4. July - August

President’s Message

The Fellows of the PFA are unique in a world that tolerates average or mediocre skills, knowledge and ability. However, world-class accomplishment is the prerequisite if we are to maintain dentistry’s high standards. Today, all over the world, pressures of companies and governments are trying to control treatment of our patients. It is no easy task to lift performance from merely average to excellent.

If we are to have any input in meeting the challenge of quality dentistry, we must think in different terms about all the problems involved. It is necessary to think in different terms about who are our patients and how do we serve them. It is necessary to think in different terms about our association with our dental supply companies and dental laboratories. It is necessary to think in different terms about how we deliver our services.

We in the PFA are thinking in different terms. We are helping people in need all over the world. The PFA mentor program is teaching our future dentists to think ethically and professionally. We are not just talking about doing more or delivering more dental services. We are providing leadership to enable dentists to be “professional” in the true sense of the word “professional”!

I would like to share a piece called “Attitudes” by Charles Swindoll.

“The longer I live, the more I realize the impact of attitude on life. Attitude, to me, is more than facts. It is more important than

the past, than education, than money, than circumstances, than failures, than successes, than what other people think or say or do. Attitude is more important than appearance, giftedness, or skill. It will make or break a company … a church … a home.

The remarkable thing is that we have a choice everyday regarding the attitude we embrace for that day. We cannot change our past … we cannot change the fact that people will act in a certain way. We cannot change the inevitable. The only thing we can do is play on the one string we have and that is our attitude. I am convinced that life is 10% what happens to me and 90% how I react to it.

And so it is with you …
We are in charge of our attitudes.”

As we enter a new century, I am optimistic that the age-old values and attitudes that have sustained us over the years are reaffirming dentistry’s leadership in the health professions. I am optimistic that these same values and attitudes will override the shallow, shortsighted thinking and attitudes of some of our less motivated colleagues.

Malcom David Campbell, DDS
President


Table of Contents - July-August, 2001

Section News- International
Section News USA
Section News USA continued
Long-Range Planning Seminar Section News USA continued
PFA Gold Medal Award
President's Award go to Page 1Page 2



Calendar


2001


6-8 September

8 September

27 September-1 October

11 October

12-14 October


13-17 October

31 October-2 November




25th European Prosthodontic Conference, Prague, Czech Republic

23rd Japan Section Meeting, Nigata, Japan

89th FDI World Congress, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

PFA Continuing Education Program, (7CE Units) , Kansas City, Missouri

ADA Meeting, Kansas City, Missouri PFA Academy/Foundation Annual Meetings, Kansas City, Missouri

PFA Academy/Foundation Annual Meetings, Kansas City, Missouri

ADA 142rd Annual Meeting, Kansa City, Missouri

15th Congress of the IADR, Blantyre, Malawi

Calendar

2002

19 – 23 October

Fall


ADA 143rd Annual Meeting, New Orleans, Louisiana

FDI 90th Annual World Congress, Vienna, Austria

Calendar

2003

25-29 October

Fall


ADA 144rd Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA

FDI 91st Annual Meeting, Sydney, Australia


(Have your PFA Event date put here. E-mail Editor Brophy at PFADWJMB@aol.com)


Interim Board Meeting

Atlanta Westin Airport Hotel, 22 March 2001

President M. David Campbell called the meeting to order as the sun lifted over the magnolia trees outside. Vice President Gordan Stine gave the Invocation.


Board Meeting

President Campbell gave his report on attending the FDI Meeting in Paris, the PFA functions in Brussels, and the Maryland PFA Meeting. He described his plans to visit the Connecticut Section in April, then to Chile, the Hall of Fame presentation in Paris this June, and then on to Italy to discuss their Section’s activities.

Secretary/Treasurer Richard Kozal related his efforts with Mark Stanley in completing the Membership Directory on our Web site and updating the membership lists. For privacy reasons, the members’ addresses are not listed on the Web site but may be obtained by calling the Central Office.

The lockbox for receiving and depositing the membership dues has been very successful, particularly in freeing up the staff to keep the lists, the incoming mail, and the Web site up to the minute accurate.

The Central Office is looking into providing CE courses through the PFA Web site for the membership.


Budget and Finance

Chair Scott Welch noted the temporary budgetary shortfall at this point. The cause, as pointed out by Secretary/Treasurer Richard Kozal, was from paying the two expensive Chicago meetings and the Leadership Conference. Dues are now coming in and will clear that up. An internal audit is conducted quarterly that will reflect this fluid situation.


Foundation Report

Foundation Executive Director Shig Ryan Kishi gave the Foundation’s Report, which is presented under Foundation News in this issue.


Constitution and ByLaws

Trustee William Winspear opened discussion on the structuring of the Awards system, and this was motioned to the Awards Committee for determination.


Executive Committee

The Committee held discussion on various topics. No Board action was required.


Membership Committee

Trustee Perpich suggested a membership retention plan. At that time, almost 1500 members were in arrears for their 2001 dues. Dues were still coming in, and that figure will be reduced significantly. Vice President Gordan Stine presented a State by State membership total and recommended a goal of percentile growth from those figures.


Nominating Committee

For the annual election at the October Meeting, the Committee recommended the following:

    • Dr. Scott M. Welch for President (automatically from President-elect)
    • Dr. Gordan Stine for President-elect
    • Dr. Robert E. Friedman for Vice President
    • Dr. Campbell accedes to the office of Immediate Past President

Publicity

Chair Robert Friedman noted that service distinguishes PFA from the other honor organizations in the profession. And we have done an excellent job in that role, but we need to get more publicity to the world. He suggested that each Section Chair appoint a Section Editor to cover the local activities of their Section and distribute this to the local professional journals. Publications Chair Kevin Roach led the discussion on language use in our publications, particularly in deleting ethnicity, nationality, and gender. A joint Academy/Foundation pamphlet was suggested to promote recruitment. Dr. Kishi suggested funding from the Foundation for this from those funds allocated for contingencies. Thought was given to translate the pamphlet into French, Spanish, and Japanese as well. Editor Brophy gave a report on the success of the FDI Congress in making contacts and getting our name known.




Hall of Fame

Chair Ray Klein and President Campbell went to Baltimore to review the US venue of the Wall of Fame at the National Museum of Dentistry. Discussion ensued about the poor sight visibility of the location. The Museum offered a place on the first floor for a $100,000 contribution, or another location for $250,000. Dr. Friedman would be looking into space at the Smithsonian.

Dr. George Hollenbeck will be (has been) inducted into the Hall of Fame on 21 April in Anaheim, Calif, and the plaque will be presented to Dean Harold Slavkin of USC School of Dentistry.

Trustee Pierre Marois is working out the details for the June Meeting in Paris.

Induction of Drs. George Leatherman and Terrance Ward were discussed with the hope of inducting Dr. Leatherman during their trip to London after Paris.


Leadership Conference

The next Leadership Conference is scheduled for 2003. Drs. Stine and Halik will be considering a Chairperson for that conference.

Mentorship

Chair Gary Lowder suggested having the Trustees survey their areas and strengthen or implement the Mentor Program in their Sections.


Section Chair Caucus

The President has established a specific meeting with the Section Chairs attending the ADA Meeting in Kansas City this Fall.

International Committee

No report


Section Chair Appointments

• Professor Branislav Dastevski for the Republic of Macedonia
• Dr. William Atkinson for South Carolina
• Dr. Chris Baboulas for Illinois
• Dr. Anita Elliot for Arizona
• Dr. George Kann for Hawaii
• Dr. Greg Romriell for Idaho
• Dr. Bonnie Ferrel for Colorado
• Dr. William Goodman for Oklahoma


Final Budget Report

The first quarter budget will be reviewed in July during the Budget and Finance Committee Meeting. Line item discussion took place suggesting various changes.


Trustees Reports

Trustee Eiichi Katagiri reported that the 23rd annual meeting of the Japanese Section will be held on 8 September 2001 in Nigata. In August, he will initiate the selection process for the Michinosuke Nakayama Memorial Award. New Section officers will be elected in September. The Korean Section Meeting is scheduled for 26 May 2001.


