2
W o m e n o f t h e C e n t u r y H o n o r i n g O u r P a s t 1 9 1 5 q 2 0 1 4 B u i l d i n g O u r F u t u r e As the American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics marks its Centennial, we pause to recognize some of the people who influenced the developing specialty of orthodontics during the last 100 years. A list of nominees — people who lived, worked, and contributed to the Journal or the specialty between 1915 and 2014 (but are no longer alive today) — was sent to 16 judges. The judges were asked to select the 100 people they thought were the most influential during this period. We tallied the votes and are pleased to present here, in chronologic order (by year of birth), 100 People of Influence. Many of the names on the pages that follow are familiar today because of the appliances and techniques these people invented, the articles and books they wrote, or the many students they taught. Twenty of them are so well known that all 16 judges voted for them, and we are proud to recognize a few of their accomplishments. In addition, we present two supplemental lists. The first is an Honorable Mention roster of 68 people who were selected by some of the judges. And then, because orthodontics was surely a man’s world during those early years, we offer a short list of women who distinguished themselves as orthodontists during the very early years, influencing the specialty in a different but important way. Prepared by Chris Burke, Managing Editor Lisa Troehler, Graphic Designer Rolf G. Behrents, Editor-in-Chief Acknowledgment: Thanks to Norman Wahl, whose 16-part series in the AJO-DO, Orthodontics in 3 millennia, provided much of the information for this display. Edmund H. Wuerpel 1866-1958 John Valentine Mershon 1867-1953 Albert H. Ketcham 1870-1935 Viggo Andresen 1870-1950 Emil Herbst 1872-1940 Milo Hellman 1872-1947 Anna Hopkins Angle 1872-1957 Frederick Bogue Noyes 1872-1961 Alfred Paul Rogers 1873-1959 Axel F. Lundstrom 1875-1941 William Conrad Roentgen 1845-1923 Calvin Suveril Case 1847-1923 Edward Hartley Angle 1855-1930 Charles Augustus Hawley 1861-1929 Rodriques Ottolengui 1861-1937 Thomas D. Creekmore 1931-2002 Ronald H. Roth 1933-2005 Lennart Wieslander 1933-2009 George F. Andreasen 1934-1989 Beni Solow 1934-2000 Samir E. Bishara 1935-2010 Anthony A. Gianelly 1936-2009 Jüri Kurol 1942-2011 Vincent G. Kokich 1944-2013 Robert P. Kusy 1947-2008 Anna Hopkins Angle 1872-1957 Jane G. Bunker b. 1886 (est) Josephine M. Abelson 1901-1987 Alice C. Kinninger b. 1908 Carlotta A. Hawley 1913-1990 Viken Sassouni 1922-1983 Richard A. Riedel 1922-1994 Wayne Allen Bolton 1922-2011 J. Daniel Subtelney 1922-2014 Melvin Lionel Moss 1923-2006 Alexandre G. Petrovic 1925-2003 Harold T. Perry 1926-2012 Donald G. Woodside 1927-2013 Donald H. Enlow 1927-2014 Per-Ingvar Brånemark 1929-2014 Raymond Carl Thurow 1920-2009 James E. Brophy 1921-1985 Kalevi Koski 1921-1998 Lester Levern Merrifield 1921-2000 Ernest H. Hixon 1922-1972 Calvin Suveril Case 1847-1923 q Author, clinician, and innovator. q Advocated extraction to correct facial deformities; his 1911 paper provoked the “Great Extraction Debate.” q Customized appliances for each patient. q Stressed facial esthetics, in contrast to Angle’s emphasis on occlusion. q Some consider his greatest contribution to be the prosthetic correction of cleft palate. Edward Hartley Angle 1855-1930 q Teacher, author, inventor, clinician, firebrand. q Regarded as the Father of Modern Orthodontics. q Promoted separation of orthodontics from dentistry. q Established the first organized orthodontic society and the first orthodontic journal. Robert H.W. Strang 1881-1982 q Clinician, educator, and author. q Inaugurated a 2-week continuing education course at Columbia University that continued