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STUDENTS, 1917-18

NOTE. All addresses in the following list are in San Francisco unless stated to be elsewhere. B, Berkeley; 0, Oakland; A, Alameda; P, Piedmont. The superior figure, 1, marks the names of students who were registered first half-year only; 2, second half-year only. All first-year students are enrolled in the four-year course; all others, excepting those designated "2nd yr (4)," are in the three-year course.

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1st yr-529 Sixteenth av Baronidis, Cedric Cyril

3rd yr-1512 Masonic av Barton, Roy Franklin

2nd yr-1227 Fourth av Barz, Frank Albert

1st yr-136 Alpine ter Basto, Luiz Eduardo

1st yr-1333 Fifth av Berendsen, Ewald Adolph

1st yr-756 Divisadero st Berryman, Elmer Holmes

3rd yr-1248 Fifth av Bettencourt, George Leo

2nd yr-508 Stanyan st Block, Thomas Ryan

2nd yr-1242A Second av Boyd, Charles Edward

2nd yr-1248 Fifth av Breese, Lester Elmer

2nd yr-1345 Fifth av Brown, Clements William

San Francisco

Pac 6303

San Francisco

Mrkt 8116 Manila, P. I.

Snst 1562 San Francisco Park 5350 Hongkong Snst 747 San Francisco

2nd yr-226 Edgewood av Buchanan, Warren Grant 1st yr-1942 Leavenworth st Burgess, Howard Harmon

2nd yr-1346 Pine st Burke, Francis Paul

1st yr-1415 Fourth av Burnett, Hazen Glenn

2nd yr-226 Edgewood av Butler, Chester Gregson

3rd yr-1821 Lake st Cadwallader, Ward Glenn 3rd yr-226 Edgewood av Carey, Wagar Grant, Jr

1st yr-4724 Seventeenth st Carlen, Amy

2nd yr-1156 Vallejo st Carmean, Clyde Charles

3rd yr-1248 Fifth av Casella, Frank G

1st yr-1248 Fifth av Cauch, Wilbur Rogers 2nd yr-109 Carl st Chappell, Meredith Fenton

Grass Valley

Snst 3261 Mendocino Park 5009

Gridley Snst 689 Brawley Snst 3261

Salinas Snst 2408 Clements Park 5111 Pittsburg Frkn 8774 Stockton

San Francisco

Stockton Park 5111 San Francisco

Pac 4855
Clovis

Park 5111

Westley Mrkt 3188 San Francisco

Frkn 5314 Morgan Hill Snst 3261 San Francisco

Snst 3261
San Jose

Vallejo

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A.B. (Alma College) 1892 3rd yr-977 Clayton st Fischer, Ernest Clifton

2nd yr-177 Eighth av Flagg, Clarence Roland

1st yr-1366 Eleventh av Fowler, Clinton Ashby

2nd yr-1345 Fifth av Fraher, Francis James

1st yr-4120 Twenty-sixth Francis, Francis Newton

1st yr-1248 Fifth av Frank, John Herbert

3rd yr-274 Twenty-sixth Frates, Robert Carmel

2nd yr-1248 Fifth av Frisbie, Harry Earl

3rd yr-3409 California st Frost. Adolph Sutro

2nd yr-508 Stanyan st George, Reuben Amos

3rd yr-1264 Second av Gibson, Earl John

2nd yr-1466 Tenth av Glasson, Pearce

2nd yr-280 Carl st Goff, George Almon

2rd yr-San Anselmo Gold, Isaac

2nd yr-1555 Clement st Golden, Winfred Leo

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av

Snst 3261

San Francisco

Pac 6071

San Francisco

Snst 5261 Oakland Pied 8216 W

Arcata Park 5009 Crocket

San Diego Snst 1340 Grass Valley Park 3919 San Anselmo

SA 208J Chicago, Ill.

Pac 7468

Oakland

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2nd yr (4)-1323 Henry st, B Bkly 4692W

Shannon, Herbert Lorraine

2nd yr-272 Carl st

Shepherd, Carlton Wise

3rd yr-226 Edgewood av Shottenhamer, Cyril Aloysius

3rd yr-1264 Second av Skinner, Clem Williamson 1st yr-5727 Dover st, O Smith, Hugh Ian

1st yr-189 Parnassus av

Smith. Lester Lauren

2nd yr-1248 Fifth av Spridgen, William Austin 1st yr-271 Ninth av Stabler, Arthur Christian

3rd yr-1231 Sixth av Stein, Sanford Jacques

2nd yr-3410 Geary st Steiner, Cecil Casper

2nd yr-1248 Fifth av Stern, Emil

3rd yr-1304 Railroad av Streeter, Millard Joseph 2nd yr-1345 Fifth av

Selma Park 5650 Bakersfield Park 5111

San Jose Snst 1917 Oakland Pied 373 Fortuna

Santa Rosa Snst 3261 Petaluma Pac 1399 Redding Snst 1029 San Francisco

Pac 2778 Brawley Snst 3261 San Francisco

Valen 2626
Fresno
Snst 2408

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Snst 689

San Francisco

Tompkins, Carl Phillips Meridian, Idaho 2nd yr-1242A Second av Trachsler, Frank Arthur 1st yr-331 Capp st Trefts, Harry Haws

1st yr-1345 Fifth av Tweed, Charles Henry, Jr.