Trustee Eiichi Katagiri (center) gives his report

New Business

This Interim Board Meeting was the first held not in conjunction with a large dental meeting. The members felt that it was a good idea to hold it during a dental meeting so the officers could network with other dental leaders and it might attract more Section Chairs to attend. President Campbell noted that the Kansas City CE course will be for seven units of credit.

Trustee Eiichi Katagiri (center) gives his report

Awards Committee

Chair James Englander submitted his committee’s report for approval for the following nominees:

• PFA Gold Medal Award—Dr. Richard G. Shaffer
• Elmer Best Memorial Award—Dr. Jacques Monnot
• President’s Award—Dr. John Molinari

• Dental Trade and Industry Award—Jeneric/Pentron Inc. (Dr. Gordon Seth Cohen)


Pierre Fauchard (1678-1761)

by H. Berton McCauley, DDS

This is an excerpt from an address delivered at the Maryland PFA Meeting on 13 March 2001 by Dr. H. Berton McCauley, past President of the American Academy of the History of Dentistry, and retired Director of Dental Care for the Baltimore City Health Department. (The excerpt is printed with permission granted to President Campbell.)

As surely all Fellows of the Pierre Fauchard Academy are aware, this organization bears the name of the one surgeon whose supreme contribution to the literature of dentistry launched the profession into the modern era and earned him the undying distinction of “Father of Dentistry” as we know it. Much as his work is valued, little is known of the man.

Historians agree he was humbly born in 1678 in Brittany, that province in the northwest of France that juts out into the Atlantic Ocean. In 1693, at the age of fifteen, he joined the French Royal Navy and became an able assistant and student of a Major Surgeon, Alexander Poteleret. In this duty Pierre had his attention directed to the considerable dental problems of the sailors, particularly affected by scurvy. Three years later, with his interest focused on dentistry and the problems faced in its practice, he left the Navy to study the knowledge inherited from those who preceded him in the theory of dental care. He began to hone his skills through experience.

Between 1696 and 1718, he is known to have engaged in the practice of dentistry in a number of communities in western France, notably Rennes, Nantes, the university town of Angers, and Tours. In his studies, he discovered there was no compendium of information in the literature to guide a dental practitioner. Although self-educated and devoid of any formal training, Fauchard successfully subjected himself to examination for recognition as an “expert pour led dents.” As required by the Royal Edict of 1699. He earned a reputation for uncommon ability and dedication as a “chirurgien dentiste”—an appellation applied to a dentist in France even in modern times.

Around 1718 Pierre settled in Paris where he continued to practice dentistry for the rest of his life. In 1729 he married into a prominent family of actors. (His son later left dentistry for acting.) By 1734 Pierre Fauchard had become a seigneur and lord of the castle and domain of Grand Mesnil. This was at the pinnacle of his career. He was 56 years old, six years after he first published his famed text, Chirurgien Dentiste.

In 1740, Pierre’s partner in his dental practice, Pierre Nicolas Gaulard, ended his career on the Place de Greve gallows for theft. Fauchard weathered the embarrassment handily.

His celebrated contribution to dental literature had been in print for 12 years, translated into German for seven years, and a new, enlarged edition was in production. The author was the most revered and respected representative of the dental arts in a country acknowledged to be in the forefront of medical and surgical development. Other surgeons frequently consulted him.

To be expected, the envy of lesser colleagues was evoked. Fauchard did not escape the penalty of leadership. There were efforts to belittle him and to destroy his reputation. Some tried to block the publication of his text. Pierre’s candor and revelation of dental techniques rankled the charlatans who were publicly exposed for what they were. A rumor that Pierre was retiring from practice evoked this response from him, “The rumor having been falsely set about that I am abandoning the profession, which rumor could not have been invented otherwise than by those individuals who sacrificing their honor to interest, would attract to themselves the persons who honor this author with their confidence, I therefore find it necessary to give warning that I still continue the practice of my art in Paris, in the Rue de la Comedie Francaise, together with my brother-in-law and sole student, M. Duchemin.”

Aware of the inadequacy in training dentists, Fauchard urged the examining board, established by the Royal Edict of 1699, to include in their membership at least one “skillful and experienced dentist.” His suggestion was rejected.

Le Chirurgien Dentiste ou Traitedes Dents is the first scientific contribution to the literature of dentistry, and the first dental textbook. First appearing in 1728, five years after completing his first manuscript, it was held from publication until the author had it reviewed by recognized authorities in medicine and surgery. One of these experts, a close friend, Jean Claude Devaux, was a leading contributor to the medical literature of the time.

This epic achievement was hailed for its merit by prominent professional contemporaries—physicians, surgeons, and anatomists—who, like Fauchard, perceived the importance of proper treatment of oral ills to restore and maintain a healthy well-being. Notable among them were Etienne Bourdet, Claude Mouton, and Robert Bunon who soon followed Fauchard with their own dental treatises. Fauchard had precipitated a long delayed interest in the art of dental care, which resulted in significant additions to dental literature and advanced the art as a profession.

In his Chirurgien Dentiste, Pierre synthesized all that was known about dentistry in Europe—from Hippocrates to his time—which would have included De Chirurgia by the first important oral surgeon, Cordovan Albucasis (10th Century), and Dix Livres de la Chirurgie by the “Father of Modern Surgery” Ambroise Pare (16th Century) whose pioneering attention to oral surgical procedures might earn him the title “Foster Father of Dental Surgery.” Fauchard’s first edition appeared in two volumes. It was universally recognized as the vehicle of enlightened thought and technology in dentistry. In 1733 the German translation appeared in Berlin. In 1746 the second French edition was published, revised and enlarged to 919 pages with 41 illustrations. In 1786, a third edition was published, twenty-five years after the author’s death. His text was the foundation for the profession of dentistry for a century. In 1946 dental historian Lilian Lindsay translated it into English.

Pierre Fauchard covered the entire field of the profession for his day. But this foundation eventually evolved into today’s practice. He included anatomy, the irregularities of teeth, moving misaligned teeth in younger patients was easier than older ones, removing carious tissue and filling the cavities with tin or lead, prosthetic replacement of missing teeth with devices of carved ivory or bone, alleviation of periodontal disease through tartar removal and debris from the gingival sulcus. He rejected the “worm theory” of his day. He noted that oil of cloves and cinnamon relieved dental pain while sugar was detrimental to teeth and gums. He provided formulas for home mouth washes, but advocated brushing every morning with freshly voided urine.

In the area of surgery, he cited numerous case histories for the treatment of pathological conditions such as abscesses, cysts, and tumors. He advocated retaining deciduous teeth until normally exfoliated, though he did not know where the roots went. He described the enamel fixed to the dentin by “innumerable small filaments.” He replanted evulsed teeth. He transplanted them from person to person. He designed that an extraction patient should be seated in a steady, firm armchair, and not flat on the floor, which was the practice of the day. His innovation of treatment led to better suited instruments and a vastly improved drill.

Prosthetic dentistry received much attention. Appliances, fixed and removable, partial and complete were carefully described and illustrated. Though carved ivory dentures were known from the 15th Century, Fauchard was the first to demonstrate complete dentures, stabilized by springs, and aesthetic for the patient.

Fauchard’s heroic attention to treating oral ills turned a craft into a profession separating it from medicine and surgery. He introduced the term “dentist” into the literature. He had concern for the patients in their proper treatment. And he believed that dental practice should be limited to trained surgeons.

Pierre Fauchard died in his home in the Rue des Cordeliers on 21 March 1761 at 83 years of age. His burial record listed him as “Maitre Chirurgien Dentiste”—the patriarch of his profession.

