<br />

R. C. BRUMFIELD, Cooper Union, Mechanics Department, New York<br />

H. J. CAUL, American Dental Association, Research Section, Washington<br />

P. S. COLLINS, Columbus Dental Co., Columbus, Ohio<br />

W. H. CRAWFORD, Columbia University Dental School, New York<br />

W. S. CROWELL, S. S. White Co., Philadelphia, Pa.<br />

L. W. DUNHAM, Dentists Supply Co., New York<br />

W. B. HOLMES, W. V-B. Ames Co., Fremont, Ohio<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 198


E. G. KUTZELMAN, J. F. Jelenko Co., New York<br />

T. E. MOORE, Ransom & Randolph Co., Toledo, Ohio<br />

G. C. PAFFENBARGER, American Dental Association, Research Section, Washington<br />

F. A. PEYTON, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.<br />

K. W. RAY, General Refineries Inc., Minneapolis, Minn.<br />

J. S. SHELL, Thomas J. Dee Co., Chicago<br />

E. W. SKINNER, Northwestern University, Chicago<br />

K. H. STRADER, Lee S. Smith Co., Pittsburgh<br />

W. T. SWEENEY, ADA Research Section, Washington<br />

N. O. TAYLOR, Spyco Smelting & Refining Co., Minneapolis<br />

S. D. TYLMAN, University of Illinois, Chicago<br />

W. C. WHITTEMORE, Dentists Supply Co., New York<br />

ACTION TAKEN AT FIRST DENTAL MATERIALS GROUP MEETING<br />

Minutes of the first meeting are complete and available in the records of the Dental Materials Group.<br />

These have been well summarized for the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Group and are included here in that<br />

form to show the actions taken at the first meeting.<br />

"Following the dinner hour the group discussed the desirability of an organization being formed, and<br />

finding it so, it was then decided to first elect officers and then to set up an Executive Committee for the new<br />

organization.<br />

"Dr. F. A. Peyton was elected Chairman and Dr. E. W. Skinner was elected as the first Secretary of the<br />

organization.<br />

"An Executive Committee was established with the Chairman as an ex-officio member."The following<br />

were elected as members of the committee:<br />

From Dental Schools — Dr. Stanley D. Tylman<br />

Dr. Eugene W. Skinner<br />

From Industrial organizations — T. E. Moore<br />

N. O. Taylor<br />

From the American Dental Research Commission Staff — George C. Paffenbarger<br />

W. T. Sweeney<br />

"Dr. Marcus A. Ward and Dr. Daniel A. Lynch joined the group for a brief time.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 199


"Dr. Ward was then President-elect of the American Dental Association and spoke briefly on the need<br />

for an organization of research men in dental materials and of its possible future in relation to the dental schools<br />

and profession.<br />

"Dr. Lynch (Secretary, A.D.A. Research Commission) discussed the relationship of the group with the<br />

American Dental Association Research Commission and pledged the support of the Research Commission in<br />

the light of the proposed aims of the new organization.<br />

"It was moved, seconded and carried that the new organization go on record as whole-heartedly<br />

approving the work of the American Dental Association Research Commission.<br />

"A petition for affiliation with the I.A.D.R. as a section of the Dental Materials Group was presented by<br />

Dr. Skinner.<br />

"The Chairman then called for a discussion of the criteria for the selection of members and a tentative<br />

list of prospective members was presented.<br />

"It may be noted here that the ultimate answer to this last problem was to set up two types of<br />

memberships, Associate Members and Active Members. An Active Membership was based upon membership<br />

in the International Association for Dental Research and Associate Membership was to be open to any<br />

individual interested in the dental materials field, whether he was connected with a dental school, a government,<br />

a manufacturer, or was an individual dental practitioner.<br />

"It might also be noted here that each member present at the initial meeting contributed $1.00 for the<br />

expenses of the Secretary so that when the meeting was adjourned at 10:15 P.M. the new organization was on<br />

its way with a total capital of $20.00."<br />

ACTION FOLLOWING ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING<br />

Following the <strong>IADR</strong> annual meeting in St. Louis, various actions taken by the newly elected officers<br />

gave assurance of the further development of this Group. The petition to be presented to the <strong>IADR</strong> was put into<br />

final form by E. Skinner. A statement of the purposes of the Dental Materials Group, included as a part of the<br />

petition, indicated the objectives to be:<br />

1. To provide a clearinghouse for the exchange of technical information and studiesin order to avoid<br />

duplication of effort.<br />

2. To provide recognition for an encouragement of worthy research in dental materials.<br />

3. To discuss and evaluate methods for the testing of dental materials, both new and old, together with<br />

specifications for testing.<br />

4. To raise the standards of research in the dental industry in general and as a result to create a mutual<br />

feeling of trustfulness and understanding between the industry and the profession, as should exist.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 200


At the first Executive Committee meeting of the Group, held in St. Louis on the morning following the<br />

organizational meeting, it was agreed to circulate the petition for signatures among the dental materials men<br />

who were already <strong>IADR</strong> members. This represented approximately twenty persons, but not all had attended the<br />

meeting in St. Louis. This procedure had been recommended in a letter dated 18 May 1938 from William Gies<br />

to Ura Rickert of the Ann Arbor Section, in which he said a direct way to proceed would be:<br />

a. Present to Secretary Hatton, for submission to the Council, a petition for the creation of a Section on<br />

Dental Materials, to consist of members of the <strong>IADR</strong> who elect to be accredited as such.<br />

b. With the petition send endorsement by several members for the information of the members of the<br />

Council, before the matter goes to a vote.<br />

Gies was advised on 4 November that such a petition was being circulated by Skinner to be presented<br />

subsequently to Ed Hatton as he had suggested. On 11 November Gies wrote as follows to Peyton: "I am glad to<br />

learn that you had your intended group conference at St. Louis and that you decided to present the indicated<br />

petition. I feel confident that a vote of the Council will be favorable."<br />

In this same letter of 11 November 1938, Gies recognized a potential difficulty with the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

organizational structure regarding the naming of a technical branch as proposed. This was described in his<br />

statement, "Perhaps the only difficulty will be associated with the word 'section'. This difficulty occurred to me<br />

shortly after I sent you my last letter, and I intended to discuss it with you in St. Louis. The <strong>IADR</strong> is now<br />

divided into geographical 'divisions' and 'sections'. I believe we can devise a good way to avoid conflict of<br />

terminology. This difficulty should not interfere with approval of the objective of the petition."<br />

This difficulty of terminology was resolved by recognizing a "group" of persons interested in a specific<br />

area of dental science, regardless of their "division" and "section" affiliation. This Group designation was<br />

initiated with the Dental Materials Group but has been applied later to other special interests. A revised form of<br />

the <strong>IADR</strong> Constitution 1 in 1940 described Groups for the first time: ". . . (A) Members in any branch of dental<br />

science, with the approval of the Association may organize a group for the group advancement of the objects of<br />

the Association. (B) The affairs of the Group shall be managed by its members in harmony with the<br />

requirements of the Constitution and By-laws of the Association."<br />

At the same time the revised Constitution stated in the By-Laws, Section A: Membership, "4 Sections<br />

and Groups. (C) Each Section or Group shall be free to elect any person to be an 'associate' member of the<br />

Section or Group. 'Associate' members of a Section or Group are neither members nor 'associate' members of<br />

the Association, and may not be enrolled as such." 38 This statement by the <strong>IADR</strong> recognizing "associate" group<br />

members is interesting because, as noted earlier, it was the mechanism proposed by the Dental Materials Group<br />

to accommodate those persons who were interested and active in materials research but not qualified to be<br />

active <strong>IADR</strong> members.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 201


Immediately following the organizational meeting in St. Louis in October 1938, the officers of the<br />

Dental Materials Group drafted a Group Constitution and By-Laws. The stated purpose was the same as that<br />

contained in the petition to the <strong>IADR</strong> for group recognition and has continued the same throughout the years. In<br />

addition the Constitution provided for both active and associate members in the Group, and an Executive<br />

Committee made up from representatives of the schools, the profession, the dental trade, and national<br />

government or state research agencies. Provision was made in the Constitution for officers including a<br />

Treasurer, Councilor, and Editor, in addition to the Chairman and Secretary initially named in St. Louis.<br />

Numerous working committees also were included in the first Constitution, as well as subsequent revisions.<br />

By the time of the <strong>IADR</strong> General Meeting in Cleveland, Ohio, 18-19 March 1939, the petition for a<br />

Dental Materials Group had been properly presented for Council consideration, the Group organization had<br />

been established with election of officers, and the preparation of a Constitution and By-Laws was completed.<br />

Four papers related to dental materials were included in the 1939 <strong>IADR</strong> program.<br />

The Council and membership present in Cleveland passed a resolution to the effect that there should be a Dental<br />

Materials Group established within the <strong>IADR</strong> with basically the rights and privileges of a geographic section.<br />

This resolution required the vote of all the Sections, and since some were not represented in Cleveland, it was<br />

not until 28 July 1939 that Dr. Edward H. Hatton, General Secretary of the <strong>IADR</strong>, was able to write as follows<br />

to Dr. Skinner, then Group Secretary:<br />

"It gives me a great deal of pleasure to welcome your group officially into the Association. The next<br />

issue of the Journal of Dental Research will carry the names of the officers selected by you as group Councilor,<br />

Secretary and Editor.<br />

"It is my hope that this new relationship will have a long and very useful existence. I believe it will add<br />

materially to the activities and usefulness of the Association and hope sincerely that your group will gain<br />

significantly by your affiliation."<br />

This cordial and hopeful expression of mutual respect and cooperation from Hatton set the pattern for<br />

future relations between the Materials Group and the parent <strong>IADR</strong> organization. During the thirty years from<br />

1939 to 1969 the Dental Materials Group continued to benefit from the contacts and relations with the <strong>IADR</strong>, as<br />

the Group membership and number of scientific papers increased annually, with the active Group members<br />

participating regularly in <strong>IADR</strong> affairs.<br />

MEMBERSHIP<br />

It was evident before the organization meeting was held that more than twenty persons were interested<br />

in being affiliated with the Group if it was formed. Thereafter, word spread of its purpose and of meetings being<br />

held to exchange information on materials. With the adoption of the Group Constitution and By-Laws, it was<br />

established that membership dues for either active or associative members would be $2 per year, and W. T.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 202


Sweeney was named Treasurer.<br />

The first Treasurer's report, dated 20 August 1940, just eighteen months following the <strong>IADR</strong> meeting in<br />

Cleveland, where the Group was approved by the Council, showed that forty-one persons had joined the Group.<br />

Thus the Group had doubled in size during the first two years, and records indicate a steady increase in<br />

membership throughout the years that followed.<br />

From a Roster of DMG members prepared at the end of 1969, and distributed in early 1970, there were a<br />

total of 360 persons listed in the United States and Canada. Of this total number, 249 were active members<br />

having <strong>IADR</strong> membership, while the remaining 111 were associate members of the Materials Group only. This<br />

represents an average of eleven to twelve new members per year over the thirty-year period. A casual survey<br />

reveals that the members represent all interested segments of the dental field, such as teaching, clinic practice,<br />

institutional research, and manufacturing or production. Throughout the years members from each area have<br />

contributed to the welfare of the Group and participated in all phases of its activities.<br />

In addition to the North American Division members, there were in 1969 a total of 145 active and<br />

associate international members located in twenty-two countries elsewhere around the world. This number of<br />

international members combined with the North American members made a total of 505 members of the Dental<br />

Materials Group. Of the international members, fifty-five were in eight countries of Latin America, fifty-one<br />

were in Australia, and sixteen in Europe, with twenty-two countries of Middle Eastern or Far Eastern areas of<br />

the world. (Chapter on "History of the Divisions".) Beginning in 1968 the practice of naming international<br />

correspondents or representatives was initiated. Those named for the year 1969-70 include: J. A. Chong,<br />

Australia; B. Hedegard, Sweden; L. W. Suffert, Brazil; H. P. Maddalena, Argentina; D. C. Smith, England; and<br />

M. Ohashi, Japan. For the year 1970-71 the names were the same, except that R. Storer represented England.<br />

TECHNICAL PAPERS<br />

The number of papers presented at the annual scientific meeting is some measure of the interest in dental<br />

materials. During the years preceding DMG, there were only a few papers included in the <strong>IADR</strong> general<br />

program. For example, at the Third General Meeting in Chicago in 1925, there were two reports dealing with<br />

materials; three were presented in 1928; and by the time of the Fifteenth General Meeting in Baltimore in 1937,<br />

there were five papers that described dental materials. At the Cleveland Meeting, March 1939, when Group<br />

affiliation with <strong>IADR</strong> was approved, there were four papers related to materials while in Philadelphia, March<br />

1940, only three papers were included in the program; but by 1941, following completion of the Group<br />

organization, there were nine papers on the annual <strong>IADR</strong> program. In Chicago in 1943, because of wartime,<br />

there were only six papers read, but ever since, there has been a gradual increase in the number of technical<br />

reports presented. At the Forty-seventh General Meeting in Houston, 20-23 March 1969, a total of eighty-five<br />

selected papers on materials were presented, in eight scientific sessions.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 203


THE SOUDER AWARD<br />

To give recognition for outstanding achievement in the field of Dental Materials, the Wilmer Souder<br />

Award was established and first presented in 1955. (See chapter on "Awards".) The award is given annually<br />

during the <strong>IADR</strong> General Meeting to a person who is recognized for the contributions made to this field of<br />

dental science. The DMG has chosen this method to stimulate interest in materials research and to encourage<br />

high quality in the type of materials research undertaken.<br />

For this Award the Group chose to use the name of Wilmer Souder, physicist, scientist, and first<br />

Director of the dental research program at the National Bureau of Standards. Wilmer Souder is a Past-President<br />

of the <strong>IADR</strong>, not a dentist but a friend of dentistry. (See chapter on "Pages of Presidents".) The reports of his<br />

investigations and the projects undertaken in his laboratories are recognized everywhere for their true scientific<br />

character. The DMG and the <strong>IADR</strong> are fortunate to have received his advice and assistance, which are highly<br />

respected everywhere. The Wilmer Souder Award in Dental Materials is likewise highly respected by all dental<br />

research investigators.<br />

SUMMARY<br />

To a considerable degree it seems that the initial objectives of the Dental Materials Group are being<br />

accomplished. With a continually changing society making increased demands on the dental profession for<br />

increased service to patients, there are continually new challenges for those in the field of dental materials. This<br />

condition appears likely to continue for some time in the years ahead.<br />

The outstanding accomplishments of the DMG can be found in the following statement contained in a<br />

letter of 21 May 1969 from George C. Paffenbarger to Floyd A. Peyton.<br />

"The highlights of the growth and development of the Dental Materials Group of the <strong>IADR</strong>, as I see them,<br />

are:<br />

1. The Group provided a forum where diverse opinions in the science of dental materials could be<br />

presented by any technical person from dental education, dentistry or the dental trade.<br />

2. It created within the <strong>IADR</strong> a specialized group with a common interest. This type of organization is now<br />

being utilized for other specialized areas in the <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

3. The Dental Materials Group provided a special opportunity for associate membership, and this attracted<br />

a large group of interested persons who had no other outlet except if they were welcomed by a local<br />

section.<br />

4. The fact that there are members in the United Kingdom and Europe, in the Near and Far East, Australia,<br />

New Zealand, Japan and from South and Central America attests to the Group's influence in lands other<br />

than the United States.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 204


5. The growth in membership from twenty in 1938 to 505 in 1969 reflects the interest in and success of the<br />

Group.<br />

6. The opening of an avenue of publication, either in periodicals or by microfilming, has preserved in a<br />

permanent record the thirty years of activity in the field of dental materials."<br />

OFFICERS OF THE DMG<br />

Term<br />

Chairman<br />

1938-41 F. A. Peyton (U Mich)<br />

1941-42 N. O. Taylor (SS<br />

White)<br />

1942-43 P. B. Taylor (Julius<br />

Aderer<br />

Co)<br />

1943-44 W. H. Crawford (Ind U)<br />

1944-46 T. E. Moore (Ransom &<br />

Randolph)<br />

1946-47 G. C. Paffenbarger<br />

(ADA-<br />

NBS)<br />

1947-48 R. L. Coleman<br />

1948-49 W. S. Crowell<br />

1949-50 E. W. Skinner<br />

1950-51 I. C. Schoonover<br />

1951-52 C. A. Nelson<br />

1952-53 W. T. Sweeney<br />

1953-54 H. D. Coy (Med Coll<br />

Va)<br />

1954-55 R. W. Phillips<br />

1956-57 K. H. Strader (Amer<br />

Cyanamid)<br />

1957-58 D. L. Smith (JM Ney<br />

Co)<br />

1958-59 G. Ryge (Marquette U)<br />

Term<br />

termed<br />

President (formerly<br />

Chairman)<br />

1959-60 D. S. Hudson<br />

(USAF[DC])<br />

1960-61 D. B. Mahler<br />

1961-62 D. F. Taylor (NBS &<br />

CMP<br />

Ind)<br />

1962-63 G. Dickson (NBS)<br />

1944-48 E. W. Skinner<br />

1948-53 F. A. Peyton<br />

1953-54 D. A. Keys (Neb CD)<br />

1954-60 H. D. Coy (I Stern &<br />

Co,<br />

Nihon U)<br />

1960-63 G. C. Paffenbarger<br />

1963-68 F. A. Peyton<br />

1968-70 G. M. Brauer (NBS)<br />

1970-71 D. H. Anthony<br />

Term<br />

Editor<br />

1940-41 I. C. Schoonover (NBS)<br />

1941-44 R. L. Coleman<br />

(Weinstein<br />

Res Lab)<br />

1944-46 K. W. Ray<br />

1946-68 N. O. Taylor<br />

1968-71 K. H. Strader (Surgident<br />

Ltd)<br />

Term<br />

Secretary<br />

1938-44 E. W. Skinner (NWU)<br />

1944-48 F. A. Peyton<br />

1948-53 R. W. Phillips (Ind U)<br />

1953-59 D. B. Mahler (U Mich,<br />

U<br />

Ore)<br />

1959-63 M. L. Swartz (Ind U)<br />

1963-67 K. Asgar (U Mich)<br />

1967-70 D. H. Anthony (JM Ney<br />

Co)<br />

1970-71 W. J. O'Brien<br />

(Marquette U)<br />

Term<br />

Treasurer<br />

1938-40 E. W. Skinner<br />

1940-46 W. T. Sweeney (ADA-<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 205


1963-64 J. F. Glenn (LD Caulk<br />

Co)<br />

1964-65 M. L. Swartz<br />

1965-66 T. E. Fischer (U Ala)<br />

1966-67 J. W. Stanford (ADA)<br />

1967-68 J. S. Shell<br />

1968-69 K. Asgar<br />

1969-70 J. E. Overberger<br />

1970-71 C. W. Fairhurst (SS<br />

White)<br />

Term<br />

Councilor<br />

1939-43 W. S. Crowell (White<br />

Dental<br />

Mfg Co)<br />

1943-44 H. D. Coy (I Stern &<br />

Co)<br />

NBS)<br />

1946-47 W. S. Crowell<br />

1947-50 C. A. Nelson (LD Caulk<br />

Co)<br />

1950-55 T. E. Moore<br />

1955-59 R. W. Phillips<br />

1959-63 C. W. Fairhurst<br />

(Marquette<br />

U)<br />

1963-68 J. E. Overberger (W Va<br />

U<br />

& UNC)<br />

1968-71 R. L. Myerson<br />

(Myerson<br />

Tooth<br />

Corp)<br />

These highlights and summary from George C. Paffenbarger, a charter member of the Group, a Past-President<br />

of <strong>IADR</strong>, a dentist, and an able research investigator, serve as an appropriate conclusion to a historical<br />

statement describing the Dental Materials Group of the International Association for Dental Research.<br />

FLOYD A. PEYTON, D.Sc.<br />

formerly Professor of Dental Materials<br />

University of Michigan Dental School<br />

Ann Arbor, Michigan<br />

and presently Professor of Dentistry<br />

Division of Bio-Materials<br />

Department of General Dentistry<br />

College of Dentistry, University of Florida<br />

Gainesville, Florida<br />

THE PERIODONTAL RESEARCH GROUP<br />

Periodontal research has been intimately associated with the Journal of Dental Research and the<br />

International Association for Dental Research since their inception. For example, many periodontists 39 appear in<br />

the first list of contributors to the Endowment Fund of the Journal of Dental Research. Also the first volume of<br />

the Journal contains a paper on periodontology. 40<br />

In 1919 W. J. Gies conceived the idea of publishing in the Journal "a series of reviews of the results of<br />

the developments in research in all phases of dentistry" entitled "Progressive Dentistry and Stomatology". 41 The<br />

first contribution to this series came from a periodontist, Arthur H. Merritt, and was entitled "Periodontology". 42<br />

The American Academy of Periodontology utilized the JDR as the medium for the official publication of its<br />

scientific proceedings 43 from 1921 until 1930. When the Academy started its own journal in 1930, Grace R.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 206


Spalding, its Editor, explained to the readers of the JDR that the new journal would not be competing with it,<br />

since its object was "to stimulate interest in, and to record the development of periodontics." 44<br />

Based upon the close relationship between periodontology and the Journal of Dental Research, it was<br />

not surprising to find periodontists also present at the founding meeting of the International Association for<br />

Dental Research on 10 December 1920. Moreover, periodontal research has played a prominent role at the<br />

annual meetings of the <strong>IADR</strong>. The first paper presented at the Second General Meeting in 1924 was by Edward<br />

H. Hatton and William D. Skillen from Northwestern University Dental School entitled "Epithelial Changes in<br />

So-called Pyorrhea". 45 The first published abstracts were those from the scientific program of the Chicago<br />

Section of 17 November 1927, and three of the four presentations were concerned with periodontal research. 46<br />

At the Tenth Annual Meeting of the <strong>IADR</strong> in Columbus, Ohio, March 1932, of the 111 papers listed on the<br />

program, including those read by title, eight were concerned with periodontal research demonstrating the<br />

continuing interest between the <strong>IADR</strong> and periodontal research.<br />

Over the years periodontal research has grown with the Association. By 1969 a total of 691 papers were<br />

presented at the <strong>IADR</strong> meeting in Houston, Texas, with three whole sessions devoted to periodontology. With<br />

growth, there were certain growing pains apparent. Research workers in periodontology were often<br />

disappointed by the inability to meet and discuss their research at large meetings. Recognizing these and other<br />

difficulties, the International Association for Dental Research unanimously voted to establish a Periodontal<br />

Research Group at the Forty-seventh General Meeting in Houston, 20-23 March 1969. This was in keeping with<br />

the policy of the Association to decentralize and give voice to various identifiable groups within the <strong>IADR</strong>. The<br />

object of the Periodontal Research Group as stated in their Constitution is:<br />

1. To advance the study and knowledge of periodontology.<br />

2. To facilitate the presentation, discussion, and publication of scientific papers on periodontal research.<br />

3. To provide a forum and organization where all scientists whose interests are related to periodontal<br />

research may participate on an equal basis.<br />

These objectives are accepted in addition to those of the parent body, the <strong>IADR</strong>. Officers elected at this time in<br />

1969 were Helmut A. Zander of Eastman Dental Center as President and Stanley P. Hazen of Temple<br />

University as Secretary.<br />

The first major activity of the Periodontal Research Group as an entity was to convene an International<br />

Conference on Periodontal Research which was held 1-3 August 1969 in Rochester, New York. Thirty-two<br />

papers were presented at this successful Conference attended by 151 charter members and guests. Thus,<br />

periodontal research has reaffirmed its vitality and intimate relationship with the International Association for<br />

Dental Research.<br />

Officers at the end of 1970 were Harald A. Löe of the Royal Dental College of Århus, Denmark,<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 207


President; Stanley P. Hazen, Secretary; and Helmut A. Zander, Councilor.<br />

REFERENCES<br />

HELMUT A. ZANDER, M.S., D.D.S.<br />

Head, Department of Periodontology<br />

Eastman Dental Center<br />

Rochester, New York<br />

1. J Dent Res 19: 340, 1940.<br />

2. [EDITOR'S NOTE.—The Constitution and By-Laws of 1957 were approved by the general membership<br />

of the Association as stated in J Dent Res 36: 800, 1957. This was "the proposed Constitution of 1956"<br />

which was circulated individually for membership perusal. Unfortunately, it was never printed in the<br />

Journal or elsewhere for ready reference.]<br />

3. Amer J Orthodont 47: 462-464, 1961.<br />

4. Programs and Abstracts of Papers of this Forty-third General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong>, p 21, July 1965; see<br />

also J Dent Res 44: 1123, 1965.<br />

5. Programs and Abstracts of Papers of the Forty-eighth General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong>, pp 8-9, 17-18, 24-25,<br />

31, March 1970.<br />

6. Ward, M. L., and McCormick: The First Report of a Study of the Composition and Properties of the<br />

Cements Now in Use in Dentistry, J Nat Dent Assoc 2: 354-370, 1915.<br />

7. Ward, M. L., and Scott, E. O.: Effects of Variations in Manipulation on Dimensional Change, Crushing<br />

Strength and Flow of Amalgams, JADA 19: 1683-1705, 1932.<br />

8. Peyton, F. A., and Moore, G. R.: Flexibility Studies on Gold Alloy Wires and Orthodontic Appliances,<br />

Int J Orthodont & Dent Child 19: 799, 1933.<br />

9. Skinner, E. W.: The Role of Investment Setting Expansion in Gold Compensation Casting Techniques,<br />

Dent Cosmos 75: 1009, 1933.<br />

10. ———: Research on the Flow of Dental Amalgam, JADA & Dent Cosmos 25: 1651, 1938.<br />

11. Shell, J. S.: Metallography of Precious Metals, JADA 12: 794, 1925.<br />

12. Myers, R. E.: Observations of the Behavior of Molten Metal during Casting, J Dent Res 13: 275, 1933.<br />

13. Ray, K. W., and Easton, G. S.: Changes in Composition of Amalgam Alloys during Amalgamation and<br />

Condensation, JADA 18: 1076, 1931.<br />

14. Easton, G. S., and Ray, K. W.: Technic Alloys for Inlay Casting, Dent Cosmos 74: 972, 1932.<br />

15. Poetschhe, P.: Physical Properties of Dental Cements, J Indust & Engin Chem 8: 302, 1916.<br />

16. Gray, A. W.: Volume Changes Accompanying Solution, Chemical Combination, and Crystalization in<br />

Amalgam, Inst Metals J 29: 139, 1923.<br />

17. Crowell, W. S.: Physical Chemistry of Dental Cements, JADA 14: 1030, 1927.<br />

18. Wise, E. M.; Crowell, W. S.; and Eash, J. T.: The Role of the Platinum Metals in Dental Alloys, Tr<br />

Amer Inst Met Engin, Inst Met Div 99: 363, 1932.<br />

19. Taggert, W. H.: A New and Accurate Method of Making Gold Inlays, Dent Cosmos 49: 1117, 1907.<br />

20. Maves, T. W.: Recent Experiments Demonstrating Wax Distortion on All Wax Patterns when Heat Is<br />

Applied, JADA 19: 606, 1932.<br />

21. Scheu, C. H.: A New Precision Casting Technic, JADA 19: 630, 1932.<br />

22. Coleman, R. L.: Physical Properties of Dental Materials, J Res Nat Bur Stand 1: 868, 1928.<br />

23. Taylor, N. O.: Progress Report: Research on Dental Materials, JADA 18: 294, 1931.<br />

24. Souder, W.: Time Required to Cast Dental Restorations from Molten Alloy, JADA 20: 1010, 1933.<br />

25. Paffenbarger, G. C.; Sweeney, W. T.; and Isaacs, A.: Physical Properties and a Specification, JADA 21:<br />

1907, 1934.<br />

26. Essig, C. J., and Koenig, A.: Dental Metallurgy, 6th ed, Philadelphia: Lea and Febiger, 1909.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 208


27. Hogden, J. D., and Millberry, G. J.: Practical Dental Metallurgy, 6th ed, St. Louis: C. V. Mosby<br />

Company, 1924.<br />

28. Harder, O. E.: Modern Dental Metallurgy, Minneapolis: Burgess-Rosebury Company, 1930.<br />

29. Ray, K. W.: Metallurgy for Dental Students, Philadelphia: P. Blakiston's Son and Company, 1931.<br />

30. Skinner, E. W.: Science of Dental Materials, 1st ed, Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders Company, 1936.<br />

31. Shell, J. S.: Hodgen-Shell Dental Materials, St. Louis: C. V. Mosby Company, 1938.<br />

32. Souder, W., and Paffenbarger, G. C.: Physical Properties of Dental Materials, National Bureau of<br />

Standards, Circular No. C433, Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1942.<br />

33. Peyton, F. A. et al.: Restorative Dental Materials, 3rd ed, St. Louis: C. V. Mosby Company, 1968.<br />

34. Skinner, E. W., and Phillips, R. W.: The Science of Dental Materials, 6th ed, Philadelphia: W. B.<br />

Saunders Company, 1967.<br />

35. American Dental Association Guide to Dental Materials, 4th ed, Chicago: ADA, 1968.<br />

36. Copies of original correspondence are in Dental Materials Group files and records.<br />

37. J Dent Res 17: 339-340, 1938.<br />

38. J Dent Res 19: 342-343, 1940.<br />

39. Gies, W. J.: The Endowment Fund of the Journal of Dental Research, J Dent Res 1: 33-34, 1919.<br />

40. McDonagh, A. J.: Periodontology, with Special Reference to Recession of the Gums, J Dent Res 1: 423-<br />

439, 1919.<br />

41. Gies, W. J.: Progressive Dentistry and Stomatology. 1. A Plan to Present to the Readers of this Journal<br />

Effective and Reliable Reviews of Advances in Dental Practice and in Stomatological Science, J Dent<br />

Res 1: 525, 1919.<br />

42. Merritt, A. H.: Progressive Dentistry and Stomatology. 2. Periodontology with Special Reference to<br />

Periodontoclasia, J Dent Res 2: 77-87, 1920.<br />

43. J Dent Res 3:398, 1921; The Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Meeting of the American Academy of<br />

Periodontology can be found on pages lxxi-lxxix of the same issue.<br />

44. Spalding, G. R.: The Journal of Periodontology, J. Dent Res 12: 237-238, 1932.<br />

45. Hatton, E. H., and Skillen, W. G.: Epithelial Changes in So-called Pyorrhea, J Dent Res 8: 211-212,<br />

1928.<br />

46. Scientific Proceedings of the Chicago Section, J Dent Res 8: 7-9, 1928.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 209


CHAPTER SIXTEEN: HISTORY OF THE JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH<br />

Since one of the prime functions of the <strong>IADR</strong> is communication of research findings, it is important to<br />

emphasize that the Journal is the only avenue for publication of research papers and of proceedings of the<br />

annual meetings—the meetings per se constituting the other, more direct avenue of communication.<br />

A resumé of Journal accomplishments in "The Fifty Year History of the Journal of Dental Research"<br />

was published earlier. 1 Hence in this chapter it is only necessary to update Journal activities, but there is also<br />

provided more background, especially in the context of journalism in general.<br />

EARLY EFFORTS<br />

Almost exactly eighty years before the JDR appeared, the very first dental publication in the world<br />

began in New York City as a forty-eight-page monthly in 1839. Credit for its launching and support goes to<br />

Chapin A. Harris. At first it was entitled The American Journal of Dental Science, but a year later it was<br />

transferred to the newly organized American Society of Dental Surgeons and changed in name to the American<br />

Journal and Library of Dental Science. 2<br />

Early dental journalism is reviewed elsewhere, 3 but it should be mentioned that in the years following<br />

1839 there appeared eleven dental publications in various parts of the United States. Many had a fleeting<br />

existence, but a few persisted and existed for varying periods of time. These were The Dental Register of the<br />

West, the Southern Dental Journal, The Dental Summary, The Dental Review, The Dental Items of Interest, and,<br />

best known of all, The Dental Cosmos, which for three-quarters of a century remained the most influential,<br />

though proprietary, dental publication in the world.<br />

There gradually developed a desire on the part of many progressive dentists to free dental journalism<br />

from the influence of supply houses and other commercial interests. Thus, the International Dental Journal was<br />

organized in Baltimore. It was fostered and financially supported by an association of New York dentists. 4 The<br />

first copy was dated January 1880. (This journal had no connection whatsoever with the present publication of<br />

the same name which was founded in May 1949 at the Milan meeting of the Fédération Dentaire Internationale,<br />

whose official publication it has been ever since its first issue appeared in September 1950.) When other dental<br />

journals belonging to dental supply houses reduced their subscription price, the International Dental Journal<br />

unfortunately was unable to continue and closed its twenty-sixth volume in December 1905.<br />

The gap thus created in ethical journalism was immediately filled by the Journal of the Allied Dental<br />

Societies. This was a quarterly journal published by the Institute of Stomatology of New York and three<br />

Massachusetts dental societies. The editorial staff was gradually enlarged to include a dozen able men, and<br />

other societies were added from time to time. All these constituted the Association of Allied Dental Societies,<br />

Inc., which functioned as owner and publisher of this unique journal.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 210


William Gies certainly became acquainted with this journal when it published some of his own early<br />

dental research (listed in the bibliography of the William J. Gies biography now in preparation). By 1917 Gies<br />

conceived the idea that a new and larger publication was needed for the growing segment of the dental<br />

profession truly interested in research. He thus planned a journal that would be published solely by, of, and for<br />

the dental profession, accepting no advertising and not influenced by commercial interest in any way. It was<br />

intended to give free expression to the views of the various editors without fear or favor, and was devoted solely<br />

to the moral, ethical, and scientific upbuilding of the dental profession. Professor Gies further explained his<br />

views along these lines in the last issue of the Journal of the Allied Dental Societies. 5<br />

By full agreement, the editorial staff of this journal of thirteen-year standing became members of the<br />

new journal which was to be known the world over as the Journal of Dental Research. An initial editorial staff<br />

totaling sixty-seven members was chosen from among the leading investigators in all disciplines related to<br />

dentistry and stomatology. Accordingly, the Journal of the Allied Dental Societies was discontinued with its<br />

thirteenth volume in December 1918 and was immediately succeeded in March 1919 by the Journal of Dental<br />

Research, a quarterly publication of increased size and significance. The front cover of the first issue states that<br />

it is "a journal of stomatology; devoted to the advancement and dissemination of knowledge pertaining to the<br />

mouth and teeth, and to their relations to the body as a whole."<br />

The old College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University at 437 West 59th Street, New York City.<br />

Building at left with awnings was the Sloane Maternity Hospital. By contrast in appearance, the structure to the<br />

right was the "Main Building" and contained the front office of William J. Gies.<br />

The original room in which he founded and edited the Journal of Dental Research was that with the last two<br />

windows on the first floor on the far right (see arrow). The shades are drawn and awnings down on most<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 211


windows because of the bright sun shining from the south. Professor Gies occupied this office in Biochemistry<br />

for many years, vacating it in 1928 for new quarters in the medical center up north in Manhattan.<br />

After the College was moved in 1928 to the new Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center at its present location,<br />

632 West 168th Street, Professor Gies had this smaller office (entrance depicted on left), Room 5-428, in the<br />

Biochemistry Department. He still edited the Journal and conducted the affairs of the <strong>IADR</strong> from here until<br />

1936 when he retired "because of age" as he used to say. But he used this office address for another decade. He<br />

undoubtedly entered this "new" building through the picturesque archway (on the right) bearing the historic<br />

inscription.<br />

William Gies of Columbia University listed himself as the Executive Officer of the Board of Editors and<br />

remained as Editor until 1935. The other Editors were Theodor Rosebury, also of Columbia, the "Interim<br />

Editor" during the latter part of 1935; Hamilton B. G. Robinson, initially of the University of Rochester, then of<br />

Washington University, and finally of Ohio State University, was "the longest Editor" (1936-58); Frank J.<br />

Orland of the University of Chicago was the last Editor of the Journal's first fifty years (1958-69); and last, but<br />

certainly not least, David F. Mitchell of Indiana University is the current Editor, 1969-.<br />

The first issue of the JDR is pictured, and the rest of the Journal's activity is accounted for to a<br />

considerable extent, in the pages of its "Fifty Year History." However, there are certain facets and additional<br />

information that can and should be elaborated upon here.<br />

By the fiftieth year in Association history, the Journal and the Association seemed to be very closely<br />

related, but this was not the way it had always been. The Journal was founded some twenty-one months before<br />

the Association. Moreover, a unique observation can be made that the Association was barely mentioned in the<br />

JDR until a summary of its founding meetings was printed for the first time 6 in 1926 and repeated in 1928 along<br />

with a summary of its general meetings to date. 7 The first published reference to the <strong>IADR</strong> was very meager<br />

indeed; it was merely mentioned in a footnote to an appreciation of Robert R. Andres by George A. Bates 8 in<br />

1921.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 212


The JDR Editorial team of 1968 in S-260 of the Zoller Memorial Dental Clinic at the University of Chicago:<br />

Susan Stucklen Larson, Editorial Assistant; Irene Malloy, Secretary; and Frank J. Orland, Editor. Beyond the<br />

window is the University of Chicago Press, publisher and printer of the Journal for the greater part of a<br />

decade.<br />

A semicircle of Journal issues illustrating the variation in cover format. Clockwise: the very first issue of March<br />

1919 is similar to the next one of 1940 with the Waverly Press as publisher, 1919-47. The third and fourth<br />

issues were printed while the C. V. Mosby Company was publisher, 1947-60.<br />

When the University of Chicago Press was publisher, 1960-66, the top half of the cover was in white with the<br />

lower half changing in color annually. Next to last, the oblique design was developed when the American<br />

Dental Association became publisher in 1966; the left half color was also changed every year. The final issue<br />

pictured on the right has a horizontal bar motif also with color changes annually; it was started in 1970 with<br />

the ADA still as publisher.<br />

It can be emphasized that the Journal of Dental Research portrayed itself as a very independent journal.<br />

It was incorporated in New York as the Journal of Dental Research, Inc., with William J. Gies as owner. In fact,<br />

on one page of the JDR in 1922 there are cited all its affiliated organizations 9 that used the Journal pages as an<br />

outlet for their scientific proceedings, and the <strong>IADR</strong> was next to last in the list.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 213


A List of the Names of the Organizations That Have Voted to Make the<br />

Journal of Dental Research the Medium for the Official<br />

Publication of Their Scientific Proceedings<br />

(December 1922)<br />

ASSOCIATION OF THE ALLIED DENTAL SOCIETIES, INC.<br />

AMERICAN ACADEMY OF DENTAL SCIENCE<br />

MASSACHUSETTS DENTAL SOCIETY<br />

HARVARD ODONTOLOGICAL SOCIETY<br />

BOSTON AND TUFTS DENTAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION<br />

FIRST DISTRICT DENTAL SOCIETY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK<br />

METROPOLITAN DISTRICT OF THE MASSACHUSETTS DENTAL SOCIETY<br />

HARRIET NEWELL LOWELL SOCIETY FOR DENTAL RESEARCH OF THE<br />

HARVARD UNIVERSITY DENTAL SCHOOL<br />

SAN FRANCISCO SOCIETY FOR DENTAL RESEARCH<br />

COLORADO SOCIETY OF PERIODONTISTS<br />

AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PERIODONTOLOGY<br />

NEW ENGLAND SOCIETY FOR THE PROMOTION OF DENTAL RESEARCH<br />

WILLIAM JARVIE SOCIETY FOR DENTAL RESEARCH, OF THE SCHOOL OF<br />

DENTISTRY OF COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY<br />

NEW YORK ACADEMY OF DENTISTRY<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH<br />

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY BIOCHEMICAL ASSOCIATION<br />

As the year rolled on, the Journal played an increasingly important role in communicating and<br />

promoting dental research, especially after the <strong>IADR</strong> entered its life and accepted it as its own publication, with<br />

the Editor functioning as a major office-bearer in the Association. To display four decades of significant activity<br />

of the Journal, the Editor of that time prepared a small exhibit for the Chicago <strong>IADR</strong> meeting of 1960. (See<br />

photograph among Proceedings of the Thirty-eighth General Meeting. 10 ) The same Editor was awarded a Gies<br />

Award (Honorable Mention) by the American Association of Dental Editors in 1968 for a JDR Editorial on the<br />

subject of the triple responsibility to communicate research. 11 Moreover, in 1961, the Commission on the<br />

Survey of Dentistry in the United States, 12 referring to dental research, emphatically stated that "the principal<br />

medium of communication in the United States is the Journal of Dental Research. . ."<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 214


The several Editors of the Journal have been "many things to many people". The Latin word editus refers to one<br />

who revises, corrects, arranges the context and/or style of literary works to make them conform to some<br />

predetermined standards. In a much broader sense, JDR Editors have had to be concerned with a variety of<br />

diverse yet interrelated efforts such as depicted above by catchword cartoons.<br />

(Reprinted in part from JDR 43: 1209, Nov-Dec 1964.)<br />

NUMBER OF ARTICLES AND PAGES PUBLISHED IN THE<br />

JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH, 1919-70<br />

Comments,<br />

Replies,<br />

Discussions,<br />

Scientific<br />

and<br />

Short<br />

Proceedings<br />

of Other Pages<br />

Vol/Year Articles Annotations Articles Memorials Societies Articles Published<br />

1/1919 24 0 23 1 8 4 761<br />

2/1920 23 0 10 2 6 6 877<br />

3/1921 32 0 11 1 5 3 657<br />

4/1922 16 0 8 0 4 1 705<br />

5/1923 16 0 7 0 0 1 486<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 215


