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Columbia University College of Dental Medicine
Celebrates 90th Anniversary
– One of First Dental Colleges, In Vanguard of Health Advances –
Gala Celebration to Honor Distinguished Alumni & Faculty;
Announcement of Capital Campaign Launch
Visit Gala Website
View SlideShow pictures from 1928
NEW YORK – The Columbia University College of Dental Medicine, a
national leader in dental education, community service, and
research, will celebrate its 90th anniversary with a gala
celebration featuring alumni and faculty awards, on Saturday,
Oct. 20, 2007.
Founded in 1917, the College was one of the first dental schools
founded in the United States, and today it remains a national
leader in dental education, patient care, community service and
research. It boasts an orthodontic program that is among the
oldest in the nation. The College trains the best and brightest
dental students in the nation – with average scores on the
Dental Admission Test (DAT) consistently among the very highest
in the nation.
In addition to its educational mission, the College has taken a
leadership role in national healthcare policy issues. Its
faculty have advocated for expanded oral healthcare for both
children and the elderly and have developed novel programs to
expand care locally and in developing countries around the
world. The College’s robust research program is at the vanguard
of oral health advances. Current projects include research into
the use of stem cells for craniofacial reconstruction and the
relationship between oral health and systemic diseases.
“This is a proud moment for our distinguished faculty and
alumni. This celebration is an opportunity to honor our legacy
of innovation and achievements and to plan the future of dental
medicine at Columbia. We recommit to our three-part mission of
educating the next generation of dentists, of developing novel
ways to provide dental care for the underserved, and of
conducting innovative research,” said Ira B. Lamster, D.D.S.,
M.M.Sc., dean of the College of Dental Medicine since 2001.
“The College of Dental Medicine is a key component of our
medical center, with its dental students sitting side by side
our medical students for the first two years of training, and
its faculty collaborating across our health disciplines on key
research initiatives,” said Lee Goldman, M.D., executive vice
president for health and biomedical sciences of Columbia
University and dean of the faculties of health sciences and
medicine at the Columbia University College of Physicians and
Surgeons. “We congratulate the College on this significant
anniversary.”
Marking the 90th Anniversary: Alumni, Faculty Awards &
Historical Exhibit
At the celebration, four alumni will be honored for their
exemplary achievements:
Lifetime Achievement Award:
Irwin D. Mandel, D.D.S., a 1945
graduate of the school and professor emeritus in dentistry
Professional Service Award:
Susan Karabin, D.D.S., a 1981
graduate and president-elect of the American Academy of Periodontology
Research Achievement Award:
Lawrence A. Tabak, D.D.S., Ph.D.,
a 1977 graduate and director of the National Institute of Dental
and Craniofacial Research of the National Institutes of Health
Community Outreach Award:
Robert P. Renner, D.D.S., a 1968
graduate and volunteer for Save the Children
College of Dental Medicine faculty and officers of
administration with 25 or more years of full time service will
be honored. These faculty and officers include: Dory Caley,
D.D.S.; Thomas J. Cangialosi, D.D.S.; Martin J. Davis, D.D.S.;
Stella Efstratiadis, D.D.S.; Allan J. Formicola, D.D.S.; Richard
Lichtenthal, D.D.S.; Douglas M. McAndrew.; Letty Moss-Salentijn,
D.D.S., Ph.D.; Ronnie Myers, D.D.S.; Zoila E. Noguerole; and,
David J. Zegarelli, D.D.S.
In addition, as part of the 90th anniversary celebration, the
college will host an historical exhibit in the Rotunda of Low
Library on the Columbia University Morningside campus (Broadway
at West 116th Street) from Oct. 16 through Nov. 6. The
exhibition, open to the public, will feature archived
photographs and a review of the College and its founders.
The exhibit will also feature the sculpture of Irwin Ferber
Silvers, a College of Dental Medicine alum, whose work has been
featured in New York City’s Whitney Museum of American Art and
the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), among other renowned locations.
Capital Campaign Launched to Support Future Innovations
The 90th anniversary celebration marks the launch of the
college’s capital campaign, which aims to raise $15 million in
outright gifts and pledges and an additional $15 million in
estate gifts, to support its mission to achieve excellence in
dental education, patient care and research.
The monies raised will be used to expand scholarships and
student loans; to fund recruitment and support for outstanding
faculty; to support the college’s innovative research projects
and community initiatives; and to renovate facilities where
professional dental care is provided to thousands of residents
of northern Manhattan.
To make a donation: Those interested in making a donation to the
College of Dental Medicine, should contact Nancy Mathiasen in
the Columbia University Medical Center Development Office at
212-342-5612 or nm2310@columbia.edu.
Founding, Shaping the College of Dental Medicine
Columbia’s dental school was the result of an effort by a group
of influential, independent New York dentists, physicians, and
scientists who formed the Committee for a Columbia University
Dental School in 1916. Along with Dr. William J. Gies, the group
included brothers Henry Sage Dunning and William Bailey Dunning,
Arthur H. Merritt, Henry S. Vaughn, Leuman M. Waugh, and William
Jarvie.
Breaking tradition with most dental schools, the committee
recommended that students train in a university environment
where they would receive grounding in the basic and health
sciences in joint classes with medical students. Columbia, with
its College of Physicians & Surgeons (P&S), founded in 1767 as
the first medical school in the United States, offered this
opportunity.
Columbia’s dental school opened in 1917 as the School of
Dentistry within P&S, then located at 437 West 59th Street in
Manhattan. The inaugural class had two students, both in a
six-year combined Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) and Doctor of Dental
Surgery (D.D.S.) degree program.
In 1923, the school merged with the already established College
of Dental and Oral Surgery of New York. The new entity, known as
the Columbia University School of Dental and Oral Surgery, had
two buildings on East 34th and East 35th Streets. In 1928 the
school moved to occupy the top floors of Columbia’s medical
school, which by then had moved to the Washington Heights
neighborhood of upper Manhattan.
In January 2006, the school was renamed the College of Dental
Medicine to better reflect its increasing focus on oral health
as a central component of total health, as well as the school’s
solid foundation in the biomedical sciences.
The College of Dental Medicine is one of four schools that
comprise Columbia University Medical Center, along with the
College of Physicians and Surgeons, the Mailman School of Public
Health and the School of Nursing.
Visit Gala Website
View SlideShow pictures from 1928
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Columbia University Medical
Center provides international leadership in basic, pre-clinical and clinical research, in medical and health sciences education, and in patient care. The medical center trains future leaders and includes the dedicated work of many physicians, scientists, nurses, dentists, and public health professionals at the College of Physicians & Surgeons, the Mailman School of Public Health, the College of Dental Medicine, the School of Nursing, the biomedical departments of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and allied research centers and institutions.
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