until 1946. q Principal advocate of the Tweed technique. q His Textbook of Orthodontia (1933) became a standard. q Espoused the inviolability of intercanine and intermolar widths. Hays N. Nance 1893-1964 q Meticulous clinician and investigator whose his landmark paper was “Limitations of orthodontic treatment.” q Reported that treated dentitions return to their original intercanine and intermolar widths. q Defined leeway space and reported that it could be “reserved” with a space maintainer in a borderline extraction patient. q Renewed interest in mixed dentition treatment and an increase in second premolar extractions. Anna Hopkins Angle 1872-1957 q A schoolteacher at age 16, she became Angle’s secretary at 21, and then his wife. q Studied dentistry at the University of Iowa, and orthodontics with Angle. q Founding member, Society of Orthodontists, and first editor of The Angle Orthodontist. q Known to many as “Mother Angle,” she calmed the waters that Angle roiled. Elizabeth E. Richardson (not pictured) 1863-1936 q Graduate, Dewey School of Orthodontia in Kansas City, Missouri. q Frequent contributor to Journal, 1919-1927 Jane G. Bunker b. 1886 (est) q Angle graduate and early member of the American Society of Orthodontists (1906). Josephine M. Abelson 1901-1987 q Dewey School of Orthodontia (1923). First woman to direct a Dewey School clinic. Alice C. Kinninger b. 1908 q Taught orthodontics at the University of Southern California. q Invented a space maintainer for fractured incisors. Carlotta A. Hawley 1913-1990 q Discouraged by her famous father to pursue orthodontics, she did it anyway. q Member of the Angle Society, ABO-certified, and widely regarded as a meticulous clinician. Honorable Mention q Philip Edwin Adams 1896-1973 q Milton B. Asbell 1913-2003 q Tiziano Baccetti 1966-2011 q Charles Reeder Baker 1880-1970 q Henry Albert Baker 1848-1934 q Wilhelm Balters 1893-1973 q G.V. Black 1836-1915 q William John Brady 1862-1937 q Birdsall Holly Broadbent, Jr. 1928-2009 q Archie B. Brusse 1888-1959 q Clarence “Clu” Carey 1903-2003 q Frank M. Casto 1875-1965 q Norman M. Cetlin 1921-2008 q S. Eugene Coben 1926-2007 q James Frank Colyer 1866-1954 q Harry L Dougherty, Sr. 1926-2013 q Joseph D. Eby 1887-1966 q Bercu Fischer 1893-1969 q Maxwell S. Fogel 1912-2001 q Stanley Garn 1922-2007 q William King Gregory 1876-1970 q George W. Grieve 1870-1950 q Josef Grünberg 18??-1932 q Simeon Hayden Guilford 1841-1919 q David C. Hamilton 1928-2005 q Samuel Hemley 1898-1970 q John H. Hickham 1934-2004 q H. Perry Hitchcock 1921-2005 q Sidney Horowitz 1921-2006 q William Roy Humphrey 1892-1980 q Andrew Francis Jackson 1880-1963 q Victor Hugo Jackson 1850-1929 q A. LeRoy Johnson 1881-1967 q Craven Henry Kurz 1943-1998 q Lloyd Steel Lourie, Sr. 1877-1959 q Kenneth C. Marshall 1917-2007 q J. Rodney Mathews 1911-1987 q James D. McCoy 1884-1965 q Frederick Sumner McKay 1874-1959 q George V. Newman 1924-2012 q George Northcroft 1869-1944 q Harold Judd Noyes 1898-1969 q Harvey Peck 1937-1981 q Lowrie J. Porter 1895-1981 q Earl Wiley Renfroe 1907-2000 q Elizabeth Ellen Richardson 1863-1938 q Terrell L. Root 1924-1997 q Per Rygh 1930-2008 q Isaac Schour 1900-1964 q Arthur Martin Schwarz 1887-1963 q James Henderson Scott 1913-1970 q George Dever Selfridge 1924-2014 q Wilbur M. Shankland 1912-1992 q Everett Shapiro 1917-2002 q Milton Reginald Sims 1927-2006 q Thomas D. Speidel 1908-1957 q Harvey Stallard 1888-1974 q Arthur T. Storey 1928-1998 q Elsdon “Tony” Storey 1924-1988 q Richard Summa 1868-1933 q Alexander Sved 1891-1969 q Eugene Solomon Talbot 1847-1925 q Arthur Thornton Taylor 1901-1987 q Dale B. Wade 1940-1998 q Leuman M. Waugh 1877-1972 q Eugene E. West 1920-1995 q Frederick T. West 1893-1989 q Albert P. Westfall 1902-1975 S148 S154 S147 S153