6/1924-26 21 0 7 0 1 0 501<br />

7/1927 21 0 11 1 1 0 557<br />

8/1928 26 0 9 4 6 4 722<br />

9/1929 35 0 8 1 7 2 885<br />

10/1930 38 0 7 0 10 3 813<br />

11/1931 37 0 13 0 8 0 944<br />

12/1932 44 0 11 1 7 1 1031<br />

13/1933 32 0 8 1 11 1 560<br />

14/1934 33 0 3 0 2 1 501<br />

15/1935-36 29 0 1 4 2 2 586<br />

16/1937 48 0 2 7 1 2 582<br />

17/1938 47 0 0 4 1 2 537<br />

18/1939 41 0 0 8 1 3 584<br />

19/1940 45 0 1 3 3 3 610<br />

20/1941 64 0 0 2 4 0 663<br />

21/1942 63 0 0 4 3 4 592<br />

22/1943 59 0 0 3 3 3 527<br />

23/1944 47 0 0 3 2 3 537<br />

24/1945 35 0 0 3 3 3 354<br />

25/1946 54 0 6 0 3 4 553<br />

26/1947 50 0 6 0 3 2 512<br />

27/1948 80 0 11 0 9 1 811<br />

28/1949 77 0 6 0 3 0 703<br />

29/1950 108 0 6 0 5 0 865<br />

30/1951 97 0 6 0 4 1 904<br />

31/1952 96 0 6 0 4 1 996<br />

32/1953 90 0 6 0 8 1 894<br />

33/1954 84 0 6 0 3 0 896<br />

34/1955 98 0 6 0 7 0 960<br />

35/1956 127 0 6 0 3 0 990<br />

36/1957 141 0 6 0 3 0 1026<br />

37/1958 121 4 6 0 5 1 1196<br />

38/1959 126 26 6 0 5 0 1274<br />

39/1960 122 22 6 0 5 0 1301<br />

40/1961 135 23 6 0 4 0 1328<br />

41/1962 138 24 19 0 7 0 1544<br />

42/1963 156 34 16 2 6 1 1572<br />

43/1964 96 37 20 1 7 1 1322<br />

44/1965 170 34 7 1 9 0 1464<br />

45/1966 229 71 12 0 4 0 1878<br />

46/1967 198 54 6 0 16 0 1556<br />

47/1968 155 59 6 1 11 1 1266<br />

48/1969 181 48 6 0 10 2 1642<br />

49/1970 180 65 22 0 4 2 1612<br />

Total 3985 501 355 58 247 70 44,637<br />

While it is indicative of total size of a publication, the number of pages published does not provide a<br />

differentiation of the various kinds of elements in the Journal of Dental Research.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 216


A comprehensive growth curve based on such total pages was provided in an earlier History of the<br />

Journal. 1 However, to update and upgrade the total contents of the Journal of Dental Research through 1970,<br />

the preceding table is presented which permits analysis of the several kinds of items published over the last halfcentury.<br />

Included in these extensive figures are the Supplements to the Journal, which began in 1962 and<br />

continued on through 1970 with a total of twenty-one such separately bound booklets. Among these were the<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> Directories of Membership and a variety of Symposia, including those of the AAAS Nd Section, the<br />

ICOB meetings, and some <strong>IADR</strong> annual meeting proceedings per se. Only the History of the Journal and the<br />

1969 Biographical Directory (Special Commemorative Supplement to vol. 48) had pagination separate from<br />

that of the Journal.<br />

In the early volumes of the Journal under W. J. G.'s Editorship, the nonscientific articles were numbered<br />

in italic roman numerals and hence, in many citations, were not counted in the final pagination of arabic<br />

numerals per volume. In such citations several kinds of published papers were often lumped together. Thus,<br />

certain references to the total JDR page counts, such as those in The Survey of Dentistry, 13 differ from those in<br />

the preceding table.<br />

MONETARY ASPECTS<br />

Almost all journals, and especially those that carry no advertising, have difficulty in making monetary<br />

ends meet. The wise William Gies was well aware of these problems right from the beginning. Hence he<br />

established an endowment fund for the Journal, so that at its very birth it was born with a proverbial silver<br />

spoon in its mouth. With the first issue of JDR in 1919, there had been $2026 subscribed for the Endowment<br />

Fund, although only $676 had actually been paid. Gies stated forthrightly: "the Journal of Dental Research will<br />

be financed as a University is supported, with public spirited special gifts for this purpose and from a<br />

cumulative permanent endowment fund to be created; also from subscriptions for its successive volumes—not<br />

from advertisements of goods for sale." 14<br />

In many of the early issues, the JDR cited the growth of this fund, including the lengthy list of individual<br />

contributors. By March 1921 the fund, including the accrued interest, amounted to $5356.13, 15 and by 31<br />

December 1922 the fund had grown to $6633.39. 16 In subsequent volumes of JDR, in 1927 and even in 1928, a<br />

short paragraph on the Endowment Fund simply stated that the current monetary status would be published in a<br />

later volume. 17 However, after 1928 no further information was ever published on the Endowment Fund of the<br />

Journal of Dental Research, established so early and apparently securely by William J. Gies.<br />

At the time of W. J. G.'s retirement from Columbia in 1937, a William J. Gies Endowment Committee<br />

for the Journal was appointed by ad interim action of the <strong>IADR</strong> Council. The Chairman was A. H. Merritt, and<br />

J. D. Eby, F. C. Kemple, F. S. McKay, and B. B. Palmer were the other members of the Committee, which was<br />

formed to raise funds for placing the Journal on a sound financial basis. 18 The Committee was quite successful<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 217


over the next decade. Total receipts (assets) for the Fund 19 as of 24 June 1949 were $46,345.73.<br />

THE WILLIAM J. GIES ENDOWMENT FUND, Journal of Dental Research<br />

Even as late as 1950 the following note appeared in the JDR: "This Fund was created, on the initiative<br />

of the voluntary Committee on Endowment—organized in New York City in 1937—to insure the continuance<br />

of the Journal of Dental Research 'in full accord with the highest ideals of strictly professional journalism<br />

devoted to the advancement of research,' to which the Journal was dedicated at its establishment in 1919."<br />

But in 1952, during a period of misunderstanding—one misconception being that the Journal no longer<br />

needed such monetary support—this Fund was renamed the William J. Gies Foundation for the Advancement of<br />

Dentistry. 20 An independent Board of Directors was appointed. These men in New York were the sole<br />

custodians of the Fund, which now amounted to over $50,000, and they later made grants from the Fund's<br />

income for a variety of projects, including those requested by the JDR.<br />

THE OTHER ENDOWMENT FUND<br />

Apparently William Gies, while Editor and concurrently General Secretary, did not use all of the money<br />

received from <strong>IADR</strong> for operation of his office, and the unused amount, at the time he concluded his services as<br />

Editor and Secretary, amounted to approximately $1000. Although there is no exact record of this frugality,<br />

there are several personal items of correspondence which cited Gies' gratuitousness in having accumulated this<br />

money for the later benefit of the Journal. Thus, the earliest note appeared in the Journal in 1946 when then<br />

Secretary-Treasurer Hatton (who held this previously inactive fund intact) designated it as the "Special William<br />

J. Gies Journal of Dental Research Fund." It amounted to $1402.98 by 1 March 1946. 21 On hand in bonds and<br />

savings account by 1 January 1947 was $1435.98. Including all additions and all interest, by 31 December 1947<br />

there was $1469.76 in the fund. These figures were cited as part of the "Combined Report of the Secretary-<br />

Treasurer and Business Manager as Submitted to the Collector of Internal Revenue." 22 In 1949 this fund had<br />

grown to $1506.06 (as of 1 June). 23<br />

With the separation of the large <strong>IADR</strong> fund ("the conversion" of over $50,000) from its benefic<br />

relationship to the Journal in 1952, the <strong>IADR</strong> Council and the JDR Publication Committee sought other funds<br />

for support of the Journal. There were recruited from among commercial concerns several Supporting<br />

Associates who contributed "in multiple of one hundred dollars" each. This was for immediate use in meeting<br />

printing costs. On the other hand, whenever small amounts of money were left over, these were added to the<br />

smaller endowment fund previously cited, which now assumed greater importance, being the sole remaining<br />

endowment fund for the Journal.<br />

There were intermittent reports in the Journal about this unique Fund, but by March 1956 it had grown<br />

to $1802.34, with the statement that "there had been no expenditure from this fund." This was reported in JDR<br />

of 1957 while H. B. G. Robinson was Editor.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 218


Recognizing that this small fund was growing, though very slowly, the 1957 revision of the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

Constitution stipulated in Article IX, Section 5: "If and when endowments for the Journal exceed $10,000 the<br />

Council shall appoint three endowment trustees to be custodians of the endowment assets. The terms of service<br />

of the endowment trustees shall be three years and the terms shall be so staggered that one new trustee is<br />

appointed each year. A trustee may not succeed himself."<br />

As of November 1962, while F. J. Orland was Editor, this fund, sometimes labeled simply the<br />

Endowment Fund of the <strong>IADR</strong>, amounted to $2511.85. 24 At the very end of 1964 it had been increased to<br />

$2597.58 and its name upgraded to be thereafter the "Endowment Fund of the <strong>IADR</strong> for the Journal of Dental<br />

Research." 25 This was in conformity with the facts—that the fund was held by the <strong>IADR</strong> for the Journal's<br />

eventual benefit. During the F. J. O. Editorship and with his effort, the fund was doubled from various<br />

contributions by friends of the Journal. By the end of September 1970 it totaled $5558.11, attaining more than<br />

half of its ostensible goal.<br />

The intent of the fund, according to all who have been active in Council and Publication Committee<br />

deliberations over the years, is that it should be safeguarded and maintained intact until it grows to $10,000,<br />

when it may be able to do the Journal some significant good.<br />

This resumé of the facts about these funds (which previously had not been very clear) was compiled<br />

from facts gleaned from the Journal of Dental Research, from unpublished correspondence, and with the<br />

concurrence of several men with long memories, such as Hamilton B. G. Robinson, Dan Y. Burrill, J. Roy<br />

Blayney, George C. Paffenbarger, and J. Frank Hall.<br />

REFERENCES<br />

1. Orland, F. J.: The Fifty Year History of the Journal and the Biographical Directory of the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

(Special Commemorative Supplement to the September 1969 issue of vol 48).<br />

2. Bremner, M. D. K.: Professional Journalism, in The Story of Dentistry: From the Dawn of Civilization to<br />

the Present, 2d ed, Brooklyn: Dental Items of Interest Publishing Co., 1946, pp. 107-116.<br />

3. Trueman, W. H.: Dental Journals of the United States, in Koch, C. R. E. (ed): History of Dental Surgery,<br />

vol 1, Chicago: National Art Publishing Co., 1909, pp. 321-357.<br />

4. Taylor, J. A.: History of Dentistry, Philadelphia: Lea & Febiger, 1922, pp 72-173.<br />

5. J Allied Dent Societies 13: 496, 1918.<br />

6. J Dent Res 6: 101-111, 1924-26.<br />

7. J Dent Res 8: 197-233, 1928.<br />

8. J Dent Res 3: n5, 1921.<br />

9. J Dent Res 4: 448, 1922.<br />

10. J Dent Res 39: 775, 1960.<br />

11. J Dent Res 46: 1323, 1967.<br />

12. Hollinshead, B. S. (ed): Survey of Dentistry: The Final Report of the Commission on the Survey of<br />

Dentistry in the United States, Washington, D.C.: American Council on Education, 1961, p 437.<br />

13. Hollinshead, B. S. (ed): op. cit., pp 438, 576.<br />

14. J Dent Res 1: 33-34, 1919.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 219


15. J Dent Res 3: 229, 1921.<br />

16. J Dent Res 4: 38, 1922.<br />

17. J Dent Res 7: iii, 1927; 8: iii, 1928.<br />

18. J Dent Res 16: 360-361, 1937.<br />

19. J Dent Res 28: 684, 1949.<br />

20. J Dent Res 31: 517-520, 1952.<br />

21. J Dent Res 25: 187, 1946.<br />

22. J Dent Res 27: 774, 1948.<br />

23. Recorded on second page preceding p 1, J Dent Res 29, 1950.<br />

24. J Dent Res 44: 831, 1965.<br />

25. J Dent Res 44: 1414, 1965.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 220


CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: WHO IN <strong>IADR</strong> WAS WHO<br />

A Biographic Reference to Deceased Members<br />

Those among the living are well documented in the research world by the 1969 <strong>IADR</strong> Directory and its<br />

1971 supplement. But those men and women who lived in earlier years, and gave full devotion to research in<br />

their time, should be remembered for what they achieved. Thus, a biographic listing of all deceased individuals<br />

in dental research as <strong>IADR</strong> members of the past must certainly not be overlooked, especially by the younger<br />

generation of researchers who should peruse this history of accomplishments.<br />

Documentary reference to deceased colleagues is a fitting endeavor, as famous writers have pointed out<br />

in the past. Emphasis on biography is rendered by Carlyle, who declared, "Biography is the only true history."<br />

Emmons said, "Death stamps the character and conditions of men for eternity." This may be even more valid if<br />

the attributes of men and women in research are memorialized, as in this biographic compilation.<br />

COMPILATION PROCEDURE<br />

An exhaustive effort was made to gain biographic information for each of the 298 deceased members<br />

herein cited. The entire <strong>IADR</strong> History Ad Hoc Committee and the Association's living past Presidents<br />

contributed considerable information to this chapter, but the greatest single compilation effort was expended by<br />

the Chairman's able assistants, Miss Tesa Hayashi, Mrs. Harriet Blakley, and Mr. David P. James at the Zoller<br />

Clinic, University of Chicago, who searched out all known and accessible sources of biography, including<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> records, which were found to be very meager for the early years.<br />

Despite this overall effort, results were not uniform for all those investigated. Very little information<br />

was available about some members of the past, while for others considerable background information indicated<br />

their greater contribution and prominence in the field of dental research in its broader aspects, as well as in<br />

dental education and administration.<br />

It was necessary to use extensive abbreviations for the many activities of <strong>IADR</strong> past members. Standard<br />

forms are used as in past biographic directories. The most comprehensive appeared in a commemorative<br />

supplement to the Journal of Dental Research, volume 48 (September 1969), followed by an addendum (J Dent<br />

Res, vol. 50 [March 1971]). Earlier, <strong>IADR</strong> directories appeared in J Dent Res 31: 646-738, 1952, and in J Dent<br />

Res 41: 1111-1245 (suppl.), 1962.<br />

MEMBERSHIP ANALYSIS<br />

Aside from the problems cited, the biographic information gained has proved to be rather voluminous<br />

but revealing. This fifty-year period 1920-70 saw almost three hundred of the most prominent men and women<br />

interested in dental research pass away, but these individuals left behind a heritage of great importance to the<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 221


history of the healing arts. Their collective contributions can never be fully evaluated or perhaps appreciated,<br />

but certain extrapolations are possible. Almost all persons interested in or active in dental research were, at<br />

some time or other, <strong>IADR</strong> members. Any person who was once a member is included in this compilation, even<br />

though a few may have left membership rolls before their deaths.<br />

Among this total figure of 298 persons, which included five women, 229, or 76.8 percent, held dental<br />

degrees. Of this number of dentists, seven had Ph.D. degrees while thirty-two possessed M.D. degrees. Among<br />

the total, twenty-six members held only the Ph.D. degree in some basic science, while twelve held only the<br />

M.D. degree, although included among these thirty-eight men were three who held both a Ph.D. and M.D.<br />

Thirty-two were deans of schools, and three had been presidents of a college or university, while several were<br />

presidents of other important professional organizations or editors of other journals.<br />

Of the total number, only forty-two were born, resided, and died in countries outside the United States,<br />

including eleven in Canada, eight in Hungary, five in England, and five in Germany and Austria. However,<br />

twenty-eight men who were born in European countries and five who were born in Canada emigrated to become<br />

part of the large United States membership in the Association.<br />

The members of this unique group of 298 were active in a variety of disciplines. What were their major<br />

fields of research interests? Pathology was listed most often (by 45), followed by microbiology (25) and oral<br />

surgery (24). Next listed were Orthodontics, Prosthetics, and Preventive Dentistry (23 each). These were<br />

followed by Histology (20), Anatomy (19), Dental Materials (18), and Biochemistry (17). Periodontology and<br />

Education (both 15) and Operative Dentistry (13) as well as Crown and Bridge (8) followed. Other fields were<br />

minimally cited: Physiology (6), Epidemiology (6), Anthropology (6), Oral Diagnosis (5), Pedodontics (4),<br />

Endodontics (4), Pharmacology (3), History (3), Biophysics (3), and Roentgenology (2). Psychology (1), Dental<br />

Therapeutics (1), and Socioeconomics (1) constituted the remainder of the fields listed by members of the past.<br />

However, a considerable number of persons listed more than one field, while a very few listed none.<br />

A final note in the area of mortality is that the 298 members who died during the five decades ending<br />

with 1970, which marks the fiftieth anniversary of the <strong>IADR</strong>, collectively lived to a moderately old age,<br />

averaging 65.8 years, with a span of 28 to 92 years. Over this same period the average expectation of life in the<br />

United States was only 61.9 years. Thus our members in their productive professional lives enjoyed<br />

considerable longevity.<br />

WHO WAS WHO<br />

AMICI, Giovanni. HISTOCHEMISTRY OF ORAL TISSUES. b 1923; d Milan 3 Jan 1965. Prof odont U<br />

Pavia Italy. AAAS. Auth La Dentinogenesi; contrib Arch Oral Biol & Atti del Convegno dell ARPA italiana. A<br />

founder & councilor Continental European Div <strong>IADR</strong>. Partial removable prosthesis; neurophysiopathology of<br />

the subjective and objective sensibility of the oral cavity in relation to paraprotetic pathology and results of<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 222


ecent experimental research; relationship of polymerization of the fundamental substance of connective tissue<br />

and salivary concentration of electrolytes; radiobiology of enzymatic systems in mineralization.<br />

ANDREWS, Robert R(obbin). HISTOLOGY; EMBRYOLOGY OF ENAMEL. b Boston 7 Aug 1884; d<br />

Waban Mass 26 Jan 1921. DDS Boston DC '75. Prof histol Boston DC, trustee Tufts DM. AM (hon) Dartmouth<br />

'92. Jarvie med '11. AADSci (past pres), Mass DS (past pres), RMS. A founder of <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

APLIN, Arthur W. OPERATIVE DENTISTRY. b 25 Mar 1928 place not known; d 12 Dec 1969 Lexington<br />

Ky. BS '51, DMD '55, MSD '64 U Oregon. Instr op dent '57-61, asst prof op dent '61-63, assoc prof op dent '63-<br />

64 U Oregon; asst prof fixed prosthod '64-66, asst prof dent '66-67, assoc prof rest dent '67-69 U Ky; clin asst<br />

dent U Ky Med Center Hosp '64-69. Prac '56-57. Serv USA '46-47, Capt USA DC '55-57. Co-auth sec on rest<br />

dent Current Therapy Ed IV. AAAS, ADA, Bluegrass DS, Kentucky DA, Oregon SDA, OKU. Mandibular<br />

recording methods and devices; thermal studies.<br />

ARNOLD, Francis A. PATHOLOGY; EPIDEMIOLOGY; RESEARCH ADMINISTRATION. b Orrville O<br />

30 Dec 1910; d 1 Dec 1967. BS '32, DDS '34, DSc '62 WRU. Intern US Marine Hosp Cleveland '34-36; comm<br />

off USPHS '36-67; assoc dir '48-53, dir '53-66 NIDR. Co-chmn hon ed adv bd Arch Oral Biol; bd ed Public<br />

Health Repts '58-61; mem ed counc Dent Progress '60-62. FACD, FAPHA, AAAS, ADA, AEpS, FDI (vp sci<br />

cmt '54-61), OKU. <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '53-54).<br />

BAKER, Lawrence W(ills). ORTHODONTICS. b Woodstock Vt 18 Jan 1876; d W Roxbury Mass 28 Nov<br />

1954. DMD Harvard '98, grad Angle Sch Orthod. Asst '99, instr '00, asst prof '09, prof orthod '22, fel dept res<br />

'12-54, mem adm bd & cmt on res in dent med Harvard SDM. Prac pt orthod. FAADSci (past pres), ASO, 1st<br />

Dist DS, NY, Mass DS, NDA. Growth of mandibles of rat embryos transplanted to the anterior chamber of the<br />

eye. Developed Baker intermaxillary technique.<br />

BÁNHEGYI, István. BACTERIOLOGY. b 1894 place not known; d 1944. MD '20 U Budapest. Fac dent sch<br />

U Budapest. Studies on oral microbiology and problems of dental focal infection.<br />

BARNFIELD, William F. PATHOLOGY. b Charleston Ill 11 Dec 1913; d Indianapolis 1 Jun 1946. DDS<br />

Wash U SD '39. Intern & resid Cincinn Gen Hosp '39-41. Instr '41-44 Wash U SD, instr U Ill CD '44-45, asst<br />

prof Ind U '45-46. ADA, Ind SDA, Indianapolis DS. Contributor to journals; recipient of grant by USPHS for<br />

research on the cause of periodontal disease.<br />

BARTELS, Henry A(rthur) MICROBIOLOGY. b NYC 22 Jan 1895; d NYC 14 Aug 1969. BS RI State Coll<br />

'17; BS '25, DDS '27 Columbia U. Bacteriol USPHS '17-18; bacteriol div labs & res NY Dept Health '19-53;<br />

instr 27-35, asst prof '37-57 Columbia U CD; asst prof '57-62, assoc clin prof microbiol '62-69 NYU CD; 2nd<br />

Lt USPHS '17-18. Prac pt '27-62. Auth six chaps Oral Microbiology '68. NYAS, FAAAS, AADS, ASE, RESA<br />

(pres NYU dent br '67-68), ADA, ASM. Oral microbiology; infectious diseases; defensive mechanisms in the<br />

mouth; sterilization.<br />

BATES, George A(ndrew). HISTOLOGY. b Boston 5 Aug 1847; d Auburndale Mass 5 Jan 1925. DDS<br />

Boston DC '89; DMD '03, MS '04 Tufts Coll. Prof histol Boston DC '91-99 & Tufts Coll '00-25. Trustee<br />

Harpswell (Me) Biol Lab. AAA. A founder of <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

BAUER, William H(ans). PATHOLOGY. b Prague 30 Oct 1889; d St Louis Mo 1956. MD U Prague, DDS St<br />

Louis. Intern U Prague; res fel histol, assoc dept path, asst prof to prof & dir dept stomat Innsbruck MS; prof &<br />

chmn dept path & res St Louis SD; lect bone path St Louis SM & Marquette SM. AAPB, Am Coll Oral Path,<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 223


Mo St Path Soc, St Louis MS, St Louis Path Soc. St Louis sec <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '48-49). General and oral pathology;<br />

cancer; salivary gland virus; tissue culture.<br />

BEAR, Harry. DENTAL EDUCATION. b Richmond Va 1890; d 30 Jul 1950. DDS Med Coll Va '13. Inst<br />

metallurgy to prof exodont, dent jurisprudence, ethics & economics '14-29, dean SD '29-50 Med Coll Va.<br />

FACD, Pan Amer Odont Assoc, ADA (past vp, trustee & mem Hse Deleg), Richmond DS (past pres), Va SDA<br />

(past pres), ASOS (past pres; secy '33-50), OKU.<br />

BEBB, William. COMPARATIVE ANATOMY. b Fountaindale Ill 15 Jun 1869; d Spencer Ind 7 Apr 1938.<br />

DDS CCDS '97. Secy USC CD '02-12; prof comp dent anat & museum curator '14-27, librarian '24-27 NWU<br />

DS; vis lect Am Dent Soc Europe. Traveled widely collecting volumes and specimens to build the most<br />

complete library and museum in his field—the William Bebb Library and Museum at Northwestern University<br />

Dental School.<br />

BECKS, Herman. b Wesel am Rhein Germany 24 Aug 1897; d San Francisco 13 Jul 1962. DMD '22, MD '24<br />

U Rostock Germany; DDS '33 U Calif. Instr U Freiburg '26-28; res assoc to prof '28-62, chmn div DM '40-62 U<br />

Calif. Prac pt oral diag & DM. Hon prof dent San Carlos U Guatemala. Callahan awd. Assoc ed J Calif SDA; ed<br />

oral med sec J OS OM & OPath. FACD, ADA (chmn res sec), Inst PH, Ann Seminar Stud & Prac DM (pres &<br />

bd dir), NRC (dent cmt), Pasteur Soc, AAPer, AAAS (fel), AAAN, AGA, AAOP, SRCD, FDI, Orthod Assoc<br />

Mexico, OKU. Oral pathology; bone anomalies; effect of hormones and growth factors on oral status and bone<br />

development; preventive dentistry.<br />

BEEBE, Douglas M. b 1907 place not known; d 3 Jul 1954. DDS NWU. Lt Col USA DC, chief dent serv USA<br />

redistribution cent Miami Beach Fla, mem R&D bd Surg Gen off '49-54, res consult NBS '53-54, chief USA<br />

dent serv Alaskan Aleutian Command.<br />

BELDING, Paul H(erbert). BACTERIOLOGY. b Waucoma Ia 11 Jun 1896; d Waucoma 3 Jun 1953. DDS<br />

State U Iowa '19, BS Upper Iowa U '43. Prac gen '19-53. Ed Dental Items of Interest '37. AAAS, ADA,<br />

Dubuque Dist Dent Soc, Fayette City Dent Soc (pres '32), Iowa SDS, Tricity Dent Soc. Dental caries.<br />

BERGER, Adolph. ORAL SURGERY; PATHOLOGY. b Hungary 12 Dec 1882; d NYC Apr 1951. DDS NY<br />

CD '09. Asst prof oral surg '23, assoc prof '25, prof '27 emer '51 Columbia U. Prac gen to oral surg. William<br />

Carr Prof Oral Surg at Columbia. Cmdr USNR '38. FACD, FNYAM, ADA, OKU. Clinical research.<br />

BERLINER, A(braham). PERIODONTICS. b Gloversville NY 5 Jan 1913; d NYC 30 Jun 1966. DMD Tufts<br />

Coll '36. Tchg fel dept anat NYU DS '42-43, postgrad fac perio 1st 2nd & 10th Dist DS NY, '46-53, res assoc<br />

chem Newark Coll Rutgers '53-55, head dept perio Lenox Hill Hosp '51-53, Sydenham Hosp from '50, mem<br />

Eastern Grad Res Fdn from '49. Capt USA '43-45. AADM, ADA. Aqueous iodine solutions; clinical<br />

instrumentation, bone pathology and histopathology in periodontal disease.<br />

BEST, Elmer. S. b 1881; d Jul 1954. Ed Dental Survey. ICD (secy '37-54; rgstr US sec '35-54), Minn Dist DS<br />

(pres), AAAS.<br />

BEUST, Theodore Bernhard. ANATOMY; HISTOLOGY; EMBRYOLOGY. b New Albany Ind 14 Jan<br />

1871; d 24 Nov 1937. DDS 89, MD '08 Louisville. Prof dent bact & biol '17, prof dent histol & comp dent anat<br />

'22-37 Louisville CD. Louisville faculty awd '34. ADA. <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '35-36). Microscopic anatomy of teeth;<br />

dental caries; comparative dental embryology.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 224


BIEN, Saul M(arcus). BIOPHYSICS; CRANIOFACIAL BIOLOGY. b NYC 1908 Nov 13; d 19 May 1969.<br />

AB NYU '33, DDS Columbia '37, MSc NYU '61. Intern Guggenheim Dent Clin '37-38, sr res dent NY St '42-<br />

44, guest sci Brookhaven Nat Lab '57, spec fel USPHS '62, res assoc prof microbiol NYU '64. Prac pt orthod.<br />

1st Lt USA DC '43. Hellman awd AAO '68, Lord-Chaim prize '64. FACD, NYAS, FAAAS, RMS (fel), AMWA<br />

(fel), NLAD, ISCB (secy treas '65), AAO, AADS, ADA, AChemS, EOS, AADEd, FDI, ASCB, RESA, AAUP.<br />

Pentoses; prosthetic appliances; lactoflavin; fluoride content of saliva; analysis of fluorides and forces exerted<br />

in the tooth alveolus; periodontal diseases; electrochemical phenomena; effect of high hydrostatic pressure on<br />

calcified tissues and microorganisms.<br />

BLACK, Arthur D(avenport) PATHOLOGY; ORAL SURGERY. b Jacksonville Ill 15 Nov 1870; d Evanston<br />

Ill 7 Dec 1937. BS Ill Coll '92; DDS '00, MD '01 NWU. Demonstr to prof op dent, asst oral surg prof dent path<br />

& op dent & dean '18-37 NWU. Alumni med NWU '37. Pres Chicago Centennial Dent Cong '33, FACS,<br />

AADS, OKU. <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '29-30). Developed system of classification and indexing of dental literature.<br />

BLACKWELL, Robert Edwin. OPERATIVE & PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b Marshall Co Ill 12 Jan<br />

1884; d Evanston Ill 13 Dec 1970. DDS '14, MS '25 NWU. Instr op dent '14-17, asst prof & supt clin '17-20,<br />

prof '20-49, prof emer op dent NWU DS '49. Prac pt '14-49. Ed Black's Operative Dentistry 9th ed '55. FACD,<br />

FAAAS, ADA, FDI, OKU (pres '43). Etiology of caries; preventive dentistry.<br />

BLUM, Theodor. ORAL SURGERY. b Vienna 25 Sep 1883; d NYC 25 Jul 1962. DDS '09, MD '11 U Pa; MD<br />

Vienna '12. Instr oral surg '14, asst prof '17, instr gen surg '18-19 NY PostGrad Hosp. Prac ft oral surg. Lt Cmdr<br />

USNR '35. Mem exec group adv cmt Guggenheim Dent Clin '29-43, commr Bd Oral Surg NY St '47, pres Dent<br />

Health Serv '47. ASOS (pres '39-40), ACS, ICD (fel), FDI, ADA (chmn sec oral surg, exodont & anesth '37),<br />

NY Inst Clin Oral Path (found & secy treas), East Dent Soc (pres '23), Met Med Soc (secy '23, pres '29),<br />

NYAM (fel), FAAAS, 1st Dist Dent Soc NY (chmn oral surg '21-22, pres '33-34), OKU. Clinical oral<br />

pathology and surgery; oral roentgenography; bone abnormalities; anesthesia.<br />

BODECKER, Charles F(rancis). HISTOPATHOLOGY. b NYC 2 Sept 1880; d NYC 11 Feb 1965. DDS U<br />

Buffalo '00. Prof oral histol & embryol '23-46, exec off res lab '26-46, prof emer Columbia D&OS '46-65. Prac<br />

pt gen '00-44. Jarvie med '38, Disting Serv Med Columbia Presbyt Med Cent '53, U Buffalo awd '53, Callahan<br />

awd '54, dent res awd Columbia U '54, Spenadel med '58. Assoc ed J Dent Educ '36-45, ed NY St Dent J '48-65;<br />

auth Fundamentals of Dental Histology & Embryology '26, Elementary Histology for Dental Hygienists '33.<br />

FACD, FAADM, ADA, NYAM (assoc fel), NYAS (assoc fel), NYBDE '30-50, NY (chmn res cmt '28-42),<br />

OKU. A founder of <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '42-43). Dental caries; demonstration of organic enamel matrix (named enamel<br />

lamella and rod sheaths); histology and physiology of enamel and dentin; periodontoclasis; vital staining of<br />

enamel.<br />

BOGUE, Edward A. b Vernon NY 1834; d NY 21 Nov 1921. DDS NYC DS '55, MD Coll Castleton Vt. Lect<br />

Harvard DS '70. Prac NYC '64-21. ADA charter mem & secy, Odont Soc Gt Brit, Odont Soc France, Am Dent<br />

Club (pres), NY Odont Soc (pres), 1st Dist DS NY (pres), NY Inst Stomat (pres), NY SDS, Am Acad DSci<br />

(Boston), Int Dent Fed, NY St Bd Dent Exam. Literary contributor and inventor of appliances for dental use.<br />

BONYHÁRD, Béla. A. PROSTHETICS. b 1899; d 1944; MD Budapest '23. Res in prosth dent & removable<br />

appliances Dent Dept Apponyi Policlinic Budapest. Co-auth A Teljes protézis; auth Die Indikationsstellung für<br />

die partielle Prothese '36. Designer of clasp for removable partial prosthesis, still used in central Europe, known<br />

as "Bonyhàd clasp."<br />

BOX, Harold K(eith). PERIODONTICS. b Carleton Place Ont 24 Apr 1890; d Toronto 1956. DDS '14, PhD<br />

'20 U Toronto; FDS RCS Eng. Prof oral & dent path '19, prof dent path & perio '20, res prof perio '27-56 U<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 225


Toronto. Prac pt perio. FAAPer (hon), CDA (res cmt), NRC Ottawa, Ontario DA (hon life), Toronto Acad Dent<br />

(hon life), AARD (hon). Periodontal pathology and therapeutics.<br />

BRAND, Thurlow W(eed) ANATOMY. b Pittsburgh Pa 11 Jan 1891; d Carmel Colo 16 Sep 1965. BS '13,<br />

DDS '17 U Pittsburgh. Tchr to prof Pittsburgh SD '17-65. FACD, ADA.<br />

BRASHEAR, Alton D(ean). GROSS ANATOMY; HISTOLOGY. b Ft Smith Ark 17 Mar 1906; d Richmond<br />

Va 30 Jun 1963. DDS Ohio SU '32; BA '34, MS '35 U Rochester. Intern Rochester Dent Disp '32-33,<br />

Rockefeller fel U Rochester '33-35, instr anat La SU Sch Med '35-38, prof anat Med Coll Va '38-63. Col USA<br />

DC '41-46. Van Woert prize 1st Dist Dent Soc '34. Auth From Lee to Bari '57. AAA, ADA, Assoc Mil Surg,<br />

OKU. Innervation of teeth; embryologic techniques; fascias of the neck and head.<br />

BRAWLEY, Robert Eugene. b Greenville O 19 Mar 1904; d Dayton O Feb 1954. BS '28, DDS '32 OSU; MS<br />

'34 U Rochester. Intern Guggenheim Clin '31, intern Forsyth Dent Infirm '32, Rockefeller fel U Rochester '32-<br />

33. Prac pt pedod '38-54. ADA, Ohio SDS, OKU. Salivary analysis; bacteriostatic and physical properties of<br />

saliva; palatal measurements; gnathodynamics; dental caries; normal resting saliva.<br />

BREKHUS, Peter J. CROWN & BRIDGEWORK. b Bergen Norway 3 Aug 1894; d 22 Jun 1951. BA<br />

Augsburg Coll Norway '02, DDS U Minn '10. Tchr Minn public schls '02-07; clin asst '10, instr '11-12, asst prof<br />

'12-15, assoc prof '15-23, prof '23-42, emer '42-51 U Minn; vis prof U Helsingfors & U Oslo '21. Gies awd '40,<br />

U Minn Outstanding Achiev awd '51. Auth The Fundamentals of Crown & Bridge Work; Your Teeth—Their<br />

Past & Probable Future.<br />

BRONNER, Finn J. DENTAL INSTRUMENTS; OPERATIVE DENTISTRY. b Oslo 1888; d New Orleans<br />

12 Apr 1954. Stud Univ Oslo, Paris, Berlin, DDS U Pa '18, stud Mayo Clin & US Navy Med Sch. Instr to prof<br />

emer NYU CD '27-53, prof Loyola SD (La) '53-54. Prac dent Norway to '15; prac gen '18-26. Mem 11<br />

American & Norwegian prof assocs. Author of texts, scientific papers; extensive research on dental techniques,<br />

physiology of teeth and jaws; aptitude testing for dental profession.<br />

BROUGHTON, Albert J(ames). b Toronto 1873; d 14 Mar 1958. DDS RCDS Ontario '06. Prac ft. Found '06,<br />

secy treas '07 Can OP Assoc. Secy Toronto sec <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

BROWN, Robert K. RELATIONSHIP OF PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTS TO STUDY & PRACTICE OF<br />

DENTISTRY. b Sharpsburg Pa 22 Sep 1893; d Detroit Apr 1944. DDS '19, MS '28 U Mich. Instr to prof '22-33<br />

U Mich. Prac ft gen '19-22, '33-44. Assoc ed Dental Survey.<br />

BRYANT, Carrie K(irk). BACTERIOLOGY. b Philadelphia 6 Jan 1883; d Philadelphia 19 Dec 1939. AB U<br />

Pa, studied Phila City Lab & U Pa Lab Hygiene. Instr '17, asst prof bact '26 Pa DS. AAAS, Soc Amer Bact.<br />

BULLEID, Arthur. BACTERIOLOGY. b Torquay Devon England 5 Nov 1892; d London 19 Jul 1964. LRCP<br />

(London), MRCS Eng '17, LDS RCS (Eng) '20, FDS RCS (Eng) '48. Dent surg Guy's Hosp, exam bact & path<br />

BDS (London), lect spec bact Dent Sch Guy's Hosp, exam dent surg & path LDS RCS (Eng). Prac pt. Med off<br />

RAMC '17-20 (Maj). Hunterian prof RCS '35-36, Cartwright prize & John Tomes prize RCS. BDA, RSM<br />

(odont sec).<br />

BUNTING, Russell W(elford). BACTERIOLOGY. b Ann Arbor Mich 21 Jun 1881; d 22 Nov 1962. DDS '02,<br />

DDSc '08 U Mich. Instr '04, prof oral path '14-50, secy dent fac '12-23, dean dent fac '37-50 Mich SD; dent<br />

consult Fed Civil Defense Admin '51. DSc (hon) U Detroit '57. Callahan awd '29, Fauchard med '30. Prac gen.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 226


Auth Oral Pathology 2nd ed '40, Oral Hygiene & Treatment of Parodontal Diseases '36, Oral Hygiene &<br />

Preventive Dentistry '50. AAAS, ADA, OKU. <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '32-33).<br />

BURSTONE, Marvin S(tanley). EXPERIMENTAL PATHOLOGY; HISTOCHEMISTRY. b St Louis Mo 8<br />

Dec 1922; d Atlanta Ga 19 Feb 1966. DDS '46, MA '50 Wash U. Instr path Wash U SD & SM '48-50, asst prof<br />

path Ill CD '50-52, spec NIH fel U Chicago '52-53, USPHS NIDR '53-60, head path sec diag res br Nat Cancer<br />

Inst '61-66. Capt USA DC '46-48. Essay prize CDS '54. Assoc ed J Histochem & Cytochem '62-66. FAAS,<br />

AACR, AAEP, ABOP (dipl), ADA, HistS (treas '59, counc '62-66). Enzymes and their historical identification.<br />

BURWASSER, Philip. PEDODONTICS. b Montreal Canada 23 Mar 11; d Cleveland O 29 Oct 1966. BA '33,<br />

MA '35, DDS '40 WRU; PhD U Chicago '47. Intern Forsyth Dent Infirm '40-41; dent fel Zoller Dent Clin '41-<br />

45; instr '45-46, asst prof '46-50, assoc prof '50-58, prof pedod & dir grad courses WRU SD '58-66; dir dent<br />

serv WRU Hosps. Prac pt pedod. FACD, ASDC, OKU. Dental pulp; gingival tissues.<br />

CADELL, P(eter) B(roughton). PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b Armidale NSW Australia 6 Dec 1921; d<br />

Brisbane 9 Dec 1964. BDSc U Queensland '50, MDS U New Zealand '58. Admin dent off Nauru '55-58, sr res<br />

off Med Res Counc New Zealand '59-64. Prac ft gen '50-55. Flight Lt Aust AF '42-45. Aust Assoc Soil Sci, Int<br />

Assoc Soil Sci, New Zealand Assoc Scis, New Zealand Soc Soil Sci. Environmental study associated with<br />

dental conditions on Nauru; soil trace elements and dental caries in New Zealand; geographic variations in<br />

caries prevalence in New Zealand.<br />

CARBONELL, Virginia M(agsarili). DENTAL ANTHROPOLOGY. b Manila Philippines 14 Sep 1920; d<br />

Herkimer NY 24 Nov 1965. DMD U Manila '52, MA U Chicago '58. Intern '52-53, asst dent surg '53-58, instr<br />

'58-60, res asst '58-59, res assoc '59-60 Zoller Dent Clin; res assoc London Hosp Med Coll '60-62; asst prof &<br />

res assoc Zoller Dent Clin '62-65; asst prof SD SUNY at Buffalo '65. Mosby book awd '53. AAPA, Roy Anthro<br />

Inst Eng (fel). Dentition of people of Kish, Mesopotamia (3000 B.C.); dentition of early British skulls (700-<br />

1800 A.D.); dentition of Magdalenean female from Cap Blanc, France; variations in frequency of shovel-shaped<br />

incisors in different populations.<br />

CARY, James Egerton. b Brisbane Australia 2 May 1905; d 24 Feb 1948. BDSc '41, BS '42, DDS '45 U<br />

Queensland (first to receive dental degree from this school). LDQ '26. Prac '26-48. Cary prize in his honor at<br />

Queensland DC by Commonwealth Dent Supply Co '45. Aust Dent Assoc. Development of alkali within saliva<br />

and its relation to dental disease.<br />

CHAYES, Herman E. S. CROWN & BRIDGEWORK; PUBLIC HEALTH. b Ukraine 14 Jul 1878; d NY 2<br />