(This material was extracted from biographies on Pierre Fauchard by Bernhard Wolf Weinberger (1948), Malvin E. Ring (1985), Walter Hoffman-Axthelm (1981), and Milton B. Asbell (1988).-



Annual PFA Academy/Foundation Meeting Schedule

Kansas City, Missouri
11–14 October 2001
Westin Crown Center Hotel

Thursday
11 October, 8 am–4:30 pm
Continuing Education Program, Pershing East Room

Friday
12 October, 7:30 am–5 pm
Academy Board Meeting, Roanoke Room

Saturday
13 October,7:30 am–11 am
Foundation Board Meeting, Penn Valley Room

10 am-11 am
Section Chair Caucus, Union Hill Room

11:30 am–2 pm
Annual Awards Luncheon, Pershing South Room

2:30 pm–5 pm
Foundation Board Meeting, Penn Valley Room

6:30 pm–8 pm
President’s Reception, Pershing West Room

Sunday
14 October, 8 am–5 pm
Foundation Board Meeting, Brookside Room

1 pm–5 pm
Academy Board Meeting, Roanoke Room

6:30 pm–10:30 pm
PFA Dinner Party, Washington Park Place III

All Section Chairs are invited to attend the Academy Board Meetings, the Awards Luncheon, the President’s Reception, and the no-host PFA Dinner Party. All Meeting Reports are to be in the Central Office no later than 2 September to be included in the official Meeting Agenda Manual.


Long-range Planning Seminar

International Trustees Michael Perpich of Minnesota and Gary Lowder of Utah along with California Northern Section Chair Daniel Castagna presented a day-long study on 23 March in Atlanta suggesting preparation and implementation of ideas for the future of the Academy. The entire Board was in attendance with Foundation Executive Director Shig Ryan Kishi and Editor James Brophy.

The major topics covered were (1) Intelligence, (2) Courage, (3) Focus (value), and (4) Adaptability. Intelligence is understanding our mission and how to apply it to our areas. Then gather the facts needed to plan for tomorrow. Assess our potential. Courage is the energy and commitment to carry out our program over the long haul and to inspire others in helping us. Focus is concentrating on what we want to achieve as a group. And Adaptability is to be able to make course corrections as problems arise.

Setting goals helps to achieve success and understand our status. Vice President Gordan Stine had done some preliminary Section membership statistics that were distributed. If PFA set a 5% membership goal, we would break even. So we need to assess at our potential and study such Section problems as lapsation, retention, and recruitment. A suggestion that came from this was to centralize membership invitations to potential members from our headquarters. Another was for President Campbell to send out a letter to Section Chairs asking for a membership growth of 5% with the Regional Trustees following up with phone calls.


L-R, Long-range Planning Committee Trustee Gary Lowder, Daniel Castagna, Trustee Michael Perpich


Trustee Mike Perpich setting membership goals

Budgetary constraints were considered and discussed. Foreign exchange rates, recessions in non-U.S. countries, and individual area financial stress were brought up.

Programs such as mentoring, continuing education, and local projects that attract membership were reviewed. Each Section is encouraged to adopt a program to unite their members in working together. Foundation grants are geared to help promote this.

A timetable of three years for every Section to have an active mentorship program at their dental schools and five years for all Sections to have a functioning mentor program was suggested. Publicity was gone over in depth. Trustee Robert Friedman (PFA Publicity Chair) discussed urging every Section to develop their own newsletter. Editor Brophy is developing a newsletter manual for their use. A timetable was established for each Section to get an article in their local journals within the year, two articles a year within three years, and two articles a year with a Section Editor office appointed in five years.

Continuing Education was a topic for inquiry with suggestions of having one of the two Board Meetings be a CE course, holding a traveling CE course every quarter in a different location, to promoting on-line CERP. We need to search for a niche to fill.

A local projects timetable was suggested that in one year all Section Chairs receive and review the grant proposal applications; three years actually submit a grant; and in five years receive a grant for their project.

The definition for the PFA is honor, ethics, leadership, and professionalism with our target audiences of the (1) profession, (2) our patients, and (3) the public.

More discussion ensued about the PFA being viewed as being an exclusive American organization. While 75% or so of the membership is from the United States, we need to appeal to more countries for international growth.

The many suggestions and proposed goals were submitted to the Executive Committee for consideration and implementation.



Trustee Gary Lowder leading the discussion about our future




PFA Gold Medal Award








Dr. Richard G. Shaffer

Rear Admiral Richard Shaffer retired from the Navy in 1989 having earned the Distinguished Service Medal, three Legions of Merit, the Meritorious Service Medal, the Navy Commendation Medal and two Presidential Commendations.

He was awarded Fellowships in ICD, ACD, and AGD. Case Western Reserve University School of Dentistry presented him their 1998 Alumnus of the Year Award.

Upon his retirement from the Navy, Dr. Shaffer accepted the position as Secretary General of ICD and Registrar for the U.S. Section. During his tenure, ICD reached an international membership growth of 8500 members in 90 countries. He retired from ICD in 1999 but still remains Chairman of the Audiovisual Committee to produce the “Outstanding Leaders in Dentistry” series, and Chairman of the Convocation Committee.

Dr. Shaffer serves on the Board of Visitors of the National Museum of Dentistry and is Chairman of their Development Committee.

He serves as Trustee of the McLean Bible Church in Virginia, is consultant to the Navy Dental School in Bethesda, and is a Red Cross volunteer.

He and Barbara, his wife of 44 years, have three sons and nine grandchildren.

But Dr. Shaffer’s resume hardly expresses the personal warmth of this professional man. When visiting with him at major dental meetings, you feel within heartbeats that he is a friend. Always optimistic and uplifting, you come away feeling better for just having exchanged a few words. For a good purpose, Admiral Shaffer knew how to cut the red tape. What the resume fails to express is what a wonderful person Richard Shaffer is. And that, with his outstanding professional credentials, makes him an excellent choice for the PFA Gold Medal. The many suggestions and proposed goals were submitted to the Executive Committee for consideration and implementation.

Dr. Richard G. Shaffer has been selected by the Academy Board to receive the PFA Gold Medal in Kansas City on 13 October at our Awards Banquet.

Dr. Shaffer, a native of Lakewood, Ohio, graduated from Wesleyan University in 1956, Case Western Reserve School of Dentistry in 1960, and earned his Master’s degree from George Washington University in 1978.

He entered the U.S. Navy as an intern in 1960, completing a General Dentistry residency at the Naval Dental School in Bethesda, Maryland, in 1970. He became Dean of that school in 1975. He then served at the Great Lakes Naval Center as Commanding Officer for the Regional Dental Center. In 1982 he was promoted to Commodore. Dr. Shaffer then served as Commanding Officer for Norfolk Naval Regional Dental Center with additional duties as the U.S. Atlantic Fleet Dental Officer.

In 1983 Dr. Shaffer became the first Vice Commander of the Naval Medical Command responsible for U.S.Navy medicine worldwide.

He received his second star in 1984 to become the first dental officer to hold a major medical command at the National Capitol Region covering five states and the President’s Hospital in Bethesda. That year he was appointed Chief of the Navy Dental Corps, and Assistant Chief of the Bureau Surgery for Dentistry.




President’s Award








Dr. John A. Molinari



Chairman of the Department of Biomedical Sciences at the University of Detroit Mercy School of Dentistry. He has published more than 200 articles, text chapters, and abstracts in the areas of microbiology and immunology, and he is co-author of the textbook Practical Infection Control in Dentistry.

Dr. Molinari has lectured internationally on topics dealing with diseases and asepsis. Dr. Molinari is a consultant to the ADA Council on Scientific Affairs and a member on the Michigan Dental Association Special Committee on Health Hazard Resources. He served as Project Coordinator for the governmental Health Resources and Service Administration Task Force on AIDS and Dental Education. He serves on the Michigan Governor’s Risk Reduction and AIDS Policy Commission.

Dr. Molinari currently serves as editor for the Infection Control Section for the Compendium of Continuing Education in Dentistry. He is also a member of the Editorial Board for the ADA Journal.

Dr. Molinari is an honorary member of the Michigan Dental Association and ICD.

Dr. John A. Molinari has been selected by PFA President Malcolm David Campbell to receive the President’s Award at the PFA Awards Luncheon on 13 October 2001 at the Kansas City Meeting. Dr. Molinari will also be the luncheon speaker.

President Campbell selected Dr. Molinari because of his excellence in academics and research.