American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics Volume 147 Issue 5 2015 [Doi 10.1016%2Fj.ajodo.2015.03.017] Salmond, N. -- 100 Years of Publishing, 100 People of Influence

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  • W o m e n o f t h e C e n t u r y H o n o r i n g O u r P a s t1 9 1 5 q 2 0 1 4B u i l d i n g O u r F u t u r e

    As the American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics marks its Centennial, we pause to recognize some of the people who influenced the developing specialty of orthodontics during the last 100 years. A list of nominees people who lived, worked, and contributed to the Journal or the specialty between 1915 and 2014 (but are no longer alive today) was sent to 16 judges. The judges were asked to select the 100 people they thought were the most influential during this period. We tallied the votes and are pleased to present here, in chronologic order (by year of birth), 100 People of Influence. Many of the names on the pages that follow are familiar today because of the appliances and techniques these people invented, the articles and books they wrote, or the many students they taught. Twenty of them are so well known that all 16 judges voted for them, and we are proud to recognize a few of their accomplishments.

    In addition, we present two supplemental lists. The first is an Honorable Mention roster of 68 people who were selected by some of the judges. And then, because orthodontics was surely a mans world during those early years, we offer a short list of women who distinguished themselves as orthodontists during the very early years, influencing the specialty in a different but important way.

    Prepared by Chris Burke, Managing Editor Lisa Troehler, Graphic Designer

    Rolf G. Behrents, Editor-in-ChiefAcknowledgment: Thanks to Norman Wahl, whose 16-part series in the AJO-DO, Orthodontics in 3 millennia, provided much of the information for this display.

    Edmund H. Wuerpel1866-1958

    John Valentine Mershon1867-1953

    Albert H. Ketcham1870-1935

    Viggo Andresen1870-1950

    Emil Herbst1872-1940

    Milo Hellman1872-1947

    Anna Hopkins Angle1872-1957

    Frederick Bogue Noyes 1872-1961

    Alfred Paul Rogers1873-1959

    Axel F. Lundstrom1875-1941

    William Conrad Roentgen1845-1923

    Calvin Suveril Case1847-1923

    Edward Hartley Angle1855-1930

    Charles Augustus Hawley1861-1929

    Rodriques Ottolengui1861-1937

    Thomas D. Creekmore1931-2002

    Ronald H. Roth1933-2005

    Lennart Wieslander1933-2009

    George F. Andreasen1934-1989

    Beni Solow1934-2000

    Samir E. Bishara1935-2010

    Anthony A. Gianelly1936-2009

    Jri Kurol1942-2011

    Vincent G. Kokich1944-2013

    Robert P. Kusy1947-2008

    Anna Hopkins Angle1872-1957

    Jane G. Bunkerb. 1886 (est)

    Josephine M. Abelson 1901-1987

    Alice C. Kinningerb. 1908

    Carlotta A. Hawley 1913-1990

    Viken Sassouni1922-1983

    Richard A. Riedel1922-1994

    Wayne Allen Bolton1922-2011

    J. Daniel Subtelney1922-2014

    Melvin Lionel Moss1923-2006

    Alexandre G. Petrovic1925-2003

    Harold T. Perry1926-2012

    Donald G. Woodside1927-2013

    Donald H. Enlow1927-2014

    Per-Ingvar Brnemark1929-2014

    Raymond Carl Thurow1920-2009

    James E. Brophy1921-1985

    Kalevi Koski1921-1998

    Lester Levern Merrifield1921-2000

    Ernest H. Hixon1922-1972

    Calvin Suveril Case 1847-1923 qAuthor, clinician, and innovator.

    qAdvocated extraction to correct facial deformities; his 1911 paper provoked the Great Extraction Debate.

    qCustomized appliances for each patient.

    qStressed facial esthetics, in contrast to Angles emphasis on occlusion.

    qSome consider his greatest contribution to be the prosthetic correction of cleft palate.