Jul 1933. DDS NYCD '98. Prac ft '01-15. Auth Cast Gold & Porcelain Inlays '18, Movable-Removable<br />

Bridgework. ADA, AARD (life), 1st Dist DS NY (pres '27-28, mem bd dir), NDS, NY SDS. Developed Chayes<br />

system of movable-removable bridgework.<br />

CHILLINGWORTH, Felix P. PHARMACOLOGY; LEPROSY. b New Haven Conn 17 Sep 1882; d Boston<br />

29 Jun 1938. MD Yale U. Fac physiol Yale; med exam City of New Haven; assoc prof pharmacol Tulane; stf U<br />

Kan MS; prof physiol '20-29, prof exptl pharmacol '29-37, prof & head dept pharmacol '37-38 Tufts M&DS;<br />

chief leprosarian Ibersville La leprosarium. AMA, FACP, FASEB.<br />

CHOTT, George A. DENTAL MATERIALS; PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b Chicago 15 May 1904; d<br />

Chicago 6 Mar 1969. BS NWU '26. Pres Crescent Dental Co Chicago.<br />

CHRISTOPHER, Knud-Mogens. PALEOPATHOLOGY. b Copenhagen 20 Aug 1914; d Copenhagen 21 Apr<br />

1942. Instr op dent Dent Inst Copenhagen.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 227


CLAPP, George Wood. PROSTHETICS. b Boston Mass 24 Oct 1870; d 8 Aug 1958. DDS U Mich '98. Tchr<br />

denture prosthesis & practice NYU CD beginning '14. Prac ft prosth '00-06. Auth "Life & Work of J. Leon<br />

Williams," Dental Digest '25. ADA, 1st Dent Dist NY. The mechanics of anatomical articulation; restoration of<br />

facial expression with artificial teeth; professional denture service.<br />

CLARK, Henry B(annister), Jr. ORAL SURGERY. b Oak Park Ill 29 Jan 1911; d 10 Dec 1966. BS '31, MB<br />

'33, MD '34, DDS '36 U Minn. Intern Ind U Hosp '33-34, prof & chmn div oral surg Minn SD '46-66. USA MC<br />

'40-46 (Capt to Maj). Prac ft oral surg '36-40, '46. ABOS (dipl), ADA, Minn Cancer Soc (bd dir), ASOS, OKU.<br />

Analysis of maxillofacial injuries, particularly fractures of upper jaw; healing of experimental fractures of bone<br />

and effects of implantation of bone substitutes.<br />

CLARK, Stanley W. b Chicago 1887; d Chicago 1944. DDS '16, MDS '34 NWU. Prof materia med & therap<br />

NWU. Col USA DC.<br />

CLAWSON, M. Don. OPERATIVE DENTISTRY; PEDODONTICS. b 1900; d Oak Ridge Tenn 17 Dec 1951.<br />

DDS Wash U SD '26. Prof op dent, act dir, demonstr, lect '30-41 American U Beirut; demonstr & lect U St<br />

Joseph, Beirut; dir dent serv Iraq Petroleum Co; prof op dent & pedod & dir dent educ '42-45, president '45-50,<br />

bd trustees '50-51 Meharry MC; dir dent serv Oak Ridge reservation Manhattan proj. Prac ft '26-28, '30-41, '50-<br />

51.<br />

COHEN, Joseph T. PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b Minneapolis 6 Feb 1893; d Aug 1963. DDS U Minn '16.<br />

Res Inst Child Welfare (Minn) '26-39; clin assoc prof Minn SD & SM '39-60. Prac ft gen & pedod '16-56.<br />

FICD, ADA, ASDC, OKU. Growth and development of dental arches in children; statistical study of dental<br />

caries.<br />

COLYER, James Frank. ORAL PATHOLOGY. b London 25 Sep 1866; d London 30 Mar 1954. FRCS,<br />

LRCP, FDS RCS. Dent surg for over 30 yrs Royal Dent Hosp London. Hon curator odont collection Museum<br />

RCS. Colyer prize '26, Colyer med RCS, gold med RCS, Tomes prize '15. FRSM (hon), BDA (hon), Kaiserlich<br />

Deutsche Academie des Nationforsches (hon). Auth Dental Conditions of the Teeth of Animals '36; co-auth<br />

Dental Surgery & Pathology '10. <strong>IADR</strong> (chmn London sec to '39).<br />

COOLIDGE, Edgar D(avid). HISTOPATHOLOGY. b Galesburg Ill 15 Jul 1881; d 12 Aug 1967. DDS<br />

Loyola '06, BS Lewis Inst '25, MS NWU '30. Instr oper tech '06-13, prof oral hygiene prev dent & therap '27-<br />

48, prof emer '48-67 Loyola CDS; prof materia med & therap Ill CD '13-23. Prac pt perio & endod '06-59. LLD<br />

(hon) '48, ScD (hon) '59 Loyola. Callahan awd '47, Disting Serv awd Interprofessional Counc '59, awd<br />

leadership perio Tufts U '61, Achievement awd Knox Coll '60, emer fel Inst Med Chicago. AAPath, AAAS,<br />

AADH, AAE (hon pres '59), AAPer (pres '47), ADA, ASPer (hon), FDI, Ill SDS (pres '32), Int Dent Cong Paris<br />

'31 & Vienna '36, Odontographic Soc Chicago (pres '41-42), OKU. Hon vp <strong>IADR</strong> '58.<br />

COURTNEY, James Milton. RESTORATIVE & PROSTHETIC DENTISTRY. b Emsworth Pa 16 May 1902;<br />

d Cleveland 16 Jul 1970. DDS WRU SD '28. Dent intern Mt Sinai Hosp Cleveland '28-29, instr oral surg WRU<br />

SD '29-33, stf St Luke's Polyclin '42. Prac ft. Maj DC '42-45. FICD, FACD, ADS, ADA, AEqs, Am Acad HD<br />

(exec cmt, chmn audit comm), Acad Pl Res D (pres '56-57), FDI, NYAS, AAAS, CDS, AAGFO. Investigation<br />

of the relationship of pre-operative oral prophylaxis to post-operative pulmonary complications.<br />

COWLING, Thomas. b York Twp Ont Canada 8 Jan 1888; d Toronto 17 Apr 1950. DDS RCDS Ont '12; BA<br />

'23, MA '25 McMaster U; B Pedagogy Ont Coll Educ '29. Prof dent technol & metallurgy; senate '37, asst dean<br />

'42 U Toronto. Ed Oral Health; assoc ed J Dent Educ. CDA, Ont DA.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 228


COY, Herbert D(ale). DENTAL MATERIALS. b Farragut Ia 16 Jul 1892; d Richmond Va 23 Feb 1966. DDS<br />

Creighton U '14. Dent consult Baker & Co '34-42, mgr I Stern & Co '42-48, prof op dent & dir dent clin Med<br />

Coll Va '48-58, consult US VA '51-52 & Walter Reed Army Med Cent, vis prof Nihon U '58. Prac ft gen '14-34,<br />

'58-66. 1st Lt USA DC '17. MDS (hon) Nihon U '59. AAAS, ADA, Iowa SDS (pres '31-32), FACD, OKU.<br />

CRAWFORD, Harry Mills. BACTERIOLOGY. b Arlington Tex 28 Oct 1901; d Dallas 30 May 1954. DDS<br />

Baylor '29. Instr dent res '43, assoc dent res '46-50 Baylor. Prac pt '29-54. Dallas Co Med Soc, Tex SDA, ADA,<br />

Dallas Acad Dent Res (pres '46), SW Soc Dent Med. Bacteriology of dental caries.<br />

CRAWFORD, William H(opkins). PROSTHETICS; RESEARCH ADMINISTRATION. b Morristown Minn<br />

12 Aug 1899; d Minneapolis 20 Feb 1964. DDS U Minn '23. Instr '23, asst prof C&B '25, assoc prof '27-28 U<br />

Tenn; assoc prof dent '28, prof & admin off prosth div '28-36 Columbia; prof dent & dean Ind U '39-45; dean<br />

Minn DS '45-64; dir res USPHS. USA '18-19. FAAS, ADA, Minn DA, APHA, NYAD, ICD, ACD, AADS<br />

(pres), Jarvie Soc, OKU.<br />

CROSBY, Albert W(illiam). ORTHODONTICS. b Hartford Conn 13 Nov 1870; d New Haven 11 Nov 1938.<br />

DDS NY CD '92. Assoc clin prof dent surg Yale SM, attend orthod NYU. Prac ft gen '93-11, ft orthod '11-38.<br />

Conn SDA (pres), ABO (pres), NYAD, EOS, NY Soc Orthod, AAAS, ICD, ADA (trustee '31-34), OKU.<br />

CROSS, Kent K(ane). PROSTHODONTICS; DENTAL ANTHROPOLOGY. b Campbell Hill Ill 14 Feb<br />

1878; d 4 Aug 1964. DDS '07, BA '32, MA '33 U Denver. Lect Tenn SDS. Prac ft prosthod '07-58. 1st Lt Colo<br />

Nat Guard '17-18. FICD, SW Dent Soc (hon). Dental dictionary; development of jaws and teeth from Silurian<br />

fish to modern man.<br />

CUSHMAN, Frank. DENTAL EDUCATION. b 1889; d 2 Feb 1946. DMD Harvard SDM. Prof & chmn dept<br />

dent Harvard SDM. Ret '44.<br />

D'AMICO, Angelo. PREVENTIVE & RESTORATIVE DENTISTRY. b Palermo Italy 26 Feb 1900; d 11 Aug<br />

1969. DDS U Calif '24. Instr U Calif '31-32, tchr postgrad courses USC beginning '59. Prac ft gen beginning<br />

'24. FACD. Normal function and functional relation of natural teeth in man; dental anthropology; functions of<br />

natural cuspids in human dentition.<br />

DARLINGTON, Charles G(oodliffe). PATHOLOGY. b Brooklyn NY 28 Jan 1892; d 5 Nov 1960. MD<br />

Medico-Chirurgical Coll Phila '15. Intern Flushing Hosp '15-16, intern Metropolitan Hosp '16, path Muhlenberg<br />

Hosp (NJ) '24, oral path dent serv Montefiore Hosp '32, consult path Beekman Downtown Hosp NYC '47; asst<br />

prof path NYU Coll Med '19-34, prof path NYU CD '34-60. Lt Col USA & chief lab serv '43-46. ABOP (dipl),<br />

AMA, NY Path, Am Soc Clin Path, Harvey Soc, NYAM, Union Co Med Soc, found fel Coll Am Path. <strong>IADR</strong><br />

(chmn NY sec '38-40).<br />

DEAN, Henry Trendley. PUBLIC HEALTH. b Winstanley Park Ill 25 Aug 1893; d Evanston Ill 14 May 1962.<br />

DDS St Louis U '16, Off Sch USPHS '31. Act asst dent surg '21-22, '24-25, asst dent surg '25-26, dent surg '30-<br />

42, sr dent surg '42-45, dent dir '45-53 USPHS; div infect diseases, div physiol & exptl biol & med NIH '31-49;<br />

dir NIDR '48-53; lect Navy Dent Sch '43-53, lect Army Dent Sch '49-53. 1st Lt to Capt USA DC '17-19; Col<br />

USPHS. Gorgas awd '49. AAAS, ACD (chmn Wash sec '41), APHA, ADA, AAMS (pres '37), NRC (mem cmt<br />

div med sci '43-48, subcmt dent '47-53), FDI (US vp '47). <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '44-45). Epidemiology of fluorides and<br />

dental health; research administration.<br />

DEAN, Marguerite T(aylor). PATHOLOGY. d Memphis Tenn 21 Apr 1952. Assoc prof dent & dir sch dent<br />

hygiene U Tenn. Widow of Richard D. Dean, former dean U Tenn DS.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 229


DEAN, Richard D(oggett). BACTERIOLOGY; SEROLOGY; IMMUNOLOGY; PATHOLOGY; DENTAL<br />

EDUCATION. b Mississippi 1884; d 29 Sep 1950. BS Miss St Coll '08; DDS '22, MD '28 U Tenn. Prof oral<br />

path '22, prof oral med & surg '28, head div oral med & surg '33, dean '41-50 U Tenn CD. ADA.<br />

DENTON, George B(ion). HISTORY OF DENTISTRY. b Detroit Mich 22 Mar 1884; d Evanston Ill 9 Mar<br />

1963. BA '07, MA '09, PhD '16 U Mich. Instr English '12-17, instr tech composition DS '17-18, asst prof '18-19,<br />

prof '19-34, prof dent hist & lit '34-49 NWU; res consult ADA '49-63. Ed Bull of the History of Dentistry '53-<br />

63. AAHD, FDI. Hist of dentistry; dental nomenclature.<br />

DEWEY, Kaethe Weller. PATHOLOGY. b 1868 place unknown; d 11 Nov 1934 Bad Nauheim Germany.<br />

MD Rush MC 12. Asst ob & gyn, path fel Rush MC; res asst histol & oral path, asst prof oral path U Ill CD;<br />

assoc prof clin path U Pittsburgh SD '28-34. Assoc ed J Dent Res '27-34; co-auth Pathology of the Mouth '25.<br />

Pathology of the mouth; reaction of oral tissues to implants.<br />

DIAMOND, Moses. DENTAL ANATOMY. b Berlad Rumania 1894; d NYC 6 Oct 1949. DDS NYU '14. Prac<br />

'14-22; assoc prof dent, prof dent anat, chmn dept dent anat Columbia D&OS '22-49; lect Roy Soc Med London<br />

'21. Consult Am Museum Nat History. Embryol Inst Vienna awd '36. Co-auth. The Enamel of Human Teeth '40.<br />

AAAS, ADA. Formation of enamel; growth of human skull.<br />

DIECK, Wilhelm. b Haensel Westphalia Germany 12 Jan 1867; d Berlin 28 Feb 1935. DDS U Berlin '87, MD<br />

Wurzburg '96. Asst prof '99, head op dent '07-24 Wurzburg; dean Berlin CD '24-35; vis lect Japan '30. ScD<br />

(hon) U Pa '15. Auth Anatomy & Pathology of the Teeth & Jaws in X-ray Photography '11. Soc Germ Tchrs<br />

Dent (pres). X-ray photography; rehabilitation of amalgams.<br />

DOWN, C(harles) H(arold). PATHOLOGY. b Williamstown Australia Jan 1890; d Victoria Apr 1965. BDSc<br />

'12, DDSc '40 U Melbourne. Demonstr op tech '22-34, sr lect & head dept conserv dent surg '35-49, lect human<br />

dent anat '35-57, lect comp dent anat '45-57, prof conserv dent '49-58, prof '58-60, prof emer conserv dent surg<br />

'60 U Melbourne. Eng Capt Aust Army DC '15-19. FACD, FDS RCS, mem adv cmt Commonwealth Bur Dent<br />

Standards '46-58, Australian Dent Assoc (standards cmt '46-60). Dental materials; conservative dentistry.<br />

DRAIN, Charles L(awrence). CARIES; PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b Missouri Valley Ia 7 Feb 1895; d<br />

Des Moines 5 Jun 1937. DDS Iowa CD '17. Lect & instr pedod '20, prof '36 SU Iowa CD; dir Iowa Bur Dent<br />

Hygiene. 1st Lt USA DC '17-19. ADA, Iowa SDS, ACD, OKU, Good Teeth Council for Children (bd dir),<br />

ASPDC (bd dir).<br />

DRESSEL, Robert P(hillip). CROWN & BRIDGEWORK. b LeSueur Minn 4 Feb 1898; d 8 Nov 1968. DDS<br />

U Minn '23. Demonstr C&B & prosth dent '23, instr '24, asst prof '26, assoc prof '30, prof & chmn dept C&B<br />

beginning '38, secy fac beginning '51 WRU SD. Prac pt gen. 1st Lt USAR DC. FACD, AAAS, AACBP (pres<br />

'53), AADS (chmn C&B sec), AAHD, AAPRD, AAUP, ADA (secy; vice chmn & chmn partial dent sec),<br />

OKU. Effect of saliva on dental cements; TMJ relative to decreased facial vertical dimensions; partial denture<br />

prosthesis.<br />

DRIAK, Fritz. DENTAL CARIES; ANESTHESIA; PERIODONTOLOGY. b Vienna 14 Feb 1900; d Vienna<br />

27 Nov 1959. Dr med '24 U Vienna, clin dr Chvostek '24-25, clin dr Eiselsberg '25-27, asst dent inst U Vienna<br />

& Kieferstation 1st surg clin '27-45; after '45 dir Dent Inst U Vienna. Prac oral surg. Austrian DA (pres), hon<br />

mem Soc Stomat, Piedmont DA (Italy), Stomat Soc (Rome), ARPA (Austrian sec), FDI, Vienna MS. <strong>IADR</strong><br />

(secy Vienna sec).<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 230


DUNNING, Henry S(age). ORAL SURGERY. b Scarsdale NY 7 Jul 1881; d New Canaan Conn 10 Feb 1957.<br />

DDS '04 NY CD, BS NYU, MD '11 Columbia P&S. A founder of Columbia D&OS '15. WW I serv abroad<br />

repairing maxillofacial injuries. Tchr to prof oral surg Columbia D&OS '18-48, chief dent serv Presbyterian<br />

Hosp. Disting serv awd Columbia Presbyterian Med Cent '53. FACS, dipl AB Otolaryngology & ABPS. A<br />

founder of <strong>IADR</strong>. Brother of William Bailey Dunning.<br />

DUNNING, William Bailey. b NYC Apr 1874; d Englewood NJ 21 Jul 1959. DDS NYCD '95. A founder of<br />

Columbia D&OS '15. Prof op dent '19, prof theory & prac '24, prof dent '30, prof emer '45-59 Columbia D&OS.<br />

Prac ft gen '95-46. US Navy '98. Ed J Allied Dent Societies (precursor of J Dent Res) '12-18; co-auth A<br />

Dictionary of Dent Sci & Art '36. ADA (3rd vp '41), 1st Dist DS NY (pres '16), NYAD (pres '33-35), NY SDS,<br />

NY Tb & Health Assoc (chmn dent cmt), NYAM. 1st prof emer Columbia D&OS. A founder of <strong>IADR</strong>. Brother<br />

of Henry Sage Dunning; father of James M. Dunning, Harvard SDM; grandson of Edwin James Dunning,<br />

pioneer dentist of New York State.<br />

ELLIS, Arthur W(illiam). PUBLIC HEALTH. b Ingersoll Ont Canada 1883; d 29 Jul 1949. DDS RCDS Ont<br />

'04. Prac ft '04-49. Coronation awd '35, BDA awd '46. Ont DA (chmn dent public health cmt; hon life mem,<br />

pres '29-30), Can Dent Hygiene Counc (chmn), Ont Govt Dent Health Cmt (chmn).<br />

ESCHLER, Josef. ORAL SURGERY; ORTHODONTICS. b Germany 27 Sep 1908; d 26 Dec 1969. MD<br />

German U at Prague '33; DMD U Freiburg '55; Stud dent at dent coll Prague, Oslo, Stockholm & Copenhagen<br />

'34-38. Asst Histol Inst Germ U (Prague) '31-35; vis prof Tokyo med & dent depts '40-47; asst prof U Freiburg<br />

'48-59; vis prof U Cairo & U Alexandria '56-60 (3 mos each yr); prof & head dept oral surg, plastic surg &<br />

orthod U Freiburg '59-69; vis prof U Tokyo '61, U Bombay & U Calcutta '61 & '62; vis lect Greece &<br />

Yugoslavia '65. Author of two books on orthodontia, oral surgery book, and more than 200 other scientific<br />

works.<br />

FAULKNER, Alden W(est). PROSTHETIC DENTISTRY. b Hants Co NS Canada 24 Jan 1885; d Halifax<br />

1966. DDS Dalhousie U '12. Lect Dalhousie U '13-43, alumni governor Dalhousie U '46-49. Prac ft gen '12-56.<br />

FACD, CDA (pres '30-32), Nova Scotia Dent Soc (pres), ACD, Prov Dent Bd NS (secy). Heat expansion during<br />

setting time of plaster.<br />

FICKES, William L. CERAMICS. b 1869; d Steubenville O 30 Mar 1951. DDS Temple SD '91. Prof ceramics<br />

U Pittsburgh '04-47. Pa SDS (pres '23-24), ADA cmt on nomenclature, AADS. Early specialist in porcelain<br />

work applied to dentistry; frequent contributor to journals on use of porcelain.<br />

FINK, Emanuel B. PATHOLOGY; BACTERIOLOGY. b 1890; d Chicago 15 Jun 1936. MD Rush MC, PhD<br />

U Chicago. Prof path & bact CCDS.<br />

FLEMING, Harold S(teadman). PATHOLOGY. b Brooklyn NY 9 Oct 1904; d 25 Dec 1963. PhB Brown U<br />

'26, DMD Harvard U '30, MS & DSc U Pa '52. Intern Forsyth Dent Infirm '30-31; asst resid oral surg Grace-<br />

New Haven Hosp '49-50; clin instr '50-52, res asst dept path '52-55, res assoc '55-58 Yale U SM; prof res<br />

Howard CD '58-63. Spanel fel '50-51, FICD, AAAS, ARPA, NYAS, ORCA. Transplantation of embryonic oral<br />

tissues under various conditions; transplantation of human neoplasms; induction of the cancer process in in vivo<br />

transplants and in situ salivary glands.<br />

FLIEDER, Donald E. PATHOLOGY. b Waterloo Ia 18 Jul 1924; d 19 Jan 1970. BA Ia St Tchrs Coll '47;<br />

DDS '52, MS '54 SU Ia. Prof oral path St Louis SD '56-66, prof oral path Ky CD '66-70. Prac ft '56-70. USNAF<br />

'43-45. AChemS, AAAS, AAUP, AAOP. Salivary glands; periodontal disease.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 231


FÖLDI, Alexis. EFFECTS OF TUBERCULOSIS ON ORAL TISSUES. b Kassa Hungary 4 Apr 1895; d<br />

Portland Ore 31 Aug 1940. DM U Budapest. Asst dent dept Policlin U Budapest, attend dent surg TB Hosp<br />

Budapest.<br />

FOSDICK, L(eonard) S. BIOCHEMISTRY. b Chagrin Falls O 7 Nov 1903; d Tucson Ariz 31 Jan 1969. BS<br />

Fla SU '27; MS '29, PhD '31 NWU. Asst '27-29, instr '27-32, assoc prof '32-35, prof chem '36-69 NWU.<br />

AChemS, ASBC, ACDS. <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '51-52). Dental caries; periodontal disease; local anesthetics;<br />

vasopressors.<br />

FREEMAN, Charles W(est). ORAL SURGERY; DENTAL EDUCATION. b Sharon Vt 18 Jan 1892; d<br />

Chicago 26 Jun 1960. DDS '12, MS '25 NWU. Instr to prof oral surg & dean NWU DS. Prac pt '13-45. Lt Col<br />

USA DC. FACD, ADA, ADSE, Chicago Inst Med, AADE, OKU.<br />

FREY, B. J(ohn). HISTOLOGY; PATHOLOGY. b Chicago 31 May 1909; d 27 Dec 1969. BS '34, DDS '36 U<br />

Ill. Intern & stf Eastman Dent Disp '36-39, Carnegie fel U Rochester '37-39, dent extern dept pediatrics &<br />

orthopedics Ill Res & Educ Hosp '39-43. Prac pt '39-43, ft beginning '46. Lt to Maj USA DC '43-46. ADA,<br />

Southeast Dent Assoc. Vitamin B and experimental cretinisms; fluorine.<br />

FRIEL, G(eoffrey). PATHOLOGY; BACTERIOLOGY. b Ireland 1880; d Johannesburg 1956. BA Trinity<br />

Coll Dublin '01, LDS RCS Ireland '01. Lect pt fac dent U Witwatersrand beginning '26. Prac ft '02-53. LLD<br />

(hon) U Witwatersrand '53. Johannesburg Dent Soc (pres, secy).<br />

FRIESELL, F(rederick) C(harles). HISTOLOGY; BACTERIOLOGY. b Murrysville Pa 1867; d Pittsburgh 2<br />

Sep 1955. DDS U Pittsburgh '98. Prof histol & bact '04-46, emer '46-55 U Pittsburgh. FACD, FAAAS. Brother<br />

of H. Edmund Friesell.<br />

FRIESELL, H. Edmund. PATHOLOGY. b Pittsburgh Pa 10 Nov 1873; d Murrysville Pa 27 Oct 1946. DDS<br />

Pa CDS '95, BS U Pittsburgh '11. Prof op dent & dean Pittsburgh SD beginning '03, prof op dent & dent path<br />

WRU '06-17. LLD (hon) Marquette '19, DSc (hon) U Pittsburgh '30. Asst ed J Dent Res. NBDE (mem Comm<br />

on Survey of Dent Curriculum), Nat Assoc Dent Fac (pres), Dent Counc Pa (pres), Am Inst Dent Tchrs (pres),<br />

Pa SDS (pres), Ohio SDS (hon), RI SDS (hon), NDA (pres '20-21), AADS (pres), 7th Int Dent Cong (1st vp),<br />

FACD (pres), FAADS, Ill SDS, CDS, Odont Soc W Pa, AMA, FDI, OKU. Brother of F. C. Friesell.<br />

GAUNT, W(alter) A(lwyn). DENTAL EMBRYOLOGY; HISTOLOGY. b Dumfries Scotland 8 May 1918; d<br />

1969. BSc London '50, MSc Manchester '54, PhD London '62. Mem external sci stf Med Br Counc London<br />

beginning '56; Lt RNVR Spec Br HM Submarine Serv '39-46; hon sr lect in spec anat Guy's Hosp Med Sch.<br />

Co-auth Advances in Dental Histology '67. RMS (fel). Embryology of mammalian dentitions; growth studies of<br />

teeth and jaws.<br />

GIBBONS, Paul. PROSTHODONTICS. b Merced Calif; d Ann Arbor Mich 1965. BS, DDS U Mich; MS U<br />

Mich '49. Teaching fel U Mich '48; asst prof Med Coll Va '49-50; asst prof & chmn dept prosth dent St Louis U<br />

SD '50-52; asst prof '52, prof '60 U Mich; consult VA; adv Ferris Inst. USA '42-44. Mich SDS, vp & pres<br />

Washtenaw DS, Am Dent Soc, Am Cleft Palate Assoc, Am Prosthod Soc, assoc fel Dent Prosth, OKU.<br />

Problems incident to cleft palate; resilient liners for dentures; dental needs of the indigent.<br />

GIES, William J(ohn). b Reisterstown Md 21 Feb 1872; d Lancaster Pa 20 May '56. BS '93, MS '96, ScD '04,<br />

LLD (hon) '24 Gettysburg Coll; PhB '94, PhD '97 Yale. Asst zool & physiol '94-98 Yale; instr physiol chem<br />

'98-02, adj prof '02-05, prof '05-07, prof biochem '07-37, emer '37-56 Columbia P&S; physiol chem NY Coll<br />

Pharm '04-21, Teachers Coll '09-28; consult chem NY Botan Garden '02-21; chmn study dent educ Carnegie<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 232


Found '21-31; path chem Bellevue Hosp '10-21; Presbyterian Hosp '21-41; chmn dent adv bd NY Dept Health<br />

'26-35; mem exec cmt Guggenheim Dent Clin '29-43. LLD (hon) Baylor '24; ScD (hon) Temple '38, Maryland<br />

'40. Awd merit RI SDS '27; Callahan med '28; William J Gies Fellowship founded at Columbia by students &<br />

colleagues; Wm J Gies res awd & grants-in-aid established by ACD '37; disting serv awd Gettysburg '38.<br />

Founder & first editor, J Dent Res. FAAAS, SBC (sec & ed Proceedings '06-10), Soc Physiol Chem (pres '99-<br />

02), ACS, Physiol Soc, Soc Pharmacol, SEB (sec & ed Proceedings '03-09, vp '09-12, pres '19-21), FACD (asst<br />

sec '33-43, ed bd Journal '34-45); FAAPer; Philos Soc; Harvey Soc; NYAD (vp '21). A founder of <strong>IADR</strong> (hon<br />

pres '22-28, sec '28-39, pres '39-40). Influence of dietary conditions on physiological resistance; blood, lymph,<br />

and saliva in relation to caries; nutrition and dentition.<br />

GILCHRIST, Raleigh. INORGANIC CHEMISTRY. b Windsor Vt 8 Jan 1893; d 25 Oct 1966. AB Montana<br />

'15, PhD Johns Hopkins '22. Asst chem Cornell '15-17; chem NBS beginning '19 (& until retirement); chief<br />

platinum metals & pure substances section NBS from '48. Lect Geo Washington U '27-28, '29-34; educ course<br />

NBS '28-29, '31-32. USA '17-19. Hillebrand prize Chem Soc Wash '38. US deleg Internat Cong Pure & Applied<br />

Chem and Conf Internat Union Chem Madrid '34. AChemS (secy '25-27 Wash sec, pres '29), AAAS, Philos Soc<br />

Wash. Inorganic and analytical chemistry of the platinum metals and gold; development of methods for<br />

analyzing dental gold alloys; assay of gold-filled materials; atomic weight of osmium.<br />

GILLETT, Henry W(ebster). b New Hampshire 16 Jun 1861; d Connecticut 12 Mar 1943. DMD Harvard DS<br />

'85. Instr op dent Harvard '91-96, an organizer & prof op dent Columbia D&OS. Prac ft gen '85-00. Jarvie med.<br />

NYAD (a founder & 1st pres), 1st Dist DS NY (pres).<br />

GOODALE, W(illiam) G(eorge). PEDODONTICS; PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b Farley Ia 14 Nov 1919;<br />

d Iowa City 4 Jul 1964. DDS '51, MS '53 SU Ia Instr '52-55, asst prof '55-57, asst prof & act head '57, assoc<br />

prof '58-60, assoc prof & head '60-64 Iowa CD. Prac ft gen '52-53, pt later. ADA, APHA, ASDC, OKU. Caries,<br />

diet, ultrasonic cavitation; sterilization.<br />

GORE, Jehu Thomas. PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b Philadelphia 8 Jan 1879; d Upper Darby Pa 9 Dec<br />

1955. DDS U Pa '02. Instr '02-10, res assoc '43-55 U Pa. Prac ft gen '02-55. ADA, Pa SDS, Phila Co DS, OKU.<br />

Etiology and prevention of dental caries.<br />

GOTTLICH, Samuel F. Place and date of birth not known; d 1947. DDS. Secy Assoc Dutch Dental Surgeons.<br />

GOTTLIEB, Bernhard. PATHOLOGY. b Kuty Poland 14 Jul 1885; d Dallas Tex 16 Mar 1950. MD U<br />

Vienna '11. Asst prof & head dept histol res U Vienna '11-38, vis prof U Mich '40-41, prof & head dept oral<br />

path & dent res Baylor '41-50. LLD (hon) Loyola, DMD (hon) Bonn. Auth Dental Caries '47. FAAPath,<br />

FAAPer, FRCS, AAOP, ADA, BDA, AAEndod, ICD, RSM, Tex SDS.<br />

GRAHAM, W(illiam) C. b 1875; d Davenport O 5 Jan 1946. DDS U Pa '96. Lect oral hygiene & spec subjects<br />

'13-14, instr dent med & oral hygiene '14-17, asst prof dent med '17-29, prof oral hygiene & prev dent '29-39,<br />

prof emer '39 Ohio CD.<br />

GREEN, Gordon E. BACTERIOLOGY; IMMUNOLOGY. b Pullman Wash 22 Sep 1924; d Philadelphia 14<br />

Mar 1967. BS U Md '49; MS '52, PhD '53 Ohio SU. Grad asst '52, res fel '52-53, instr '53-58, res assoc '53-58,<br />

fel '54-57, instr '56-60, asst prof bact '58-60, Ohio CD; res dir div dent & USPHS sr res fel Henry Ford Hosp<br />

'60-66; Temple U SD '66-67. AAAS, ASM, SEBM. Oral bacteriology; caries immunity; anticaries agents;<br />

clinical studies related to dental caries; biochemistry of saliva; bacteriology of dental calculus.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 233


GRIEVES, Clarence J(ones). NUTRITION; FOCAL INFECTION; DENTAL MATERIALS. b Wilmington<br />

Del 23 Oct 1868; d Baltimore 4 Nov 1927. DDS U Md '88. Asst demonstr op dent '88, asst prof C&B '92 U Md;<br />

prof comp anat & histol Baltimore CDS '06-17; chief stf dent clin Johns Hopkins Hosp '13-25. Lt USNR '17-18.<br />

AM (hon) U Mich '21. Jenkins med '22, Callahan med, Jarvie med. Clarence Jones Grieves Library Fdn est Md<br />

SDS '25. FACD (charter mem), Md SDS, ASO (hon), NDS.<br />

GROVE, Carl J. PERIODONTICS. b Milleville Minn 1873; d St Paul 4 Jul 1942. DDS CCDS '98. Ed<br />

Nutrition & Dental Health. <strong>IADR</strong> (a founder of Minn sec). Caries; ammonia content of saliva.<br />

GRUBER, Rolf G(ordon). DENTAL MATERIALS. b Chicago 1 Apr 1930; d 17 Feb 1969. DDS Loyola CDS<br />

'54, MS NWU '64. Dir intern trng USPHS '60-62; asst prof '64-66, assoc prof dent mat beginning '66, asst dean<br />

beginning '67 Loyola CDS. Prac ft '56-60. Capt USAF DC '54-56. ADA, Odont Soc & Clin Soc of USPHS.<br />

Silver-tin amalgams; physical properties of tissue conditioners; fungus growth on tissue conditioners.<br />

GRUEBBEL, Allen O. PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b Concordia Mo 21 May 1899; d Kansas City Mo 21 Jul<br />

1963. DDS Kansas City West Dent Coll '23, MPH Johns Hopkins Sch Pub Health '38. Lect Kansas City U SD<br />

'40-44, lect Wash U SD '40-44, lect Loyola U beginning '47. Prac ft gen '23-37. Student Army Trng Corps '18.<br />

Dir dent div Mo State Health Dept '38-44, exec secy Counc Dent Health ADA beginning '44. ADA, OKU,<br />

ACD, American Public Health Assoc. Public health methods; control of dental caries.<br />

HABERMAN, Sol. MICROBIOLOGY. b Chicago 15 Jan 1914; d Dallas 17 Apr 1968. BA '36, MA '37 U Tex;<br />

PhD Ohio SU '41. Instr Baylor Med Sch '41-43; dir microbiol Baylor Med Cent '41; prof & chmn dept<br />

microbiol '45, dir grad stud Baylor CD; assoc prof Southwest Med Sch '43-53; asst dir Wadley Res Inst '52-56.<br />

Merit awd Tex Soc Path '46. FACD, FAAAS, AAI, AAM, ASHG, ASM ISH (secy-gen '46-58, ed cong proc<br />

'48-52, pres immunol sec Paris cong '54), OKU. Bacillary dysentery; fungus infections in man; serological<br />

differentiation of Drosophila; effects of X-rays on bacteria; Rh and ABO blood groups; oral infections;<br />

chemistry of antibodies; antibiotics and sensitivity tests; periodontal infections by filamentous microorganisms.<br />

HACKH, Ingo W. D. DENTAL LITERATURE; CHEMISTRY. b Stuttgart Germany 25 Mar 1890; d San<br />

Francisco 19 Oct 1938. PhC Braunschweig '08; AB '17, AM '33 U Calif. Prof chem San Francisco DS P&S '18-<br />

38. FAIC, FRSArt (London), FAAAS, AChemS, AADE, Med Lib Assoc. <strong>IADR</strong> (secy San Francisco sec).<br />

HARRISON, R(oland) W(endell). MICROBIOLOGY. b Waxahatchie Tex 10 Sep 1897; d Foley Ala 8 Feb<br />

1964. BA SMU '21; MS '25, PhD '30 U Chicago. Instr '21-25, asst prof '25-28 SMU; instr Wash U '30-37; asst<br />

prof '37-41, assoc prof '41-43, assoc dean biol sci '41-43, prof '43-63 U Chicago & Zoller Dent Clin; dean biol<br />

sci '43-47, vp & dean fac '47-63, act chancellor '60-61 U Chicago. Mem NIDR adv counc. DSc (hon) SMU '48.<br />

Assoc ed J Infectious Diseases '37. AAAS, AAI, ASM, SEBM. <strong>IADR</strong> (pres Chicago sec '42-43). Bacteriologic<br />

and virologic studies on trachoma; tissue culture of trachoma and St. Louis encephalitis viruses; bacterial<br />

variation; biochemical and immunological studies of lactobacilli; bacteriology of the mouth.<br />

HARVEY, Oliver D. b West Mansfield O 1914; d Decatur Ga 15 Jan 1969. BS Bowling Green SU, DDS Ohio<br />

SU '49. Lt & sr asst dent surg USPHS, fac '53-69, prof & chmn dept op dent Emory U SD. ACD, ADA, GaDA,<br />

North Dist Dent Soc, OKU.<br />

HATTON, Edward H(oward). ORAL PATHOLOGY. b LaRose Ill 2 Apr 1876; d 15 Aug 1959. BL U<br />

Chicago, MD Rush MC '12. Tchr public & private schools Minn '99-09; asst dir Dept Health La Salle-Peru<br />

Oglesby Ill '14-16; res oral path NWU DS '16-22; prof path & bact '22-42, emer '42-59 NWU; instr path Rush<br />

MC '17-22. Callahan med '41. Inst Med Chicago, Chicago Path Soc (pres '33). <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '33-34, secy treas<br />

'38-58). Oral focal infection; pulpless teeth and dental caries.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 234


HELLMAN, Milo. DENTAL ANATOMY; ORTHODONTICS; OCCLUSION. b Jassy Rumania 26 Mar 1872;<br />

d Far Rockaway NY 11 May 1947. DDS U Pa '05. Lect orthod U Pa SD '24-26; prof comp dent anat '27-28,<br />

prof orthod '28-29 NYU CD; prof dent Columbia D&OS '32-47; res assoc phys anthro NY Museum Nat Hist<br />

'17-47. ScD (hon) U Pa '33, U Witwatersrand '38. Albert H. Ketchum Memorial awd WRU '39. FNYAS (vp '32,<br />

'33), FAAAS, FACD, FNYAD, ADA (life), NYAM (assoc fel), AAO (vp '41). <strong>IADR</strong> (pres NY sec '33).<br />

HEMLEY, Samuel. ORTHODONTICS. b NYC 8 Feb 1898; d 30 Aug 1970. DDS Columbia D&OS '18. Asst<br />

oral surg Vanderbilt Clin Columbia U '19-25, Long Island Coll Hosp '24-26; instr orthod '29-33, asst prof to<br />

chmn orthod '34-37, prof & chmn orthod '47-66, prof emer '66-70 NYU, Prac orthod '19-67. Auth Orthodontics;<br />

Fundamentals of Occlusion '44, Orthodontic Theory & Practice '53. Clinic of orthod named after Dr. Hemley in<br />

'67. FACD, FAAAS, OKU (pres '41-45), all orthod and dent societies.<br />

HERMEL, Joseph. ROENTGENOLOGY. b Risce Hungary 1910; d Jerusalem 17 Jul 1970. Stud med German<br />

U at Prague '34-39; émigré to Palestine during war. MD '50, spec in dent '50-52 Prague. Returned to Israel, est<br />

priv prac & joined stf Jerusalem SDM '54; head roentgenol in dept oral med, oral diag from '60, sr lect oral<br />

roentgenol '67, assoc prof '70. Adv to Ministry of Health on radiation hazards and protection in dental offices.<br />

Auth many publications on oral radiol & oral med.<br />

HINIKER, J(erome) J. PERIODONTOLOGY. b Hastings Minn 12 Feb 1912; d 24 Aug 1969. DDS Minn SD<br />

'34. Intern USPHS '34-35, chief dent serv VA Reg Off Washington DC '46-48, chief prof serv VA Central Off<br />

Washington DC '48-52, chief dent serv VA Hosp Ann Arbor Mich '53-63, asst chief med dir for dent VA<br />

Central Off beginning '63. Prac ft '36-38. Col USA DC '38-46; Col USAF DC '46. ASOS (hon mem) '66. Assoc<br />

Mil Surg, FACD, FICD, AAPer, OKU, FDI. Effects of scaling; curettage and gingivectomy by ultrasonic<br />

instrumentation; effects of traumatic occlusion in rhesus monkeys.<br />

HIRSCHFELD, Isador. PERIODONTOLOGY. b Riga Latvia 13 Jun 1881; d NYC 5 Feb 1965. DDS NYU<br />

'02. Instr dent '12-24, spec lect '24-27, assoc prof & head dept perio '28-48, clin prof & head dept perio '48-56<br />

Columbia D&OS; found & chief perio clin NY Throat & Lung Hosp '15-25, Beth Israel Hosp '24-34, vis perio<br />

Bellevue Hosp '26-28, chief perio NY Hosp Joint Diseases '27-34, attend dent surg Presbyterian Hosp '29-37.<br />

Prac ft gen '02-25, ft perio beginning '25. Leadership awd perio Tufts U '56. FACD, FICD, AAPer (pres '41),<br />

ADA, FDI, NYAM (assoc fel), NYAS, Interdental (Hirschfeld) canals; retrocuspid and retroincisal papillae;<br />

food impaction; skulls in relation to periodontal disease; dental erosion and abrasion; eradication of gingival<br />

pigmentation.<br />

HOFFMAN, Murray M(itchell). GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT; PHARMACOLOGY. b NYC 20 Jan<br />