John Molinari received his B.A. degree from St. Vincent College and his Ph.D. in microbiology from the University of Pittsburgh School of Dentistry. He is currently Professor and

President’s Message

The Fellows of the PFA are unique in a world that tolerates average or mediocre skills, knowledge and ability. However, world-class accomplishment is the prerequisite if we are to maintain dentistry’s high standards. Today, all over the world, pressures of companies and governments are trying to control treatment of our patients. It is no easy task to lift performance from merely average to excellent.

If we are to have any input in meeting the challenge of quality dentistry, we must think in different terms about all the problems involved. It is necessary to think in different terms about who are our patients and how do we serve them. It is necessary to think in different terms about our association with our dental supply companies and dental laboratories. It is necessary to think in different terms about how we deliver our services.

We in the PFA are thinking in different terms. We are helping people in need all over the world. The PFA mentor program is teaching our future dentists to think ethically and professionally. We are not just talking about doing more or delivering more dental services. We are providing leadership to enable dentists to be “professional” in the true sense of the word “professional”!

I would like to share a piece called “Attitudes” by Charles Swindoll.

“The longer I live, the more I realize the impact of attitude on life. Attitude, to me, is more than facts. It is more important than

the past, than education, than money, than circumstances, than failures, than successes, than what other people think or say or do. Attitude is more important than appearance, giftedness, or skill. It will make or break a company … a church … a home.

The remarkable thing is that we have a choice everyday regarding the attitude we embrace for that day. We cannot change our past … we cannot change the fact that people will act in a certain way. We cannot change the inevitable. The only thing we can do is play on the one string we have and that is our attitude. I am convinced that life is 10% what happens to me and 90% how I react to it.

And so it is with you …
We are in charge of our attitudes.”

As we enter a new century, I am optimistic that the age-old values and attitudes that have sustained us over the years are reaffirming dentistry’s leadership in the health professions. I am optimistic that these same values and attitudes will override the shallow, shortsighted thinking and attitudes of some of our less motivated colleagues.

Malcom David Campbell, DDS
President



Calendar


2001


6-8 September

8 September

27 September-1 October

11 October

12-14 October


13-17 October

31 October-2 November




25th European Prosthodontic Conference, Prague, Czech Republic

23rd Japan Section Meeting, Nigata, Japan

89th FDI World Congress, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

PFA Continuing Education Program, (7CE Units) , Kansas City, Missouri

ADA Meeting, Kansas City, Missouri PFA Academy/Foundation Annual Meetings, Kansas City, Missouri

PFA Academy/Foundation Annual Meetings, Kansas City, Missouri

ADA 142rd Annual Meeting, Kansa City, Missouri

15th Congress of the IADR, Blantyre, Malawi

Calendar

2002

19 – 23 October

Fall


ADA 143rd Annual Meeting, New Orleans, Louisiana

FDI 90th Annual World Congress, Vienna, Austria

Calendar

2003

25-29 October

Fall


ADA 144rd Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA

FDI 91st Annual Meeting, Sydney, Australia


(Have your PFA Event date put here. E-mail Editor Brophy at PFADWJMB@aol.com)


Interim Board Meeting

Atlanta Westin Airport Hotel, 22 March 2001

President M. David Campbell called the meeting to order as the sun lifted over the magnolia trees outside. Vice President Gordan Stine gave the Invocation.


Board Meeting

President Campbell gave his report on attending the FDI Meeting in Paris, the PFA functions in Brussels, and the Maryland PFA Meeting. He described his plans to visit the Connecticut Section in April, then to Chile, the Hall of Fame presentation in Paris this June, and then on to Italy to discuss their Section’s activities.

Secretary/Treasurer Richard Kozal related his efforts with Mark Stanley in completing the Membership Directory on our Web site and updating the membership lists. For privacy reasons, the members’ addresses are not listed on the Web site but may be obtained by calling the Central Office.

The lockbox for receiving and depositing the membership dues has been very successful, particularly in freeing up the staff to keep the lists, the incoming mail, and the Web site up to the minute accurate.

The Central Office is looking into providing CE courses through the PFA Web site for the membership.

Budget and Finance

Chair Scott Welch noted the temporary budgetary shortfall at this point. The cause, as pointed out by Secretary/Treasurer Richard Kozal, was from paying the two expensive Chicago meetings and the Leadership Conference. Dues are now coming in and will clear that up. An internal audit is conducted quarterly that will reflect this fluid situation.

Foundation Report

Foundation Executive Director Shig Ryan Kishi gave the Foundation’s Report, which is presented under Foundation News in this issue.

Constitution and ByLaws

Trustee William Winspear opened discussion on the structuring of the Awards system, and this was motioned to the Awards Committee for determination.

Executive Committee

The Committee held discussion on various topics. No Board action was required.

Membership Committee

Trustee Perpich suggested a membership retention plan. At that time, almost 1500 members were in arrears for their 2001 dues. Dues were still coming in, and that figure will be reduced significantly. Vice President Gordan Stine presented a State by State membership total and recommended a goal of percentile growth from those figures.

Nominating Committee

For the annual election at the October Meeting, the Committee recommended the following:

    • Dr. Scott M. Welch for President (automatically from President-elect)
    • Dr. Gordan Stine for President-elect
    • Dr. Robert E. Friedman for Vice President
    • Dr. Campbell accedes to the office of Immediate Past President

Publicity

Chair Robert Friedman noted that service distinguishes PFA from the other honor organizations in the profession. And we have done an excellent job in that role, but we need to get more publicity to the world. He suggested that each Section Chair appoint a Section Editor to cover the local activities of their Section and distribute this to the local professional journals. Publications Chair Kevin Roach led the discussion on language use in our publications, particularly in deleting ethnicity, nationality, and gender. A joint Academy/Foundation pamphlet was suggested to promote recruitment. Dr. Kishi suggested funding from the Foundation for this from those funds allocated for contingencies. Thought was given to translate the pamphlet into French, Spanish, and Japanese as well. Editor Brophy gave a report on the success of the FDI Congress in making contacts and getting our name known.

Awards Committee

Chair James Englander submitted his committee’s report for approval for the following nominees:

• PFA Gold Medal Award—Dr. Richard G. Shaffer
• Elmer Best Memorial Award—Dr. Jacques Monnot • President’s Award—Dr. John Molinari
• Dental Trade and Industry Award—Jeneric/Pentron Inc. (Dr. Gordon Seth Cohen)

Hall of Fame

Chair Ray Klein and President Campbell went to Baltimore to review the US venue of the Wall of Fame at the National Museum of Dentistry. Discussion ensued about the poor sight visibility of the location. The Museum offered a place on the first floor for a $100,000 contribution, or another location for $250,000. Dr. Friedman would be looking into space at the Smithsonian.

Dr. George Hollenbeck will be (has been) inducted into the Hall of Fame on 21 April in Anaheim, Calif, and the plaque will be presented to Dean Harold Slavkin of USC School of Dentistry.

Trustee Pierre Marois is working out the details for the June Meeting in Paris.

Induction of Drs. George Leatherman and Terrance Ward were discussed with the hope of inducting Dr. Leatherman during their trip to London after Paris.

Leadership Conference

The next Leadership Conference is scheduled for 2003. Drs. Stine and Halik will be considering a Chairperson for that conference.

Mentorship

Chair Gary Lowder suggested having the Trustees survey their areas and strengthen or implement the Mentor Program in their Sections.

Section Chair Caucus

The President has established a specific meeting with the Section Chairs attending the ADA Meeting in Kansas City this Fall.

International Committee

No report

Section Chair Appointments

• Professor Branislav Dastevski for the Republic of Macedonia
• Dr. William Atkinson for South Carolina
• Dr. Chris Baboulas for Illinois
• Dr. Anita Elliot for Arizona
• Dr. George Kann for Hawaii
• Dr. Greg Romriell for Idaho
• Dr. Bonnie Ferrel for Colorado
• Dr. William Goodman for Oklahoma

Final Budget Report

The first quarter budget will be reviewed in July during the Budget and Finance Committee Meeting. Line item discussion took place suggesting various changes.

Trustees Reports

Trustee Eiichi Katagiri reported that the 23rd annual meeting of the Japanese Section will be held on 8 September 2001 in Nigata. In August, he will initiate the selection process for the Michinosuke Nakayama Memorial Award. New Section officers will be elected in September. The Korean Section Meeting is scheduled for 26 May 2001.