2nd yr-1335 Tenth av Van Alstyn, Byron Edmond 2nd yr-1067 Valencia st Vitous, Clinton Robert

1st yr-303 Carl st Vorwerk, Leo Luke 3rd yr-1345 Fifth av Walther, William Enos

2nd yr-502 Stanyan st Warford, Frederick Sylvester 2nd yr-737 Bush st Warren, Irvin Russell

2nd yr-226 Edgewood av West. Chalmers Ephriam 3rd yr-94 Carl st West. Sylvan Edmond

3rd yr-1325 Masonic av Westbay, Clayton

2nd yr-226 Edgewood av Westwood. Willard S 2nd yr-1330 Sixth av Wetmore, Harry Warren 2nd yr-109 Carl st Wildanger, Warner Fred 2nd yr-226 Edgewood av Williams, Roy Oliver

3rd yr-2647 Ashby av, B Wood, John LuRell

3rd yr-1231 Sixth av Yatabe, Tamotsu

3rd yr-1843 Union st Young, Francis Willard Ph.C. 1914

2nd yr-320 Capp st Zappettini, Charles James 2nd yr-1069 Filbert st

Msn 5835 Newman Snst 2408 Hayden, Ariz.

Snst 3067 San Francisco

Valen 3313 Puyallup, Wn.

Vallejo Snst 2408 Sacramento Park 5009

Alameda Gild 2492

Juneau, Japan

Park 5111

Willows Park 8328

Willows Park 2177

Stockton Park 5111 Oroville

Palo Alto

Elk Grove Park 5111 Berkeley Bkly 8262 W Redding Snst 1029 San Francisco West 4653 San Francisco

Msn 6451 San Francisco Frkn 9299

THE DENTAL HYGIENIST

As a result of the mouth hygiene propaganda, wisely disseminated in the last decade, the demand from an enlightened public for more and better dental service is constantly increasing. Two facts are well known. First, that dental disease is preventable, and second, that there are not enough persons engaged in the practice of dentistry to adequately care for the people needing dental service.

The College of Dentistry of the University of California presents this problem in its various aspects, thusly.

(1) The health of the people, particularly the children, is largely dependent on sound teeth and a clean mouth.

(2) Preventive dentistry or the proper care of the teeth and mouth will tend to insure good health and lessen the cost of dental service by eliminating the need of restorative or reparative dentistry.

(3) A division of labor by training women in a new vocation as dental hygienists offers a solution of the problem.

These phases are interdependent and they may be appropriately discussed under the title "The Dental Hygienist," since service is the keynote in the whole theme.

Public health is now conceded to be one of the most important phases of our national life. Legislation relating to health is being enacted all the time in law-creating assemblies throughout the country from the town hall to Congress. The health of the nation is really the sum total of individual health, and should properly begin with the child by establishing rules for hygiene, and the prevention of disease.

Dental disease, primarily a children's disease occurring usually between the ages of four and sixteen, is preventable. The method of preventing it is by practicing mouth hygiene, which to be effective must be properly and regularly followed. It is authoritatively reported that not less than eighty-five per cent of children have decayed teeth. The logical place for the introduction of mouth hygiene measures to prevent decay and their more serious sequela is where the children are to be found, viz., in the homes or the schools.

Since it is very difficult to introduce such measures generally in the homes, for obvious reasons, the most suitable place is the schools, and the school authorities throughout the land are recognizing the fact that the physical as well as the mental development of the child is a part of the function of the public schools. The child not only teaches his parents, but later in life he teaches his own children, otherwise the public schools would have no place in bettering social, physical and economic conditions in the country.

The simplest procedure in preventing dental disease is to keep the teeth clean. When this is done regularly each day there is little need for dental service other than prophylactic work at periodic intervals, and the the care of the teeth and the methods of cleansing them.

The solution of the problem seems possible by the establishment of a new vocation for women, the dental hygienist, who when properly trained in a well-equipped dental school will render service to the people, particularly children, under the direction of a licensed dentist, by removing the deposits from, and polishing the exposed surfaces of the teeth. In the public schools the service will be rendered under the direction of a com petent supervisor who in addition thereto will give class instruction on the care of the teeth and the methods of cleansing them.

Massachusetts, New York, and Connecticut have already enacted legislation providing for such service. In Bridgeport, Connecticut, the work is so efficiently carried out that the percentage of children suffering from dental disorders has been reduced from eighty-five per cent to fifteen per cent, and the general health and scholarship of the children has proportionately improved.

Believing in the efficacy and importance of mouth hygiene, the Regents of the University of California approved the recommendation of the faculty of the College of Dentistry that a course of instruction for dental hygienists be inaugurated, and it was voted by the faculty to institute such a course during the term 1918-19.

The present law, however, prohibits persons from operating upon the teeth for fee, salary or reward, unless they are duly licensed dentists. It will, therefore, be necessary to amend the present law, which amendments will be proposed in January, 1919. In the event the amendments fail to meet with the approval of the Legislature, persons engaging in the study of this vocation will be obliged to refrain from practicing as dental hygienists until the law is amended. The course of instruction will train women to become dental assistants as well as dental hygienists, so that employment may be secured in the former, if not in the latter capacity, upon graduation.

The customary requirements for admission to the University, namely graduation from an accredited high school, will be required for admission. The curriculum will include the following subjects, all of which will be taught in the College of Dentistry: Physiology, Anatomy, Pathology, Bacteriology, Dental Anatomy, Hygiene, Prophylaxis, First Aid, General Principles of Nursing, Dieteties, Business Methods, Laboratory and Office Practice.

The fees for the course will be $100.00 for instruction, payable at the opening of the term or by special arrangement, in two equal payments at the beginning of each semester. A laboratory rental and deposit fee of $10.00 will be required to cover apparatus. Books will cost about $25.00 and instruments about $20.00. These should not be purchased until after registration.

The course of study will extend over the customary academic year beginning September 30, 1918, and ending June 4, 1919. Entrance eredentials should be filed with the Recorder of the Faculties, Berkeley California. A certificate of graduation will be issued to all who satisfactorily complete the course.

Approved:

GUY S. MILI BERRY,

Dean.

BENJ. I. WHEELER,

President.

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