1910; d Chicago 25 Apr 1966. BS NYU '32; DDS '37, MS '39 U Ill. Res asst '35-37, instr histopath '37-41 U Ill;<br />

resid maxillofac & plast surg Presbyterian Hosp '42-43; chief oral surg Northwest Hosp Chicago '55-66. Prac<br />

oral surg pt '37-41, ft beginning '46. Lt to Maj USA DC '41-46. Sigma Xi res awd '37, lect maxillofac surg<br />

Camp Callan Calif '43. ADA, AMWA, ASOS, FAS, Ill Acad Sci, NYAS, OKU. Rates and rhythm of growth of<br />

enamel, dentin, cementum, alveolar bone; vital staining; vitamin A deficiency; poliomyelitis; pharmacology of<br />

pain, edema trismus, physiology and biochemistry of calcification; aldehydes in allergy.<br />

HOLST, Grethe (née Andersen). ORAL MEDICINE; ORAL SURGERY. b Odense Denmark 15 Jan 1909; d<br />

25 Jun 1970. DDS Royal DC Copenhagen '35. Instr op dent Royal DC '36-39, house dent surg Queen Louise<br />

Hosp for Children '46-70. Prac ft. Danish Soc Oral Surg (vp, bd mem), Swedish DA, Danish Assoc<br />

Hospemployed Dent Surg (bd mem), Finnish Soc Odont, FDI (supp mem), Scandinavian Dent Assoc, Danish<br />

Ped Soc. <strong>IADR</strong> (Scandinavian Div counc). Oral medicine; general anesthesia; treatment of handicapped<br />

children. Wife of J. J. Holst.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 235


HOOTON, Ernest Albert. ANTHROPOLOGY. b Clemansville Wis 20 Nov 1887; d Cambridge Mass 3 May<br />

1954. AB Lawrence Coll '07; AM '08, PhD '11 U Wis; Rhodes schol '10-13, BLit '13 Oxford. Instr '13, asst prof<br />

'21, assoc prof '27, prof '30-54 Harvard; curator stomat Peabody Museum '13-54. ScD (hon) Lawrence Coll '33.<br />

Div anthro & psychol NRC '22-25, '35, Nat Acad Anthro, AAAS (secy H '20-22, vp '23), ASN, AAA, AAPA<br />

(pres '36).<br />

HOWE, Percy R(ogers). NUTRITION. b Providence RI 30 Sep 1864; d Boston 28 Feb 1950. AB '87 Bates<br />

Coll, DDS Phila DC '90. Chief res lab '15, dir beginning '27 Forsyth Dent Infirm; asst prof dent res '16, instr<br />

path & Forsyth prof dent sci Harvard. ScD (hon) Bates Coll '27, LLD (hon) Harvard '41. ADA Awd of Merit &<br />

Achievement, Jarvie med '26, Callahan awd '26, Jenkins med '27, RI SDS med '29. ADA (pres '29-30),<br />

AAArtSci, OKU. Caries; originated silver reduction treatment for infected dentin and septic roots; showed<br />

odontoblasts to be the most sensitive cells in detecting vitamin C deficiency.<br />

HRDLICKA, Aleš. ANTHROPOLOGY. b Humpolec Bohemia 29 Mar 1869; d 5 Sep 1943. MD NY Eclectic<br />

Coll '92, NY Homœ Coll '94. Asst curator div phys anthro '03-10, curator '10-43 US Nat Museum. Secy comm<br />

on anthro NRC '17-18. ScD (hon) U Prague '20, U Brno '29. Assoc ed Am Naturalist '01-08; ed & found Am J<br />

Phys Anthro '18-43. FAAArtSci, AAAS (life), AAA, AAnthroA (pres '25-26), NAS, AmPhilosS, Wash Acad<br />

Sci (pres '28-29), AAPA (pres '28-32, found, life mem).<br />

HUTCHINSON, Robert G., Jr. PERIODONTICS. b 1866; d 1945. DDS NY CD '99. FACD, AAPerio,<br />

Brooklyn DS, NDA, NY Inst Stomat, NY SDS, Odont Soc NY.<br />

HYATT, Thaddeus P. PUBLIC HEALTH. b 1865; d 1953. DDS NYU SD '89. Prof prev dent NYU SD, dent<br />

dir Metropolitan Life Insurance Co '15-36, asst dent div NYC Health Dept '28. NYU alumni med, Jarvie med<br />

'34. ADA, ASDC (a founder). Originator of the concept and practice of prophylactic odontotomy.<br />

INSKIPP, E(rnest) Frank. ENDODONTICS. b Bromley England 22 Sep 1903; d San Francisco 15 Jul 1953.<br />

BS '30, DDS '31 San Francisco P&S. Clin instr op dent '31, asst clin prof '36, prof '51, dean '52 San Francisco<br />

P&S. Prac pt. AAAS, AADEd (pres '48), AAE, ACD, ADA, Calif SDA, FDI, SF DS (pres '38), OKU.<br />

ISAACS, Aaron. DENTAL MATERIALS. b Sacramento Calif 1891; d Milford Del 1937. BS U Calif '13. Asst<br />

chem to assoc sci NBS '13-34; res chem L D Caulk Co '34-37.<br />

JACKSON, Holmes C(ondict). DENTAL EDUCATION; CHEMISTRY. b NYC 18 Feb 1875; d NYC 25 Oct<br />

1927. BS '96, PhD '99 Yale. Instr physiol chem '01, asst prof '03-05 NYU-Bellevue Hosp MC; prof exptl<br />

physiol & physiol chem Albany MC '05-09; prof physiol NYU '09-27. Auth A Manual of Physiological<br />

Chemistry. AAAS, APhysiolS, ASBC, ASPB, SEBM (found, pres '23-25), FNYAD, mem adv bd NY Dept<br />

Health.<br />

JACKSON, Victor H. ORTHODONTIA. b Arcade NY 1850; d 26 Jan 1929. DDS MD U Mich. Lect Forsyth<br />

Dent Infirm, prof emer Buffalo U, clin prof NYU CD. Prac NYC beginning '79. Author of books on orthodontia<br />

and orthopedia of face; inventor of appliances including Jackson crib.<br />

JARVIE, William. b Manchester England 14 Jul 1841; d Montclair NJ 16 Nov 1921. MDS NY Bd Regents<br />

'73. Prac ft gen '72-06. Mem NY St Bd Dent Exam, pres sec op dent Internat Dent Cong Chicago '93, trustee<br />

NY Coll D&OS. Organizer Brooklyn DS, 2nd Dist DS NY, Odont Soc NY (past pres); AAADSci (assoc fel),<br />

Odont Soc GB.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 236


JOHNSON, Charles Nelson. DENTAL EDUCATION; JOURNALISM. b Brock Township Ont Canada 16<br />

Mar 1860; d Chicago 17 Jul 1938. LDS RCDS Toronto '81, DDS CCDS '85. Tchr anat to prof & chmn dept op<br />

dent & dean stud CCDS (Loyola) '91-38. Presenter gold foil clin. Jarvie med '15 NY SDS; Jenkins med '26<br />

Conn SDS; bronze bust of himself CCDS Alum '25, Okla SDS '29, Canadian friends '30; Callahan awd Ohio<br />

SDS '36. Hon off two Internat Dent Congs; hon mem Soc d'Odont de Paris, La Federación Odont Venezuela,<br />

Ontario DA. Ed The Bur, Dent Review ('93-94, '02-19). Dent Cosmos & JADA ('25-38); contrib ed Oral Health;<br />

auth Filling Teeth '00, Success in Practice '03, Operative Dentistry '08; also numerous essays, discussions,<br />

fiction, and verse. Alum Assoc CCDS (past pres), Chicago Odontolog Soc, Chicago Odontograph Soc, Chicago<br />

DS, Ill SDS, ADA, ACD, AADEd, FACD, AADS, OKU. Dental profession's most prolific writer; eulogized as<br />

recipient of every honor awarded by organized dentistry and the "immortal patriarch of the profession."<br />

JOHNSON, Norman P(reston). PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b Chicago 27 May 1907; d Dixon Ill 17 Dec<br />

1965. DDS U Ill '32. Chief dent serv Dixon St Sch '47-65. ADA, IDA. Dental conditions found in the different<br />

classifications of mental retardation.<br />

JOHNSON, Percy Leroy. DENTAL HISTOLOGY. b Bangor Me 15 Feb 1901; d White Plains NY 23 Oct<br />

1958. BS U Maine '23, MS U Syracuse '25, PhD Johns Hopkins '29. Adam T Bruce fel '27-29, res asst Johns<br />

Hopkins '29-30; prof biol Mo Valley Coll '30-42, Mo State Food Sanitarian '42-43, assoc prof histol NYU '47-<br />

58, AAA, ASZ, NY Acad. Histochemistry of teeth.<br />

KALETSKY, Theodore. b 1897; d NYC 21 May 1952. Mem NY Counc on Dent Therap, NY St Bd Dent<br />

Exam, ACD, NYAD, ICD, 1st Dist DS NY (atomic energy res prog), ADA (Counc Dent Res).<br />

KANTHAK, Frank. PLASTIC SURGERY. b Chicago 9 Jan 1910; d Atlanta Ga 5 Dec 1969. DDS NWU '32,<br />

MD Yale '36. Intern & resid U Chicago '36-38, asst prof U Ill & Cook Co Hosp '38-41, consult plastic surg<br />

Atlanta VA hosp, lect plastic & maxillofacial surg Emory U. Lt Col USA MC '41-46. AAPS, ACS (fel), AMA,<br />

ASPRS.<br />

KAZANJIAN, V(araztad) H(ovannes). PLASTIC AND RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY. b Yerzinga<br />

Turkish Armenia 18 Mar 1879; d Boston 1969. DMD '05, MD '21 Harvard. Prof mil oral surg '18-22, prof clin<br />

oral surg '22-41, prof plastic surg '41-47, emer '47 Harvard. Prac ft plastic & reconstructive surg. Spec surg Brit<br />

Expeditionary Forces '15-19. ScD (hon) Bowdoin Coll '52. Invested Companion St Michael & St George, King<br />

George V '19. Awd & scroll RI DS '32, Fones med Conn SDS '43, spec hon cit ASP&RS '51, ASOS awd '54, cit<br />

Emerson Coll '54, spec hon awd ASMS '56, Wood med Boston City Hosp '56, pres cit NYU '62. Auth The<br />

Surgical Treatment of Facial Injuries 2nd ed '59. FAAOO, FACD, AAPS, ABPS (dipl), ASMS, ASP&RS,<br />

Boston Surg Soc, Int Soc Plastic Surg. Plastic and reconstructive surgery with special reference to deformities<br />

of the face and jaws.<br />

KEILTY, Robert A. PATHOLOGY. b 1886; d Washington DC Jul 1954. MD U Pa '07. Intern Phila Gen Hosp<br />

'08-09, instr path U Pa '11-18, consult path US VA '27-46. Prac pt. USA MC Maj '18-19. Phila Path Soc, Am<br />

Soc Clin Path, AMA. Bacteriology and pathology of gingivitis.<br />

KELSEY, H(arry) E(stes). ORTHODONTICS. b 1873; d Baltimore 1 Mar 1946. DDS Baltimore CDS '96,<br />

grad Angle Sch Orthod '08. Tchr Baltimore CDS, stf Johns Hopkins Hosp beginning '13. ADA (mem res<br />

counc), ABO, FACD, Southern Soc Orthod (pres), NY Soc Orthod (pres), AAO (pres).<br />

KEMPLE, Frederick C. ORTHODONTICS. b Ohio 31 Jan 1871; d 1938. DDS U Pa '95. Prac ft gen &<br />

orthod. <strong>IADR</strong> (an organizer & mem cmt on Wm J Gies Endowment Fund for J Dent Res).<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 237


KIRSCHBAUM, Arthur. ANATOMY. b NYC 15 Oct 1910; d Houston 28 May 1958. BS NYU '31; MA '33,<br />

PhD (anat) '36, MB & MD '43 U Minn. Tchg asst zool '31-34, tchg fel anat '34-37 U Minn; Coxe fel '37-38,<br />

instr '38-39 Finney-Howell Res Fdn fel '39-40, instr anat '40-41 Yale Sch Med; asst prof '42-45, assoc prof '45-<br />

51 Med Sch U Minn; prof & head dept Ill Coll Med '51-54; prof & chmn Baylor CD '54-58. Consult MD<br />

Anderson Hosp for Cancer Res; spec consult USPHS. AAA, Assoc Cancer Res (adv ed Cancer Research '49),<br />

SEBM, Soc Exptl Path. Experimental mouse leukemia; chicken leukemia; physiology of reproduction;<br />

experimental glomerulonephritis; alloxan diabetes; experimental neoplasms of the mammary gland, adrenal<br />

cortex, and ovary of inbred mice.<br />

KLAFFENBACH, Arthur O(tto). CROWN AND BRIDGE; PREVENTION. b Muscatine Ia 7 Jan 1880; d<br />

Iowa City 9 Dec 1963. DDS Iowa SU CD '07, postgrad stud NWU '17 & U Toronto '25. Demonstr '22-23, prof<br />

crown & bridge prosth beginning '24 Iowa SU. Prac gen '07-25. Am Acad Rest Dent, Am Acad Plastic Res,<br />

ADA. <strong>IADR</strong> (sec secy '30-48). Gold alloys; dental porcelains; gold alloy casting; acrylic resins; close bite<br />

cases; gnathodynamics.<br />

KLATSKY, Meyer. PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b Russia 7 Oct 1888; d 12 May 1969. DDS NY CD '15.<br />

Auth The Human Masticatory Apparatus; An Introduction to Dental Anthropology '53. ADA, AAPA, FAAS.<br />

Normal and pathological dental conditions; contributions of anthropology and genetics to dental science.<br />

KÖMÜVES, Oszkár. ENDODONTICS. b 1896; d 1944; places of birth and death not known. MD Budapest<br />

'21. Auth monograph on path & therap of infected teeth (published in Hungarian). Engaged in studies of pulp<br />

gangrene and apical granulomas; devised first usable method for quantitative assessment of caries prevalence<br />

suitable for statistical evaluation.<br />

KÖSZEG, Ferenc. b 1901; d 1944; places of birth and death not known. MD U Budapest. Res assoc dent dept<br />

Apponyi Polyclinic. Influence of diet on prevalence and incidence of caries; enamel dissolution in different<br />

acids.<br />

KRAMER, Leon R. PUBLIC HEALTH. b Clay Center Kan 18 Sep 1894; d Topeka Kan 21 May 1950. DDS<br />

Kansas City Western DC '18, MS Columbia '40. Fac Kansas City Western DC & U Kansas Med Sch, head dent<br />

div Kansas St Bd of Health '36-50. Prac ft gen '19-36. ADA, Shawnee Co DS, 1st Dist DS Kans, Kans SDA.<br />

KRAUS, Bertram S(hirley). PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY. b Cleveland 3 May 1913; d 4 Feb 1970. AB<br />

WRU '34, MA '46, PhD U Chicago. Asst prof '47-53, assoc prof anthro '53-57 U Ariz; prof phys anthro U Wash<br />

'57-63; prof anat & dir cleft palate res SDM beginning '63 & prof phys anthro U Pittsburgh. Lt (sg) USNR '43-<br />

51. Milo Hellman res awd '58, Chicago Dent Soc essay awd '62. Disting schol Queens U (Belfast DS) '62, '66;<br />

6th annual Margolis lect Tufts DM '64; lect Univ London '66. AACPR, AAnthropA (fel), AAPA, ASHG,<br />

FAAAS, NAS, ISCB (pres '63-65), TS, SSHB. <strong>IADR</strong> (pres Northwest sec '59-61). Auth The Basis of Human<br />

Evolution '64; The Human Dentition before Birth '65. Differential growth in fetal teeth and skeleton; dental<br />

genetics; craniofacial growth; race differences.<br />

KROGH, Harold W(alter). ORAL SURGERY; ANESTHESIA. b Necedah Wis 28 Nov 1899; d Washington<br />

DC 27 Nov 1966. DDS U Minn '21. Fel dent sec Mayo Clin '21-23; assoc surg Geo Wash U Med Sch '28-35,<br />

'44-66; chmn dent sec Episcopal Hosp beginning '38, Geo Wash Hosp '43, Emergency Hosp '46; chief dept dent<br />

Wash Hosp Cent '58-66. Prac ft oral surg '26-66. Wash Hosp Cent & Doctors Hosp Res Fdn (trustee). St George<br />

med Am Cancer Soc '61, Ridder af Dannebrog '56. FAAAS, ADA, ACD, Am Cancer Soc (pres Wash sec,<br />

trustee, exec cmt, vp), ASOS (lst chmn cancer cmt), Danish DA, Wash Acad Med OKU. <strong>IADR</strong> (chmn & secy<br />

Wash sec). Dry sockets; extraction of teeth in presence of acute infection; intravenous anesthesia; causes of<br />

tooth mortality.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 238


KRONFELD, Rudolf. HISTOLOGY; DENTAL ANATOMY. b Vienna Austria 10 Dec 1901; d Chicago 13<br />

Feb 1940. MD U Vienna '26, DDS CCDS '33, BS Loyola '35. Asst Dent Inst U Vienna '26-29, dir res lab<br />

CCDS. Auth Histopathology of the Teeth & Their Surrounding Structures '33, Dental Histology & Comparative<br />

Anatomy '37. Chicago Med Soc, Ill Med Soc, AMA, Chicago Path Soc, AAAS, ADA, Ill SDS, Chicago DS,<br />

FDI, Odontograph Soc Chicago, FAAPer (pres '39-40). Charter mem Vienna sec <strong>IADR</strong>; <strong>IADR</strong> Chicago sec<br />

(secy '30-31, pres '31-32); <strong>IADR</strong> vp '37-38, '39; pres-elect '39-40.<br />

KRONFELD, Sidney M. b 1913; d NYC 5 Sep 1964. DDS NYU '35.<br />

LANDA, Joseph S. PROSTHETIC DENTISTRY; ORAL DIAGNOSIS. b Russia 2 Jan 1892; d NYC 3 Sept<br />

1970. DDS Imperial U '14, DDS NYU CD '25. Prof & chmn dept prosthod & cleft palate rehab NYU CD '25-<br />

29; Fulbright prof Tokyo M&DU '55-56; res sci Guggenheim Res Cent; attend prosthod Beth Israel Hosp;<br />

found Hadassah SD; chmn res & educ, chmn library cmt Hebrew U. Prac pt prosthod & oral diag. Lt Russian<br />

Army DC '14-17. DSc (hon) Trinity Coll Dublin '60. Lord-Chaim prize 1st Dist DS '53. Auth Practical Full<br />

Denture Prosthesis, Dynamics of Psychosomatic Dentistry, FACD, AADM, ABPros (dipl), ADA, ADS, AEqS<br />

(charter mem), APsychS, Greater NY Acad Prosthod (found), Israeli DA (hon), Kyoto Res Soc (hon), NYAS,<br />

RESA, Tokyo Res Soc (hon), OKU. Temporomandibular joint in relation to hearing organ.<br />

LANE, Charles. ORAL SURGERY; PROSTHETICS. b Goderich Ont Canada 28 Mar 1884; d Detroit 1938.<br />

DDS RCDS Toronto '06, CCDS '09. Head dept op dent '33, dean '34-38 U Detroit DS. FACD, AAAS, Mich<br />

SDS (past chancellor), ACDS (past regent), ADA (past vp), NSD Prosth (past pres).<br />

LASBY, William F. PROSTHETICS; DENTAL EDUCATION. b Castle Rock Minn 25 Oct 1876; d 12 Apr<br />

1953. BS Carleton Coll '00, DDS Minn SD '03. Asst oral anat '00-03, instr to prof & chmn prosth dent '08-27,<br />

supt clin '19-27, dir summer sessions '20-27, acting dean '27-29, dean '29-45, emer dean '45 Minn SD. Prac '03.<br />

Lt Col DRC '24-33. AADS (pres '33), AAAS, ADA, ACD fel (vp '35), Minn SDA, Minn Acad, OKU (pres '39).<br />

LAZANSKY, Joseph Peter. BACTERIOLOGY; ORAL SURGERY. b Lechvice Czechoslovakia 1 Apr 1899;<br />

d Birmingham Ala 27 Jul 1956. MD Prague '23, DDS State Inst Dent Med Prague '25, DMD Tufts '43, postgrad<br />

trng orthopedic surg Prague and oral surg Vienna, stud Guy's Hosp '40, Carnegie fel Rochester SM&D. Tchrprac<br />

oral surg U Prague. Asst prof to chmn dept oral surg Tufts '44-50; dir clin '50, assoc dean '54 Ala SD. Oral<br />

surg consult to VA. Serv abroad '46, '48, and '51 Unitarian Med & Dent tchg missions. ADA, AMA.<br />

Bacteremias following dental procedures; effectiveness of local anesthetics.<br />

LEIST, Moriz. Birthplace, dates of birth & death not known. MD. Jaw dept. 1st Surg Clin U Vienna. Elected to<br />

mem Vienna Sec '29.<br />

LISCHER, Benno E(dward). ORTHODONTICS. b Mascoutah Ill 27 Jun 1876; d St Louis 9 Oct 1959. DMD<br />

Wash U '00. Prof orthod '02-24, dean '33-45, emer '45 Wash U; prof orthod U Calif '30-33; lect U Mich '24-29.<br />

Pract pt orthod '00-30. 1st Int Orthod Cong (hon pres) '26. Trans Simon's Diagnosis of Dental Anomalies '26.<br />

ASO (pres '13), AADS (pres '43), AADEd (pres '44). Principles and methods of orthodontics.<br />

LITTLE, Arthur P. PROSTHODONTICS. b Appleton Wis 27 Mar 1889; d Richmond Va 1 Feb 1950. DDS U<br />

Minn '10. Conducted res Phila '27-32, prof prosth dent Med Coll Va beginning '32. Prac ft '27-32. FACD, ADA,<br />

OKU.<br />

LOGAN, William H(offman) G(ardiner). ORAL SURGERY. b Morrison Ill 14 Oct 1872; d Chicago 6 Apr<br />

1943. DDS CCDS '96, MD Chicago Coll Med & Surg '05, MS U Mich '30. Prof plastic & oral surg & dean<br />

CCDS '20-43. Lt Col USA DC & chief dent div Surg Gen Off '17-19. LLD (hon) Loyola '26, LLD (hon) Nat<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 239


Univ Ireland '40. Chmn Fdn for Dent Res CCDS. Gorgas Memorial Inst Tropical & Prev Med (secy '29-33, bd<br />

gov), 7th Int Dent Cong (pres) '26, FACS (bd gov), Nat Dent Assoc (pres '17-18), Ill SDS (pres '13-14),<br />

Chicago DS (pres '09-10), AMA, Ill St Med Soc, Chicago Med Soc, Am Assoc Oral & Plastic Surg, ABPS, FDI<br />

(vp '26-36, pres '36, '39), AADS, ADSE (hon), OKU.<br />

LOOS, Otto. ORAL PATHOLOGY. b Germany 16 Feb 1871; d Frankfurt Germany 1 Apr 1936. MD. Prof<br />

dent & dir Dent Inst U Frankfurt am Main '14-36. German DS (hon), FDI.<br />

LUCKHARDT, Arno B(enedict). PHYSIOLOGY. b Chicago 26 Aug 1885; d Chicago 6 Nov 1957. BS '06,<br />

fel '07-08, MS '08, PhD '11 U Chicago; MD Rush MC '12. Asst bact '08-09. physiol '09-11, assoc '11-12, instr<br />

'12-14, asst prof '14-19, assoc prof '19-23, prof 23-47, Beaumont disting serv prof, emer '47, admin cmt (act<br />

chmn '17-19, chmn '42-47) U Chicago; tchg fel Rockefeller Fdn Europe '24-54; consult Roerig Co, Chas Pfizer<br />

Co. Alternate adv counc child res Mooseheart Lab. ScD (hon) NWU '33, LLD (hon) Conception Coll '33. Alpha<br />

Omega med '37, Callahan med. AA, Physiol Soc (secy '30-32, pres '32-34), FAMA, ADA, Endocrine Soc, Fed<br />

Soc Exptl Biol (pres '34), FACD, Kaiserliche Akad der Naturforscher, Int Coll Anesthetists (fel). Gastric and<br />

pancreatic secretion; gastrointestinal motility, visceral sensory nervous system; ethylene anesthesia; physiology<br />

of the parathyroid glands; history of physiology and medicine.<br />

LYONS, Chalmers J. ORAL SURGERY. b Martinsburg O 30 Apr 1874; d Ann Arbor Mich 18 May 1935.<br />

DDS '98, DDSc '11 U Mich. Instr clin dent '07, lect '10, instr oral surg '13, prof '15-35 U Mich. Prac '98-07.<br />

Chalmers J. Lyons Academy of Oral Surgery founded '27. Auth Fractures & Dislocations of the Jaws '19, rev<br />

'26. Am Assoc Oral & Plastic Surg (past pres), Mich SDS (past pres).<br />

MacGREGOR, Alexander B(rittan). PATHOLOGY; PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b London 25 Jan 1909; d<br />

9 Jan 1965. MD Cambridge U '44; LDS Royal Dent Hosp '36; MB, BChir St Mary's Hosp London '33; LRCP &<br />

MCRCS '33. Dent consult St Bartholomew's Hosp London '38-53, Royal Dent Plastics Cent '46, Royal Dent<br />

Hosp London '46-53, dent consult Royal Navy '52-65, prof dent surg & dir dent studies Birmingham Sch Dent<br />

Surg '53-65. Prac pt gen '36-39, '46-53. FDS RCS '48. Squadron leader RAF DC '39-45. Mummery prize BDA,<br />

Colyer prize RSM, Storer-Bennett res prize, Saunder schol, Woodhouse schol, Tomes lect RCS '46, guest lect<br />

14th Australian Cong '56. BDA, FDI, Genl Dent Counc, RCS (fac '52-65), RSM (vp, secy odont '59-65).<br />

Lymphatic flow; aspects of dental caries; antibiotics; maxillofacial surgery; periodontal disease.<br />

MacKENZIE, John J. d Toronto Canada Aug 1922. Prof histol & comp dent anat Royal Coll Dent Surg '94-<br />

09, analyst Provinc Bd of Health '94-01, prof gen path & chmn dent res dept U Toronto '02-22.<br />

MAIN, (Lee) Roy. ORAL ROENTGENOLOGY. b Webster Groves Mo 6 Jan 1885; d St Louis 22 Jan 1966.<br />

DDS St Louis U '07. Prof roentgenol '33-61, dean '45-57 St Louis SD. LLD (hon), Baylor U '58. Prac ft gen '07-<br />

18, oral roentgenol '19-61. ADA, ADSE, Dent Soc Mex. Reflex complications of dental origin.<br />

MALLESON, Herbert C(ecil). STRUCTURE OF ENAMEL. b England 27 Feb 1881; d London 12 Nov 1935.<br />

LDS '03, Conjoint '06 Guy's Hosp London, LRCP MRCS. Obstetric resid to sr dent surg Guy's Hosp. Bd exam<br />

dent surg RCS. John Tomes prize RCS '27. Co-auth Practical Dental Histology & Bacteriology.<br />

MANLEY, Edgar B(ooth). ORAL PATHOLOGY. b St Annes on Sea England 18 Jul 1897; d Birmingham<br />

England 4 Apr 1959. LDS '20, MSc '44 Manchester; BDS Birmingham '42. FDS RCS '50. Lect dent histol &<br />

anat '30-37 Manchester; hon dent surg Cheshire Co Mental Hosp, lect prosth & dir mechanical dept Edinburgh<br />

Dent Hosp & Sch '37-39; surg rgstr Birmingham Dent Hosp '39-45; hon asst lect spec anat teeth '40-45, lect<br />

dent anat, histol & path '46-48, reader in dent path '49-59, hon consult '51-59 United Birmingham Hosps. Prac ft<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 240


'20-37. Howard Mummery prize '40-43, John Tomes prize '48-51. RSM (gen secy), RCS (mem Bd Fac Dent<br />

Surg '50-59), Zool Soc London (fel), BDA, Birmingham Med Inst (odont sec). Dental histology.<br />

MANSBACH, Erwin Elieser. b Karlsruhe Germany 30 Jun 1902; d Palestine 28 Mar 1948. DDS U Berlin '25.<br />

Clin asst in several German institutions '25-32; emigrated Palestine '33; chief dent clin Jewish Workers' Sick<br />

Fund '33-48. Israel DA. Author of many papers, lecturer. Caries, dental anatomy, physiology, conservative<br />

dentistry, prosthetics; social dentistry.<br />

MARGETIS, Peter M(ichael). DENTAL MATERIALS. b Anderson Ind 5 Apr 1916; d 17 Jun 1969. BA U<br />

Wis '39, DDS Marquette U '43, MS Georgetown U '56. Chief hosp dent serv Ft Riley Kan '52-53, guest worker<br />

dent mat res sec NBS '53-56, asst chief dept dent res WRAIR '56-57, chief dent res br USA Med R&D<br />

Command '57, guest lect applied sci WRAIR '56, mem Army Mat Adv cmt '58, consult dent mat & Asst Surg<br />

Gen '60. Off USA DC beginning '43. ADA. Properties of dental materials; agar duplicating compounds;<br />

amalgam; silicate and zinc phosphate cements.<br />

MARJERISON, Howard M(itchell). PROSTHODONTICS; DENTAL EDUCATION. b Lawrence Mass 19<br />

Nov 1895; d 4 Sep 1955. DMD Tufts '16. Intern Forsyth Dent Infirm '16-17; lect prev dent Harvard SDM; instr<br />

prosth dent '17, asst prof '23, assoc prof & chmn dept partial prosthod '29, act dean '33, dean '34-40, prof prosth<br />

dent '39-40 Tufts DS; prof dent & dean Ill CD '40-44; assoc dir Forsyth Dent Infirm '44-55. Prac pt gen '17-40.<br />

Chmn cmt dent NRC '48-55, trustee Forsyth Dent Infirm. ScD (hon) Tufts '42. AAAS, ADA, OKU.<br />

MARKUS, Moe B. ORTHODONTICS. b 8 Sep 1900; d Philadelphia 27 Jun 1951. AB, DDS U Pa '23. Instr to<br />

assoc prof orthod Temple SD '25-46, demonstr to lect anat mouth & jaws Temple MS '31-51, prof orthod Pa<br />

SDM '47-51. Lt USA DC. Eastern DS (secy '25), Pa SDS (asst secy), Phila Co DS (treas '32-34, secy '34).<br />

MARSHALL, John A(lbert). BIOCHEMISTRY; PATHOLOGY. b Chicago 30 Aug 1884; d San Francisco 7<br />

May 1941. BS '07, MS '14, DDS '16, PhD '17 U Calif; postgrad study U Berlin & Tech U Charlottenburg<br />

Germany '09-10. Prof biochem & dent path U Calif. Capt USA '17-19. Assoc ed J Dent Res; auth Diseases of<br />

the Teeth '26; co-auth Operative Dentistry '23, Anatomy of the Rhesus Monkey '33. AMA, ADA, SEBM, ASO<br />

(hon).<br />

McBRIDE, W(illiam) David. VIROLOGY. b El Centro Calif 10 Jun 1925; d Oakland Calif 27 Apr 1964. DDS<br />

U Minn '48, USPHS post doct fel U Minn '48-51. Naval DS '51-53, dent surg NIDR '53-57, res fel Caltech '57-<br />

60, asst prof Baylor U Coll Med '60-62, Calif Dept PH '62-64. Lt USN DC '51-53. AAAS, ASM. Viral<br />

immunology; host-virus relations.<br />

McCANN, Harold G(ilman). CHEMISTRY. b Kittery Me 2 Sep 1916; d 1969. BS Bates Coll '37, MS<br />

Brooklyn Polytech '47. Analyt chem '37-43, res chem '43-50 Gen Chem Co NY; principal invest NIDR<br />

Bethesda '50-59; head analyt serv NIAMD Bethesda '59-63; stf mem Forsyth Dent Cent beginning '63. ACS,<br />

AAAS. Liquid SO 3 ; analytical methods; mechanism of action of fluoride, topical fluoride; synthesis and<br />

solubility of apatites.<br />

McCOLLUM, Elmer Verner. b Redfield Kan 3 Mar 1879; d Baltimore 15 Nov 1967. AB '03, MA '04 U<br />

Kansas. Loomis fel '05-06, PhD '06 Yale. Asst chem '03 U Kansas, '06-07 Yale; instr agr chem '07-08 U<br />

Wisconsin; asst prof to prof Johns Hopkins '10-17; Biochem & head dept '17-44, res prof '44-46, prof emer '46<br />

Sch Hygiene & PH Johns Hopkins. Mem Nat Adv Counc, Perm Nutrition Comm League of Nations '35-39,<br />

vitamin adv bd USP '36-49, deleg 10th Pan-Am Sanit Comm '38, NRC '42. ScD (hon) Cincinnati '20, LLD<br />

(hon) Manitoba '38. Howard Potts med '21, John Scott med Phila '24, Jenkins med Conn '27, gold med Am Inst<br />

NY '34, Callahan med '35, and Am Food Mfrs Assoc, Borden awd in nuar NAS. Am Philos Soc, Swedish Acad,<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 241


Royal Acad Med Belgium, Kaiserlich Deutsche Acad der Naturforscher zu Halle, Harvey Soc, ASBC (pres '27),<br />

AChemS, AIN (vp '37, pres '38), AAAS, PHA. Biochemistry of nutrition, especially vitamins and mineral<br />

elements; deficiency diseases; caries phosphate studies.<br />

McDONAGH, Andrew J. CROWN, BRIDGEWORK; PERIODONTOLOGY. b Lanark Co Ont Canada 1867;<br />

d Toronto 1942. RCDS Toronto. Prof crown & bridge prosth & perio RCDS. AAPer (a founder & past pres;<br />

chmn cmt on res & nomenclature).<br />

McDOWELLL, Arthur R(oscoe). DENTAL EDUCATION. b Yuba Co Calif 8 Jan 1890; d San Francisco 19<br />

May 1938. DDS San Francisco Coll P&S SD '17. Jr dean '21-23, dean '23-38 San Francisco SD. USA DC '17.<br />

AADS (pres '35-36), ACD, ADA, NBDE.<br />

McFALL, Thomas A(lbert). HISTOLOGY; CYTOLOGY. b NYC 3 Jul 1906; d 1969. DDS Pa SD '30. Instr<br />

Pa DS '29-36, dir postgrad prog SD & Inst of Res Walter Reed Army MS & Chmn dept oral med '54-61, clin<br />

assoc prof to assoc prof oral med Pa SD '61-69. Col USA DC '42-61. Auth Oral Medicine Syllabus '65. Bd<br />

Exam ABOM '65, USA Legion of Merit '62, South Md Dent Soc (hon mem), ABOM (dipl) '57, OKU, AAMS<br />

(exec counc '61), Soc for Promotion Dent for Children (pres '35), Stomat Soc U Pa (pres '27), ADA, AAOM,<br />

AAOP, APHA, IAOP, Wash Dent Club, 1st Dist Dent Soc Pa. Systematic study and evaluation of the total<br />

patient and correlation of findings for diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of oral disease; histologic, cytologic,<br />

and cell culture investigations for the correlation of changes in cell morphology and metabolism that occur in<br />

lesions of oral tissues under the influence of local systemic diseases.<br />

McKAY, Frederick Sumner. CARIES. b Lawrence Mass 13 Apr 1874; d Colorado Springs Colo 21 Aug<br />

1959. DDS U Pa '00. Supt instr Angle Sch Orthod '05-07, prof orthod U Denver DS '10-11, consult child<br />

hygiene USPHS '28-29, consult dent fluorosis '38. Prac ft perio beginning '17. Jarvie med '45, Callahan med '49,<br />

Sabin awd Colo PHA, Spenadel med, Illuminated Scroll AAPHD, Lasker awd APHA. Chmn Lord-Chaim Prize<br />

cmt '32-34, ASO (sec '06), ADA, NYAD, FACD (hon), Colo SDS, OKU. Mottled enamel; mass control of<br />

caries by use of fluoridated domestic water supplies; etiology and control of caries.<br />

MENKIN, V(aly). PATHOLOGY. b Moscow Russia 26 Feb 1901; d Kansas City Mo 2 Dec 1960. BS CCNY<br />

'22; MA Columbia '23; MD Harvard '28, U Berlin '32. Tchg fel physiol Harvard SM '27-28; nat res fel med U<br />

Pa '28-30; instr path '30-40, asst prof '40-43 Harvard SM; Duke '44-46; assoc prof exptl path & head Agnes Barr<br />

Chase Fdn for Cancer Res Temple U '46-60. Medal in Exptl Zool '24. Cmt med res Office Sci Res & Devel '42-<br />

43. Guggenheim fel '44, Bernard vis prof Montreal '51; Int Cancer Fdn grant '37-39, Nat Exec Cancer Counc<br />

grant '47-50. Auth Dynamics of Inflammation '50; ed sec path Excerpta Med, sec inflammation & infect dis Biol<br />

Abstracts. AAA, AACR, AMA, Physiol Soc, Soc Exptl Path, Assoc Path & Bact, Assoc Immunol, Endocrine<br />

Soc, Soc Exptl Biol, NY Acad, Int Soc Cellular Biol. Sympathetic system; splenic contraction and leukocyte<br />

level; leukocytes in hyperthyroidism; experimental tuberculosis; iron pigments; inflammation in relation to<br />

immunity; capillary permeability in injury; mechanisms of inflammation; leukotaxine and leukocytosispromoting<br />

factor; necrosin; chemotherapy of cancer research; experimental leukemia; pyrexin—the leukopenic<br />

factor; leukopenin, thermostable factor in the mechanism of leukocytosis with inflammation.<br />

MENSCHIK, Zygmunt. HISTOPATHOLOGY. b Krakow Poland 6 Mar 1914; d 22 Feb 1969. MD Krakow<br />

SM '38, DSc Edin Polish SM '44. Intern St Lazarus State Hosp Krakow '38-39; resid St Elizabeth Gen Hosp '39-<br />

40; lect anat & embryol '41-42, asst prof anat '42-46 Edin Polish SM; asst prof anat U Ottawa '47-55; asst prof<br />

to prof anat Georgetown Med Cent beginning '55. Prac pt '54-55. Med off Polish Army '40-41. Golden Apple<br />

awd Georgetown Med Stud '65. AAA, Anat Soc Gt Brit & Ireland, CPhysS, CAA, SEBM, APhysS, HistS,<br />

AADSch. Effects of Vitamin E deficiency in mice on the heart, adrenals, condylar cartilage of<br />

temporomandibular joint, squamomandibular joint; central nervous system studies on mice.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 242


MERRITT, Arthur Hastings. b Williamsburg Mass 2 May 1870; d 9 Feb 1961. DDS NYU '95, MS U Mich<br />

'38. Vis lect Columbia D&OS. Prac ft perio. ScD (hon) Columbia '40, NYU '45. Fauchard med '32, Callahan<br />

med '40, Jarvie med '40, Fones med '41. 1st Dist DS NY (pres '18), AAPer (pres '25), ACD (pres '38), ADA<br />

(pres '39), Am Dent Fdn (pres '40), NYAD (pres '27), NY Hist Soc (trustee), AAAS. Periodontal disease; soft<br />

tissue lesions of oral cavity.<br />

MERSHON, John V(alentine). ORTHODONTICS. b Penn's Manor Pa 7 Jul 1867; d Philadelphia 20 Feb<br />

1953. DDS Pa Coll '89. Head dept orthod U Pa '16-24, vis lect Columbia '45. Prac ft orthod. ScD (hon) Pa Coll<br />

'33. FACD, AAO (pres), NY Soc Orthod (pres), AAAS. Clinical study of growth and development relating to<br />

orthodontics.<br />

MESSNER, Clinton T(haddeus). b Oxford Ind 1885; d Washington DC 28 May 1936. DDS Ind U '08. Tchr<br />

Ore DS '11-13. USPHS St Louis '19-21, chief dent dept USPHS Washington DC '21-36. Lt Col USA. ADA<br />

(secy res cmt), Assoc Mil Dent Surg (past pres), NYAD, NBDE, ACD.<br />

MIDGLEY, Albert L(eonard). ORAL SURGERY. b Worcester Mass 8 Apr 1878; d Providence RI 31 Oct<br />

1967. DMD Harvard '01. Asst dent surg '01-08, dent surg '08-38, consult dent surg RI Hosp & St Joseph's Hosp<br />

(appt '39); dent surg St Vincent's Infant Asylum '02-11; clin instr '06-16, lect exod & anesth '17-19 Harvard<br />

DM; oral surg '15-18, lect '16-19 Forsyth Dent Infirm; consult dent surg Memorial Hosp Pawtucket RI (appt<br />

'38). Prac pt gen. Lt Cmdr USNR DC '32-40. DSc Marquette '22, Temple '34. Dent Educ Counc Am (pres '16-<br />

20, secy '21-35). Gies awd ACD '55, RI Dentist of the Century RI SDS '59. Assoc ed Apollonian; contrib ed J<br />

Am Coll Dent. FACD, AAAS, AADM (hon), AAADSci (hon fel), ACD (found mem, secy '22-35, pres '36,<br />

regent '37), ADA, Apollonia Guild, Nat Assoc Dent Exam (pres '11). Surgical treatment of maxillary fractures;<br />

dental education; somnoform anesthesia.<br />

MILLBERRY, Guy S. DENTAL MATERIALS. b 1872; d 1952. Prof chem & metallurgy U Calif; supt infirm<br />