Trustee Eiichi Katagiri (center) gives his report

New Business

This Interim Board Meeting was the first held not in conjunction with a large dental meeting. The members felt that it was a good idea to hold it during a dental meeting so the officers could network with other dental leaders and it might attract more Section Chairs to attend. President Campbell noted that the Kansas City CE course will be for seven units of credit.

Trustee Eiichi Katagiri (center) gives his report

Awards Committee

Chair James Englander submitted his committee’s report for approval for the following nominees:

• PFA Gold Medal Award—Dr. Richard G. Shaffer
• Elmer Best Memorial Award—Dr. Jacques Monnot • President’s Award—Dr. John Molinari
• Dental Trade and Industry Award—Jeneric/Pentron Inc. (Dr. Gordon Seth Cohen)


http://www.fauchard.org/

Our web site has been updated to include some new features, important information, and links to other related sites.

The Academy of General Dentistry recently put out an article entitled, “Prying Reality from Hype in New Technology” in which they noted that, among their membership, the use of computers has risen to 85% in 2000 from 51% in 1997 and 25% in 1995. They related that the dental community has been slow to embrace the new technology because of the initial investment to get started. As a practitioner myself for more than a quarter of a century, I have seen that my older staff are not familiar with the office computer and avoid it. With the younger dental assistants coming on that have been trained in computerese since grammar school, the transition has been rewarding and productive to the dental office.

Under then President Shig Ryan Kishi, your Academy adopted his far-sighted vision into the future on the upswing of the technology. “In for a penny, in for a pound” is an old English saying, which means if you make the commitment, go all the way. And President Kishi went first class, establishing a “state of the art” Web site that has served us well in distributing information and saving money.

The most important feature to the Academy budget has been the Online Fellowship Directory, which contains the most current listing of active and life members in your Section. In the past, the Academy had to plan funding such a directory every year, then every other year, then every three years, and finally every five years due to the rising cost. The printing and mailing costs were in the thousands of dollars. The six months it took from start to “in your hands” made it 15% out of date by then. And there always was the debate about taking advertisements and whether that meant product endorsement. Now the Directory is up to the minute at your disposal.

Members were always inquiring about what the Academy does. Brochures were printed and handed out and lost. But now anyone can visit the Web site and get a history, browse through all the Awards that are presented along with a list of their recipients, discover the officers and trustees, and download PFA forms.

All the back issues of Dental World can be found at this place. In visiting many non-U.S. countries, I have seen a great many members get their most recent copy of Dental World off the Internet before it reaches them by mail. In a sleepy border town in the Central American jungles, I walked into the modern dental office of Bertram and Ivan Moldauer, who punched up Dental World on their computer even before the magazine found its way to them.

The history of the Foundation, with all its projects and grant programs, is there. No need to write anyone and wait for a reply. There it all exists for your 24/7 demand.

A calendar of events is kept up-to-date for immediate referral. If your Section wishes to post their dates there, you are welcome. Download the Meeting Form, fill it out, and e-mail it back for posting. Then the entire world can attend your function.

No more snail mail delays waiting to hear back from the Central Office in the deserts of Nevada. Seven days a week, 24 hours a day, every day of the year, you can e-mail our Secretary/Treasurer Richard Kozal or Judy at RKozal@aol.com and get a reply overnight (if they are not attending a PFA function elsewhere).

Our publications are listed, and the books The Life and Times of Pierre Fauchard and Dental Legacy can be purchased right there. A PFA Online Catalogue of Academy items can be purchased with the PFA logos on them. And you can pay for them by using your PFA credit card, an application for which is there as well, supplied by MBNA. Every time you use that card, PFA receives a small stipend. The more you put all your purchases on the PFA card, the more you help support your Academy.

The International Online Dental Hall of Fame has a list of our recipients and the location sites of the main venue in Paris and the U.S. venue in Baltimore. The PFA Museum at the Community College of Southern Nevada is featured, with displays of dental artifacts. Your old artifacts are welcomed by curator Richard Kozal.


The PFA Dental Museum in formation

The site index that first pops up helps you get around to the area you want. One of those areas is our Links page, which will take you to related areas of interest and other professional organizations.

Not only does this site save an enormous amount of time in our busy world, but also the cost of maintaining the site is well offset by the savings in printing, office time, and mailing costs. This is the future. While we are honoring the principles of a 1700s professional, his namesake Academy is well into the 21st Century.




Foundation News

(The following is a brief summary of the October 2000 Foundation Board Meeting Minutes.)

There were a few fine-tuning changes reported out of the Chicago Foundation Board Meeting that you may need to be aware of. Section grant applications for Section projects that have “fast track” approval have the added stipulations that such projects “are conducted by a significant number of Fellows” and that such projects are “in the control” of the applying Academy Section.

Another change is that the Humanitarian Award grant permits recipients to use the additional $5000 “in any manner that they choose that aids their program.”

A $10,000 budget line item was provided for which permits the Board to act on immediate funding of special projects that come before it which have missed the earlier deadline. In such cases, time constraints demand attention immediately as the project will not be available for next year’s consideration under the Foundation deadlines. But funding requires unanimous consent by the Foundation Board.

The Academy grant application request is also to include a summary of the prior year’s programs.

The non-U.S. dental school scholarships for 2001 will be awarded in Argentina, Australia (3), Belgium, Canada (3), Chile, Costa Rica, France (2), Germany, Hong Kong, India (2), Ireland, Japan (3), Korea, Mexico, Peru, Portugal, Poland, Singapore, and the United Kingdom (2). All 2001 scholarship amounts will be $1500. Any division of this amount by the individual Section needs to be submitted to the Foundation in writing for approval by the Executive Committee.
The Academy President and President-elect serve as voting ex-officio members of the Foundation Board. For that reason, the Academy Board cannot meet at the same time as the Foundation Board.

The Foundation Board has been struggling with the concept of how to operate with “a minimum of eight and a maximum of 14 voting Trustees ...” when there are more past PFA Presidents wishing to serve on the Board than positions open. A newly passed amendment would establish “a Roster of Available Past Presidents.”

When a vacancy occurs on the Foundation Board, the top name on that list will be appointed. So an Academy President who has sat on the Foundation Board for two years as Trustee may find himself off the Board as an immediate past President and on a waiting list. Other options were discussed and debated, but this accommodation was arrived at for the time being. A larger Foundation Board might prove to be unwieldy and would certainly be more expensive in meeting costs.

The Board painstakingly reviewed 32 grants that passed the established guidelines.

The approved grants were The Thousand Smiles Foundation (Dr. James Vernetti); Rhode Island Section’s Smokeless Tobacco (Dr. M. Christine Benoit); Roybal-Allard Children’s Dental Center of Los Angeles; Bridge the Gap (Trustee Robert Friedman); Dentists on Wheels (National Board of French Dental Surgeons); Union Gospel Mission Dental Clinic (St. Paul District Dental Society); St. Martin de Porres Dental Center of Topeka, Kansas; Kindness in Action Service Society of Alberta, Canada, to provide dental services in Honduras; the University of Maryland, Baltimore College of Dental Surgery; Dental Hall of Fame in Canada (Trustee Kevin Roach); Kidlink in North Carolina; Maryland Foundation of Dentistry for the Handicapped; Changing Lives of Utah, to provide for services in rural Mexico; Minneapolis District Dental Society, to provide dental care for the homeless; Indigent Dental Care Clinic (Tennessee Section); UCLA’s Venice Dental Center; Northern Nevada Dental Health Program (Northern Nevada Dental Society); Good Shepherd Mission Clinic (University of Oklahoma College of Dentistry); an Oral Health Curriculum for Children (Texas A & M University Health Sciences Center Research Foundation); and the New Orleans Musician’s Clinic (LSU) for a total amount of $134,548 in grants.

The Academy applied for $40,000 in grants to fund an international continuing education course, the PFA Web site, the Hall of Fame, and the Mentorship Program.

The Foundation agreed to continue holding one meeting per year. Their next Board Meeting will be in Kansas City, 13-14 October 2001.


