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L1BB ARV
VERNIER RADCU1PFE MEMORIAL LIBRARY ', , .
LOMA LINDA UNIVERSITY *^ ™ L 1 NiA UN 1 VERS I TY
LOMA LINDA. CALIFORNIA LOIMA L [ NDA , CA L I F . c Orange Show Issue
- —— * SPA ^ university
_ Vol. 2, No. 18 Friday, March 12, 1965
1,000 Participants Expected
At Alumni- Student Convention
tor
> p~
: al
Over 1,000 graduates of the School of Dentistry, dental hy
gienists, their families, students, and guest dentists are expected
to participate next week in the activities of the annual Ahsmni-jiel
Student Convention in Loma Linda.
Beginning on March 17 and
in . lasting through March 20, the
__ l Convention will feature scien
tific addresses, table clinics,
commercial exhibits and dem
onstrations, and social and reli
gious programs something
for everyone.
Zeno Klinker, a top comedy
writer and humorous lecturer,
will speak Wednesday evening.
March 17 at 7 p. m. in Burden
Hall. The Dental Students As-
. sociation is sponsoring the pro-
In gram.
let
> oi J Official Opening
~ The Convention will officially
ne open at 9 o'clock in Burden
n" Hall after registration is com-
_ pleted Thursday morning. Hugh
IC_ , C. Love, DDS, president of the
' School of Dentistry Alumni As-
[ jj sociation, and James - A. Smith,
al SD ' 65, president of the Dental
_ Students Association, will pre-
- d side.
_ The president of the Amer-m
ican Dental Association, Dr.
^ Fritz A. Pierson, will deliver
d the keynote address.
Throughout the remainder of
the day table clinics and com
mercial exhibits will be on dis-il_
play in the pavilion.
or " Carousel" is the title of a
_ program for dental hygienists
h- to be given at 3 p. m. in Room
[£ 108 of the School of Dentistry
building.
£ W. Ballentine Henley, LLD,
president of the California
T- College of Medicine, will give
an address titled " You and
i. Tour Public" at the awards din
ner Thursday evening at Azure
Hills Country Club in Grand
£ Terrace. During the dinner a
panel of judges will announce
~ the winning student table clin
ics.
University Will Expand
Services to Community
Week of Devotion
Begins March 22
The Spring Week of Devo
tion for the Loma Linda cam
pus will begin March 22 and
continue through March 27.
The devotion week on the Los
Angeles campus follows from
April 12 to 16.
Dr. Norval F. Pease, profes
sor of applied theology at An
drews University, B e r r i e n
Springs. Michigan, is the speak
er on the Loma Linda campus.
His general theme for the week
is " Great Issues Facing Sev
enth- day Adventists." The ser
mon topics are listed in the
University SCOPE Calendar.
Two services daily, at 8: 10
a. m. and 6: 30 pjn., will be held
in the University Church. The
meetings are open to commu
nity residents as well as stu
dents and faculty.
The registrar's office has re
leased a special schedule for
the morning classes during the
Week of Devotion for the Lo
ma Linda campus.
Students will attend the
morning services Monday
through Friday. On Monday
and Tuesday the classes sched
uled for 8 ajn. will not meet,
but other classes will meet as
usual. Additional changes are
announced as follows.
To page 5. col. 3
APPEARING ON TELEVISION during Children's Dental Health
Week was Thomas J. Zwemer, DDS, associate professor of ortho
dontics ( center). He showed the youngsters how to properly care
for their teeth.
Swimming Pool Open
The swimming pool is open
again after being closed for
almost two months. Pool Man
ager Norm McGirr says the
decks were sandblasted during
tliis time and the pool was
repainted.
The heated pool is open Sun
day through Thursday from 1
to 6: 30 p. m. and from 12 to
3 p. m. on Friday.
Swimmers who are inter
ested in learning scuba diving
are invited to contact Mr. Mc
Girr regarding classes.
Friday Meetings
On Friday morning dentists
will hear J. C. Almy'Harding,
DDS, tell how to establish a
rewarding and enduring prac
tice. The program begins at 9
ajn. in Burden Hall.
At the same hour Richard C.
Oliver, DDS, will speak to den
tal hygienists in Linda Hall on
the subject, " Working With
Your Dentist For the Patient."
Wives of dentists, meanwhile,
will attend a program featur
ing William D. Bolander, MD,
instructor in psychiatry, at 10
a. m. in the School of Dentistry
building, Room 173.
The La Paloma Restaurant
is the site for the luncheon and
annual business meeting of the
dental hygienist alumni begin
ning at 11: 30 a. m.
" Designed for Living" is the
iheme which Glenn Carlson, in
terior designer, will stress at
the wives' luncheon on Friday.
Sponsored by the Junior Dental
Auxiliary, the luncheon will be
gin at 12 noon at Redlands
Country Club.
Dr. Oliver will discuss " Spe
cial Problems of Oral Hygiene"
at a program for dental hy
gienists beginning at 2 p. m.
in Linda Hall.
Following religious services
Friday evening and Saturday
in the University Church, the
( Century Club dinner and annual
alumni business meeting will be
held at the University of Red-lands
Commons at 6: 30 p. m.
A color film, " The Hound
Dog That Thought He Was a
Paganini Quartet Presents
Concert Saturday Evening
The Paganini Quartet, world- renowned string ensemble cur
rently in residence at the University of California in Santa Bar
bara, will perform at the University Saturday evening, March 13.