'06-14, dean U Calif SD '14-40. Auth Practical Dental Metallurgy. ADA.<br />

MILLER, Edgar Grim, Jr. BIOCHEMISTRY. b Gettysburg Pa 22 Feb 1893; d NYC 28 Jun 1955. BS<br />

Gettsyburg Coll '11, PhD Columbia '13. Asst to prof biochem Columbia '14-55. AAAS, NYAM, AChemS,<br />

ASBC, SEBM. Physiological and pathological chemistry.<br />

MILLER, Henry A(lexander). ORAL SURGERY. Place and date of birth not known; d Philadelphia 14 Jul<br />

1945. DDS U Pa '29, MD Yale '33. Stf graduate Presbyterian, Children's U Pa Hosps. Assoc ed Dental Digest.<br />

AMS, ADA, Pa SDS, Phila Co DS.<br />

MILLER, Samuel Charles. PERIODONTICS; ORAL DIAGNOSIS. b NYC 15 Nov 1903; d NYC 8 Feb<br />

1958. DDS NYU '25. Instr physiol & histol '22, instr perio '25, chief diag dept '28, asst prof '30, assoc prof '34,<br />

prof & chmn dept perio beginning '47 NYU CD. Prac pt perio & oral diag '25-47. Fauchard awd. FACD, 1st<br />

Dist DS NY, AADM (pres '46-47), ADA, NYSDS, AAPer, Pan-Am Odont Assoc, AAAS, NYAM (assoc fel),<br />

ABOM (chmn), OKU (pres.) <strong>IADR</strong> (ed NY sec). Reattachment and bone regeneration; etiology of periodontal<br />

disease; repositioning of the mandible; hydrogen peroxide and sodium perborate as oral irritants; classification<br />

of alveolar bone types; plasma phosphatase determinations; torus palatinus.<br />

MINER, Leroy M(atthew) S(impson). PATHOLOGY; DENTAL EDUCATION. b Chicago 13 Apr 1882; d<br />

Boston 19 Apr 1964. DMD Harvard '04, MD Boston U '07. Assoc prof '18, prof stomat '35, emer '44 Boston U<br />

SM; clin oral surg & dean '22-44, emer '44 Harvard SDM. Prac pt oral surg. Trustee Forsyth Dent Infirm.<br />

Lowell lect Boston. ScD (hon) U Pa '33, DPH (hon) Temple '38. Alpha Omega med '36. Co-auth Dental<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 243


Education in the United States '41. FACD, FACS, AAAS, ADA (pres '36-37), AAArtSci. Pres <strong>IADR</strong> '27-29.<br />

Oral pathology, medicine, and surgery; preventive dentistry; dental research and education.<br />

MOEN, Obed H. MICROBIOLOGY; PATHOLOGY. b Shell Lake Wis 7 Sep 1892; d 23 Nov 1969. DDS '18,<br />

MSD '27 NWU. Prac ft '18-69. LLD (hon) Nat U Ireland '60. Merit awd NWU Alum '60, Dentist of Year awd<br />

Wis SDA '60. Wis SDA, ADA, FDI (pres '59-61), FACD, FAAAS, AAOP, ADSA, OKU. Histological findings<br />

in teeth and filled root canals; tissue changes in treated teeth of known history; verification of results of root<br />

resection by photomicrographs.<br />

MORSE, Arthur L(inwood). ORTHODONTICS. b Lynn Mass 25 Oct 1883; d 6 Oct 1969. DDS Tufts DM<br />

'08. Clin orthod Forsyth Dent Infirm '15-20; instr '08-15, asst prof '15-21, prof '21-45, prof emer orthod '45-69<br />

Tufts DM. AADSci, AAO, ADA, OKU.<br />

MYERS, Victor C(aryl). BIOCHEMISTRY. b Buskirk Bridge NY 13 Apr 1883; Wd 7 Oct 1948. BA '05, MA<br />

'07 Wesleyan U; PhD '09 Yale. Adj prof physiol chem & exptl physiol & dir labs Albany MC '09-11; prof path<br />

chem '12-22, act dir labs '17-19, prof & dir dept biochem '22-24 NY Postgrad MS & Hosp; prof & head dept<br />

biochem '24-27 SU Iowa; prof & dir biochem WRU SM '27-48. DSc (hon) Wesleyan '30. Auth Essentials of<br />

Pathological Chemistry '13, Practical Chemical Analysis of Blood '21, Laboratory Directions in Biochemistry<br />

'42; assoc ed J Lab & Clin Med & Gastroenterol. ADA (mem Counc Dent Therap), FAAAS, ASBC (sec '19-23,<br />

counc '24), FASEB (exec sec '22), SEBM (secy treas & mg ed '23-24, vp '27), APhysiolS, AIN, AChemS.<br />

NIELSEN, Arne G(abriel). PREVENTIVE & OPERATIVE DENTISTRY. b San Francisco 3 Jun 12; d April<br />

1965. BS & DDS U Calif '40. Stf dent Cowell Hosp '41; post-grad Naval DS '52; asst & head op dent '52-59,<br />

head dent br Med Res Labs New London Conn '59-65. Capt USN DC. FACD, ADA. Improved operative<br />

procedures in ultrasonics and increased rotary speeds; oral health problems of submariners; oral health problems<br />

in Antarctica; stannous fluoride in preventive dentistry.<br />

NOYES, Frederick Bogue. DENTAL HISTOLOGY & EMBRYOLOGY. b Chicago 22 Aug 1872; d 25 Jul<br />

1961. BA Johns Hopkins '93; DDS '95, ScD '22 NWU; LLD Temple U '95. Prof histol '97-13, prof histol &<br />

orthod '14-20 NWU DS; prof orthod '21-40, dean '28-40, prof emer '40-61 U Ill CD; prof histol & embryol<br />

Angle Sch Orthod. Prac pt gen '95-08, pt orthod beginning '08. Callahan med '23, Jarvie med '29. ADA, CDS,<br />

Ill SDS (pres '21-22), ADA, Odont Soc, Odontographic Soc of Chicago, Inst Med Chicago (pres '43), EdwH<br />

Angle Soc Orthod. <strong>IADR</strong> (pres Chicago sec '21-27). Lymphatic drainage of dental area.<br />

NOYES, Harold J(udd). ORTHODONTICS. b Chicago 11 Aug 1898; d Portland Ore 25 Apr 1969. PhB '23,<br />

MD '33 U Chicago; BS & DDS '28 U Ill. Postgrad dept ped Rush MC '33-40; stf Presbyterian Hosp '36-40; prof<br />

& chmn dept orthod NWU DS '40-46; prof dent & dean Ore DS beginning '46; clin prof dent med '46, head div<br />

dent & oral med beginning '48 U Ore Med Sch. Prac pt orthod '33-46. 2nd Lt USA '18-19. Ed Angle Orthodont;<br />

auth Dent Histology & Embryology '38. FACD (pres), AAAS, AADS (pres), AAO, ADA, NIH (dent stud sec),<br />

Survey Dent in US (co-chmn dent ed cmt). Orthodontics; histology; embryology; health and disease in children.<br />

Son of Frederick B. Noyes.<br />

NUCKOLLS, James. HISTOLOGY; PATHOLOGY. b Redwood Valley Calif 2 Oct 1902; d San Francisco 19<br />

Apr 1952. DDS U Calif '27. Asst dent anat '29, prof & chmn op dent '41, prof oral histol & path & chmn div<br />

preclin sciences '47 U Calif. Nuckolls Lectureship est U Calif CD. Co-auth Dental Anatomy '49. FACD. Tooth<br />

bud studies; histopathology, biochemistry, and bacteriology of caries; the periodontal lesion.<br />

NYLANDER, Victor T. OPERATIVE DENTISTRY. b 1889; d Jan 1962. DDS U Minn '17. Head dept op dent<br />

U Ill CD '20-37. Prac (ret '56). <strong>IADR</strong> Chicago sec (secy treas '32, pres '33).<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 244


OCHSENHIRT, Norman C. SURGERY. b 12 Feb 1892; d 25 Jul 1952. BS '16, MD '17 U Pittsburgh; MS U<br />

Minn '27. Demonstr to prof path & gen maxillofacial surg U Pittsburgh SM '28-52 & Pittsburgh SD '30-52.<br />

ACS (fel), Allegheny County Med Soc (secy & pres), AMA, Int Coll Surg (fel), Pa Med Soc, Pittsburgh Surg<br />

Soc. Anatomy; pathology; maxillofacial surgery.<br />

OKUBO, James K. ANATOMY. b 30 May 1920 place not known; d 29 Jan 1967. AB Wayne SU '49; DDS<br />

'54, MS '57 U Detroit. Instr gross anat & clin tchg '54, asst prof '59, chmn anat sec '63, assoc prof '65 U Detroit<br />

SD.<br />

OLIVER, Oren A(ustin). ORTHODONTICS. b Sinking Creek Va 16 Aug 1887; d Nashville Tenn 6 Mar<br />

1965. DDS Emory '09. Instr orthod '16-26, prof & vp '17-26 Dewey Sch Orthod; prof orthod & mem exec<br />

counc Vanderbilt SD '17-26; prof emer clin dent surg Vanderbilt SM '54; vis prof orthod U Kansas City SD;<br />

lect grad sch orthod Tufts DM; dir postgrad course labio-lingual technique Wash U SD. Prac ft gen '09-16, pt<br />

orthod beginning '17. 1st Lt USA DC '17; Lt Col USAR DC '17-53, 56. LLD (hon) Emory '49. Ketchum awd<br />

'57, hon key Tenn SBDE. Assoc ed Am J Orthod; counc J Dent Res; co-auth Labiolingual Technic '40. FACD,<br />

FICD (pres US sec '34-36, pres at large '52-54), FAAAS, AAO (pres '30), ABO (dipl, dir & secy '29-36, pres<br />

'36-37), Acad Int Med & Dent (fel), ADA (trustee '34-40, pres '41-42), Am Soc Advancement Gen Anesth in<br />

Dent (fel), APHA, ASDC, AAMS, EOS, Ewell Neil DS (fel), FDI (pres '52-55), PFA, RSH, SW Soc Orthod<br />

(hon), Tenn SDA (pres '23), OKU. Malocclusion as a factor in periodontal lesions; diastema between central<br />

incisors; occlusal guide plane; technique of the lingual and labial arches; designer of orthodontic pliers,<br />

instruments, wires, band materials.<br />

OPPENHEIM, Albin J. ORTHODONTIA. b Europe 1875 city not known; d 1945 place not known. MD,<br />

DDS, Prof & head dept dent histol U Vienna; later fac dent USC. Studies on experimental tooth movement.<br />

ORBAN, Balint. HISTOLOGY; PATHOLOGY. b Hungary 24 Mar 1899; d Chicago 1 Jun 1960. MD U<br />

Budapest '22, MD U Vienna '30, DDS NWU '38. Prof oral histol & path NWU '38-39, prof oral path & res<br />

Loyola SD '40-47, res fel U Ill CD '47-49, dir res Colo Dent Fdn '49-60. Prac perio. ADA, FAAAS, AAPer,<br />

OKU, FDI (pres sci comm '36-60). Histology of dental structures; histopathology of periodontal diseases.<br />

O'ROURKE, John T(homas). b Saco Me 18 Aug 1888; d Boston 3 Jun 1948. DDS '17, BS '32 U Louisville.<br />

Asst prof '19, assoc '23, dean '26-44 Louisville SD; dir grad stud Tufts CD '44-48. ScD (hon) Louisville '44. Ed<br />

J Dent Educ 36-40; co-auth Dental Education in the United States '41. ADA, CDA, NYAD, Ky SDS, AADS<br />

(pres '36), OKU.<br />

OSBORN, T(homas) W(illiam) B(ryant). BIOCHEMISTRY; NUTRITION. b Johannesburg S Africa 14 Sep<br />

1905; d Johannesburg 26 Jun 1949. BS U Witwatersrand '27; MS U S Africa '28; PhD Oxford '31; DSc U<br />

Witwatersrand '38; LRCP, MRCS London '38. Act lect '28, lect '31, act head physiol '34 U Witwatersrand.<br />

Rhodes schol. Auth Complement or Alexin '37.<br />

OWEN, Elbert B(rittain). PROSTHODONTICS. b 1880; d St Louis 6 Jun 1950. DDS St Louis U '09. ADA<br />

(chmn prosth sec '29), AADP (pres '33), ACD, Mo SDA (pres '49), St Louis DS (pres '20), OKU.<br />

OXNER, Warren C. b Chester Bay NS Canada 1878; d Halifax NS Canada 7 Jun 1950. DDS Baltimore Coll<br />

'02. Clin demonstr & prof crown & bridge Dalhousie U. Prac ft. Ed for Nova Scotia sec of J Can Dent Assoc<br />

'44. Dominion Dent Counc (pres), Halifax Dent Soc (pres), Nova Scotia Dent Assoc (pres), Provinc Dent Bd of<br />

Nova Scotia '35.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 245


PALMER, Bissel Barbour. DENTAL SOCIOECONOMICS. b NYC 4 Feb 1889; d NYC 23 Jan 1968. DDS<br />

NYU. Assoc prof oral Surg Columbia, attend oral surg at Hahnemann 5th Ave & NY Polyclin hosps, mem bd<br />

Doctors Hosp. Prac pt. FACD (pres), NYAD (treas), William J Gies Fdn Advancement Dent (pres), <strong>IADR</strong><br />

(treas a trustee).<br />

PAYNE, Joseph L(ewin). ORAL SURGERY. b London 25 Sept 1872; d London 31 Jan 1939. Attend Guy's<br />

Hosp DS. Lect, dent, consult surg Guy's Hosp DS. BDA (past pres Metro Branch), BSSO (past pres), RSM<br />

(pres odont sec). Classification of odontomes.<br />

PESSO, Frederick Austin. CROWN & BRIDGE. b Rosebloom, Otsego Co NY 25 Jun 1858; d Mt Vernon NY<br />

13 Mar 1928. DDS U Pa '89. Tchr C&B U Pa DS '89-01; found postgrad sch for C&B Philadelphia '01, merged<br />

it with U Pa DS '10; prof C&B Columbia D&OS '10-28. Auth text on C&B & numerous papers; mem many<br />

dent soc. First to develop removable bridgework; international authority on crown and bridge; inventor of many<br />

instruments and formulas. A founder of <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

PENDLETON, Elbert Crosby. DENTAL ANATOMY; PROSTHETICS. b 14 Mar 1882; d 15 Jul 1960. DDS<br />

'07, MDS '33 (Loyola). Instr to prof prosth dent '24-39, prof diag & res in full denture prosth '40-52 Loyola. Ill<br />

DS (pres '38), OKU. <strong>IADR</strong> (Chicago sec, pres '40-41).<br />

POGUE, William L. CROWN & BRIDGE; OCCLUSION. b Birmingham Ala 19 Dec 1925; d Aug 1970. DDS<br />

'51, MSD St Louis SD. Asst prof crown & bridge St Louis U '63-64, asst prof rest dent Ky CD '66-70. Prac ft<br />

'53-63. 1st Lt DC '51-53, USAAF '43-46. ADA, Ky Dent Assoc. Adrenal absorption during tissue retraction;<br />

retention of plastic facings.<br />

POTTS, Herbert A. PATHOLOGY; ANESTHESIOLOGY. b Green Co Ill 1873; d Evanston Ill 7 Oct 1942.<br />

DDS '95, MD '01 NWU. Fac path '08-20, oral surg '20-42 NWU DS. Maj USA. Consult oral surg France WWI.<br />

POWERS, Catherine M. Place and date of birth not known; d Philadelphia 4 Jun 1970.<br />

PRINZ, Hermann. PHARMACOLOGY; PATHOLOGY. b Germany 13 Jun 1868; d Lansdowne Pa 24 Nov<br />

1957. DDS U Mich '96, MD Barnes MC '00. Prof materia medica & therap Wash U '99-13; prof materia medica<br />

& therap Evans Dent Inst '13-38, emer '38 U Pa. DSc (hon) U Pa '26, Wash U '41; DMD (hon) U Cologne '29.<br />

Jarvie med '23, Callahan med '33, Fones med '34, U Pa Alumni awd '39. AMA, AAAS, Kaiserlich Leopold-<br />

Carolin (fel) Akad der Naturforscher. Dental pharmacology and therapeutics; oral pathology.<br />

RABKIN, Samuel. PATHOLOGY. b Russia 10 Apr 1888; d 22 Jul 1969. DDS Ohio CD '13. Clin Beckman<br />

Med-Dent Clin Ohio '15-28, stf Jewish Hosp Ohio '15-40. Prac ft. First awd Sci & Health Exhibit ADA '39.<br />

AIBS, AAPA, Gen Soc of America, FAAAS, fel Ohio Acad Sci. Tracing historical evidence and indicative<br />

source relative to dentition degeneration; jawbone-tooth morphologic pathology.<br />

RADUSCH, Dorothea F(ranke). DIET IN PERIODONTICS. b Washington Co Minn 6 Sept 1901; d 27 Feb<br />

1969. DDS Minn SD '24, BA U Minn '34, MS U Minn Grad Sch '38. Asst prof '24-53 Minn SD. Prac pt '24-53,<br />

ft beginning '53. Many publications in periodontics; contrib auth Juvenile Dentistry '52. FAAAS, FACD,<br />

AADE, ADA, OKU.<br />

READE, Robert J(ohn). ULTRAVIOLET LIGHT & ITS APPLICATION TO DENTISTRY. b Toronto Ont<br />

Canada 17 Jun 1866; d Toronto 20 Feb 1936. DDS U Toronto '94, MD Trinity MC. Prof med RCDS Ontario<br />

'06-08. Ed Dent Practice. CDA (past chmn res cmt), Ontario DA (past chmn, pub dent health cmt).<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 246


REHAK, Rudolph. ORTHODONTICS. b 1899 place not known; d Budapest 1 Sep 1969. MD Budapest '23.<br />

Habilitation to lectureship Budapest '47, cand med sciences late 1950's. Chief orthod serv Central Inst Stomat<br />

Budapest. Orthod res & auth texts on orthod.<br />

RICE, William. b Dublin NH 4 Sep 1867; d Boston 23 Nov 1932. DDS Boston DC '88, DMD Tufts DS '05.<br />

Instr '00, asst prof clin dent '11, prof '13, dean '16 Tufts DS. Mem dent adv bd Mass Dept Health. ScD (hon)<br />

Tufts '29. Gold med RI DA '27. FACD, AADSci (pres '18-19), Central Health Counc Mass (pres '24), New<br />

England DS (pres '24), Mass DS (pres '23), Dent Fac Assoc Am Universities (vp '21-23). A founder of <strong>IADR</strong><br />

(treas '27-32).<br />

RICKERT, U(ra) Garfield. BACTERIOLOGY. b Wadsworth O Oct 1879; d 22 Oct 1938. BS Buchtel Coll<br />

'07; AM '13, DDS '16 U Mich. Instr physiol chem '17, asst prof '19, prof '21-38 U Mich. FACD (vp '31, pres<br />

'32, mem counc dent therap), ADA, ASB, Mich DS (pres '37). <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '30-31). Dental therapeutics and<br />

medicines; focal infection in systemic disease.<br />

RIDER, Theodore H. ORAL HYGIENE; DENTIFRICES. b Washington DC 14 Oct 03; d NYC Feb 1955.<br />

PhB '25, PhD '28 Yale. Instr pharmacol & toxicol Sch Med Yale '28-30; chief chem '30-33, res dir '33-37 Wm S<br />

Merrell Co; tech dir Pepsodent Co Chicago '37-47; assoc dir res Lever Bros '47-55; prof Cincinnati Coll Phar<br />

'32-37. AAAS, ACS, Pharmaceut Assoc. Synthesis and testing of local anesthetics; chemical detoxification of<br />

toxins; pharmaceutical products and synthetic drugs; dentifrices; cosmetics; antiseptics; soap products; edible<br />

fats.<br />

ROGERS, Alfred P. ORTHODONTICS. b Amherst NS Canada 5 Jul 1873; d 6 Apr 1959. DDS Pa Coll '96,<br />

AM Acadia U '20, DSc Wash U '41, DSc Acadia U '44. Asst prof orthod res Harvard '18; dir Harvard-Forsyth<br />

Post Grad Sch Orthod '19-22; assoc orthod Harvard '27-40; clin prof orthod '41-43; prof emer '43-59 Harvard<br />

Sch Dent Med. Prac ft orthod. Lect Columbia U Sch Orthod. Am Bd Orthod '30. Albert Ketchum awd '38.<br />

AADS (pres '15-16), Am Soc Orthod (pres '11), Northeastern Soc Orthod (pres '38), OKU, European Orthod<br />

Soc. Dento-facial orthopedics; use of exercise in correction of malocclusions and facial abnormalities.<br />

ROGERS, James B(oyles). ANATOMY. b Larned Kan 5 Mar 1896; d 19 Nov 1965. AB '16, AM '17 U<br />

Kansas; MD U Louisville '27. Asst zool U California '17; instr biol Tufts Coll '19-20; zool Kansas St Coll '20-<br />

22; asst anat '23-27, instr '27-28, asst prof '28-33, assoc prof '33-37, prof '37 U Louisville; neurol clin Louisville<br />

City Hosp '30-47; neurol Louisville Gen Hosp '42-47; lect Nichols VA Hosp; consult VA Hosp Lexington. USA<br />

MC '17-19. AAA, AMA. Effect of extirpation of the thyroid; histology and physiology of blood vessels;<br />

microsurgery of mammalian blood vessels; toxemia of pregnancy in guinea pigs; induced and spontaneous<br />

tumors of guinea pigs; longevity of guinea pigs.<br />

ROSENZWEIG, Kurt A. DENTAL EPIDEMIOLOGY. b Cologne Germany 15 May 1909; d Jerusalem 15<br />

Jan 1970. DMD Bonn U '32, MPH U Mich '56, stud dent anthro U Chicago '64. Stf dent Hadassah Dent Clin<br />

'42-46; dir dent serv Cyprus Immigrants Camps '46-48; chief dent Israel Ministry of Health '48-50; tchr dent<br />

mat Ort Vocational Sch; chief dent serv for Jerusalem children; tchr public health dent, head dept prev dent '60,<br />

sr lect '61, assoc prof '66 Hadassah SDM. Past ed Israel Dent J. Recipient of grants from NIH and USPHS;<br />

published results of his studies are widely quoted in international scientific literature. Epidemiology of caries,<br />

fluorosis, periodontal disease, malocclusion among ethnic groups; dental care service for employees and<br />

dependents, including time-and-motion studies of dental personnel. Oral epidemiology of ethnic groups.<br />

ROWE, Arthur T(aylor). PROSTHETICS. b Castleton ND 12 May 1883; d NYC 12 Dec 1935. DDS U Minn<br />

'06. Instr to prof dent prosth U Minn '24-26; prof & head div prosth dent '26-32, assoc dean '32-35 Columbia<br />

D&OS. Minn SDS, NY SDS, Minn SDA (pres '26), 1st Dist DS NY, NYAD, OKU.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 247


RUDOLPH, Charles E(ugene). PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b Punxsutawney Pa 26 Oct 1885; d Jun 1969.<br />

DDS Minn SD '11. Instr to asst prof prosth dent & assoc prof clin orthod '11-48, prof & chmn div orthod '35-48<br />

Minn SD. Prac pt. Outstanding achiev awd U Minn '60. FACD, AAAS (cmt on med care costs '29-33), ACD<br />

(regent; pres '37-38), ADA (trustee '28-35), Am Dent Fdn (trustee), Minn SDA (chmn counc on dent health,<br />

pres '38), OKU. Socioeconomic aspects of dental service.<br />

RUSHTON, Martin A(msler). PATHOLOGY. b London 29 Mar 1903; d London 16 Nov 1970. MA '28, MB<br />

'32, MD '46 Cambridge; LDS RCS '28; FDS RCS '48; FRCS '64. Chief dent surg Jaw & Plast Unit Basingstoke<br />

'39-46, dent surg Guy's & St. Thomas hosps '37-67, prof dent med U London '46-67, dean fac dent surg RCS<br />

'59-62. Prac ft '32-39. LLD (hon) U Toronto '59, U Belfast '63; D Odont (hon) Stockholm '58, Copenhagen '64.<br />

Colyer prize RSM, Mummery prize BDA, Tomes prize RCS Eng, Nuckolls lect U Calif '60, Weinmann lect U<br />

Ill '61, Fauchard Acad awd '67, Colyer med RCS '67. Co-auth Oral Histopathology. RSM, BDA (pres), BSSO<br />

(pres '47), BSPer (pres '57). <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '64-65). Oral pathology; dental medicine; effects of strontium 90.<br />

RUYL, James P(eter). DENTURE RESTORATIONS. b Brooklyn NY 1873; d Brooklyn 29 Dec 1930. DDS<br />

NY CD '94. Prac ft gen. Lecturer and presenter of clinics; from observation of European practice, developed for<br />

American dental profession the operation now known as alveolectomy.<br />

SAHS, E(rnest) A. DENTAL MATERIALS; OPERATIVE DENTISTRY. b Salem SD 21 Nov 1897; d 8 Aug<br />

1968. DDS Iowa SU '23. Demonstr '27-35, asst prof to assoc prof op dent '55-68 Iowa CD. Prac ft gen '27-55.<br />

AAAS, ADA, Iowa Dent Alumni Assoc (pres '59), Iowa Dent Assoc (chmn dent health counc '47-49, house del<br />

'47-52), OKU. Trifacial neuralgia; dental inlay castings; pulp capping.<br />

SALAMON Henrik. PROSTHETICS; ORTHODONTICS; DENTAL HISTORY. b 1865 place not known; d<br />

1944 place not known. MD '99 U Budapest. Prof med fac U Budapest. Res in prosth dent, orthod & dent<br />

history. Auth 12 books & many papers. Ed Stomatologiai Kozlony; auth Die Lehre der elementaren<br />

orthodontischen Bewegungen '12, Atlas der stomatologischen Brucken und Regulierungsarbeiten, History of<br />

Hungarian Dentistry: A magyar stomatologia (fogaszat) tortenete '42. Deviser of bridge nomenclature.<br />

SANDERS, Elkan. Place and date of birth not known; d 1946. Lived in Amsterdam. <strong>IADR</strong> mem '34-46.<br />

SCHAMBERG, M(orris) I. ORAL SURGERY; PATHOLOGY. b 1875; d NYC 20 May 1953. DDS U Pa SD<br />

'96; MD Med Chirurgical Coll '98. Original fac mem, prof clin & oral surg Columbia D&OS '21-24.<br />

SCHERER, Walter H. b Newport Ky 1880; d Houston 12 May 1951. DDS Ohio Coll DS '00. Estab prac<br />

Houston '00. Maj USA WWI. Armed Forces Med Adv Comm '48, Houston Dist DS (pres '13), St Bd Dent<br />

Exam, Tex SDS (pres '18), ADA (vp; pres '33-34). Instrumental in organization of Texas Dental College and its<br />

affiliation with the University of Texas; served as faculty member, trustee, and president.<br />

SCHEU, Carl H(erman). DENTAL MATERIALS. b Cleveland 2 Jul 1892; d Lakewood O 1 Sep 1956. DDS<br />

WRU '18. Resid dent Cleveland City Hosp '18-19. Prac ft gen. FACD, ADA, Ohio SDA, Cleveland DS, AARD,<br />

Dent Forum Milwaukee. Dental castings and investments; hygroscopic expansion of the refractory.<br />

SCHLOSSER, Rudolf O. PROSTHODONTICS. b Pleshen Germany 1882; d Chicago 3 Dec 1967. DDS<br />

Baltimore Coll DS '03, stud prosth Royal Coll DS Toronto '14. Mem res stf Dentists' Supply Co NYC '18-21;<br />

fac mem, prof pros dent '24, prof emer '47 NWU DS. Prac Hartford Conn '03-18. Est first oral hygiene clin &<br />

conducted trng of dent hygienists in Hartford. Lect tour Europ dent socs & univs '31; postwar trav in Europ<br />

giving refresher courses to displaced dentists; lect Germany, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Holland. Auth<br />

Complete Denture Prosthesis '39 (rev '46, 53). FACD, Ill DS, Chicago DS, OKU.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 248


SCHOUR, Isaac. HISTOLOGY; DENTAL EDUCATION. b Efingar Russia 11 Jan 1900; d Chicago 5 Jun<br />

1964. BS '21, PhD '31 U Chicago; DDS '24, MS '28 U Ill. Lect dent med U Denver DS '26-27; instr materia<br />

medica & therap '24, asst prof '27, assoc prof '31, prof histol '35-64, head dept histol '37-64, assoc dean postgrad<br />

educ '46-55, dean '55-64 Ill CD. DSc (hon) Wash U '41. Cert merit exhibits AMA '35, 37, 39; Alpha Omega<br />

awd '47; res awd Columbia D&OS '56. AAA, AAAS (secy Nd sec '45-49), AADS, ABOM (dipl), ADA, All<br />

India DA (hon), Jerusalem DS (hon), OKU. <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '41-42). Experimental studies of tooth development;<br />

oral influences of endocrine, nutritional and metabolic factors; epidemiology of gingival disease; pulpal<br />

biology; student and teacher education in dentistry.<br />

SEAMANS, Harry M(errick). DENTAL EDUCATION. b Delaware O 1 Oct 1867; d Colorado Springs Colo<br />

29 Jul 1948. BA O Wesleyan U '90, DDS NY CD '97, MS O Wesleyan U '97. Instr '98-03, prof '03, dean dent<br />

dept '06-14 Ohio MS; dean '14-38 Ohio St DC '14-38. Prac '97-15. Curriculum Survey Comm AADS '30.<br />

AADS, Am Inst Dent Tchrs, Columbus DS, Ohio SDS, OKU. Raised standards of dental education.<br />

SHAPIRO, Harry Herschel. ANATOMY. b NYC 27 Jul 1892; d Cornwall-on-Hudson NY 23 Dec 1958.<br />

DMD Tufts '18. Res assoc '28-30, instr anat '30-40, asst prof '40 Columbia; vis lect anat Tufts. Annual prize<br />

dent res Chicago Dent Soc '43. AAA, AAPA, NYAS. Anatomy of head and neck; temporomandibular joint;<br />

transplantation of developing tooth buds.<br />

SIEGEL, Eli H(arold). BIOCHEMISTRY. b Plattsburg NY date not known; d 18 Jul 1969. BS NYU '32, DDS<br />

Columbia D&OS '36. Gies fel biochem '36-40, asst biochem '40-41 Columbia; chief Northeast Disp NYC '46-<br />

51; lect '47-56, instr dent hygiene prog beginning '57 NYC Community Coll; consult dent Off Indian Affairs<br />

'36-38. Prac pt. Lt Cmdr USNR DC '41-45. Ed Columbia Dent Rev '35-36. AAHD, Clin Soc of NY, Diabetes<br />

Assoc NY St, Assoc Jr Coll. Dental and oral disease in primitive peoples; diabetes and dental problems; dental<br />

disturbances associated with severe metabolic disturbances; genetics of dental anomalies; epidemiology of<br />

Vincent's disease; dental history.<br />

SINCLAIR, James Alexander. PERIODONTICS. b Marion NC 8 Dec 1877; d Asheville NC 16 Mar 1952.<br />

DDS Baltimore CDS '00. Spec lect dent med Meharry MC SD. Prac ft perio & oral surg '02-52. FAAPer, NC<br />

SDS (pres '14), Am Assoc Advancement Oral Diag (pres '35), South Acad Perio, ICD (pres '44). Local use of<br />

sulfanilamide; implantation of gelatin in wounds; use of ascorbic acid in subluxation pain in temporomandibular<br />

area and other dental involvements; antigen-antibody reaction and hypersensitivity as factors in periodontal<br />

lesions.<br />

SIPPY, Burne O(lin). ORTHODONTICS. b Ithaca Wis 16 Jun 1886; d Chicago 11 Jul 1936. BS U Akron '09,<br />

DDS Ill CD '15, MS U Ill '26. Fac U Ill '17, prof orthod & chg undergraduate tchg U Ill CD '30-36. ADA, CDS,<br />

Ill SDS, Chicago Assoc Orthod (secy treas '27-30, pres '32), Odontograph Soc Chicago (secy treas '28-30, pres<br />

'30).<br />

SKILLEN, William G(raham). HISTOLOGY; HISTOPATHOLOGY. b Toronto 6 Nov 1884; d Chicago 27<br />

Aug 1958. DDS NWU '11. Clin demonstr & instr '12, assoc prof histol '14, prof '36-58 NWU DS. Prac pt gen<br />

'11-14. ADA, CDS, OKU. <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '36-37, pres Chicago sec '32-33).<br />

SKINNER, Eugene W(illiam). DENTAL MATERIALS. b Anamosa Ia 28 Feb 1896; d Chicago 3 Dec 1966.<br />

BA Grinnell Coll '19; MS '25, PhD '30 SU Iowa. Instr chem Doane Coll '19-20; tchr physics Boone HS '20-24;<br />

prof physics & math Olivet Coll '25-30; asst to assoc prof basic dent technol WRU SD '30-34; assoc prof to prof<br />

'34-66, dir dent grad & postgrad study '40-66 NWU DS. Hon lect U Edinburgh '54, Souder awd DMG '56, Bee<br />

awd AAPRD '60. FACD, FAAAS, AAUP, ADA (assoc), APhysS, OKU. <strong>IADR</strong> (chmn DMG '49-50; pres<br />

Chicago sec '56-57). Diffraction of X-rays in liquids; surface structure of enamel; dental materials.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 249


SLOMAN, Ernest G. DENTAL ANATOMY. b San Francisco 1896; d San Francisco 30 Apr 1952. DDS San<br />

Francisco P&S '21. Prof anat & dean San Francisco P&S '38-52, lect dent surg Stanford MS. DSc (hon) USC<br />

'47. AADS (pres '50-51), ADA (vp & chmn judicial counc, spkr house of delegates), NBDE, ACD, AADE,<br />

AAAS.<br />

SNYDER, Marshall L(ovejoy). MICROBIOLOGY. b N Conway NH 7 Jul 1907; d Portland Ore 3 Mar 1969.<br />

PhB Brown U '30; MS '32, PhD U Colo. Child res fel bact U Colo '31-36; res assoc '36-38, instr '38-41, asst<br />

prof bact '41-46 U Mich; prof bact Ore DS '46-69. Maj USA '42-45. Fulbright res prof Royal Dent Coll<br />

Copenhagen '57-58. AAAS, ASM, Soc Path & Bact Gt Britain & Ireland. Normal intestinal and oral flora of<br />

children; bacteriology of dental caries; selective cultural methods; continuous culture techniques for study of<br />

mixed cultures.<br />

SOBEL, Albert E(dward). BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY. b Luko Hungary 24 Sep 1906; d NYC 15 Jun 1967.<br />

BS '30, ChE '35 Cooper Union; MA Columbia '36; PhD Polytech Inst Brooklyn '40. Lab asst dept biochem<br />

Rockefeller Inst '25-30; staff chem pediat res lab '31-33, chem-in-charge pediatric res lab '33-36, head dept<br />

biochem '36-63, mem med bd Jewish Hosp Brooklyn; dir biochem lab Presbyterian Univ Hosp & assoc prof<br />

biochem Pittsburgh U SM '63; molecular biol Beth Israel Hosp Res Lab '63-65; dir biochem Grad Hosp U Pa &<br />

assoc prof clin chem U Pa SM '65-67; adj prof chem Polytech Inst Brooklyn '46; lect adv chem Brooklyn Coll<br />

'42-46; lect blood chem Hunter Coll '43-47; lect biochem SUNY Coll Med. Van Slyke med & Ames awd<br />

AACC '60; Bernard med '61. AAAS, AACC (pres '52-53, chmn cmt on standards '49-51), AChemS, ASBC,<br />

B&TS, Harvey Soc, NYAS, SEBM. Micromethods; biochemical changes in disease; mechanism of<br />

calcification; absorption and transportation of fat-soluble vitamins.<br />

SPEIDEL, Thomas D. ORTHODONTICS. b Iowa City Ia 19 Feb 1908; d Minneapolis 30 Nov 1957. DDS '30,<br />

MS '32 U Iowa. Asst orthod & child welfare '30-32, asst pediat & dent '33-34, asst prof orthod '36-39, assoc<br />

prof '39-41 U Iowa; asst prof U Tenn '34-36; prof U Ind '41-45; dean Loyola SD La '45-48; prof & chmn div<br />

orthod U Minn beginning '48. FACD, ADA, AAO, AADEd (pres '48), OKU (pres '44-45). Dental and facial<br />

development; dental and facial changes in orthodontic treatment.<br />

SPRAWSON, Evelyn Charles. DENTAL PHYSIOLOGY & PATHOLOGY. b Wimbledon England 13 Feb<br />

1881; d 1955. MC DSc London, FDS Eng, MRCS Eng, LRCP London '05. House surg Royal Dent Hosp '05;<br />

med supt Nat Dent Hosp '05; hon dent surg & histol lect '11, lect normal & path histol '11-46, lect dent surg '19-<br />

46, prof dent surg '40-46, consult dent surg London Hosp; exam dent surg RCS Eng '20-30, U London '24-38,<br />

dent bd UK '22-32, U Otago '27, U Witwatersrand '32, U Birmingham '24-27. Prac pt '05-14. Capt RAMC '14-<br />

18. Walker schol '00, Saunders schol '02, Hunterian prof RCS '37, Tomes prize '29, Tomes lect RCS '47. Coauth<br />

Dental Surgery and Pathology 9th ed '53. RSM (pres odont sec '39, hon mem '51), BDA, BMA, Med<br />

Protection Soc (vp '26). <strong>IADR</strong> (vp for England '34).<br />

STANTON, Frederick L. ORTHODONTICS. b NYC 1874; d 1945. DDS NY CD '91. Prof prev dent NYU.<br />

Grad & organizer alumni soc Angle Sch orthod.<br />

STEIN, Georg. NUTRITION; PATHOLOGY. b Vienna 6 Oct 1891; d NYC 1962. MD U Vienna '18, DMD<br />

Harvard '41. Intern med Franz Josef Hosp '18-19; instr anat '13-14, resid surg '19-22, head dept dent preschool<br />

child '28-38, head dept stud focal infection '34-38 U Vienna; res assoc dent Columbia D&OS beginning '47.<br />

Privatdozent U Vienna '35. Prac pt gen. AAAS, AAOP, NYAS, OKU. Author of over 70 papers on oral<br />

pathology, focal infection, endodontics; nutrition; deficiency diseases of the tongue. Original observer of mesial<br />

drift of molar teeth.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 250


STILLMAN, Paul R(oscoe). PERIODONTICS. b Greenwich Conn 4 Jun 1871; d 15 Dec 1945. DDS<br />

Baltimore Coll DS '99. Instr advanced dent Columbia '16-20, clin prof perio NYU CD '24-45, postgrad lect<br />

perio Harvard '28. Mem Med Exam Bd NY, mem adv bd NYC Dept Health. 7th Int Dent Cong (pres perio sec).<br />

Assoc ed J Am Coll Dent; co-auth Textbook of Clinical Periodontia '23. FACD, FNYAD, FAAPer (pres), ADA<br />

(pres perio sec '20), 1st Dist DS NY (vp), AAAS, OKU. <strong>IADR</strong> (interim pres '23-24).<br />

STONES, H(ubert) H(orace). PATHOLOGY. b Shrewsbury England 29 Jun 1892; d Anglesey England 28<br />

Sep 1965. LDS & BDS '14, MB & ChB '15, MD '31, MDS '33 U Manchester FDS RCS Eng '47. Prof dent surg<br />

& dir dent educ U Liverpool, dir & gen consult Liverpool Dent Hosp, consult maxillofacial cent Broadgreen<br />

Hosp Liverpool, hon dent consult Liverpool Regional Bd Hosps & Dent Hosp, prof emer U Liverpool. Prac ft<br />

gen '19-35. Capt RAMC '15-19. Mummery prize BDA '36, Tomes prize RCS Eng '45-47, Tomes lect RCS Eng<br />

'51, vice-dean bd Fac Dent Surg RCS Eng '53, Sprawson lect London Hosp DS. Ed Internat J Dental Health<br />

'56; co-auth Oral and Dental Diseases 4th ed '62. FDI (ed IDJ until '65), FACD, ADA (hon), BDA, Liverpool<br />

Regional Hosp (bd mem), Liverpool United Tchg Hosps (bd gov), MRC (dent cmt), RSM (odont sec).<br />

Cementum; gingivectomy and epithelial attachment; traumatic occlusion. Responsible for first fluoride study in<br />

Great Britain.<br />

STOWE, Lewis Riddell. PEDODONTICS. b Rush City Minn 1893; d NYC 4 Nov 1957. DDS U Minn '16.<br />

Asst prof to prof '29-46, dir div stomat '46-57 Columbia D&OS; attend dent surg Columbia-Presbyterian Med<br />

Cent; consult VA hosp Bronx. 1st Lt USA DC. Hon awd achiev U Minn '51. Contrib auth chap on mouth<br />

diseases Holt & MacIntosh's Pediatrics. Wrote many papers on mouth disease, particularly in field of<br />

pedodontics.<br />

STREAN, Lyon P(eter). BACTERIOLOGY; ENDOCRINOLOGY. b Montreal 19 Mar 1902; d Norristown Pa<br />

27 Oct 1964. DDS '23, MS '40, PhD '42 McGill. Dir bact Ayerst Labs Montreal '37-46, dir res Novocol Chem<br />

Co '46-50, chief dent med Merck Sharp & Dohme Res Labs '50-64. Prac ft gen '23-27. FAAAS, FAPHA,<br />