Foundation News continued

Brazil
Chair Professor Lucy Dalva Lopes presented the Foundation Scholarship Award to Dulce Catarnio de Souza of Curso Odontologio Guerillios University with Dean Nello Francisco Romani and PFA Section Secretary/Treasurer Renato Geromel last December during their 10th Anniversary PFA Awards Dinner.


-R, Dean Nello Francisco Romani, recipient Dulce Catarnio de Souza, Chair Lucy Dalva Lopes,

France
French Dental Bus

The French Dental Bus “Dentists on Wheels” is a not for profit organization sponsored by the French Conseil National de l’Ordre des Chirurgiens Dentistes. The mobile dental clinic serves the poor Paris suburbs throughout the year and is staffed by volunteer dentists. PFA International Trustee Pierre Marois presented the $10,000 Foundation check to l’Ordre President Andrè Robert at a ceremony this January with the entire Board of Trustees present.


L-R, Drs. Couzinou,Bouteille, Cherpion, PFA Trustee Pierre Marois, l’Ordre President Andrè Robert, Mahe, Regard


L-R, The French Dental Bus with Drs. Ray Klein, Andrè Robert, Fred Halik, and Pierre Marois outside l’Ordre headquarters last June

Last November, our International Trustee Pierre Marois assisted France Section Chairman Hubert Ouvrard along with dental school Deans Marie-Laure Boy-Lefevre from the University of Paris 7 and Pierre Lafforgue of University of Lille to present University of Lille dental student Guillaume Honore our Foundation Scholarship Award. Fellows and Professors Patrick Missika and Philippe Monsenego attended to laud our scholarship winner.


Guillaume Honore receiving congratulations from Dean Pierre Lafforgue with Trustee Pierre Marois, Chair Hubert Ouvrard, and Dean Marie-Laure Boy-Lefevre attending



United Kingdom
Professor Monty Duggal of the University of Leeds Dental Institute presented the Foundation Scholarship Awards to dental students Vanessa Lee and Mark Tullet. Both students will be taking their elective research projects in Chitrakoot, India, as part of a wider community-based program sponsored by the Leeds Dental Institute and SEWA International, a United Kingdom charity. This will give them the opportunity to broaden their knowledge of dentistry in a developing country.


Scholarship recipients Mark Tullet and Vanesaa Lee (center) receive awards



Stay connected! Visit the PFA Web site at www.fauchard.org/


Foundation News continued


United States

Connecticut

Bridging the Gap, a PFA Section-sponsored, Foundation-funded project, was initiated by 35 members of the Fairfield County PFA. These dentists donate their services, along with a dental lab that reduces its fees, to treat individuals with psychiatric disabilities with dentures and prostheses to “bridge the gap to a better life.”

The Bridge House of Bridgeport is a nonclinical setting, serving about 300 people a year who are making the transition from institutional care to independent living. They represent about 5% of the population who have the more severe, persistent forms of psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia and bipolarism. In addition to their attempts to overcome medical handicaps, the medication they take affects their teeth and gums, relates Bridge House Executive Director Victoria Furey. They tend to lose their teeth. Because they have disabilities, they are often poor and cannot afford expensive dental work. “Their access to professional care is appallingly limited,” she goes on. “The loss of their teeth makes them tremendously self-conscious, particularly when they go for a job interview.”

In steps International Trustee Robert Friedman, who secured Foundation funding for the New Haven Special Olympics games to make some 2500 mouth guards for the athletes several years ago. Dr. Friedman noted that bad smiles make for introverted personalities. But give them back their smiles and their personalities blossom. People notice a smile first.

So Dr. Friedman conceived of a program to treat these patients to return their smiles to them by enlisting the PFA Fellows and a local dental lab to do dentures and prostheses for these individuals. He and Fellow Pablo Cuevas applied for a Foundation grant to fund the project and were additionally awarded the Foundation’s Humanitarian Award for another $5000.

Fellow Mary Hamill of Norwalk states that she enjoys treating appreciative people who are trying to turn their lives around. “And if you give them a boost, I cannot think of anything nicer,” she notes. This improves their self-esteem to get that job.

Fellow Brian Duchan of Westport added that it gives him back his smile to help these people.
Director Victoria Furey noted that you cannot put a price tag on giving a smile back. “Dr. Friedman is an angel.” And so says the Fairfield Citizen of January 19th.
The Bridging the Gap project was also reported in the Connecticut State Dental Association’s The Communicator newsletter for February.

Indiana

Chairman Ray Maddox, IU Assistant Professor, presented the Foundation Scholarship Award to University of Indiana senior dental student Yazdan Alami last January in Dean Lawrence Goldblatt’s Office with Student Affairs Associate Dean Margot Van Dis. The IUSD Alumni Bulletin announced the presentation.


L-R, Associate Dean Margot Van Dis, Chair Ray Maddox, recipient Yazdan Alami, and Dean Lawrence Goldblatt

Massachusetts

In the Winter issue of Tufts Dental magazine, PFA is listed under “Friends of the J. Murray Gavel Center” for gift giving along with Fellow Norm Becker. The Center is associated with the Tufts University School of Dental Medicine. The PFA Foundation is also listed in the magazine under its own title “Pierre Fauchard Scholarship/Foundations.”

Ohio

Dean Jerold Goldberg of Case Western Reserve School of Dentistry presented the Foundation Scholarship to dental student Nhu Quynh Tran.


L-R, Award recipient Nhu Quynh Tran with Dean Jerold Goldberg

Minnesota

In the January issue of the Minneapolis District Dental Society newsletter Brush-Up, the Foundation grant to the Sharing and Caring Hands Dental Clinic in Minneapolis was reported. This shelter provides a host of services to some 20,000 people each month and is run entirely on private donations. The Minneapolis District Dental Society provides the dental services there and will be using the grant to purchase a Cavitron unit and surgical handpieces.

Nevada

The Nevada Dental Journal, Winter issue, highlighted the Foundation in a page-long article for their grant to the Northern Nevada Dental Health Program, which promotes dental access and treatment for children in rural northern Nevada. The NNDHP partnered with the United Way to form the Pediatric Dental Care Program (PDCP) to provide pro bono dental treatment to eligible children 16 years of age and younger. So far, the group has generated $1.2 million in services over the last 10 years.

Texas

Director of Student Affairs Moira Allen of the Baylor College of Dentistry in Dallas calls our attention to the Dallas Morning News article of 23 January, which reports that dental school senior Curt Cain received the Foundation scholarship.


Scholarship recipient Curt Cain receiving award from Dean James Cole

Wisconsin

Chairman Glenn Maihofer presented the Foundation Scholarship Award to Marquette University senior dental student Jorge Parajon in Dean William Lobb’s office.


L-R, Chair Glenn Maihofer, recipient Jorge Parajon, and Dean William Lobb
Foundation News

Executive Director Shig Ryan Kishi gave this summary of the Foundation activities at the March Atlanta Meeting.

The Foundation commitment of $104,500 will be completed this year to the University of Costa Rica School of Dentistry for their Multimedia Teaching facility. Another $7500 will be awarded for the Loader-Espinach Award presented in Costa Rica. The next event for that award will be in 2002.

The Costa Rica flower shop property is being transferred to Fundacion Piedad, a Central American dental charity organization. The jewelry shop property has a buyer and was determined to be sold by the Board.

Of the 20 grants approved by the Foundation at their Chicago Meeting, the University of Oklahoma—Good Shepherd Mission was not awarded due to recipient amendments to the Foundation contract that were not favorable to the Foundation. Ten grant applications were disapproved. The Academy grants for 2001 were approved for $40,000 of which $10,000 goes for the Continuing Education course in Kansas City this Fall; $15,000 goes to maintaining and updating our Web site, $10,000 goes for our Hall of Fame/ Dental Museum projects, and $5000 funds the Mentorship Program.

The Foundation Scholarship Program has received student nominees from all 53 U.S. dental schools.

Academy Fellows donations have risen to $26,675 with $22,840 from the United States, $710 from international members, and $2925 from Life Members in 2000.