The concert is open to season ticket- holders for the University's
lecture and artist series and to others who purchase $ 1 tickets
in advance from the registrar's office.
The quartet, led by co- found- formed in Canada, Europe,
South America, and Japan. The
ensemble has been acclaimed
at such major music festivals
as Edinburgh, Vancouver, Ber
lin, Tanglewood, and Aspen.
er Henri Temianka, derives its
name from the instruments its
members play. All four- were
made by the master Italian
violin- maker Antonio Stradi-varius
over 200 years ago, and
likewise were once owned by
the legendary nineteenth- cen
tury violinist, Nicolo Paganini.
First violinist Temianka
plays the famous Strad of 1727,
Paganini's favorite concert in
strument. The priceless violin,
made when Stradivarius was 83
years of age, reached Pagan
ini's hands from Count Cozio di
Salabue in 1817.
The second violin, played by
Stefan Krayk, head of the UC-Santa
Barbara string depart
ment, is one of Stradivarius'
earlier masterpieces dating
from 1680.
Cellist Lucien Laporte's in
strument passed into the hands
of the Mendelssohn family aft
er Paganini's death in 1840.
The instrument was created in
Stradivarius' ninety- second
year.
The 1731 viola on which Al
bert Gillis performs is the same
instrument for which Paganini
commissioned Berloiz to write
his " Harold in Italy."
Since its inception in 1946,
the Paganini Quartet has
toured annually through the
United States and has per-
The quartet's local appear
ance is the fifth event of the
University's 1964- 65 artist and
lecture series. The concert will
begin at 8 p. m. in Burden Hall.
Alumni Distribution
Revealed in Report
Graduates of Loma Linda
University may be found work
ing in all parts of the world,
according to a report on alum
ni distribution presented to the
Board of Trustees at their
most recent meeting.
About half of the 3,330
School of Medicine alumni, for
example, are located outside
California, throughout the
United States and in 34 other
countries. Other schools in the
University have a similar dis
tribution.
In contrast, only 17 per cent
of University of California
medical graduates are located
outside the state, the report
reveals.
The contrast may be ex
plained in part by one of Lo
ma Linda University's special
purposes which is to provide
medical, technical, and other
professional personnel for the
hundreds of medical and edu
cational institutions operated
throughout the world by the
Seventh- day Adventist Church.
The majority of alumni, how-
To page 3. col. 5
Next issue of University SCOPE
will contain coverage of the
Alumni Postgraduate Conven
tion which has just closed in Los
Angeles and the Alumni- Student
Convention.
The Paganini Quartet
Continued expansion of Loma
Linda University's health serv
ices to southern California com
munities was pledged during a
recent news conference by Uni
versity President Godfrey T.
Anderson. " Service," said Dr.
Anderson, " is One of three ma
jor functions of the Universilj
- the others being education
and research."
The transfer of clinical pro
grams from Los Angeles to the
the inland area has already be
gun. Dr. Anderson reported. It
will continue al an accelerated
pace through the autumn of
1967 when the new University
medical center will open ils
- doors.
According to Dr. Anderson,
one indication of the value of
such services is the present
clinical program at the Univer
sity School of Dentistry, where
students and teachers provide
care to more than 40 patients
annually.
Another service, the Dental
Welfare Clinic, is a non- teach-,
ing, volunteer program involv
ing more than 100 teachers,
alumni, and stmients each
month. The clinic provides free
care to thousands of persons
who cannot, pay. According to
Charles T. Smith, DDS, dean
of the School of Dentistry, this
service, currently limited to
San Bernardino County, will
soon be extended to Riverside
County.
" The University's health serv
ices are not limited to southern
California." the University
president revealed. " Teams of
physicians, dentists, nurses,
dental hygienists, dietitians,
technicians, and students pro
vide urgently needed services
to underprivileged people on
Indian reservations and in sev
eral Latin American countries.
Individual students serve terms
of service in still other coun
tries.
Another example of Univer
sity community services is the
diabetes detection center spon
sored recently by the Southern
California Diabetes Association.
More than 2,000 persons
were tested, of whom 120 had
positive results. This was the
first time that a dual testing
program using both blood and
urine tests had been employed
in a screening program in
southern California.
Other permanent community
programs, such as the United
Cerebral Palsy Association re
habilitation center at Loma
Linda, provide continuing spe
cial services.
Josephine Edwards
Will Speak Tonight
Returned missionary Joseph
ine Cunnington Edwards is the
speaker for the Campus Bli-
Mowship Hour tonight in the
University Church.
Known in Seventh- day Ad
ventist churches as a former
missionary in Africa and as the
author of many books, stories,
and articles, Mrs. Edwards will
speak on " The Boy Who Gave
All He Had to God."
Individuals who have served
in foreign mission lands are in
vited to come dressed in cos-
To page 3. col. 1
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Dbase record # | Scope1965-v02-18 |
| Title | Scope - Volume 02, Number 18 |
| Description | Scope - Volume 02, Number 18; March 12, 1965 |
| Date Created | March 12, 1965 |
| Digital format | |
| Publisher | Loma Linda University |
| Language | English |
| Rights | Physical rights are retained by the institution. Copyright is retained in accordance with U. S. Copyright laws. |
| Collection | Scope |
| Collection # | Scope1965-v02-18 |
| Date publ to db | 2008-05-29 |
| OCLC number | 639085230 |
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