FAMWA, AAID (pres '61-62), ADA, AIOB, AMA (affiliate), Am Acad Dermatology, ASM, NYAS, Soc<br />

Invest Dermatology. Dental caries; steroids; congenital defects; gamma globulin for herpetiform lesions;<br />

staphylococcus toxoid; active and passive immunity with H. pertussis; vitamin B 6 in the prevention of dental<br />

caries.<br />

STROMBERG, William R(oss). DENTAL TECHNOLOGY. b 1914; d Lexington Ky 3 Mar 1966. Grad<br />

South Missionary Coll & U Miami, dent degrees Emory U & U Mich. Assoc U Ky '63-66, dir dent tech. Blue<br />

Grass Dent Soc, KDA.<br />

SULLIVAN, Harold R. b Australia 1916; d 14 Sep 1960. MDS '38, DDSc '53 U Sydney. Bact res U Sydney,<br />

lect op dent & biochem U Sydney, asst dir Inst Dent Res. Maj WW II. Carnegie fel, Nuffield Fdn, Dominion<br />

Trav Fel. Fairfax Reading Mem prize awd '58. Ed Apollonia '47; hon ed Dental J Australia '51, '54-55. Aust<br />

Dent Assoc, Dent Alum Assoc (pres '48-49). A charter member Australian sec <strong>IADR</strong>. Bacterial factors in the<br />

initiation of dental caries; observations on the formation of carious lesions in human dental enamel.<br />

SWANSON, W(illiam) F(redin). MICROANATOMY; EMBRYOLOGY. b Arroye Pa 19 Dec 1892; d<br />

Pittsburgh 6 Jun 1970. BS Pa SU '15; DDS '20, MS '30 U Pittsburgh. Asst prof '24-35, assoc prof '35-44, prof &<br />

head dept histol & embryol '44-47, assoc dean '47-52, dean '52-61, dean emer '61 Pittsburgh SD. Outstanding<br />

Dentist of Year awd '60 Pa DA. Pa St Dent Counc & Exam Bd (secy), FACDM, Acad Gen Dent, ASM, FDI,<br />

OKU. Pulpless teeth as foci of infection; respiration of streptococci from pulpless teeth; bacterial toxins and<br />

vitamin C in relation to tooth structure.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 251


SWEENEY, James T. DENTAL AMALGAMS. b Berkeley Calif 18 Sep 1893; d Lodi Calif 24 Jun 1951.<br />

DDS U Calif CD '26. Stf Stockton Calif St Hosp '26-44, tchg stf Calif CD. Prac '44-51. FACD, ADA, OKU.<br />

Essayist and presenter of table clinics at dental meetings. Research in dental amalgams and instrument design.<br />

SZABÓ, József. ACTION OF SILVER NITRITE ON PULP & DENTIN. Place and date of birth not known; d<br />

Budapest 17 May 1937. Dir Dent Inst U Budapest '19-37. Auth texts on dent & oral surg.<br />

TALBOT, Eugene S. COMPARATIVE ANATOMY. b 1847 place of birth not known; d Chicago 20 Dec<br />

1924. DDS, MD.<br />

TAYLOR, Norris O(slow). DENTAL MATERIALS; METALLURGY. b Touling Ill 7 Oct 1895; d 28 Jun<br />

1967. BS '18, MS '20 U Ill; PhD SU Iowa '23. Instr to assoc prof SU Iowa '20-28; ADA res assoc NBS '28-31;<br />

vp Spyco Smelting & Refg Co '31-38; sales mgr '39-46, vp '46-67 S S White Dental Mfg Co; prof dent mat<br />

Mich SD '46-48.<br />

TAYLOR, Philip B. DENTAL MATERIALS. b Detroit 16 Nov 1906; d 28 Feb 1969. AB Olivet Coll '30, AM<br />

WRU '32. Tchg fel '30, instr '34, asst prof '36-40 WRU SD; dir res Julius Aderer Inc '44-69; consult Cosmos<br />

Dent Prod Inc '45-61. Lt Col USA '40-45. Chmn DMG. <strong>IADR</strong>. Casting procedures and polymers.<br />

THOMSON, George K(err). PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b Newcastle New Brunswick Canada 26 Mar<br />

1870; d Halifax 2 May 1935. DDS Phila DC '92. Prof hygiene & clin & prev dent, prof crown & bridge &<br />

ceramics, dent fac Dalhousie U '25-35. CDA (pres; chmn Army Dent Serv); Dominion Dent Counc; Can rep Int<br />

Dent Cong '14, '26, '31; chmn Cmt Dent Ed 10th Conf Can Univs; AADS (chmn cmt on Est Preschool Dent<br />

Clins).<br />

TIBLIER, Sidney L(ouis). PATHOLOGY; SURGERY. b New Orleans 15 Jul 1898; d 13 Jun 1969. BA '17,<br />

MS '19, DDS '23 Loyola (La). Instr to prof chem '19-26, prof oral path '26-45, dean '38-45, lect dent hist &<br />

ethics Loyola SD (La). Prac (pt). FACD, AADH, La SDS (pres '35-36), OKU. Ed Louisiana State Dent J.<br />

Experimental pathology and surgery.<br />

TINOCO, Alfred A. Place and date of birth not known; d Aruba Venezuela 26 Mar 1970.<br />

TISHLER, Benjamin. PERIODONTICS. b Boston 11 Oct 1872; d Boston 3 Jan 1951. DMD Harvard '04. Instr<br />

Harvard DS '06-25, vis lect perio NYU. Prac gen '04-24, perio '24-51. FACD, Am Acad Dent Sci, AAPer (pres<br />

'33), ADA, Harvard Odont Soc (pres '24), Mass DS. Noted contributor to literature of periodontia.<br />

TODD, T(homas) Wingate. ANATOMY. b Sheffield England 15 Jan 1885; d Cleveland O 28 Dec 1938. MB,<br />

ChD U Manchester; London Hosp. Jr & sr demonstr anat U Manchester '07-08, house surg Royal Infirm '09,<br />

lect anat & clin anat U Manchester '10, prof & head dept anat WRU '12-38. Dir Hamman Museum, Brush Fdn.<br />

Auth Mammalian Dentition. FRCS, AAA, Soc Anat Gt Britain & Ireland, AAnthroA, Galton Soc (fel).<br />

Originated longitudinal growth studies.<br />

TOVERUD, Guttorm. PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b Aurskog Norway 30 Apr 1896; d 25 May 1969. Cand<br />

Odont State Dent Inst Oslo '19, PhD Oslo U '26. Asst State Dent Inst Oslo '19-23; instr to docent Pedod Inst<br />

Oslo '23-31; prof & head of pedod '32-66, dean '33-39, prof emer '66 Oslo DS. Prac pt pedod '24-48. Lt DC '20-<br />

22. Odont D (hon) U Lund '65, LLD (hon) Queen's U Belfast '65, D Odont (hon) Roy DS Denmark '67. Miller<br />

prize FDI '67, Knight of St Olav Norway '61. Nor Dent Assoc, Oslo Dent Soc, Nordic Pedod Assoc, FDI,<br />

ORCA, FRCS. Dental caries—etiology and prophylaxis; pedodontics.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 252


TRITHART, Albert H. PREVENTIVE DENTISTRY. b Sykesville Pa 13 Aug 1920; d Las Vegas Nev 10 Nov<br />

1970. BS Muskingum Coll '42, DDS Pittsburgh SD '45, MPH U Mich '48. Reg dent off Tenn Dept PH '45-58,<br />

dir div dent health Montana State Bd of Health '58-61, dir div dent health Tenn Dept PH '61-67; assoc prof<br />

SUNY (Buffalo) '67-70, prof & chmn dept community dent U Mich '70. Maj USA DC '43-45, '52-54. ADA,<br />

AAPHD (pres '66), APHA, AADS. Comparison of interproximal carious lesions found by clinical<br />

roentgenographic examinations; caries experience and between-meal dietary histories.<br />

TULLER, Charles Sheppard. PROSTHODONTICS. b Chicago 22 May 1880; d New Orleans 6 Nov 1944.<br />

DDS CCDS '01. Fac Tulane U DS; active in founding Loyola SD (La); prof dent path, materia medica & therap<br />

'14-15, prof oral path, materia medica & therap '15-16, secy fac & prof oral path & therap '16-19 Loyola SD<br />

(La). Prac pt. ADA, La DA (past pres), New Orleans DA (past pres), OKU. Collaborated with Dr. Sidney<br />

Fournet in development of technique to assure retention of full dentures; from '36 to '44 traveled extensively,<br />

giving courses in this technique. Presenter of many clinics and papers; contributor to professional journals.<br />

TURKHEIM, Hans J. BACTERIOLOGY. b Hamburg Germany 23 Jul 1889; d 27 Apr 1955 London. DMD<br />

Munich '11. Privatdozent '23-30, extraord prof & dir prosth dept '30-33 U Hamburg; postwar vis lect & hon prof<br />

med Hamburg U. Est ft gen prac Gt Britain '33. BDA, BDA Photo Soc (past pres), ADA, FDI, Royal Soc Med<br />

(fel), Continental Dent Soc (pres Gt Britain). Bacteriology of dental material.<br />

TURNER, Charles R(oot). DENTAL MATERIALS; PROSTHODONTICS. b 3 Nov 1875 place not known; d<br />

Philadelphia 11 Jun 1947. AB U NC '95, DDS U Pa '98, MD Med Coll Va '99. Prof prosth U Pa Med '00-02;<br />

prof prosth '02-42, dean '17-41 Pa SD. ScD (hon) U Pa '38, Med Coll Va '35. ADA, Pa SDA (pres '25-26). Auth<br />

American Practice of Surgery '04; co-auth & ed American Textbook of Prosthetic Dentistry 3rd, 4th, 5th & 6th<br />

eds. AAS, FDI, AADS (past pres), NC SDS (hon), Nippon DS (hon), ADSE (hon), OKU.<br />

VAN KIRK, L(awrence) E(dward). HISTOLOGY; BACTERIOLOGY. b Freeport Pa 6 May 1895; d 26 Aug<br />

1953. AB Washington & Jefferson '16; DDS '19, MS '31 U Pittsburgh. Instr '19-37, dean '47 Pittsburgh SD.<br />

Prac pt gen '19-47. FACD, Odont Soc W Pa (pres '46), Pitt Acad Dent, OKU. Structural variations in human<br />

enamel and dentin; effects in animals following injection of bacteria isolated from human pulpless teeth.<br />

VAN WOERT, Frank T(horn). DENTAL EDUCATION. b Half Moon NY 16 Apr 1856; d NYC 1 Sep 1927.<br />

MDS '90 NY St Bd Exam. Prof dent surg & electrotherap U Buffalo; a founder, instr '18-24, prof prosth '16-19,<br />

chmn admin bd '19-22, prof clin dent & dir '22-27 Columbia D&OS. Brooklyn DS (pres), NY Odont Soc (pres),<br />

2nd Dist Dent Soc NY (pres), NY SDS (pres), 1st Dist DS NY, Nat DS, NYAD, AYAM.<br />

VEHE, William Dietrich. CERAMICS. b Bristol SD 11 Sep 1883; d 1959. DDS CCDS '07. Prof op dent &<br />

crown & bridgework '16-46, prof emer '46 U Minn. Prac pt. Minn Dist Dent Soc (pres '14), Minn SDA (pres<br />

'16), ADA, Monson Res & Clin Club, OKU. <strong>IADR</strong> (pres Minn sec). Ceramics pertaining to strength studies and<br />

color; the porcelain inlay; the porcelain veneer crown.<br />

VOLLAND, Roscoe H. b 19 Sep 1878; d Iowa City Ia 6 Jan 1962. Grad Iowa St Tchrs Coll '99; DDS '02, MD<br />

'05 U Iowa. Fac mem Iowa CD 21 yrs, prof clin dent NWU 21 yrs; ret from tchg '44. ScD (hon) NWU '24. Iowa<br />

SDS (pres '11), ADA (pres '28, treas '28-48), chart mem ACD (pres '29); life mem Am Dent Soc Europe.<br />

Named outstanding figure in Iowa dentistry '00-'50 by Iowa State Dental Society.<br />

VON MÁTHÉ, Denes. PROSTHETICS. b 1877 place of birth not known; d 1943. Kolozsvar Transylvania '03.<br />

Prof stomat med fac U Budapest '37-43. Spec prosth dent. Co-auth book on full prosthesis: A teljes protézis.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 253


WACH, Edward C(harles). ENDODONTICS. b Chicago 5 Apr 1885; d Chicago 10 Aug 1966. PhB '07, DDS<br />

'23, MS '37 U Ill. Instr to assoc prof dept applied materia medica & therap Ill CD '23-25. Prac pt gen. FACD,<br />

FAAAS, AAE, ADA. Dental caries.<br />

WACHSMANN, Karel, Sr. b Prague 11 Nov 1857; d Prague 6 Oct 1938. Ed stf Czechoslovenska<br />

Stomotologie. Czech DS (pres '05-14, '24-30). <strong>IADR</strong> hon vp.<br />

WAITE, Frederick C(layton). DENTAL & MEDICAL EDUCATION. b Hudson O 24 May 1970; d 30 Mar<br />

1956. LittB '92, AM '94 WRU; AM '96, PhD '98 Harvard. Instr NY high schools '98-00, NYU '99; asst anat U<br />

Chicago '00-01; asst prof '01, assoc '05, prof '06, emer prof histol & embryol '40-56 WRU. LLD (hon) WRU<br />

'43. AAAS, AAA, AAHM, AMA, AAMC (vp '06), AMicroS (vp '13), ASN, ASZ, Boston Soc Nat Hist,<br />

Cleveland Acad Med, Cleveland DS (hon), Ohio Acad Med (pres '30). Zoology; embryology; microscopic<br />

anatomy; medical and dental education; history of medical and dental education.<br />

WALDO, Charles Merrell. ORTHODONTICS; ANATOMY. b Canisteo NY 24 Feb 1906; d Boston 29 Jan<br />

1953. AB '28, DDS '30, MS '32 U Mich. Instr Mich SD '30-32; fel orthod Child Res Counc Denver '32-36; instr<br />

to asst prof orthod Mich SD '38-41; asst prof to assoc prof Harvard SDM '41-53; assoc orthod Children's Hosp<br />

Boston '44-53; tchg fel anat '42, res assoc '46-47 Harvard MS. ADA, AAAS, Gt Lakes Soc Orthod, AAO,<br />

OKU. Longitudinal growth studies; clinical orthodontics; early growth—cleavage stages; bone growth and<br />

factors affecting growth in deer antlers.<br />

WARD, Marcus L(lewellyn). DENTAL MATERIALS; DENTAL HISTORY. b Howell Mich 5 Aug 1875; d 9<br />

Jan 1967. DDS '02, DDSc '05 U Mich. Instr '03-05, lect '05-08, prof op tech & op dent '08-12, prof dent physics<br />

& chem '12-19, prof dent metallurgy & C&B '19-34, dean fac '16-34, Taft prof dent '34-45 Mich SD. Jenkins<br />

med '38, Jarvie med '41, Callahan awd '42, Crouse awd '43. Ed Am Textbook Op Dent '20-41. FACD, AAAS,<br />

AADS (pres '25), AAUP, ADA (pres '39), Am Assoc Adult Educ, Mich Acad Sci & Letters, Mich SDS (pres<br />

'12), OKU.<br />

WASSERMANN, Friedrich. ANATOMY. b Munich Germany 13 Aug 1884; d 16 Jun 1969. MD U Munich<br />

'10. Prof anat U Munich '14-36; prof dept anat & Zoller Dent Clin '37-48, prof emer '48-69 U Chicago; sr biol<br />

Argonne Nat Lab '48-69. PhD (hon) U Frankfurt '58, MD (hon) U Giessen '59. Unitarian Serv Cmt med mission<br />

to Germany '48; vis prof WRU '42, U Heidelberg '52, U Frankfurt '54, Albert Einstein Coll Med '55, 57. Disting<br />

serv awd U Chicago Med Alum Assoc '60. AAA, FAAS, Anat Soc Germ (hon), ASCB, ASZ, ISCB,<br />

Leopoldina, Med Soc Munich (hon), SEBM, SSDG. Cytology, especially mitosis, connective tissue, dental<br />

tissues, adipose tissue; electron microscopy; isotopes; radioautography.<br />

WEBSTER, Albert E(dward). ORAL SURGERY. b Canada 1866; d 5 Nov 1936. DDS CCDS '93, MD Rush<br />

MC '98. Demonstr '93, prof orthod '99, prof op dent '06-36, dean '15-23, hon dean '23-26 Fac Dent U Toronto.<br />

MDS (hon) RCDS Ontario '94, LLD (hon) Toronto '32. Jarvie med '32. Canadian rep Int Dent Cong St Louis<br />

'04. Ed Dominion Dent J '00-35; auth A Manual for Dental Assistants. FACD, CDA (pres), Am Inst Dent Tchrs<br />

(pres), BDA (hon), Ontario DA (hon). <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '24-25, '31-32).<br />

WEIDMANN, Stephan Michael. COMPOSITION & BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY OF HARD TISSUE. b<br />

Sacalaz Rumania 3 Jun 1904; d Leeds England 7 Jul 1969. Dipl Ing Technische Hochschule Stuttgart '26, Dr<br />

Ing Technische Hochschule Darmstadt '30, PhD U Leeds '51. Head chem Dermata Leather & Shoe Factories<br />

(Cluj) '33-34, dept head Electrochem Works Halle '45-48, sr res fel to prof oral biol Leeds DS '48. Biochem<br />

Soc, ORCA, B&TS. Bone biology; calcification; organic matrix of bones and teeth; fluoridation.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 254


WEINMANN, Joseph Peter. HISTOLOGY; PATHOLOGY. b New Bistritz Czechoslovakia 13 May 1896; d<br />

17 May 1960. MD U Vienna '23. Res assoc U Ill '38-39, res fel Columbia '39-40, asst prof Loyola '40-46, assoc<br />

prof U Ill '46-60. Lord-Chaim prize '41. Co-auth The Enamel of Human Teeth '40, Bone & Bones 2nd ed '55.<br />

FAAAS, FAAOP, ABOP (dipl).<br />

WEISBERGER, David. ORAL BIOLOGY. b Dunmore Pa 15 Feb 1904; d Boston 8 Nov 1966. BS St Thomas<br />

Coll '26, DMD Harvard '30, MD Yale '35. Stf oral surg & chief dent serv Mass Gen Hosp '48-66, instr to prof<br />

dent med Harvard SDM '36-66, consult Boston hosps '40-66. Mem NIH nat adv counc dent res '60-66. AAAS,<br />

ACS (bd dir Mass div), New Eng Cancer Soc, New Eng Soc Oral Surg. Tissue enzymology; influence of<br />

surgical removal of salivary glands and subsequent development of dental caries in experimental animals; effect<br />

of liver disease on occurrence of leukoplakia.<br />

WELKER, William H(enry). BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY. b Red Hill Pa 20 Aug 1879; d Spooner Wis 7 Jul<br />

1956. AB Lehigh U '04, PhD Columbia '08. Asst prof biol chem Columbia '11-12; asst prof '13-19, assoc '19-<br />

21, prof '21-31, prof & head dept biol chem '31-47 U Ill Coll Med. DSc (hon) Franklin & Marshall Coll '42.<br />

Gibbs prize NYAM '07. ASBC, SEBM, Harvey Soc, Coll Phys Metabolism. Immunological properties of<br />

proteins; cancer.<br />

WHITE, Jesse D(uncan). PROSTHETICS. b Raymond Ill 1873; d St Louis 1941. DDS Wash U '01. Asst to<br />

prof prosth '04-36, act dean '32-33 Wash U. ACD (charter mem), Mo SDS (pres), St Louis DS (pres), OKU.<br />

WILLIAMS, James Leon. HISTOLOGY; PROSTHETICS. b Embden Me 21 Apr 1852; d NYC 23 Feb 1932.<br />

DDS Baltimore DC, LDS RCS Ireland '89. Assoc ed J Dent Res. FACD, FAADSci, FNYAS, F Royal Anthro<br />

Inst England & Ireland, Nat Soc Dent Prosth (pres). <strong>IADR</strong> (pres '21-23). Invented Trubyte system; discovered<br />

typal forms of teeth.<br />

WINTER, George B(en) W(ade). ORAL SURGERY; EXODONTIA; IMPACTED MANDIBULAR THIRD<br />

MOLAR. b Brooklyn NY 14 Apr 1878; d St Louis 28 Mar 1940. AB St Louis U '00. Prof St Louis U, tchr WW<br />

I in Officers Sch Neuro Plast & Oral Surg, tchr extension courses Columbia U, prof exodont Wash U SD.<br />

Coined word "exodontia" '13. Auth text on exodontia, text on impacted mandibular 3rd molar '26; movie<br />

Fundamental Principles for the Technical Removal of the Mandibular 3rd Molar '36. Jenkins med '33, gold<br />

med & scroll RI SDS '36, gold med Odont Soc Havana '38. FACD, ADA (pres '36, trustee), ADSE (hon),<br />

ASOS & Exodont (charter mem), Mo SDA (pres '27), St Louis DS (pres '21), OKU.<br />

WINTER, Gordon R. b 1896; d 30 Jul 1951. DDS U Pa '19. Asst prof oral med & prof oral diag Temple SD &<br />

MS. AADM (pres '51).<br />

WINTERNITZ, M(ilton) C(harles). PATHOLOGY. b Baltimore 19 Feb 1885; d Hanover NH 3 Oct 1959.<br />

AB '03, MD '07 Johns Hopkins. Fel '07-08, asst path '08-09, instr '09-10, assoc prof '10-17 Johns Hopkins; prof<br />

path & bact '17-25, Brady prof path '25-50, dean '20-35 Yale SM; assoc dir Inst Human Relations '31-35; act dir<br />

bd sci adv '47-48, dir '48 Jane Coffin Child Memorial Fund for Med Res; asst res path '10-13, assoc res path '13-<br />

17 Johns Hopkins Hosp; path Baltimore City Hosp '10-17, New Haven Hosp '17-32 (then appointed dir). Maj<br />

USA MC '18-19. Mem cmt growth NRC (act chmn div med scis '49-50, chmn '50-53). MA (hon) '17, LLD<br />

(hon) '52 Yale. Jenkins med '32, His Majesty's med of hon '48, Pres Cert of Merit '48. USN Off Sci Res & Dev,<br />

US VA, consult USPHS. AA, AMA (fel), Soc Exptl Path, Assoc Path & Bact, SEBM, Royal Soc Med (fel).<br />

Cardiovascular-renal diseases; nucleic acid ferments; catalase; peroxidase; lipase; melanotic sarcoma;<br />

tuberculosis of the stomach; tuberculosis cavities of the liver; the relation of duct changes to chronic<br />

pancreatitis; regeneration of the kidney; pathology of war gas; influenza.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 255


WISAN, Jacob M(ordecai). DENTAL HYGIENE; PUBLIC HEALTH. b Stapleton NY 28 Feb 1896; d<br />

Philadelphia 4 Oct 1958. DDS NYU '18, MSPH Columbia '44. Sch dent Clark Twp NJ '27-33, Rutgers '30-31,<br />

NYU '31-39, state supvr child dent proj St Dept Educ NJ '33-35, chief div dent health St Dept of Health '39-47,<br />

dir div Dental Health Educ ADA '48-58, Joseph Samuels Dent Clin for Child RI Hosp '49-51, dir dent res &<br />

educ US VA '51-53, chief dent health sec Dept Public Health Philadelphia '53-58. Consult USPHS. Dipl Am Bd<br />

Dent Pub Health, ADA, Soc Dent for Children (pres), fel Pub Health Assoc, Sch Health Assoc, NJ Dent Soc.<br />

Administration of dental care programs for children; dental health habits of American people; cost analysis of<br />

dental care programs for children.<br />

WOLFE, William R(udolph), Jr. DENTAL CARIES & GINGIVITIS. b Cleves O 6 Aug 1906; d 3 Dec 1969.<br />

DMD U Louisville '46. Instr '47-49, asst prof '49-52, assoc prof '52-56, prof & chmn dept oral med beginning<br />

'56 U Louisville. Capt DC '50-56. OKU, FAAAS, ACD, ADA, AADS.<br />

WRIGHT, George H(enry). b Warwick England 28 Dec 1869; d Boston 1941. DMD Harvard '03. Instr histol<br />

'04, asst to instr laryngol '09, asst prof dent '19, clin prof oral med '28-37 Harvard DS; dent consult Eye & Ear<br />

Infirm Mass Gen Hosp. Organizer Boston sec <strong>IADR</strong>. Temporomandibular joint disturbances associated with<br />

"closed bite."<br />

WRIGHT, Walter H(enry). DENTAL ANATOMY; PROSTHETICS; DENTAL EDUCATION. b Pa 18 Feb<br />

1893; d NY 31 Dec 1951. DDS '17, BS '31, MS '32, PhD '34 U Pittsburgh. Lect anat '18, asst prof anat & clin<br />

prosth '19-20, assoc prof prosth dent '33-37, prof anat & prosth '38-46 Pittsburgh SD; prof prosth dent & dean<br />

NYU CD beginning '46. Dent consult to surg gen USA & VA, Adv Health Counc Greater NY. Prac pt '35-46.<br />

FACD (pres), ADA (chmn prosth sec), AAAS, AAA, AACPProsth (pres '46), AAUP, AADS (chmn plans &<br />

proj cmt), Nat Soc Dent Prosth (pres), NBDE, Odont Soc W Pa, NYAD, Pa SDS, OKU (pres).<br />

WYLIE, William L(eroy). OPERATIVE DENTISTRY. b Drennen Pa 17 Mar 1886; d Cleveland 29 Jul 1960.<br />

BS Valparaiso U '09, DDS NWU '19. Asst prof op dent, supt dent clin, dean '37-56, dean emer '56-60 WRU.<br />

Mil consult USA. FACD, ACD, Ohio SDS, Cleveland DS (secy), OKU.<br />

YARDENI, J(acob). DENTAL CARIES. b Kiev Russia 15 Apr 1894; d Jerusalem 13 Sep 1970. DDS Dent<br />

Sch Kiev U '16, cert proficiency oral anat Columbia D&OS '39-41. Intern Kiev Red Cross Hosp '15-16, head<br />

dent clin Israel Sick Fund '53-54, sr lect Israel Fac Dent Med '56-64. Prac '21-64. Cum laude Med Fac Dent<br />

Coll Kiev '16. Grabov prize Tel Aviv Dent Assoc '65, Alpha Omega awd '64. Israel Dent Assoc (pres '54).<br />

Orthodontics; dental morphology; dental caries. Auth first textbook on dental anatomy in Hebrew.<br />

YOUNG, J. Lowe. ORTHODONTIA. Place and date of birth not known; d NYC 3 May 1941. Transplantation.<br />

ZEMSKY, James L. ORAL SURGERY. b 1884; d NYC 9 Apr 1951. DDS NY CD '15. Auth text on oral<br />

surgery.<br />

ZISKIN, Daniel E. PERIODONTICS. b Grand Forks ND 27 Apr 1895; d NY 21 Oct 1948. DDS '17 U Minn.<br />

Asst prof U Minn '18-30; chief stf dent clin Minneapolis Gen Hosp '20-30; asst prof '31, assoc prof '36, head<br />

clin res lab & head div grad stud beginning '45 Columbia D&OS; attend dent Presbyterian Hospital NYC. Dent<br />

consult NY Diabetes Assoc. FAAAS, Am Acad Dent, AAPer, OKU. Co-auth Differential Diagnosis of Mouth<br />

Diseases '43, Handbook of Pulp Symptomatology & Diagnosis '43.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 256


CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: THE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY OBSERVANCE<br />

It seems very fitting to conclude this document with a full account of the Fiftieth Anniversary<br />

Observance of the Association. It was for the Forty-eighth Annual Meeting of the International Association for<br />

Dental Research at the Americana Hotel in New York City, on Monday morning, 16 March 1970, that a special<br />

program was prepared for this occasion. There were featured several outstanding speakers, who cited some of<br />

our historical heritage but who primarily made projections into the future of dental education, research, and<br />

health care. One address in particular, made by the top representative of the United States Government in health<br />

and scientific affairs, portrayed the important future role and problems of health personnel and research.<br />

Greetings were extended from the presidents of all the divisions of the Association, who had been invited to<br />

attend this special annual meeting, representing their constituents from abroad. The exact program was as<br />

follows, in outline form:<br />

The Americana Hotel was the<br />

site of the 50th General Session<br />

of the <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

8:45<br />

A.M.<br />

General Meeting—Executive Session I (Georgian Rooms)<br />

Presiding officer: PRESIDENT CLIFTON O. DUMMETT<br />

Opening Session of the Forty-eighth General Meeting and Fiftieth<br />

Anniversary Observance<br />

Greetings from the Presidents of the Divisions<br />

Keynote address: "The Future of Research in the Health Sciences"<br />

ROGER O. EGEBERG, M.D., Assistant Secretary for Health and Scientific Affairs,<br />

Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Washington, D.C.<br />

10:00<br />

A.M.<br />

Symposium I —"Dental Research and Society" (Georgian Rooms)<br />

Presiding officer: PRESIDENT CLIFTON O. DUMMETT<br />

Moderator: RALPH W. PHILLIPS, Assistant Dean for Research and Research<br />

Professor of Dental Materials, School of Dentistry, Indiana University, Indianapolis, Indiana<br />

"In Tribute to the Memory of William J. Gies: An Assessment of the Need for Changes in Dentistry"<br />

HERBERT J. BARTELSTONE, Associate Dean, Professor of Dentistry and Professor of<br />

Pharmacology, School of Dental and Oral Surgery, College of Physicians and Surgeons,<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 257


Columbia University, New York, New York<br />

"The Interfacing Role of the University"<br />

JOSEPH F. VOLKER, President, University of Alabama in Birmingham, Birmingham,<br />

Alabama<br />

"Politics, Priorities, and Public Health"<br />

JOHN B. MACDONALD, Committee of Presidents, Universities of Ontario, Toronto, Ontario<br />

This half-century observance in the life of the <strong>IADR</strong> was planned and implemented by an Ad Hoc Advisory<br />

Committee on Programs for the <strong>IADR</strong> Fiftieth Anniversary, whose members were as follows:<br />

R. W. PHILLIPS, Chairman F. J. ORLAND<br />

D. Y. BURRILL G. C. PAFFENBARGER<br />

M. K. HINE E. V. ZEGARELLI<br />

S. J. KRESHOVER C. O. DUMMETT, ex officio<br />

B. M. LEVY A. R. FRECHETTE, ex officio<br />

I. D. MANDEL G. H. ROVELSTAD, ex officio<br />

Divisional Presidents of the International Association for Dental Research (left to right): S. Matsumiya,<br />

Japanese; G. H. Rovelstad, North American (President-Elect); C. H. Tonge, British; J. F. Van Reenen, South<br />

African; K. F. Adkins, Australia-New Zealand; M. Skougaard, Scandinavian-NOF; G. Cimasoni, Continental<br />

European; C. O. Dummett, North American (President).<br />

OPENING OF THE FORTY-EIGHTH GENERAL MEETING AND GREETINGS FROM THE DIVISIONAL PRESIDENTS<br />

After calling the meeting to order at 9:00 A.M., President Dummett welcomed the members and guests.<br />

He introduced the president or representative of each of the other <strong>IADR</strong> divisions, who extended a message to<br />

the Association for his division, as follows:<br />

PRESIDENT KEN FRANCIS ADKINS, AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND DIVISION<br />

Mr. President, officers, members, and guests. On behalf of all of the members of the Australia and New<br />

Zealand Division of the International Association for Dental Research, I convey to you our best wishes on this<br />

your fiftieth anniversary.<br />

I congratulate you on your impressive record of achievements in the past, but, more importantly, I wish<br />

you greater successes in the future both for your own deeper personal satisfaction and for the advancement of<br />

science.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 258


PRESIDENT CECIL HOWARD TONGE, BRITISH DIVISION<br />

Mr. President. It is a great honor for me to be here today and to be able to convey the congratulations<br />

and good wishes of the members of the British Division on this occasion of the Fiftieth Anniversary Observance<br />

of the International Association for Dental Research. The achievement and growth of the last fifty years have<br />

made possible a recognition and an identity which would not have been accorded to dental research workers<br />

but for the wisdom and efforts of the founders and their successors in organizing this Association.<br />

The British Division, beginning as a small nucleus prior to 1939, has achieved a progressive growth in<br />

size and this year will have a program of some 139 papers in three sessions held simultaneously.<br />

One of the really pleasant aspects of this meeting is the opportunity it gives me to greet again those many<br />

friends who have transferred from the British to the North American Division. It is good to see them here.<br />

Should the <strong>IADR</strong> wish to hold its 1975 meeting in Britain, I can assure you of a warm welcome, and,<br />

with the close proximity of the Scandinavian and Continental European divisions, such a meeting could present<br />

a large forum for the exchange of ideas.<br />

May the future bring a continuation of the success which has marked the history of the first fifty years of<br />

the <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

COUNCILOR GEORGIO CIMASONI, REPRESENTING PRESIDENT A. KRŸNCKE, CONTINENTAL EUROPEAN<br />

DIVISION<br />

Mr. President, ladies and gentlemen. On behalf of our President, Professor Krÿncke of Germany, I have<br />

the great pleasure of bringing to you the greetings of the Continental European Division of the International<br />

Association for Dental Research. I must add that I personally welcome this opportunity, since it gives me the<br />

great pleasure of seeing the numerous friends that I have in this country. Those of us who are used to travel<br />

abroad can fully appreciate the value of the efforts of our present officers in trying to improve relationships<br />

among our members and in making the <strong>IADR</strong> a truly international association. In this connection, I heard at the<br />

council session that a meeting of the whole <strong>IADR</strong> is being planned for 1975 in London: I certainly am fully in<br />

favor of such a project and can assure you that proper support will be given on the "other" side of the Atlantic.<br />

Finally, let me express my gratitude for this kind invitation.<br />

PRESIDENT SEIICHI MATSUMIYA, JAPANESE DIVISION<br />

Mr. President, dignitaries, ladies and gentlemen. On behalf of the ninety-five members of the Japanese<br />

Division, I would like to express our hearty congratulations on the fiftieth anniversary of the International<br />

Association for Dental Research.<br />

For the past half-century the Association has made a valuable contribution to the progress of dental<br />

sciences; especially, their international interchange of programs furthering scientific knowledge has been highly<br />

appreciated.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 259


Recently our division has become quite active. It is a great pleasure for me to inform you that the First<br />

Pan-Pacific Congress of Dental Research was held in Japan last year as one of our activities.<br />

PRESIDENT MOGENS SKOUGAARD, SCANDINAVIAN-NOF DIVISION<br />

President Dummett, ladies and gentlemen. On behalf of the eight hundred members of the NOF, the<br />

Scandinavian Division of the International Association for Dental Research, it is a great honor for me to extend<br />

warm congratulations on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the <strong>IADR</strong>.<br />

Although the <strong>IADR</strong> by definition is the mother organization, I cannot resist the temptation to mention<br />

that we celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of the NOF three years ago. Nevertheless, we are proud that the NOF<br />

has now joined the <strong>IADR</strong> as the Scandinavian Division of this distinguished research organization. We are<br />

convinced that dental research is indeed international, that we have the same goals regardless of which part of<br />

the world we originate in, and it is our belief that the best way to forward these goals is to join forces.<br />

In spite of the numerical North American dominance, the <strong>IADR</strong> has over the years proved to be an<br />

international organization in the true sense of the word. This has been particularly the case during the last<br />

decade. May I take this opportunity to express the hope that this tendency will develop even further over the<br />

years to come.<br />

PRESIDENT JOHANNES FREDERICK VAN REENEN, SOUTH AFRICAN DIVISION<br />

Mr. President, officers, members, ladies and gentlemen. The South African Division has asked me to<br />

bring you greetings and good wishes; I bring the International Association for Dental Research our warmest<br />

congratulations on its fiftieth anniversary.<br />

The first fifty years have truly been golden years! The <strong>IADR</strong>, through its activity, its meetings, and its<br />

journal, has done a great deal for dental science and humanity. It has established itself as the largest and most<br />

important dental research organization in the world. In fact, I doubt whether the progressive dental research<br />

worker can afford to isolate himself from the <strong>IADR</strong>. May it continue to serve the profession so well in the years<br />

to come!<br />

I wish to pay tribute to the founders of the Association. It is significant that they formed an international<br />

body, and our division wishes to acknowledge the contribution they have made to the progress of dental science<br />

and international relations.<br />

The invitation to presidents of divisions to attend the golden jubilee meeting is a gesture which, I assure<br />

you, Mr. President, is greatly appreciated by the South African Division. We attach significance and importance<br />

to the example they have set, and we hope that more and more opportunities will be created in future for<br />

members of the Association to attend meetings of other divisions. In this way there can be greater exchange of<br />

ideas, which, we believe, is necessary for the progress of dental science, dental education, the profession, and<br />

humanity as a whole.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 260


INTRODUCTION OF MAYNARD K. HINE BY CLIFTON O. DUMMETT<br />

In considering many of the illustrious members of our Association upon whom I might bestow the honor<br />

of introducing our speaker for the day, several excellent candidates of course came to mind. The person who<br />

was finally selected was Dr. Maynard K. Hine of Indianapolis, Indiana. I think that if I were to enumerate the<br />

accomplishments of this dedicated administrator, it would take all day. Suffice it to say that he was born in<br />

Waterloo, Indiana, receiving degrees from the University of Illinois and the University of Rochester in New<br />

York. He was appointed Dean and Chairman of the Department of Periodontics at the University of Indiana in<br />

1944. In 1968 he was appointed Chancellor of the Indianapolis campus of the University of Indiana, a position<br />

which he holds at the present time. He is a former president of the International Association for Dental<br />

Research, a former president of the American Dental Association, a former president of the American Academy<br />

of Periodontology, a past president of the American Association of Dental Editors, a past president of the<br />

American Association of Endodontists, a past president of the American Association of Oral Pathology, a past<br />

president of the Indiana State Dental Association, and a past president of the American Association of Dental<br />

Schools. He is the possessor of several honorary degrees. I feel that our Association has done itself a distinct<br />

service in asking Dr. Hine to accomplish the pleasant task of introducing the Assistant Secretary of Health,<br />

Education, and Welfare.<br />

Clifton O. Dummett,<br />

President,<br />

introduced<br />

Maynard K. Hine.<br />

In my years of association with the dental profession, I have found it highly unusual to find any one<br />

individual about whom it can be said that one has never heard an unfavorable word. This is the case with Dr.<br />

Hine, whose special ability is that of being able to bring us together. In this capacity, then, I feel that he would<br />

also serve well as a consultant to the current President of the United States.<br />

Ladies and gentlemen, and members of the International Association for Dental Research, it is my<br />

pleasure to present to you at this time the Chancellor of the University of Indiana, Dr. Maynard Kiplinger Hine.<br />

INTRODUCTION OF ROGER O. EGEBERG BY MAYNARD K. HINE<br />

In introducing a well-known, influential individual, it is tempting to recite at some length the various<br />

achievements which have made him well known and influential. However, I have often questioned the<br />

desirability of this procedure, particularly if the individual is so well known that he really needs no introduction.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 261


A comprehensive introduction of a celebrity is most time-consuming, and most of us are really more interested<br />

in what the individual is going to do than in what he has done.<br />

Therefore, I shall not follow the usual pattern of reading the long list of activities of our morning<br />

speaker but rather shall single out those achievements which have made him unusually well qualified for his<br />

current assignment as the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare's Assistant Secretary for Health and<br />

Scientific Affairs.<br />

Maynard K. Hine, Chancellor,<br />

Indiana and University—Purdue University<br />

at Indianapolis, introduced Roger O.<br />

Egeberg.<br />

Dr. Roger Olaf Egeberg was born in Chicago, Illinois. He studied at Cornell and at Northwestern<br />

Medical School, and had his residency at the University of Michigan. He engaged in the private practice of<br />

internal medicine for ten years, so he knows the advantages and the handicaps of private practice of medicine.<br />

He served for a time as General Douglas MacArthur's personal physician and then for a decade worked in the<br />

Veterans Administration Hospital in Los Angeles, where he was involved in another facet of the health care<br />

system. During this time he became attracted to medical education. He served as a clinical professor of<br />

medicine from 1948 until 1964, when he was appointed Dean of the University of Southern California Medical<br />

School. Dr. Egeberg assumed active leadership in the development of the Watts neighborhood health center in<br />

Los Angeles.<br />

I note that he served as a member of the California State Board of Health for four years, but Governor<br />

Ronald Reagan refused to reappoint him&mdash;a fact which some consider not uncomplimentary.<br />

Members of the <strong>IADR</strong> will be interested to know that he has been carrying on research in ecology and in home<br />

care. Last fall he was named Assistant Secretary for Health and Scientific Affairs. The problems facing him are<br />

staggering, but, as Medical World News commented after his appointment, he is a "tough-minded persuader"<br />

with progressive views regarding the delivery of health care.<br />

Here, then, is a physician who has had experience as a private practitioner, a hospital medical director, a<br />

public health administrator, a clinical professor, a research investigator, the dean of a medical school, and a<br />

gentleman farmer. In these times there is a need to make good health care available to all who need it and at the<br />

same time to attempt to preserve the best in the private practice of medicine. A big order—and to deliver it will<br />

require a man of Dr. Egeberg's background and talents.<br />

We are honored to have Dr. Roger Olaf Egeberg on our program. His subject is "The Future of Research<br />

in the Health Sciences."<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 262