Foundation President Robert Shira submitted his report to the Atlanta Meeting, which was mostly covered by the Executive Secretary orally. Additions were that 32 grant applications were considered at the Chicago Meeting with 20 being approved, 10 rejected, and two withdrawn for a total of $134,548 awarded. The Scholarship awards totaled $123,000 for 54 U.S. dental schools (Northwestern will be closed next year) and 28 non-U.S. dental schools.

The Foundation ByLaws currently read that the Board shall consist of at least eight and not more than 14 members. Since the Board is at capacity, the following change was made to accommodate this situation. “When the current President of the Academy who is serving as Foundation Trustee becomes a past President, he will not automatically become a Foundation Trustee. His name will be placed on a roster of available past Presidents and will be appointed to the Foundation Board when a vacancy exists in the order of their listing on the roster.”

Discussion ensued about holding a Foundation fund raising program to raise capital to offset paying more income tax. Past PFA President Larry Barrett was appointed Chairman of this committee. His committee will consist of Drs. Campbell, Stine, Halik, Long, and Shira.


More News

The Foundation contribution list is located at the Academy Web site. To view it, at the site, click on inquiries, and scroll down to the link.

Executive Secretary Shig Kishi reports reviewing 114 grant applications for presentation at the Kansas City Meeting this October. All 53 U.S. dental schools have responded to the scholarship requests.

This year the ADA Health Foundation solicited funding from PFA for a grant to increase access to care for underserved children across America. Unfortunately, one of the Foundation grant provisions prohibits the Board from funding other Foundations. But the project did reach their funding goals through the generosity of Dr. Samuel Harris (of the Dental Museum fame) and a $100,000 grant from Procter & Gamble. The ADA Health Foundation reports receiving 14 grant requests a day for the Harris Fund Grants Program.


Director Shig Ryan Kishi

International Trustee Robert Friedman (Academy Publicity Chairman) reports that his article on the Foundation and Dr. Robert Shira was published in the ADA News on March 19th.

Foundation Treasurer George Higue filed a 65-page year 2000 Financial Report for the Foundation, which includes the three funds maintained by his office—(1) the Brenes Espinach account; (2) the Academy Foundation account (your contributions); and (3) the Nakayama account for the Japanese Section. Dr. Higue noted that the tremendous stock market losses did not affect the PFA accounts due to his wise investment policies.


Brazil

At their annual Dinner Meeting celebrating their first decade as a PFA Section, Chair Professor Lucy Dalva Lopes awarded the Foundation Scholarship to dental student Opas Tujihara of Mogi des Cruzes University with Dean Renato Sergio Chuirilete.


L-R, Dean Renato Sergio Chuirilete, scholarship recipient Opas Tujihara, Chair Lucy Dalva Lopes, and Secretary/Treasurer Renato Geromel

United States

Michigan

Chair Virginia Merchant held their PFA Breakfast in Detroit to award the Foundation scholarships to dental students Andrew Cheung with the University of Michigan School of Dentistry, Assistant Dean Marilyn Woolfolk present, and to Judy Wybenga with the University of Detroit Mercy School of Dentistry, Associate Dean G. William Knight present. PFA President David Malcolm Campbell helped officiate. This was reported in the Journal of the Michigan Dental Association, April issue.

Nevada

The Nevada Dental Journal, Spring issue, printed a pagelong article on the Foundation and its grant program.

Texas

“By the Roots” Program Administrator J. Phillip Ford of Baylor College of Dentistry reports that more than 14,000 children were instructed in proper dental hygiene through their program. A school nurse from an east Texas town noted that there has been a definite increase in better oral health care among her students. The PFA logo appears on their Oral Health poster.



From the Desk of Congressman Charles Norwood, DDS

We did it! The ergonomics regulations are history! We used the 1996 Accountability Act, which allows Congress to pass a resolution of disapproval of regulations made by a federal agency, such as OSHA and the Labor Department. I had the honor to lead the floor fight for this disapproval, and President Bush signed it promptly.

The ADA has been pointing out problems with the Clinton medical privacy rules. I asked that they not be final until corrected. Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson has been instructed to fix them.

I still am in conversations with the White House about patient protection rights, but they are opposed to it. I have been asked to reintroduce my bill, but even if we could get it out of the House in two months, it would never get through the Senate.

The last issue I am working on is the one on liability. The President wants federal liability; we want it at the state level. The business and corporation lobbyists and insurance companies prefer federal court over state ones. I believe that the state court is better, but something is better than nothing. It does not make sense to have a patients’ rights bill that is silent on liability.

The redrawing of congressional districts looms post-census. The district they are trying to give me is one I could not win. The courts will be the only place we will have any voice to protect my district. Any help you can provide will be appreciated. I can be reached at P.O. Box 499, Evans, GA, 30809.

Sincerely,
Charlie



Section News

Brazil
Chair Professor Lucy Dalva Lopes celebrated the 10th anniversary of their PFA with an Awards Dinner last December.


Academic Professor Irma Neume Carvallio, President of the Academy Paraibana de Odontologia, receives award from Chair Lucy Dalva Lopes)

Canada

Fellow Richard Speers of Toronto helped found the International Dental Ethics and Law Society (IDEALS) in 2000. The Society has been established to foster an international multidisciplinary dialogue on the values guiding dental and law practice. Their first General Assembly meeting will be held this October in Amsterdam during the 4th International Congress on Dental Law and Ethics Their Web site is www.ideals.ac or contact Dr. Joseph Welie at the Creighton University Center for Health Policy and Ethics, 2500 California Plaza, Omaha, NE 68178, for more information.

France

International Trustee Pierre Marois of Paris had the Foundation check presentation for their mobile dental clinic placed in La Lettre de l’Ordre National des Chirurgiens-dentistes, their professional magazine that goes to every dentist in France. “Le Dr. Pierre Marois, responsible de la section eurpeenne de la Pierre Fauchard Academy, la celebre institution americaine, a remis, le 4 janvier dernier, un cheque de 10,000 dollars au president Andre Robert, pour l’Association du bus social dentaire. Le Conseil national et son president, Andre Robert, egalement president de l’Association du bus social dentaire, tient a remercier le Dr. Marois, et avec lui la Pierre Fauchard Academy pour cette aide genereuse.”

The annual official Hall of Fame Ceremony at the Paris venue was held on 21 June at the Conseil National de l’Ordre des Chirurgiens-Dentistes headquarters. PFA President David Campbell, Secretary/Treasurer Richard Kozal, International Trustee for Europe Pierre Marois, and Hall of Fame Chair Ray Klein attended along with French dental society President Andre Robert and his officers.
FDI Centennial President Jacques Monnot was honored by PFA with the Elmer Best Award presented by our President David Malcolm Campbell. Professor Claude Severin, President de l’Academie Nationale de Chirurgie Dentaire, was conferred with Honorary PFA Membership. Pictures and highlights in the next issue.

Guatemala

Fellow Ivan Moldauer received his Certificate in the AEGD Program at Nova Southeastern University in Ft. Lauderdale. Dr. Moldauer teaches at the Francisco Marroquin University School of Dentistry in Guatemala.



Dr. Moldauer presented a table clinic on rotary endodontic instrumentation at the Miami Midwinter Meeting.


Fellow Ivan Moldauer receives certificate from Dr. Phil Levine

Japan

Dr. Mamoru Sakuda has been selected as Section Chair-elect and will become International Trustee after Dr. Eiichi Katagiri’s term ends.
Mrs. Tomiko Nakayama, President of the Hakusui Trading Company, has donated $2000 toward the maintenance of our PFA Web site. Mrs. Nakayama and her late husband have been PFA supporters for decades. Mrs. Nakayama will attend our functions in Kansas City this fall.

Portugal

Chair Gil Alcoforado inducted 14 new Fellows last March in Lisbon. Professor Armand Santinho Cunha gave the address.


L-R, Chair Gil Alcoforado presents membership certificate to Dr. Pedro Correia

Malaysia

Chair Paul C. K. Lee is serving as the Organizational Chairman for the Rotary Regional Convention in Kuala Lumpur.

Philippines

Chair Daimpo J. Lim was active in their recent 93rd annual Convocation and Scientific Meeting of the Philippine Dental Association last May with past Chair Primo Gonzales. Their party won all the positions but speaker.

Switzerland

Dr. Hans Della Bona has retired as Section Chair. Dr. Roland will succeed him.

Section News continued

United States

California, Southern Section

Dr. George Hollenback (1886-1973) was honored during the California Dental Society Meeting in Anaheim last Spring at the PFA Annual Luncheon. Dr. Hollenback was installed into the Hall of Fame in his home state. PFA President-elect Scott Welch welcomed those attending with Hall of Fame Chairman Ray Klein, past PFA President, doing the background remarks.


Chair Ray Klein giving the Hollenback history

---

Past PFA President Carl Lundgren gave his sponsoring comments. Dean Harold Slavkin accepted the Hollenback plaque for USC while Dr. Lloyd Baum received another plaque for Loma Linda Dental School. Dr. Baum did research with Dr. Hollenback at Loma Linda.


Dean Harold Slavkin receives Hollenback plaque

USC Dean Slavkin noted, “The plaque will serve as a symbol for innovation and discovery at USC, and can also serve to create mechanisms for the five dental schools in California to share faculty.”

A third plaque will be presented to the University of the Pacific this summer.


Dr. Lloyd Baum accepts Hollenback plaque for Loma Linda



Washington, D.C.

The premiere of the U.S. Surgeon General’s Report on Oral Health took place at the Hubert Humphrey Building. Drs. Caswell Evans, Jr., Project Director, and Dushanka Kleinman, co-Editor, directed the project. Dr. Clifton Dummett, Sr., was one of the three reviewers.


L-R, Drs. Caswell Evans, Clifton Dummett, Dushanka Kleinman

Connecticut

Chair Howard Mark hosted a Leadership Conference and Dinner attended by PFA President M. David Campbell with over 30 Fellows in attendance at the Yankee Silversmith Inn in Meriden last Spring. Presentations were given by Drs. Gregory Egnaczyk of Shelton on Protecting the Smiles of Connecticut Children, PFA International Trustee Robert Friedman of Fairfield on his Bridge the Gap Project with 34 Fellows, and Section Chair Howard Mark on the Mentoring Program in Connecticut. President Campbell addressed the Fellows on the Academy activities. One of the Foundation scholarship recipients, Gary Schulman of UCONN, was present and recognized by the group.

Last May, the Section honored Dr. Edwin S. Mehlman of Rhode Island with their Distinguished Service Award at their annual Awards Luncheon for his professional commitments and dedication. Dr. Mehlman, a graduate of Pennsylvania School of Dentistry, practices endodontics in Providence and is Clinical Assistant Professor at Boston University. He served as President of the Rhode Island Dental Association in 1986 and ADA First Vice President in 1994. Dr. Mehlman is currently ADA District I Trustee. He is a Fellow in PFA, ICD, and ACD.


L-R, Chair Howard Mark, Awardee Ed Mehlman, PFA President David Campbell, Trustee Robert Friedman

Section News continued

At their May Induction Meeting, International Trustee Robert Friedman gave the Membership Charge to new Fellows Brian Bottaro, Dean Cloutier, Stuart Epstein, Vernon Kwok, Daniel Minchik, Michael Perl, Frank Raviola, William Reicker, Cary Shapoff, and W. Fred Thal.

Louisiana

Chair Frank Martello hosted their annual Breakfast Meeting at the New Orleans Riverside Hotel during the New Orleans Dental Conference to honor Dr. C. Richmond Corley of Lake Charles with their Distinguished Dentist of the Year Award. Drs. Charles Mackey of Lake Charles and Richard Ballard of Metairie were inducted as new Fellows. Dr. Donald Pavy, a physician and author of Accident and Deception – the Huey Long Shooting was the guest speaker.

Massachusetts

Chair Norman Becker hosted their Awards Dinner to honor Dr. Athena Papas with their Distinguished Service Award. PFA International Trustee Robert Friedman, past PFA President Min Horiuchi, and past PFA Rhode Island Chair Christine Benoit were in attendance with the many dignitaries.



Dr. Athena Papas receiving award from Chair Norman Becker


L-R, ADA Trustee Edwin Mehlman (this year’s Connecticut Distinguished Award recipient), ADA Trustee Frank Eggleston, Mary Thiel, and MDS Trustee James Thiel


Nebraska

Chair Paul Tamisiea hosted their annual luncheon meeting on Sunday 21 April during the Nebraska Dental Association session. Fellows in attendance were Drs. Baeder, R. Brunmeier, Jerold Buresh, Cavlovic, Corcoran, Drahota, Roger Gerstner, Hermsen, D. Hoover, Michael Hoover, B. Kutler, Carol Murdock, Myron Pudwill, Reinhardt, Laura Romito, Scott Shaddy, Fred Tafoya, Paul Tamesiea (Chairman), Scott Trapp, Gary Westerman (Secretary/Treasurer), Windle, and Robert Zaiman.

The student scholarship recipients were UNMC College of Dentistry senior Brant Darby, who was present, and Creighton University dental school senior Todd Weber, who was taking his regional dental board exams.

Nominating Committee Chairman Roger Gerstner proposed new Fellows Jerold Buresh, Michael Carlisle, Michael Hoover, Marty Matz, Carol Murdock, Laura Romito, Scott Shaddy, Fred Tafoya, Scott Trapp and Robert Zaiman while Chairman Paul Tamisea did the installation.


Newly inducted Fellows

Their Distinguished Service Award was presented to Dr. Myron (Mike) L. Pudwill for his excellence in dental academics and service to organized dentistry.

Seven new names were recommended for Fellowship.


Chair Paul Tamisea (left) presents Distinguished Service Award to Dr. Myron Pudwill


Nevada

The Nevada Dental Journal printed an article on the PFA Museum at the Community College of Southern Nevada. Our PFA Secretary/Treasurer Richard Kozal is curator.


Dr. Larry Pierce inspects the 1930 Ritter x-ray unit donated by Dr. Bill Shear with Dr. Kozal explaining the exhibits



Section News continued

Fellow State Senator Raymond Rawson, DDS, had an article in the Nevada Dental Journal about being wary of reciprocity for the State of Nevada. Their new dental school will open in the near future on the UNLV campus.

North Carolina

Chair Neil Lutins and Fellow Stephen Mackler represented their PFA Section with a $3000 contribution to the international health consortium for Moldova. Moldova was the second smallest republic of the 15 constituent republics of the USSR and is located in the southwest between Rumania and the Ukranian SSR surrounding it on the north, northeast, and southeast.

This pioneering effort with the Moldovian Ministry of Health was to work with partner health institutions in their country. The ADA/Health Volunteers Overseas signed an agreement to recruit U.S. educators to visit the Moldovian dental school to discuss dental techniques. The team consisted of Dr. Rick Mumford, Chief of the North Carolina Deptartment of Public Health, Dr. Garland Hershey, past Provost of the UNC System in Chapel Hill, Maj. Brenda Mor, RN of the North Carolina Army Reserve National Guard, and our own Dr. Stephen Mackler.

North Carolina delegation with the US Ambassador to Moldova

Rhode Island


Past PFA Chair Christine Benoit attended the Massachusetts PFA Awards Dinner with International Trustee Robert Friedman and his wife.


L-R, Dr. & Mrs. Robert Friedman with Dr. Christine Benoit

Pennsylvania

PFA 1997 Gold Medal recipient John L. Bomba passed away of leukemia in Las Vegas where he had just moved with Thelma, his wife of 56 years. John had taught at Temple University School of Dentistry for more than 30 years and was a past President of the ADA and AGD. Much honored for his outstanding service to dentistry, Dr. Bomba will be missed.

Fellow Gaetan J. Lavalla passed away. He had served as President of the Pennsylvania Dental Association, the Philadelphia County Dental Society, the Middle Atlantic Society of Orthodontists, the Pennsylvania Association of Orthodontists, the Temple University Dental Alumnae Society, and the Southern District Dental Society of Philadelphia. He was Chairman of the PDA’s Committee on Ethics and Professionalism.