THE FUTURE OF RESEARCH IN THE HEALTH SCIENCES<br />

ROGER O. EGEBERG<br />

ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR HEALTH AND SCIENTIFIC AFFAIRS, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH,<br />

EDUCATION, AND WELFARE, WASHINGTON, D.C., USA<br />

It is a great pleasure to be with you on the occasion of your fiftieth anniversary. I would like to extend<br />

special greetings to the presidents of the Australia and New Zealand, British, Continental European, Japanese,<br />

North American, Scandinavian, and South African divisions who are here today. I understand that this<br />

distinguished Association uniquely serves to bring together scientists from all parts of the world. These<br />

scientists represent a wide range of disciplines and share a common dedication to research on oral disorders.<br />

The growth of your organization has been synonymous with the development of the dental sciences and the<br />

advancement of new knowledge. May you continue your impressive contributions to this important area of<br />

research.<br />

When Cliff Dummett kindly asked me to speak at this meeting about the future of research in the health<br />

sciences, I decided to take the opportunity to tell you something about where I think we stand in dealing with<br />

problems of health, and where I think we are heading.<br />

Actually, in neither of these areas can conclusions be expressed very easily. The debate about health<br />

problems in America has become intense in recent years. Yet I would have to say that we are still a long way<br />

from knowing exactly what the dimensions of those problems are. I know from personal experience that, if you<br />

try to cite figures to show that our health care system is in serious trouble, somebody will cite other figures—or<br />

even the same ones—to prove that things are more or less all right.<br />

If you dare to suggest that health indicators such as infant mortality or the utilization of health services<br />

show that many people in this country are not getting the kind of care they need and deserve, someone will<br />

jump up and say that such figures are no good, that they reflect differences in genetics and cultural patterns and<br />

cannot be used to gauge the effectiveness of care.<br />

Then, to go a step further—a leap further, really—it is even harder to try to draw some conclusions<br />

about where we might be heading in the whole sphere of health care delivery. Again, experience has<br />

demonstrated to me rather forcefully that, if one is so bold as to talk about the need for improvement in the way<br />

we make health care available to the people of the United States, he is likely to be accused of trying to ram<br />

compulsory health insurance down the throats of the public and the health industry. Or, if one happens to<br />

believe, as I do, that compulsory health insurance is not the way out of our problems, assuming that we have<br />

some problems, then there is a chorus of critics ready to say that he is a reactionary pawn of the health<br />

establishment without the vision or the will to see the inevitable logic of such a scheme.<br />

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Roger Egeberg delivered the keynote address at the 50th Commemorative meeting. Also on platform are<br />

<strong>IADR</strong> officers, many from abroad, and other dignitaries. The Georgian Rooms in the Americana Hotel were<br />

filled on that Monday morning of 16 March 1970.<br />

MORE KNOWLEDGE NEEDED<br />

The point is that there is more heat than light in much of what is being said about health care, about<br />

where we are today and where we ought to be heading tomorrow. But there is one thing that, thankfully,<br />

individuals on all sides of this debate generally agree on: We need a lot more knowledge than we have,<br />

knowledge in the fundamental biomedical disciplines, in the realm of health administration, in health<br />

economics, and in the social and behavioral aspects of health. Again, lest I expose my flank to the attack of<br />

those who say, "All Washington wants to do is look at the problem," let me emphasize my firm belief that there<br />

is a great deal that can be done right now both in research and in the delivery of essential health care. The field<br />

of dental health is a prime example.<br />

THE GROWING POPULATION<br />

As you know better than I, we have seen a tremendous rise in the demand for dental health care, as in all<br />

the health care fields. Consider the effect of rising population. In the 1920s the population of the world was<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 264


increasing by about 20 million people a year. Now it is up to about 1 1/4 million people a week, which means<br />

that the increase in the world population this year over last year will be about 70 million.<br />

Although it is a major factor, population growth, of course, is not the only force responsible for this<br />

growing demand. Rising levels of income and education represent other powerful forces.<br />

DENTAL DISEASES ARE HEALTH PROBLEMS<br />

More and more, the public is perceiving dental diseases as health problems. These attitudes have been<br />

shaped in large part by the high quality of the work of dental scientists and the steady communication of<br />

research findings to the public. One measure of rising expectation and demand is the prediction that dental<br />

health insurance may cover as many as 30 million Americans in 1975, as compared with only about 6.5 million<br />

today.<br />

As recognized health problems, the dental diseases are included in the new concept that fires the social<br />

consciousness of the country—of health as a right rather than a privilege. Needless to say, if everyone were to<br />

exercise this right, dentistry would be literally unable to meet the demand.<br />

I believe that the growing climate of public expectancy, coupled with the practical need to exact the<br />

greatest benefit from limited professional, scientific, and fiscal resources, must eventually lead to the successful<br />

integration of dentistry into total health programs.<br />

THE GOLDEN AGE OF DENTAL RESEARCH<br />

The promising contributions of the dental sciences—what Cliff Dummett termed the "Golden Age of<br />

Dental Research"—have been stimulated by many physical and biological scientists who have joined dentistry's<br />

ranks. Much more may also be accomplished by aligning educational and care aspects more closely with the<br />

broader field of biomedicine.<br />

One of the most important issues at present is how to team the scientific community with those who are<br />

primarily responsible for the health care—dental, medical, and other—of people. Although doing your own<br />

thing is the currency of the day, it is essential that you extend your creative thinking beyond traditional research<br />

interests and contribute ideas for the design and development of the educational and health delivery systems that<br />

will make it possible to bring services to those who need them, especially to children. Prevention and care in the<br />

early years will obviously reduce the need for service and the toll of disease and expense in maturity.<br />

The harvest is indeed great and the laborers few. I need not remind you of the staggering dimensions of<br />

dental diseases and disorders. Tooth decay and periodontal disease are virtually universal. For example, the<br />

United States Army currently finds that every hundred inductees require 600 fillings, 112 extractions, forty<br />

bridges, twenty-one crowns, eighteen partial dentures, and one full denture. If we examine the problem of<br />

malocclusion, we find that not fewer than one-fifth, and perhaps as many as one-half, of school-age children<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 265


will require orthodontic treatment. Private citizens pay approximately $4 billion a year for dental care, and an<br />

estimated 100 million man-hours are lost annually as a consequence of dental disease.<br />

DENTAL MANPOWER<br />

Of the many problems facing dentistry, none is greater or more urgent than the deficiency of manpower.<br />

A stabilizing factor has been the dental school construction program. The Health Professions Education<br />

Assistance program has been a major instrument in increasing student places in dental schools. First-year<br />

enrollment rose from 3,770 in the 1963-1964 school year, the year immediately before enactment of the HPEA<br />

legislation, to 4,203 in 1968-1969. We expect that it will reach 4,610 by the fall of 1970. That adds up to an<br />

increase of 22 percent over the seven-year period, almost four times the increase recorded in the seven<br />

preceding years. Even so, the ratio of dentists to population will continue its gradual decline.<br />

As a result of various societal forces, dental demand is expected to increase 50-75 percent by 1975. Only<br />

one-fifth to one-third of this increased demand can be met by the projected increase in the number of dentists.<br />

There is obviously no single, simple solution to this problem. But one conclusion is inescapable: we<br />

cannot continue doing business in the same old familiar way. Already, dentistry is exploring a path opened by<br />

its medical colleagues of giving the individual practitioner the responsibility of delegating duties to auxiliaries.<br />

For the past decade, federal agencies and dental schools have been studying the problem of what procedures can<br />

be delegated to dental assistants, hygienists, and laboratory technicians. Their findings are accelerating the<br />

transfer of selected professional duties from the dentist to his auxiliaries, a development that lies at the heart of<br />

the new patterns that must evolve to meet growing demands for health care.<br />

THE NEED FOR DENTAL EDUCATORS<br />

The times also call for other types of change. Because dentistry is steadily becoming more scientific and<br />

less empirical, it is increasingly important to assure practitioners of the future of an adequate orientation in<br />

scientific concepts. To do this, however, we must solve the problems of the scarcity of research-trained<br />

teachers. It is estimated that there are about 2,500 full-time equivalent faculty members to staff our fifty-three<br />

operating dental schools. This figure must be doubled by 1975 for adequate staffing of six new dental schools<br />

and others that are now in process of expansion. Although there is a shortage of all kinds of dental educators,<br />

the most critical lack is of well-trained clinical faculty.<br />

I realize that the late start of dental research has greatly disadvantaged dental schools and slowed the<br />

progress of the dental sciences. Statistics recently cited show that there is one biomedical research worker for<br />

every seven active physicians, and there is one Ph.D. scientist in health research for every 9.5 physicians. In<br />

contrast, there is only one dental researcher for every forty-four active nonfederal dentists and only one Ph.D.<br />

researcher for every forty-three such dentists.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 266


Future curriculum design not only must reflect advances in the dental sciences that will shape the<br />

practice of tomorrow; they also must reflect economic and psychological aspects of disease prevention. The<br />

establishment of departments of community dentistry is adding a new social dimension to the education of<br />

young dentists. However, attention to research in new techniques to improve learning is long overdue.<br />

These are areas in which investigators should be involved. As Cliff Dummett has stressed, the<br />

behavioral scientist is indispensable to the research team concerned with the totality of today's health problems.<br />

Similarly, the organization and delivery of health care services must claim the attention of creative scientists.<br />

Let me be quick to point out, however, that these are areas that we must explore in addition to continuing<br />

research in the physical and biological sciences. This type of effort, directed toward the prevention of dental<br />

diseases, holds the ultimate hope.<br />

ROLE OF RESEARCH<br />

The role of research as a substrate for prevention has been well illustrated in dental caries. It is in this<br />

area, I understand, that we perhaps stand most squarely on the threshold between discovery and application.<br />

You are probably aware that President Nixon's budget for the fiscal year 1971 requests a $5 million<br />

increase for the National Institute of Dental Research for studies on caries. This amount represents one-tenth of<br />

the total increase over last year for all biomedical research at the National Institutes of Health.<br />

TO MAKE CARIES PREVENTABLE<br />

The NIDR has helped to demonstrate, in essence, that an adequate base of knowledge now exists on<br />

which to mount a concerted research effort to make caries almost entirely preventable by 1980. A ten-year<br />

program of intensified research and development will be conducted by the institute through intramural,<br />

collaborative, and extramural studies. Several promising leads will be pursued through a sequence of laboratory<br />

research, clinical studies, field trials, and field demonstrations until they reach the point of readiness for<br />

widespread application in personal oral health programs and community health services. I understand that many<br />

of these findings have come from members of your Association and have been reported at these annual<br />

meetings.<br />

Relief of some of the manpower shortage is predictable in several of the preventive procedures being<br />

tested under this program. For example, a new method of topical fluoride application—using a gel in a<br />

mouthpiece—permits a single dental hygienist to supervise the treatment of several hundred schoolchildren in<br />

less than an hour, as contrasted with the twenty or so that could be treated daily with previous methods.<br />

Another manpower lack—the shortage of trained clinical researchers—has seriously impeded the flow<br />

of knowledge from the laboratory to the practitioner's office. This problem, however, is now under intensive<br />

study by the NIDR in the hope of finding additional means to bring persons with this type of training into<br />

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esearch and, as I mentioned earlier, into academic dentistry.<br />

As one approach to this problem, the NIDR has been supporting a dual-degree program which enables<br />

talented students to obtain both D.D.S. and Ph.D. degrees within seven years after their baccalaureate. In<br />

addition, it qualifies them as board-eligible in a clinical specialty. This program at the Universities of Alabama<br />

and Minnesota has aroused considerable interest and has stimulated at least five other dental schools to submit<br />

applications for similar types of training.<br />

THE COSTS TO SOCIETY<br />

Obviously, we must find innovative solutions to the problem of providing care to all who need it at a<br />

cost that the national economy can tolerate. We achieve relatively little if the great potential for the control of<br />

dental and other health problems is subverted by rising costs that effectively bar large numbers of people from<br />

needed health care. On the other hand, we dare not be misled by a false sense of economy. Although it will<br />

certainly cost society a good deal more to make preventive health services as widely available as they might be,<br />

the saving in money and in human well-being will, I am sure, more than offset the investment.<br />

The development of new, effective methods of prevention is vital because it will keep people healthy<br />

and out of hospitals and in that way will help to solve the crisis of health care delivery. We look to the<br />

continued contributions of dental research in these important areas. For in all branches of the health sciences,<br />

research offers the best hope for understanding and solution of the difficult problems we face.<br />

Clifton O. Dummett,<br />

President of <strong>IADR</strong>,<br />

presented honorary<br />

membership plaque to Roger O.<br />

Egeberg, M.D.,<br />

Assistant Secretary for Health<br />

and Scientific Affairs,<br />

HEW.<br />

CITATION TO ROGER EGEBERG BY CLIFTON DUMMETT<br />

It is becoming more and more of a rarity to find in high places men who have not lost the common<br />

touch. It is a liability of these times. One of the reasons why it is such a pleasure to be able to honor one who<br />

through sheer ability and hard work has reached the pinnacle of success in his profession is essentially the fact<br />

that he has not lost the common touch. Mr. Assistant Secretary, we, the members of the International<br />

Association for Dental Research, honor ourselves in honoring you today. The awesome burdens and<br />

considerable accountabilities of your high office are enough to affect adversely many a strong and dedicated<br />

man, yet you have maintained your cheerful demeanor, your tremendous sense of humor, and what I have<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 268


learned from experience to be your rich and colorful vocabulary. Approachable and committed to the task of<br />

improving the health of the citizens of our nation, you have been most effective in your support of all health<br />

professions. As you well know, research is the very foundation upon which the advancements of all health<br />

professions are based. The <strong>IADR</strong> has activated and encouraged many of the advances in dentistry. Your<br />

recognition of this truth, your support of dento-medical relations, and your implicit confidence in our ability to<br />

fulfill our educational, research, and service responsibilities to the American people—these comprise the<br />

reasons why our Association is happy and proud to make you one of us. Accordingly, sir, it is my pleasure on<br />

behalf of our organization to present you with this plaque attesting to your honorary membership in the<br />

International Association for Dental Research.<br />

INTRODUCTION OF RALPH W. PHILLIPS BY CLIFTON DUMMETT<br />

One of the first things I did last March was to appoint an Ad Hoc Committee on Programs for the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

Fiftieth Anniversary. This committee, under the able direction of Ralph Phillips, has done a magnificent job in<br />

arranging the fiftieth anniversary program. The committee felt that the presentation of high-level scientific<br />

symposia would be a major service to the scientific program. The result of the committee's action is this first<br />

symposium, entitled "Dental Research and Society," and Ralph Phillips was chosen to be moderator. I think it<br />

would be indecent to spend any time introducing Ralph Phillips. We all know him; we all know of his high<br />

level of accomplishment; we know of his contributions as a former president of the <strong>IADR</strong>; we know that he has<br />

won many awards, gold medals, and significant honors; we know that he is a consultant to all the federal<br />

agencies and to all the reputable societies and associations in our land; we know that he is an author of<br />

outstanding textbooks; and we know that despite all these accomplishments he is a regular guy with a subtle and<br />

piercing sense of humor. At present he is Assistant Dean for Research and Research Professor of Dental<br />

Materials at the School of Dentistry of the University of Indiana. Ralph will be responsible for moderating this<br />

symposium, which will set the pace for what I believe will be a memorable conclave. Ladies and gentlemen,<br />

Dean Phillips.<br />

REMARKS BY RALPH W. PHILLIPS<br />

The International Association for Dental Research this year enjoys and celebrates its fiftieth anniversary.<br />

It is appropriate that the inaugural meeting at this session be marked by a symposium commensurate with the<br />

past achievements and the future goals of this association. The Ad Hoc Committee on Programs for the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

Fiftieth Anniversary has selected as an appropriate title for this symposium "Dental Research and Society." It is<br />

my pleasure to serve as moderator of this symposium and to introduce the carefully selected participants.<br />

Each of the three assigned subjects that will follow, although distinct in scope, fits into the general<br />

theme cited. It is to be hoped that the challenges to be presented to this audience will provide guidelines for the<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 269


future activities of this Association, will define the role of the university as it relates to research in the health<br />

sciences, and will identify the problems associated with the dental investigative effort as applied to the<br />

community and government. Before introducing the speakers, I would like to thank personally the other<br />

members of this committee for their enthusiastic cooperation on the organization of this symposium, as well as<br />

on other details associated with this meeting.<br />

Ralph W. Phillips, Chairman, Ad Hoc Advisory Committee on Programs for the <strong>IADR</strong> Fiftieth Anniversary.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 270


IN TRIBUTE TO THE MEMORY OF WILLIAM J. GIES: AN ASSESSMENT OF THE<br />

NEED FOR CHANGES IN DENTISTRY<br />

HERBERT J. BARTLESTONE, D.D.S., PH.D.<br />

ASSOCIATE DEAN, PROFESSOR OF PHARMACOLOGY, AND PROFESSOR OF DENTISTRY, SCHOOL OF DENTAL<br />

AND ORAL SURGERY, COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, NEW YORK, NEW<br />

YORK.<br />

As a professor at Columbia University, I am very pleased to be able to express once again our<br />

appreciation of the efforts of Professor Gies of Columbia University in founding our society and its<br />

international journal. In the past, much has been said and written about this famous scientist. In 1957, on the<br />

occasion of the thirty-fifth general meeting of this Association, Dr. Theodor Rosebury presented an eloquent<br />

tribute to the memory of the then recently deceased Dr. Gies 1 Dr. Rosebury's presentation was neither an<br />

obituary nor a biography but rather a creative interpretation of Dr. Gies's work in dental education. Using the<br />

content of the famous Bulletin No. 19, 2 Dr. Rosebury assessed the changes in dental education since that 1926<br />

report of Dr. Gies.<br />

Today I would like to present an aspect of the professional efforts of Dr. Gies which points up his<br />

commitment to the need for collection and presentation of scientific information via appropriate media so that it<br />

may properly be used to advance science and, eventually, health care delivery.<br />

We all are aware of the fact that Dr. Gies founded the Journal of Dental Research in 1919 and the <strong>IADR</strong><br />

at Columbia University in 1920. By 1919, however, Dr. Gies was already an experienced motivator and<br />

organizer of scientists into coordinated groups. I feel certain that few of you realize that Dr. Gies was one of the<br />

founders of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine in 1903 and, further, that in 1904 he was the<br />

founder and first editor of the famous Proceedings of that society. Then, in 1906, Dr. Gies became one of the<br />

founders of the American Society of Biological Chemists and the founder and editor of its Proceedings in the<br />

next year. In 1923, after his work in founding the <strong>IADR</strong>, he initiated negotiations which brought four small<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 271


organizations concerned with dental education into one society: the American Association of Dental Schools.<br />

He served in an editorial capacity for a number of journals and special literature collections in basic science and<br />

clinical areas.<br />

The <strong>IADR</strong> itself may be considered a living tribute to the efforts of scientist, teacher, humanist Dr. Gies.<br />

It is not necessary for me to go into the details of the Association's historic growth, since Frank J. Orland, your<br />

chairman of the Committee on <strong>IADR</strong> History, has prepared an illuminating exhibit of this information for this<br />

Fiftieth Anniversary Observance. 3 These fifty years of growth, reflecting the expansion in numbers of member<br />

scientists, the increase in depth and breadth of their scientific interest and accomplishments, and the<br />

Association's impact on dentistry, have brought us to this critical period of assessment.<br />

Our member scientists have increased the scope of dental science and, through their additional roles as<br />

teachers, have brought some of this body of information into the traffic in dental education, since the curriculum<br />

of a modern dental school is directly dependent for its scientific content upon the efforts of our members. We<br />

have had a significant role in the maturation of dentistry and can therefore be considered to have earned the<br />

credentials necessary for assuming another role in dentistry. We must now become activists in the search for<br />

ways and means to bring what we now know about the art and science of dentistry into direct contact with the<br />

problems of delivery of dental health care to our society, so that we may help to solve them.<br />

This is a critical period for dentistry, paralleling the circumstances existing in all the health care<br />

professions. Society itself has matured to a degree which makes it possible to consider health maintenance to be<br />

a right of all men rather than a privilege of special segments of society. Limitations upon the implementation of<br />

this right to health must be related only to the level of our knowledge in prevention and treatment of disease at<br />

any given moment. The facts are that clinical efforts in prevention and treatment of oral diseases, based upon<br />

the present level of knowledge in dentistry, could result in the prevention or curtailment of most major dental<br />

disease in our population. What we now know, if applied, could effectively stop caries and prevent or<br />

significantly curtail all periodontal disease. In addition, disabilities related to problems of growth and<br />

development could be significantly reduced in numbers and severity.<br />

But something is seriously out of order in our profession, since we know that we do not now prevent<br />

caries and most periodontal disease. If, in spite of the efforts of more than 100,000 dentists, there are an<br />

estimated 1 billion unfilled carious areas in the mouths of the people of the United States; if, in spite of our<br />

efforts, over 10 percent of our people have no teeth at all; if another 5 percent have no teeth in one dental arch;<br />

if untold millions of people are missing one or more teeth without adequate prosthetic repair, then, even with<br />

our knowledge, we have not slowed pathological processes to the point where over 100,000 dentists can<br />

possibly restore health in the face of existing disease. The present systems of dental manpower development<br />

and dental health care delivery must be considered obsolete in the light of society's current demand for progress.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 272


Our present system of dental health care delivery treats less than 50 percent of our population, while 95<br />

percent of the population suffers from dental disease. The dental profession, working closely with government<br />

and universities, has funded and constructed new schools, so that now we graduate 3,500 dentists per year. By<br />

the end of the 1970's we may have enough schools capable of graduating an additional 1,000 dentists. This<br />

rather heroic effort of all facets of society concerned with dental education becomes shockingly inadequate<br />

when viewed prospectively. The "numbers game" as a solution to dental health problems becomes obsolete if<br />

we consider the following: that dentists retire from practice or die; that the population is increasing at a<br />

remarkable rate; that dental health is a right of every member of a democratic society; and that about 110<br />

million people are not now treated. I have indicated up to this point that our current clinical systems of delivery<br />

may be inadequate; our efforts to build new educational structures to increase the dentist population appear to<br />

be inadequate; and now I must also suggest that our educational system itself may be obsolete. Obviously,<br />

American dentistry can easily find examples of an individual dentist serving the dental needs of a patient<br />

completely. This reflects the potential of dental health care delivery systems originated during the first twenty<br />

years of the twentieth century to care for an individual patient. But our professional attainments of the past and<br />

present can be considered significant only if we recognize that the early operating objectives of a young<br />

profession may no longer be valid today.<br />

Dental education is still structured to produce a dentist who can repair teeth with existing carious lesions<br />

and can replace missing teeth. Periodontal disease and its prevention and treatment are superficially taught<br />

through most undergraduate curricula. This means that dentists spend large amounts of chair time supplying<br />

prostheses necessary to restore functions lost through periodontal disease in patients with varying degrees of<br />

still-persisting periodontal involvement. Failure of the treatment is directly related to progressing periodontal<br />

disease, and much time is spent in remaking or enlarging the restorations which have failed. Because dental<br />

restorations are often designed in a manner conducive to a high iatrogenic disease potential, the resultant<br />

disease again requires large aliquots of dentists' total chair time.<br />

Our system of education produces a mechanistically oriented dentist whose inadequacies become<br />

glaringly apparent when both the state of dental health needs and the right of man to be free of dental disease<br />

are joined conceptually. Under no conditions conceivable at present can we educate and train dentists, as we<br />

know them today, in numbers sufficient to fulfill our profession's mandate from society. We cannot afford to<br />

build the structures to house new schools or expand existing ones to a practical degree. Even if we could do this,<br />

we could not staff these schools.<br />

I believe that a significant contribution to the solution of dental health care delivery problems should<br />

come from you individually and collectively. You in the audience represent a significant sample of the scientists<br />

who are concerned with dentistry and who make up the membership of the <strong>IADR</strong>. I believe that you should all<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 273


egin to consider taking an active role in the applied clinical science known as dentistry. You must recognize<br />

the fact that, while almost all the basic advances in dentistry since 1921 have come from your thought and<br />

experimentation, you are considered relatively uninfluential in matters of clinical education and dental health<br />

care delivery. I believe that you must accept more professional responsibility and lead your profession toward<br />

acceptance of necessary changes in education and practice if dentistry is to succeed in meeting the demands for<br />

health care in the future.<br />

You have expanded our knowledge of caries and periodontal disease, the plaque diseases. In fact, you<br />

have already supplied the profession with the scientific basis for the prevention of caries and periodontal<br />

disease. You have, however, failed for the most part to accept the responsibility for guiding the clinicians to the<br />

realization that the application of this knowledge can enhance remarkably their ability to solve the problems of<br />

dental health care. You are aware of the magnitude of the problems facing the profession, but I fear that most of<br />

you feel no direct responsibility for bringing solutions directly to society. You tend to use the clinicians as a<br />

buffer between you and society, even though some of you may quietly question the success of their efforts. I<br />

believe that the time has come for each of you in your capacities as teachers and investigators to marshal the<br />

clinical information necessary for you to influence the curricula of your institutions and the health care delivery<br />

systems of this country and others.<br />

At Columbia we are engaged in an educational effort designed to produce a dentist better able to cope<br />

with the solutions to problems confronting dentistry. We are convinced that most dental disease can be<br />

prevented or curtailed. Further, we are convinced that therapeutic and restorative efforts necessary to treat<br />

existing disease can be carried out with greater facility, with lower cost, and with lessened iatrogenic disease<br />

potential. We are convinced that students must receive exhaustive exposure to preventive dentistry and the<br />

psychosocial, motivational, and community/communications methodology basic to successful prevention of<br />

disease. Dentistry must recognize, reduce, or eliminate periodontal disease, and we are prepared to increase<br />

greatly our emphasis on periodontics throughout the curriculum. We must be able to teach caries-preventive and<br />

periodontal disease-preventive restorative dentistry. We can no longer accept the inevitability of tooth loss as a<br />

consequence of aging. We cannot any longer afford the man-hours usually spent in remakes of clinical failures<br />

when we do already possess information fundamental to clinical success.<br />

The dentist of this decade must be prepared to use what we now know about dental science and art. You,<br />

the ones who advanced the science and art of dentistry, must now close the gap between the current practice of<br />

dentistry and what can and should be the practice of dentistry. We believe that through curriculum changes the<br />

new dentists will be prepared to prevent or curtail the dental diseases of children and relieve the need for the<br />

expensive and time-consuming treatment of these individuals when they become adults. The new dentists can<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 274


e taught to prevent and curtail periodontal disease in adults and reduce the failures and remakes inevitable<br />

when this disease is unrecognized and/or untreated.<br />

Is it possible that the practitioners of clinical dentistry do not recognize the primary importance of the<br />

diagnosis and treatment of periodontal disease? The fact is that they seem to be almost totally unaware when<br />

viewed as a group. If periodontal disease goes unrecognized and thus, obviously, untreated, how can prevention,<br />

the optimal effort, be taught and practiced? You, understanding these disturbing facts, must rise up out of your<br />

laboratories and studies and engage in the educational, political, institutional, and community efforts to make<br />

the appropriate changes in the nature of clinical dentistry. We must become committed to the concept that it is<br />

realistically possible to teach and effect the prevention of most oral disease. We must greatly multiply the<br />

operative usefulness of each dentist, so that a slowly increasing dental manpower can deliver prevention and<br />

dental health care which is available to all people. It is simply unrealistic to continue to deliver care to an<br />

expanding population in which the individual patient requires the filling and the refilling of teeth and then<br />

undergoes tooth loss and its replacement and finally complete loss and dentures. Twenty million denturewearing<br />

Americans are living examples of this time-consuming demonstration of the failure of dentistry as it is<br />

presently practiced.<br />

To be functional you must learn what dentistry is in the field, evaluate what you observe in the light of<br />

society's needs, and then, motivated and informed, help create and implement the educational, social, and<br />

practice modes of our profession. I believe that many of the changes which may come, through government and<br />

organized dentistry, may not be workable if your influence is not felt. If the "increase dental manpower"<br />

approach to solving dental health care problems is an example of the efforts of others, then you had better<br />

engage now with dentistry's problems if you really care about the prevention or treatment of oral disease in our<br />

population.<br />

Dr. Gies looked at dentistry prior to 1926 and prepared the way for the truly remarkable growth of<br />

dentistry as a profession. Now we must look again and with greatly accelerated effort, effect the implementation<br />

of advances in dental science for the benefit of the profession and the society it serves.<br />

By example, we at Columbia who are members of the <strong>IADR</strong> have recognized our responsibility and<br />

have taken steps to engage in solving some of the problems which I have been speaking about. What follows is<br />

a summary of our approaches:<br />

1. Develop and implement a new curriculum which stresses the correlation of scientific and clinical<br />

information to produce a strong conceptual basis for prevention, recognition, forestalling, and<br />

treatment of more disease in more patients per individual dentist. Because we believe that mere<br />

increase in numbers of standard dentists is not satisfactory, our predoctoral program is designed<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 275


to relieve the disproportion existing between the magnitude of the health needs of our population<br />

and the productivity of each individual dentist.<br />

2. Teach the efficient use and management of existing dental paraprofessionals and develop<br />

programs for expanded-duty paraprofessionals. Then teach the undergraduates and postdoctoral<br />

students how best to use their services both administratively and clinically. This places the<br />

conceptually grounded student in a position to prevent and treat more disease or oversee the<br />

treatment of more patients over a longer, more productive period of practice than was previously<br />

possible.<br />

3. Develop postdoctoral and predoctoral programs which result in generalists and specialist<br />

clinicians and scientists educated in depth in preventive concepts and community needs and with<br />

full awareness of changing patterns of health care delivery. These dentists will have been<br />

motivated to become involved in teaching, community and institutional programs, and<br />

government agencies' educational programs for the laity. These new dentists can become the<br />

creators and implementers of the systems of dental care of the future.<br />

4. Engage in continuing development and alterations in curriculum based on concurrent evaluation<br />

of all preventive and correlative programs and health care delivery systems.<br />

5. Present continuing educational programs of a conceptual rather than technical nature which do<br />

not compete with dental society programs. Our objectives are to stress, to the practicing dentist,<br />

prevention, periodontal concepts, reduction of iatrogenic disease factors, quality-control<br />

methodology and means of evaluating the nature of therapy, and an awareness of the changing<br />

nature of health care delivery in a changing society.<br />

I ask you to consider becoming activists in all aspects of dental health care delivery, so that the<br />

profession and society can benefit more fully from you who have been almost solely responsible for the science<br />

of dentistry.<br />

REFERENCES<br />

1. J Dent Res 36: 800, 1957; not printed in the Journal, but see Rosebury, T.: The Challenge to Dentistry:<br />

A Tribute to William J. Gies, Science 126: 1056-1058, 1957.<br />

2. Gies, W. J.: Dental Education in the United States and Canada (Bulletin No. 19; New York: Carnegie<br />

Foundation, 1926).<br />

3. See chapter on "Meetings and Members", p. 202.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 276


THE INTERFACING ROLE OF THE UNIVERSITY<br />

JOSEPH F. VOLKER, D.D.S., PH.D.<br />

PRESIDENT, UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA IN BIRMINGHAM<br />

It is a privilege and pleasure to participate in the ceremonies that mark the fiftieth anniversary of the<br />

International Association for Dental Research. My affiliation with the Association spans approximately twothirds<br />

of that period. Suddenly I am an old boy, but hopefully a few "young Turk" qualities have survived. On<br />

such occasions one is tempted to reminisce, but the problems of the present and the challenges of the future<br />

demand that I forgo that pleasure.<br />

A cursory review of the programs of our annual meetings indicates that much of the recent progress in<br />

dental research in the United States can be attributed to the partnership of universities and the federal<br />

government, and there is every reason to believe that this alliance will continue. I do not underestimate the<br />

contributions of our colleagues from industry, the federal agencies, the armed services, and various private<br />

nonprofit organizations, but I would point out that most, if not all, of their personnel received academic<br />

preparation, including research training, at institutions of higher learning.<br />

For almost the first three decades of the <strong>IADR</strong>'s existence, until the creation of the National Institute of<br />

Dental Research in 1948, federal participation was minimal. Today the affairs and destinies of government and<br />

universities seem inseparable.<br />

Traditionally, universities have been concerned with transmission, preservation, accumulation, and<br />

application of knowledge, the first being the most important. In the past the preservation of knowledge became<br />

of importance only in times of war and tyranny; the accumulation of knowledge proceeded at a digestible pace;<br />

and demands for service were limited. Although the number of matriculants increased, the growth rate was not<br />

alarming, and instructional responsibilities could be met by reasonable expansion of existing institutions and<br />

creation of a limited number of new ones.<br />

But the good life was not to last. Our time was to know the full force of the information and population<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 277


explosions. In part, both could be credited to the universities, particularly the research activities. Recently, I<br />

noted a short-range projection indicating that as a result of many factors, including improved health, the number<br />

of students attending colleges and universities would increase by 50 percent during the seventies. At the same<br />

time, it is predictable that the body of scientific knowledge will more than double within the decade. Obviously,<br />

universities have their work cut out for them. With federal partnership they must undertake unprecedented<br />

programs of expansion of both physical facilities and academic programs. At the same time, they must combine<br />

to create more effective ways of instruction, so that the new knowledge can be made available to tomorrow's<br />

scholars. The magnitude of the latter undertaking almost defies one's imagination. In a recent address, I<br />

recalled:<br />

In the late 1930s I was a candidate for the Ph.D. at the University of Rochester. At that time, the<br />

biochemistry department had a primary interest in the lipids, and graduate and professional students were<br />

expected to be rather knowledgeable in this area. Fortunately, this requirement could be met in part by<br />

mastering the information contained in 169 pages that comprised the small but excellent monograph, The<br />

Biochemistry of the Lipids, authored by Henry B. Bull. By 1943 this reference source had been replaced by The<br />

Biochemistry of the Fatty Acids and their Compounds, the Lipids, a 387-page summary by Walter R. Bloor. The<br />

latter publication in turn was replaced during the 1950s by a 2,966-page compendium, The Lipids, their<br />

Chemistry and Biochemistry, authored by Harry J. Deuel, Jr.<br />

It was predictable that the accelerated rate of growth of our knowledge of lipids would result in the<br />

creation of specialty journals. In the closing months of the 1950s the Journal of Lipid Research appeared, and in<br />

the mid-60s a companion publication Lipids was inaugurated. Both have six issues annually containing as many<br />

as twenty-five articles each. 1<br />

I am grateful that at the moment I am neither teacher nor student.<br />

The information explosion has other implications for the university. These were succinctly stated by<br />

President Kennedy in a 1962 message to Congress:<br />

The accumulation of knowledge is of little avail if it is not brought within reach of those who can use it.<br />

Faster and more complete communication from scientist to scientist is needed, so that their research<br />

efforts reinforce and complement each other; from researcher to practicing physician, so that new<br />

knowledge can save lives as swiftly as possible; and from the health professions to the public, so that<br />

people may act to protect their own health. 2<br />

These concerns led almost directly to a number of new major government-university undertakings. Regional<br />

medical programs, mental retardation centers, and National Library of Medicine networks are pertinent<br />

examples. Local, national, and international meetings devoted to population, pollution, and nutrition problems<br />

under the joint sponsorship of government agencies and universities have become a way of life, and university<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 278


centers supported by federal funds for studies in these areas are commonplace.<br />

No one questions the need and desirability for a continuation and expansion of government-university<br />

cooperation in meeting the needs of education and research. At the moment, however, particularly in the health<br />

fields, these joint efforts are overshadowed by an even greater need for a joint attack on the overwhelming<br />

problems associated with the nation's number-one service dilemma, the health delivery crisis.<br />

Virtually every important professional journal, prestigious magazine, and major public newspaper has<br />

had feature articles dealing with the problem, and many have made pertinent editorial comments. One of these<br />

has pointed out that in less than two decades the nation's outlay for health care has increased fivefold. It stood at<br />

$63 billion in 1969, and, if it continues to grow at the current rate, it will reach $200 billion in 1980. More<br />

important, at the moment 40 percent of the nation's health bill is paid by governments—federal, state, and<br />

local—through health programs for government employees, veterans, servicemen, and their dependents, as well<br />

as through state and city hospitals and Medicare and Medicaid.<br />

Despite this enormous outlay of public and private funds, the health of the American people compares<br />

unfavorably with that of residents of many other Western countries. Moreover, despite our high level of dental<br />

education and substantial support of dental research, the oral health of our citizens is at best only fair. Whereas<br />

virtually all schoolchildren of New Zealand and Scandinavia receive extensive dental care, only a quarter of<br />

their American counterparts do. Under these circumstances, the federal government has been giving intense<br />

attention to the problems of the delivery of health care, including our dental deficiencies. Understandably, it is<br />

supporting research, very often in conjunction with universities, on the use of new technology, that is,<br />

computers, in diagnosis and treatment of patients and in the identification and training of new kinds of health<br />

workers, such as physicians' and surgeons' assistants and oral therapists. There is little evidence that the<br />

majority of American dental schools are either willing or able to participate in these new areas of investigation.<br />

Almost a decade has passed since the Survey of Dentistry called attention to the need to move in this<br />

direction. The response has been negligible. Now, other more powerful and urgent voices have been added.<br />

As I review the past few years, the pattern becomes clear. Four major areas of government and<br />

university cooperation in health sciences research have evolved in response to public demands: (1) fundamental<br />

research on the etiology of disease; (2) applied investigations on the treatment and prevention of disease; (3)<br />

educational research on the transmission of information and the development of therapeutic skills; and (4) the<br />

establishment of more effective and economical methods of delivering health care. In each instance, dentistry's<br />

response has been too little, too late. We embraced fundamental research with reluctance and applied research<br />

with hesitancy. The same attitudes seem to prevail toward educational and health delivery investigations.<br />

Those of us in the university excuse our behavior with the cliché that we cannot be all things to all<br />

people, and we must proceed with caution in the acceptance of new responsibilities. I take exception to this<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 279


philosophy. Discrimination rather than avoidance, enterprise in preference to inertia, are enduring university<br />

characteristics. Sir Eric Ashby has described our current problem and offered a basis for its solution.<br />

Round every Senate table sit men for whom the word university stands for something unique and<br />

precious in European society: a leisurely and urbane attitude to scholarship, exemption from the obligation to<br />

use knowledge for practical ends, a sense of perspective which accompanies the broad horizon and the distant<br />

view, an opportunity to give undivided loyalty to the kingdom of the mind. At the same Senate table sit men for<br />

whom the university is an institution with urgent and essential obligations to modern society; a place to which<br />

society entrusts its most intelligent young people and from which it expects to receive its most highly trained<br />

citizens; a place which society regards as the pace-maker for scientific research and technological progress. And<br />

so universities find themselves searching for a compromise. On one hand they cannot bring themselves to refuse<br />

the responsibilities laid upon them by modern society, nor the large financial grants which accompany these<br />

responsibilities. On the other hand, they cling to their traditional organisation and curricula in the hope that the<br />

values for which universities have stood since the Middle Ages may be preserved among the automatic factories<br />

and social planning and satellite-ridden stratosphere of the third millennium.<br />

Both kinds of men around the Senate table are right. To suppose that the symptoms of split personality<br />

could be dispelled simply by bigger and better reforms in universities is to over-simplify the problem. In some<br />

directions universities must resist change; if they are to remain viable, they must display not only enterprise but<br />

inertia. Adaptation is not yet complete and in certain directions it must continue; but adaptation could overreach<br />

itself and endanger the integrity of universities, and this has to be resisted. The way to diagnose the split<br />

personality is to discriminate between those features in universities which are stable and enduring despite the<br />

scientific revolution and its accompanying social changes, and those features which are unstable and unfitted to<br />

the university's functions in contemporary society. 3<br />

In my judgment, educational research and health delivery systems research are high-priority items.<br />

It was my original intention to limit these remarks to those areas which at this period in time have general<br />

recognition as research. I have chosen not to do so because of my increasing awareness of yet another function<br />

of universities that is of concern and benefit to the government—the ongoing discussion of problems. I have the<br />

temerity to do so because research in its broadest sense involves accurate observations and the analysis of their<br />

significance. These talents are not the sole property of individuals who make up the science faculties of our<br />

universities. They are, however, the common characteristics of scholars.<br />

Many of the major issues of our time cannot be solved without application of research technology,<br />

complemented and supplemented with wisdom from other disciplines. Moral, ethical, political, social,<br />

economic, and legal considerations are often essential in establishing public policy. We have seen evidence of<br />

this in the "human use" research regulations, and, within the past several days, President Nixon has appointed a<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 280


commission to advise him on human privacy as it relates to the utilization of computerized data.<br />

There is a growing awareness that national policy cannot rest solely on scientific evidence, nor can it be<br />

achieved by the deliberations of ad hoc committees. Rather, it demands the thorough exploration of all possible<br />

alternative actions and their consequences. Universities have unique assets, such as personnel resources, that<br />

permit this kind of problem-solving. It may be that their ultimate "research" contribution will be in this very<br />

complex area.<br />

If we move in this direction, we must be prepared to have many of our current beliefs and attitudes<br />

challenged. Present privileges and practices may not be able to survive the close scrutiny of enlightened<br />

contemporary citizenry. I, for one, would welcome the transition. We have become the world's largest and most<br />

prestigious forum dedicated to the discovery of dental truths. Repeatedly, we have appealed to government for<br />

resources to finance our special interest. Accordingly, we should be prepared to respond to its extraordinary<br />

needs.<br />

Lest we worry about the ability of the university to meet these challenges, I would share with you, as I<br />

have with many audiences, the words of John Masefield, the late poet laureate of Great Britain. Significantly,<br />

they were spoken at the inauguration of a new university chancellor.<br />

There are few earthly things more splendid than a University. In these days of broken frontiers and<br />

collapsing values, when the dams are down and the floods are making misery, when every future looks<br />

somewhat grim and every ancient foothold has become something of a quagmire, wherever a University stands,<br />

it stands and shines; wherever it exists, the free minds of men, urged on to full and fair enquiry, may still bring<br />

wisdom into human affairs.<br />

There are few earthly things more beautiful than a University. It is a place where those who hate<br />

ignorance may strive to know, where those who perceive truth may strive to make others see; where seekers and<br />

learners alike, banded together in the search for knowledge, will honor thought in all its finer ways, will<br />

welcome thinkers in distress or in exile, will uphold ever the dignity of thought and learning and will exact<br />

standards in these things.<br />

There are few things more enduring than a University. Religions may split into sect or heresy; dynasties<br />

may perish or be supplanted, but for century after century the University will continue, and the stream of life<br />

will pass through it, and the thinker and the seeker will be bound together in the undying cause of bringing<br />

thought into the world.<br />

To be a member of one of these great Societies must ever be a glad distinction. 4<br />

REFERENCES<br />

1. Volker, J. F.: The Continuing Confusion in Communications, Proceedings of a National Conference on<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 281


the Use of Audiovisuals in Medical Education, University of Alabama Medical Center, Birmingham,<br />

Alabama, 6-8 August 1969, pp 18-27.<br />

2. Kennedy, J. F.: Message to Congress relative to a health program, 27 February 1962, in Surgeon<br />

General's Conference on Health Communications, November 5-8, 1962, Washington, D.C.: Public<br />

Health Service, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1963, frontispiece.<br />

3. Ashby, Sir E.: Technology and the Academics: An Essay on Universities and the Scientific Revolution,<br />

London: Macmillan & Co., Ltd., 1959, pp 69-70.<br />

4. From an address delivered on the occasion of Masefield receiving an honorary degree at the Installation<br />

of the Chancellor of the University of Sheffield, 25 June 1946.<br />

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POLITICS, PRIORITIES, AND PUBLIC HEALTH<br />

JOHN B. MACDONALD, D.D.S., PH.D.<br />

EXECUTIVE VICE-CHAIRMAN, COMMITTEE OF PRESIDENTS, UNIVERSITIES OF ONTARIO, TORONTO, CANADA<br />

I can best introduce my subject by quoting Sir Eric Ashby: "Have you ever thought that a scientist will<br />

go to great trouble to train himself, or to get assistants trained, to program computers, but only mechanical<br />

computers? Now politicians and administrators are walking computers. How much trouble do scientists take to<br />

program politicians and administrators? This is an art just as complicated as programming a large Atlas<br />

computer, and I do not know of any formal training given in this art. . . . There is another side to this, namely,<br />

that politicians and administrators have not learned how to program scientists either. I think if anything they are<br />

less good at it than we are at programming them, because we want to get money out of them and they do not<br />

quite know what they want to get out of us." 1<br />

The quotation is relevant because it tells us in a few words that one of the problems of science policy is<br />

the difficulty which scientists and politicians have in understanding one another. It tells us too that science<br />

policy is not the exclusive domain of scientists. Quite the contrary—many of the most crucial decisions<br />

involving the future of science will be made by politicians. This is a fact that is often at the root of<br />

misunderstanding. Michael Polanyi said: "Any attempt at guiding scientific research toward a purpose other<br />

than its own is to deflect it from the advancement of science." 2 Although scientists may applaud Polanyi's<br />

statement, it is not the same thing as saying that scientists have a right to be responsible alone for their own<br />

destiny. They do not, and it is to the difficult relationship of politics and science in generating policy that I wish<br />

to address my remarks.<br />

There is no escape from the necessity of examining the activities of scientists in the light of public<br />

interest. There is no prospect of recapturing the comfortable past when research was the preserve of a few<br />

individuals fortunate enough to have a patron and the opportunity to indulge their curiosity for the sheer<br />

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pleasure and intellectual excitement of learning more about man or his universe. The change is recent. Only one<br />

research laboratory in England existed a hundred years ago. As recently as 1912 the most famous physics<br />

laboratory in the world, Cavendish, had a total budget of about £3,000. Lord Rutherford in the years following<br />

1920 financed a dozen Nobel Prize winners and never had more than £2,500 a year to spend.<br />

Research was inexpensive, and few people were involved. Hence great issues of public policy were not<br />

apparent. They nevertheless existed, although they were ignored. Einstein's famous equation of 1905 literally<br />

rocked the world in 1945. The changes in recent years are well known. Gross expenditures on research and<br />

development by the United States amounted to $21 billion in 1963-1964. The United Kingdom spent $2 billion,<br />

France $1 billion, and Canada about half a billion. More startling has been the rate of increase. For 15 years<br />

expenditures in the United States increased by 15 percent a year. In 25 years United States science expenditures<br />

multiplied 200 times. More recently Canadian government research and development expenditures for<br />

university scientific research increased 30-35 percent a year over a 4-year period. The trend in advanced<br />

countries has been exponential, with a doubling of scientific effort every 10-15 years.<br />

To state the obvious, research dollars, whether spent in universities or by industry or by government,<br />

will have a major impact on the kind of society we create and the kind of life we will lead. The amount of<br />

money spent will be important, but of more profound influence will be how it is spent—the strategy of research<br />

expenditure. Our choices are numerous. Research dollars can be used to stimulate economic gain. Research<br />

dollars can help us to utilize more effectively the natural resources of our country. Research can let us share in<br />

the rewards of technological innovation, improve the health and longevity of our citizens, enrich our cultural<br />

resources, improve the quality of the environment in which we live, enhance individual intellectual opportunity,<br />

and assist us to meet our international responsibilities toward the underdeveloped parts of our world.<br />

All these and other research objectives are worthy. The extent to which we attain any or all of them<br />

should depend in the first instance on conscious and deliberate decisions about the effort we are prepared to<br />

make. Research cannot, of course, ensure the attainment of our goals, but failure to engage in research in many<br />

instances would obstruct the possibility of reaching them. We need to know and evaluate our total research<br />

effort, and we need to decide for individual goals what share of the total effort can be allocated wisely to<br />

research.<br />

To seek such decisions is to bring us squarely up against the more general question of goals. Identifying<br />

goals requires philosophic judgments rather than simply economic or scientific analysis. In a democracy it is the<br />

task of all citizens. We express our views individually and through our leaders in business and industry, in the<br />

universities, in the arts, in the professions, and in politics. The voices are heard by all of us, thanks to the mass<br />

media. The sounds may be distorted, but the messages are there if we have the skill to listen. Ultimately it is the<br />

task of the politicians to sense the wishes of a nation and to develop the machinery to respond to those wishes.<br />

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The politician, like other citizens, has the right to dream, and he can create his own image of the good society;<br />

but the politician has no monopoly when it comes to dreams. The kind of country a nation can be will be<br />

determined by the wishes of its people to the extent that they are crystallized and translated into action.<br />

Science and technology have transformed our world and in doing so have imposed a new urgency on the<br />

thoughtful determination of goals and priorities. Every schoolboy can catalogue an impressive list of recent<br />

scientific or technical accomplishments. Likewise, every thoughtful citizen is impressed with the predicament<br />

that science and technology have forced on modern man—limitless power for good on the one hand, universal<br />

genocide on the other.<br />

Contrasts are common. The achievements of science, while opening great new opportunities, at the same<br />

time bring important new problems. The agricultural revolution led to vast increases in urbanization and a host<br />

of urgent problems—crime, crowding, pollution, transportation. Communication and transportation technology<br />

have opened the eyes of the people of the poor nations to how the rich nations live. Control of infectious disease<br />

has heightened the difficulties created by overpopulation and increased the incidence of starvation. Computers<br />

and automation are creating changes in society as yet only dimly seen. Discoveries in genetics hold the promise<br />

and the problems of change in the nature of man himself.<br />

We have reached the stage when many scientists believe that it is within our scientific and technological<br />

power to solve every major problem related to the physical needs and comfort of mankind. Yet the deeper<br />

problems of human behavior and human values in a transformed world remain, and they will not be solved by<br />

technology. Indeed, it is clear that they are heightened by technology. It is the paradox of our age that, although<br />

scientifically we can accomplish almost anything, we have so far failed to solve most of the pressing and critical<br />

problems of our time—termination of the arms race, poverty, overpopulation, pollution of our environment,<br />

aggression. These greater issues are the concern of every man. They require not only the efforts of scientists and<br />

social scientists but also, more particularly, an input of effort of a new order of magnitude.<br />

Our choices can spell the difference between catastrophe and fulfillment. Among the important choices<br />

is the strategy of research expenditure. It is surely not good enough that such decisions are left to chance or<br />

lobbying. The decisions in the last analysis are political, and they must reflect the goals of each country and the<br />

effort its citizens are prepared to make toward them. The goals will involve investments of many kinds, only<br />

one of which is for research, and the primary decision is to determine the goals. The research effort needed for<br />

each major goal is a secondary decision. Governments must be concerned with issues such as food production<br />

rather than agricultural research, the quality of health rather than medical research, population control rather<br />

than research on fertility. In short, government must be concerned with social goals. Research related to these<br />

social goals is a means to an end.<br />

Before you conclude that I am singing a song in praise of applied research and have no place in the score<br />

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for basic research, let me add to the melody. The conduct of basic research is itself a social goal. Such research<br />

contributes to culture, to education, to social and economic well-being. In the case of the latter the contribution<br />

may be distant and is always unpredictable. Research of this type is carried out mostly in universities.<br />

Universities occupy a unique position among institutions. They have special responsibilities not shared<br />

significantly by other institutions. Traditionally and historically they saw their role as that of generating new<br />

knowledge per se, and research of a basic nature was favored. Basic research remains today and must remain a<br />

matter of the highest priority in universities. The primary role of universities along with teaching is the<br />

generation of new knowledge, and it matters not whether the knowledge appears to be useful. As Samuel<br />

Johnson put it, "a desire of knowledge is the natural feeling of mankind." The nature of man demands that he<br />

continue to explore and that, generation after generation, he seek to learn more about the universe and about<br />

himself. Research for its own sake is one of the noblest activities of man and one of the ways of enriching life.<br />

Most of the responsibility for preserving and nourishing the tradition of pure research is vested in the<br />

universities. In an age when new technologies are transforming the world, it is important that society should<br />

renew its dedication to the importance of research undertaken simply for the sake of learning. We should guard<br />

against the temptation to argue that government should support basic research in universities because it pays<br />

off, even though we know this often to be the case. Government should support research because it is an<br />

important human enterprise in its own right.<br />

Because it is important in its own right, decisions about the priority for basic research and the extent to<br />

which it should be supported with public funds become a government responsibility. Steven Toulmin separates<br />

choices into commensurable and incommensurable alternatives. Incommensurable alternatives are like the old<br />

story of apples and oranges—you can't compare them. For government, incommensurable alternatives are<br />

represented by such choices as those involved in resource allocation for medical, military, agricultural, and<br />

transportation research. They are political choices, and they depend on goals and priorities. Commensurable<br />

choices, on the other hand, represent choices between alternative ways for accomplishing a particular<br />

objective—for example, choices between different approaches to research on air pollution. These are not<br />

political choices. They are scientific and should be made by experts.<br />

The distinction between issues requiring political judgment and those requiring expertise can be<br />

illustrated by considering the question of how much basic research should be supported. This question was the<br />

topic of a major study in the United States by the Committee on Science and Public Policy of the National<br />

Science Foundation. 3 The contributors observed that basic research for the purpose of the question falls into two<br />

categories. The first is basic research related to specific missions of government departments or agencies where<br />

the mission has been determined by political decision. This type of basic research, not applied yet related to a<br />

mission, has been called "oriented basic research." Decisions about levels of expenditure of this type should be<br />

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made by those responsible for accomplishing the mission. They are difficult, require expertise, and depend<br />

primarily on judging the extent to which the mission will depend on basic research. Harvey Brooks suggested<br />

that experience has shown for science-related missions that basic research has usually accounted for 10-15<br />

percent of the total research effort, depending on the mission. Obviously, in each case this should be an<br />

operational decision determined by the scientists, not a political one.<br />

But how much basic research should be supported when it is not related to a mission? This category has<br />

been called "intrinsic basic research," and it is the kind that is carried out mostly in universities. Here the<br />

question is political, not scientific. Harvey Brooks has estimated that perhaps 5 percent of those engaged in<br />

basic research are truly outstanding but that many others should be supported to provide much of the<br />

background for the top 5 percent and for cultural reasons, and to provide trained manpower. Carl Kaysen<br />

suggested that basic research should be an overhead on applied research and development and should be set in<br />

the United States at its historical level of 9 percent of total expenditures for research and development. The<br />

point is that the choice is incommensurable, with alternative ways of spending public funds, and therefore the<br />

decision becomes a political one.<br />

The foremost reason for supporting research in universities is to strengthen a social goal—that of having<br />

strong universities. The mission is the welfare of the universities themselves as a great cultural resource of the<br />

country. Universities provide an educated citizenry. They provide trained manpower for the complex needs of<br />

society. They provide a continuing critical examination of our world and ourselves. These are reasons for giving<br />

university research a high priority. The vigor of university research will bear heavily on the successful<br />

attainment of most other social goals. The decision, however, is essentially political. 4<br />

My remarks so far have been limited to politics and priorities. Let me turn now to the third element in<br />

my alliterative topic, namely, public health. I think it fair to say that the reason research has been supported so<br />

generously in the United States during the last twenty years has been the high priority accorded to health in<br />

public policy. The country has believed that the road to health must be paved with good research. That view has<br />

been shared by the scientists, and the result until recently was a rapidly growing commitment to research and a<br />

heavy emphasis on science in the training of members of the health professions. For the scientist concerned with<br />

research in a health-related field it was a golden age of opportunity. For the public, satisfied with the promise of<br />

better health, research expenditures seemed to be the ideal investment. Indeed, evidence of success was<br />

forthcoming to help strengthen the conviction that all the problems would be solved through research. The<br />

National Health Education Committee, Inc., published various editions of a booklet entitled Does Medical<br />

Research Pay Off? On the front cover appeared the statement: "On medical research depends the prolongation<br />

of the prime of life for all of us, and as a result, increased gross national product." 5 This curious juxtaposition<br />

seems to suggest that living longer is not a bad thing provided that you pay taxes! The booklet in 1964 showed a<br />

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100 percent decline in the death rate from polio over the years 1951-1962, an 87 percent decline in the death<br />

rate from tuberculosis in eighteen years, 88 percent for influenza, 85 percent for maternal deaths, 90 percent for<br />

acute rheumatic fever: it showed an increase in life expectancy for Americans of almost seven years, marked<br />

reduction in the incidence of various diseases, and significant improvement in the treatment of others.<br />

While these successes were being recorded, other events were shaping changes for the support of<br />

medical research. Among them were a growing public bewilderment and dissatisfaction with the quality and<br />

cost of health care. It has been estimated that 30 million Americans are without medical services except under<br />

extreme or acute circumstances. The cost of care nevertheless is $63 billion and could rise to $200 billion by the<br />

early 1980's. Costs per patient-day in hospital have risen about 250 percent in twenty years. Average costs rose<br />

from $48.15 per day in 1966 to $67.60 in 1969. In some medical centers they run as high as $166.00 a day. In<br />

spite of the high costs and in spite of research, the average stay in hospital is a day longer than it was eight years<br />

ago. 6 At the same time, many cannot get a doctor. Half the deliveries in New York's voluntary hospitals are<br />

preceded by not one single prenatal visit. Soldiers injured in Vietnam receive more prompt and better-organized<br />

care than do the victims of collision on American highways.<br />

The result is the emergence of a new priority—that of designing better systems for the delivery of health<br />

care. Resources are being diverted to this important purpose—not, of course, without alarm being expressed<br />

over the new difficulties in obtaining research support. The point is made by nationally known figures, such as<br />

Michael DeBakey, that only 3 percent of the total national health bill went to research in 1968; 7 but many of<br />

those concerned about the health care of the nation wonder gloomily whether increased research expenditure<br />

will lower or raise the cost of care. They might ask, too, whether a doubling or tripling of the cost of care in the<br />

next few years represents a rational reason for doubling or tripling the level of research expenditure in the same<br />

period—just to maintain the percentage. In short, the concern for a satisfactory delivery system has become an<br />

important priority.<br />

Delivery of health care is not the only new priority. Other issues are assuming greater significance in the<br />

public mind and are moving up the priority list. Problems of overpopulation, environmental pollution, poverty,<br />

the quality of the cities, and crime are receiving more attention, although not nearly enough, in the judgment of<br />

many thoughtful observers. The urgency and seriousness of these issues is bound to result in more attention<br />

being devoted to them.<br />

Thus the public view and political decisions have sharply slowed the rate of growth for support of health<br />

sciences research, and it seems likely that competing priorities will continue to limit growth to levels much<br />

lower than those of the fifties and sixties, regardless of the course of the Vietnam entanglement, space projects,<br />

and defense expenditures.<br />

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What is the significance of this change for those, like the members of this audience, who are engaged in<br />

research related to the public's health? One message is plain: All those involved in research in the health<br />

sciences must reexamine their goals and their methods in order to make the best possible use of the human and<br />

financial resources available. A second message of even greater importance for human welfare is hidden in the<br />

network of circumstances which prompt me to predict that in the United States the growth rate for medical<br />

research as a whole will henceforth be slower than during the last two decades. I will come to the hidden<br />

message presently, but let me first comment on the implications for scientists and planners of a reexamination<br />

of ends and means.<br />

Most of you are employed in universities. This fact commits you to a concern for maintaining a healthy<br />

engagement in basic research—the kind that is pursued simply to increase our knowledge and understanding. At<br />

the same time, most of you are associated with professional schools of dentistry or medicine and so have a<br />

commitment to solving practical problems related to the improvement of health. These dual interests have been<br />

responsible for a good deal of ambivalence about how to proceed.<br />

The idea that research in universities should play a role in the solution of practical problems is relatively<br />

new. It had its beginnings in North America in the passing of the Land Grant College Act in 1862. The<br />

character of American higher education was changed from that time. The new graduates, and the new<br />

techniques, transformed not only agriculture but also industry. Applied research and federal-contract<br />

laboratories have flourished in the universities. Indeed, in engineering and the physical sciences, they have<br />

grown so large in some institutions that they have warped the shape and changed the character of the university.<br />

Still, there are many, especially in the biological sciences, who cling to the earlier view that the function of the<br />

university is to conduct basic research only. Basic research has continued to be looked upon as more prestigious<br />

and in some mysterious way more fitting for the academic than applied research. The concept has been<br />

enshrined in one view of academic freedom which claims that a professor has a right to conduct research of his<br />

choosing (and, of course, to publish his results freely). The freedom of a potential sponsor to decide whether he<br />

wants to pay for the research is a limitation that is conveniently ignored when preaching this particular gospel of<br />

academic freedom. The result of widespread support for the definition is that almost every academic expects to<br />

pursue his own research interest, chosen by him without reference to the work of his neighbor or any thought to<br />

fitting himself into a coordinated attack on a major target. He expects to be judged solely on the intrinsic merit<br />

of the proposal and his capacity to carry it out.<br />

The difficulty with this approach is that holding a Ph.D., along with having an interest in a subject, is not<br />

enough to justify allocation of resources from a limited supply. Recall Harvey Brooks's estimate that only 5<br />

percent of those engaged in basic research are truly outstanding. How large should be the echelon beyond that 5<br />

percent who are entitled to support?<br />

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In the health sciences the answer to that question depends in part on the extent to which the resources of<br />

qualified manpower could be more effectively organized for an integrated and coordinated attack on a health<br />

problem. I am talking specifically about the development of large-scale mission-oriented research within the<br />

universities, research which would require some overall direction and some sublimation of the view that the<br />

only good science is that in which the individual scientist is entirely free to choose his own research.<br />

The idea is not without both danger and difficulty. Engagement in large-scale organized research related<br />

directly to a public mission can distract from a proper emphasis on basic research and more particularly from<br />

teaching. That problem has existed for some time in some universities heavily committed to federal contracts. It<br />

need not divert a university from its purposes, however. In each case key questions should be answered by the<br />

university before it commits itself to a large-scale government-sponsored mission such as an institute. Is the<br />

proposal consistent with the university's overall goals? Is the proposal one which can be undertaken without<br />

interfering with the university's teaching and research commitments? Is the program suitable for the training of<br />

graduate students? Can the university develop appropriate organizational and management practices to carry out<br />

the mission? Is the university competent to carry out the mission?<br />

For universities and governments to enter into such partnerships requires overcoming the difficulties of<br />

attitude and organization related to unlimited freedom to choose one's own line of investigation. I believe that<br />

such organizational difficulties must be overcome in the health sciences if the resources for research are to be<br />

used wisely. "Big science" is becoming a more important instrument of modern research—not only in the<br />

physical sciences but also in the health sciences and the social sciences. While it must never replace "little<br />

science," it must take its place alongside "little science." The universities have an obligation to demonstrate and<br />

teach the methods of "big science" because many of their graduates will be called upon to contribute to this<br />

approach to research.<br />

I do not suggest that every health problem lends itself to large-scale organized approaches. Quite the<br />

contrary—many problems are at a stage of understanding which does not yet provide promising leads for<br />

organized research. In such cases progress must await the gradual illumination which will be shed through the<br />

basic work of individual scientists. But, where opportunity exists for a frontal attack, concentration of resources<br />

in a systematic way is likely to be productive often enough to justify the investment. The problem of<br />

recognizing the need presents both opportunity and threat. The threat was spelled out by Boyd Keenan when he<br />

wrote: "Failure of professors and university administrators to recognize concern among responsible politicians<br />

could very well result in emasculation of great research universities. This will occur if the university fails to<br />

hammer out new goals in a rapidly changing world." 8 Hopefully, opportunity will be a better incentive than<br />

threat; the opportunity is to do a better job with the available resources.<br />

I turn finally to the hidden message in the circumstances of our time. Our concern with the vast problem<br />

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of "environment" has been escalating, and meetings to discuss the issues occur daily. At one such meeting in<br />

New York, a businessman, belatedly alarmed by the wasteland of the Jersey Meadows, said "Jersey Standard's<br />

officers should have been shot for putting a refinery there in the first place." Someone asked him, "Where<br />

should they have put it—in the Rocky Mountains?" The suggestion aggravated the critic, but he was not<br />

interested in the hard question of where the refinery should be located. 9 Many conservationists find it easy to<br />

criticize destructive encroachments of technology but are unable and unwilling to offer useful suggestions about<br />

how the problems should be solved.<br />

The story illustrates a fundamental obstacle to our capacity to make sound decisions. It is the<br />

fragmentation of our approach. As Fortune put it, "in modern society the principle of fragmentation outrunning<br />

the principle of unity, is producing a higher and higher degree of disorder and disability." 10 Somehow we must<br />

learn to examine issues in their totality, even though we have organized our society to deal with problems in<br />

splendid isolation. Highway departments pay scant attention to the ecological effects of their engineering.<br />

Public housing authorities have built with little thought for the effect on social conditions which their programs<br />

have produced; the poor have remained poor. Power authorities have provided the energy without worrying<br />

about the pollution they have created. Health personnel have concerned themselves about the individual patient<br />

and have ignored the system. This compartmentalization has been convenient, but it has created men with a<br />

limited appreciation of the interrelationships of knowledge and action. We have become more and more<br />

specialized, and in the process we have become poorer generalists. This it seems to me is what students are<br />

telling us when they complain about the lack of relevance in the universities. It is not a rejection of specialism<br />

but a conviction that education must transcend specialism and produce citizens who are not merely skillful but<br />

are wise. Among the attributes of wisdom is the capacity to integrate, to appreciate relationships, and to make<br />

judgments based on a genuine concern for human welfare.<br />

John Gardner has written of the necessity for renewal in societies and men. He said: "Every society must<br />

mature, but much depends on how this process takes place. A society whose maturing consists simply of<br />

acquiring more firmly established ways of doing things is headed for the graveyard—even if it learns to do<br />

those things with greater and greater skill. In the ever-renewing society what matures is a system or framework<br />

within which continuous innovation, renewal and rebirth can occur." 11<br />

That is the hidden message. We must learn to take a new step in managing the affairs of men. Each of us<br />

must learn to think more broadly about how his individual efforts fit into the total mosaic of society. We must<br />

learn to think of our activity in relation to all the demands and all the priorities for a society capable of renewal.<br />

We must each contribute to placing our efforts in proper perspective and to assigning fair priority and weight to<br />

those efforts. We must reject lobbying for limited objectives in favor of lobbying for an integrated set of<br />

objectives representing our best judgments as both specialists and generalists. We must redesign our institutions<br />

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to give them youthful vigor and motivation. We must concern ourselves with the capacity of our institutions to<br />

get on with the job. If, as is true in many cases, they are showing more concern for form than substance, more<br />

respect for tradition than for achievement, then we must not be afraid to seek ways of reforming them to permit<br />

them to do those things which need to be done.<br />

Our agenda is urgent. We must apply our vast technological capacity and our growing knowledge of<br />

behavior to the priorities which can turn us away from catastrophe and toward fulfillment. Only if organized<br />

mankind can behave rationally can there be hope for individual man—for his dreams, for his creativity, for his<br />

beauty, for his humanity.<br />

REFERENCES<br />

1. Ashby, Sir E., in Keenan, B. R. (ed): Science and the University New York: Columbia University Press,<br />

1966, p 197.<br />

2. Polanyi, M., in Keenan, B. R. (ed): Science and the University, New York: Columbia University Press,<br />

1966, p 14.<br />

3. Basic Research and National Goals: A Report by the National Academy of Sciences, 1965.<br />

4. These remarks are largely quoted or paraphrased from Macdonald, J. B., et al.: The Role of the Federal<br />

Government in Support of Research in Canadian Universities, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: The Queen's<br />

Printer, 1967.<br />

5. Does Medical Research Pay?, Off New York: National Health Education Committee, Inc., 1969.<br />

6. Faltermayer, E. K.: Better Care at Less Cost without Miracles, Fortune, February 1970, p 80.<br />

7. DeBakey, M. E.: Letter to the Editor, Fortune, March 1970, p 65.<br />

8. Keenan, B. R. (ed): Science and the University, New York: Columbia University Press, 1966, p 9.<br />

9. Ways, M.: How to Think about the Environment, Fortune, February 1970, p 98.<br />

10. Ibid.<br />

11. Gardner, J.: Renewal in Societies and Men, Annual Report of the Carnegie Corporation of New York,<br />

1962.<br />

In the Headquarters Room, President Dummett with outstretched hand explained the organization of the<br />

Association to student travel grantees. The chart as part of the <strong>IADR</strong> History Exhibit was prepared by Frank J.<br />

Orland, then Vice-President, and held by Gordon Rovelstad, then President-Elect.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 292


In a discussion after the Symposium are Capt. Gordon H. Rovelstad, Roger O. Egeberg, Assistant Secretary<br />

for Health and Scientific Affairs, HEW; John S. Zapp, Special Assistant for Dental Affairs, and Assistant<br />

Secretary for Health Manpower; Seymour J. Kreshover, Director, National Institute of Dental Research,<br />

USPHS.<br />

Commemorating the Jubilee year, a birthday cake citing the fifty years was presented. President-Elect<br />

Rovelstad and President Dummett blew out the many candles while some of the many members and guests in<br />

attendance at the Banquet looked on.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 293


CODA<br />

Although the <strong>IADR</strong> story of these foregoing decades has been comprehensively explored and duly<br />

recorded, let us hope it will also constitute a prologue to the next fifty years in the active life of the Association.<br />

The Founder, William J. Gies, likewise had some thoughts for the future in this significant statement which he<br />

made after the first decade of <strong>IADR</strong> existence:<br />

Our Association exemplifies an impersonal ideal. Through the cooperation of accredited investigators in<br />

the sciences upon which dentistry rests and which it uses, the Association promotes the discovery of truth and<br />

the dissemination of new knowledge to the end that, irrespective of beliefs, opinions, policies, or traditions, oral<br />

health-service in all its aspects may be given its greatest possible usefulness for the whole of humanity. With<br />

this history behind us, and with this ideal before us, we may proudly and hopefully look forward to the<br />

evolution of endless decades in the growth and increasing public value of our Association.<br />

Now, two score years later, I also hold faith that <strong>IADR</strong> will move ahead in its ideals of promoting and<br />

communicating research.<br />

As our Committee learned in gathering together the facts of the first half-century, it is not enough to<br />

make history as our Association has done; it is also essential that history be duly recorded for the immeasurable<br />

benefit of those yet to come. Thus, may I express the hope that <strong>IADR</strong> members of a future generation will see<br />

fit to write a companion tome upon the second half-century of achievements of our <strong>IADR</strong> and for each halfcentury<br />

thereafter. Surely, the history of the <strong>IADR</strong> reflects largely the history of dental research throughout the<br />

world. Detailed achievements of such research are to follow in another publication.<br />

During the past fifty years, the common thread throughout this fabric of <strong>IADR</strong> history has been the<br />

tremendous growth in size, which is commendable indeed. But there is little intellectual virtue in mere<br />

quantitative growth. Thus, within the next half-century qualitative growth should be stressed, so that the<br />

International Association for Dental Research some five decades from now will surely be known as an elite<br />

intercontinental organization of research scholars.<br />

F. J. O.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 294


MONETARY CONTRIBUTORS<br />

Procter & Gamble Company<br />

S.S. White Company, Division<br />

of the Pennwalt Corporation<br />

Coe Laboratories, Incorporated<br />

Colgate-Palmolive Company<br />

Kerr Manufacturing Company,<br />

Division of Sybron Corporation<br />

Vick Divisions Research-Vick<br />

Chemical Company-Vick<br />

International, Divisions of<br />

Richardson-Merrell,<br />

Incorporated<br />

Shofu Dental Manufacturing<br />

Company, Limited<br />

Gebr. Brasseler Fabrik für<br />

Dentalinstrumente<br />

Kao Soap Company, Limited<br />

Siemens Aktiengesellschaft,<br />

Geschäftsgebiet Dental<br />

Sankin Kogyo K.K.<br />

Sunstar Dentifrice Company,<br />

Limited<br />

Tokyo Dental Industrial<br />

Company, Limited<br />

Pharmaton SA.<br />

Gaba Limited<br />

Harry J. Bosworth Company<br />

Cooper Laboratories, Incorporated<br />

Burstenfabrik Walther AG.<br />

Lion Dentifrice Company, Limited<br />

Shiseido Company, Limited<br />

Trisa Brush Manufacturers,<br />

Limited<br />

Block Drug Company<br />

Cook-Waite Laboratories,<br />

Incorporated<br />

Dentsply International<br />

G-C Chemical Manufacturing<br />

Company, Limited<br />

Lever Brothers Company<br />

Parkell Products, Incorporated Dabi<br />

Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.A.<br />

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,<br />

U.S.A.<br />

Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.<br />

Jersey City, New Jersey, U.S.A.<br />

Romulus, Michigan, U.S.A.<br />

Mount Vernon, New York,<br />

U.S.A.<br />

Kyoto, Japan<br />

Lemgo, Federal Republic of<br />

Germany<br />

Tokyo, Japan<br />

Bensheim, Federal Republic of<br />

Germany<br />

Tokyo, Japan<br />

Osaka, Japan<br />

Tokyo, Japan<br />

Lugano-Bioggio, Switzerland<br />

Basel, Switzerland<br />

Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.<br />

Bedford Hills, New York, U.S.A.<br />

Oberentfelden, Switzerland<br />

Tokyo, Japan<br />

Tokyo, Japan<br />

Triengen, Switzerland<br />

Jersey City, New Jersey, U.S.A.<br />

New York, New York, U.S.A.<br />

York, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.<br />

Tokyo, Japan<br />

New York, New York, U.S.A.<br />

Farmingdale, New York, U.S.A.<br />

Ribeirão Preto, Estado de São<br />

Paulo, Brasil<br />

Warrington, Pennsylvania,<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 295


Indústria Brasileira de<br />

Aparelhos Dentários SA.<br />

Polysciences, Incorporated<br />

U.S.A.<br />

Lyons, Illinois, U.S.A.<br />

Crescent Dental Manufacturing<br />

Company<br />

The order of these various commercial concerns is graded by the amount contributed. Within each block the<br />

order is alphabetical, if the same amount was contributed.<br />

SPECIAL RECOGNITION<br />

for Monetary and Moral Support<br />

The International Association for<br />

Dental Research, Incorporated<br />

The William J. Gies Foundation<br />

for the Advancement of<br />

Dentistry, Incorporated<br />

The Medical Heritage Society,<br />

Limited<br />

The Walter G. Zoller Memorial<br />

Dental Clinic, University of<br />

Chicago, Illinois<br />

New York, New York<br />

Chicago, Illinois<br />

Chicago, Illinois<br />

FACES IN PLACES<br />

MEMBERS’ FACES IN VARIOUS MEETING PLACES<br />

Participants in the Dental Caries Symposium held in Pittsburgh, 23 June 1932. This was in the old Mellon<br />

Institute, the entrance of which is in the background. This Symposium was held under the auspices of the<br />

Pittsburgh Section of <strong>IADR</strong>. Named from the left: John J. Enright, Mellon Institute; Theodor Rosebury,<br />

Columbia University; F. E. Rodriguez, Major in the Dental Corps, U.S. Army; Russell W. Bunting, University of<br />

Michigan; William J. Gies, Columbia University; Edward H. Hatton, Northwestern University; H. Edmund<br />

Friesell, Dean, School of Dentistry, University of Pittsburgh; and Philip Jay, University of Michigan.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 296


Another "Caries Conference" also held at the Mellon Institute in Pittsburgh, but in a newer building. This<br />

photograph of 19 April 1950 shows participants (mostly <strong>IADR</strong> members) in this "Third Annual Conference on<br />

Dental Health". Seated from left to right: S. Wah Leung, Frank J. Orland, Thomas D. Chattaway, Homer D.<br />

Butts, Jr., Thomas J. Hill, and Milton E. Nicholson. Standing left to right: William F. Swanson, Thomas F.<br />

McBride, W. Earle Craig, Paul Pincus (who came from Melbourne, Australia), Francis A. Bull, Gerald J. Cox<br />

(who organized this Conference), Gottfried R. Lundquist, and Isaac Sissman.<br />

This splendid banquet at the Nineteenth General Meeting of <strong>IADR</strong> was held in the Jefferson Hotel in St. Louis<br />

on 15 March 1941. There were 134 in attendance at $1.25 per plate. Robert Moore, M.D., Professor of<br />

Pathology and Dean of the Medical School, Washington University, presented an illustrated talk on medicine in<br />

history following the dinner. So many early and prominent members are recognizable in the panorama that an<br />

intensive effort was made at identification, but without complete success. Astute readers may fill in the blank<br />

numbers, but a prize is offered for identification of No. 134. See adjacent sketch.<br />

1. Hamilton B. G.<br />

Robinson<br />

2. Carl Flagstad<br />

3. William J. Gies<br />

4. Leroy M. S. Miner<br />

5. Robert Moore<br />

6. Wilmer Souder<br />

7. LeeRoy Main<br />

8. Isaac Schour<br />

44. Fred Hinds<br />

45. Alvin W. Bryan<br />

46. Harry Bear<br />

47. Fr. James J. Wallace<br />

48. Newman Dean<br />

49. Benno E. Lischer<br />

50. Gerald D. Timmons<br />

51. William H. G. Logan<br />

52. Grover C. Hunter<br />

89. Shumway<br />

90. Carl O. Boucher<br />

91. D. P. Snyder<br />

92. C. W. Strosnider<br />

93.<br />

94.<br />

95. Sumter S. Arnim<br />

96. Lester W. Burkett<br />

97.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 297


9. Frederick B. Noyes<br />

10. Edward H. Hatton<br />

11. Mrs. Ray E. Myers<br />

12.<br />

13.<br />

14. Ray E. Myers<br />

15. Harold C. Hodge<br />

16. Richard S. Manly<br />

17. Grant Van Huysen<br />

18. Edgar D. Coolidge<br />

19. Elmer A. Jasper<br />

20. John M. Marré<br />

21. Keith L. Buechele<br />

22. William H. Bauer<br />

23.<br />

24.<br />

25. Norris O. Taylor<br />

26. Moses Diamond<br />

27.<br />

28. Joseph P. Weinmann<br />

29. Wallace D. Armstrong<br />

30. Peter J. Brekhus<br />

31. Lewis W. Thom<br />

32. C. F. Bodecker<br />

33. William Lefkowitz<br />

34. Haughton Holliday<br />

35. Harold J. Leonard<br />

36. Mary C. (Mrs.) Agnew<br />

37. R. Gordon Agnew<br />

38.<br />

39. Harry D. Spangenberg<br />

40. Mrs. H. D.<br />

Spangenberg?<br />

41. Edward C. Stafne<br />

42. B. O. A. Thomas<br />

43. William F. Lasby<br />

53. Ralph R. Byrnes<br />

54.<br />

55. Ernest G. Sloman<br />

56.<br />

57. Charles E. Rudolph<br />

58. Otto W. Brandhorst<br />

59.<br />

60. George B. Denton<br />

61.<br />

62. David B. Law<br />

63. Helmut A. Zander<br />

64. Dan Y. Burrill<br />

65.<br />

66.<br />

67. Ralph Edwards<br />

68. Russell C. Wheeler<br />

69. Spitzer<br />

70.<br />

71. Gerritt Bevelander<br />

72. Russell W. Bunting<br />

73. Philip Jay<br />

74. Thomas J. Hill<br />

75. Paul P. Sherwood<br />

76. Samuel W. Chase<br />

77. William L. Wylie<br />

78. Marcus L. Ward<br />

79.<br />

80.<br />

81. Leonard S. Fosdick<br />

82.<br />

83. Warren R. Schram<br />

84.<br />

85. Clyde Hebble<br />

86. Wendell D. Postle<br />

87. Paul C. Kitchin<br />

88. Victor L. Steffel<br />

98. J. Frank Hall<br />

99. Leroy R. Boling<br />

100.<br />

101.<br />

102. Warren Willman<br />

103.<br />

104. John Buhler<br />

105.<br />

106. Edgar Coleman<br />

107.<br />

108. Herbert P. Werkman<br />

109. Willard C. Fleming<br />

110.<br />

111.<br />

112.<br />

113.<br />

114.<br />

115. Howard M. Marjerison<br />

116. Joseph F. Volker<br />

117.<br />

118.<br />

119.<br />

120. John L. Wilson<br />

121. Basil G. Bibby<br />

122.<br />

123.<br />

124. Eugene W. Skinner<br />

125. Ert J. Rogers<br />

126. Floyd A. Peyton<br />

127. James Pearce<br />

128. Virgil D. Cheyne<br />

129. George C. Paffenbarger<br />

130. Eugene J. Molnar<br />

131.<br />

132.<br />

133.<br />

134.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 298


Scene at Registration as old friends meet, for the Forty-third Annual <strong>IADR</strong> Meeting in the foyer of the Royal<br />

York Hotel, Toronto, on 22 July 1965:<br />

1. Robert M. Grainger 5. Agnes (Mrs. Paul) Kitchin<br />

2. Paul C. Kitchin 6. Carl A. Ostrom<br />

3. Hamilton B. G. Robinson 7. Duncan McConnell<br />

4. Nelson W. Rupp 8. Francis P. Scola<br />

At this Toronto <strong>IADR</strong> meeting in 1965 are pictured the officers while meditating at an important Council<br />

discussion in the Nova Scotia Room. In the center is President Martin A. Rushton of London. To his right is<br />

Gordon H. Rovelstad, Secretary-Treasurer, with his prime assistant&mdash;his wife Barbara. Directly under<br />

the coat of arms of Nova Scotia is Barnet M. Levy, President-Elect, and on the far right is Editor Frank J.<br />

Orland.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 299


First Scientific Meeting of the South African Division of <strong>IADR</strong>. This was held in Johannesburg 16 September<br />

1967 in front of the Dental School, University of the Witwatersrand.<br />

Reading from the left—first row: J. Lemmer, J. F. van Reenen, T. R. Barrowman, A. E. Dodds (President of the<br />

South African Division and then Dean of the School), R. W. Phillips (then President of the <strong>IADR</strong>), C. J. Dreyer<br />

(presently Dean of the School), M. Shear (Secretary-Treasurer, SAD), J. van de Sandt de Villiers, and A. A. de<br />

Oliveira.<br />

Second row: F. A. Hossack, H. Selipsky, E. Lasersohn, S. Chertkow, L. Oosthuizen, F. X. Prins, A. Jacobson, M.<br />

W. Baikie, T. J. N. Knight, J. Cohen, C. F. Valcke, E. Stein, M. M. Fine, and H. Smukler.<br />

Third row: M. Yankelson, I. D. Dockrat, P. J. Lohse, D. H. Retief, C. W. van Wyk, S. N. Bagg, A. Lewin, V. A.<br />

Meerkotter, C. B. Preston, D. Dell, A. Volchansky, A. M. Goldman, S. A. Bushkin, B. G. J. van Rensburg, L.<br />

Fine, L. Blum, and J. B. Radomsky.<br />

Last row: C. J. Thomas, F. R. Bertrand, and W. Meyerowitz.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 300


INDEX<br />

A complete index to this document is forthcoming.<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 301

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