    Edward Hartley Angle 1855-1930 qTeacher, author, inventor, clinician, firebrand.

    qRegarded as the Father of Modern Orthodontics.

    qPromoted separation of orthodontics from dentistry.

    qEstablished the first organized orthodontic society and the first orthodontic journal.

    Robert H.W. Strang 1881-1982 qClinician, educator, and author.

    qInaugurated a 2-week continuing education course at Columbia University that continued until 1946.

    qPrincipal advocate of the Tweed technique.

    qHis Textbook of Orthodontia (1933) became a standard.

    qEspoused the inviolability of intercanine and intermolar widths.

    Hays N. Nance 1893-1964 qMeticulous clinician and investigator whose his landmark

    paper was Limitations of orthodontic treatment.

    qReported that treated dentitions return to their original intercanine and intermolar widths.

    qDefined leeway space and reported that it could be reserved with a space maintainer in a borderline extraction patient.

    qRenewed interest in mixed dentition treatment and an increase in second premolar extractions.

    Anna Hopkins Angle 1872-1957qA schoolteacher at age 16, she became Angles

    secretary at 21, and then his wife.

    qStudied dentistry at the University of Iowa, and orthodontics with Angle.

    qFounding member, Society of Orthodontists, and first editor of The Angle Orthodontist.

    qKnown to many as Mother Angle, she calmed the waters that Angle roiled.

    Elizabeth E. Richardson (not pictured) 1863-1936qGraduate, Dewey School of Orthodontia in

    Kansas City, Missouri.

    qFrequent contributor to Journal, 1919-1927

    Jane G. Bunker b. 1886 (est)qAngle graduate and early member of the American

    Society of Orthodontists (1906).

    Josephine M. Abelson 1901-1987qDewey School of Orthodontia (1923). First woman to

    direct a Dewey School clinic.

    Alice C. Kinninger b. 1908qTaught orthodontics at the University of

    Southern California.

    qInvented a space maintainer for fractured incisors.

    Carlotta A. Hawley 1913-1990qDiscouraged by her famous father to pursue

    orthodontics, she did it anyway.

    qMember of the Angle Society, ABO-certified, and widely regarded as a meticulous clinician.

    Honorable MentionqPhilip Edwin Adams 1896-1973qMilton B. Asbell 1913-2003qTiziano Baccetti 1966-2011qCharles Reeder Baker 1880-1970qHenry Albert Baker 1848-1934qWilhelm Balters 1893-1973qG.V. Black 1836-1915qWilliam John Brady 1862-1937qBirdsall Holly Broadbent, Jr. 1928-2009qArchie B. Brusse 1888-1959qClarence Clu Carey 1903-2003qFrank M. Casto 1875-1965qNorman M. Cetlin 1921-2008qS. Eugene Coben 1926-2007qJames Frank Colyer 1866-1954qHarry L Dougherty, Sr. 1926-2013qJoseph D. Eby 1887-1966qBercu Fischer 1893-1969qMaxwell S. Fogel 1912-2001qStanley Garn 1922-2007qWilliam King Gregory 1876-1970qGeorge W. Grieve 1870-1950qJosef Grnberg 18??-1932

    qSimeon Hayden Guilford 1841-1919qDavid C. Hamilton 1928-2005qSamuel Hemley 1898-1970qJohn H. Hickham 1934-2004qH. Perry Hitchcock 1921-2005qSidney Horowitz 1921-2006qWilliam Roy Humphrey 1892-1980qAndrew Francis Jackson 1880-1963qVictor Hugo Jackson 1850-1929qA. LeRoy Johnson 1881-1967qCraven Henry Kurz 1943-1998qLloyd Steel Lourie, Sr. 1877-1959qKenneth C. Marshall 1917-2007qJ. Rodney Mathews 1911-1987qJames D. McCoy 1884-1965qFrederick Sumner McKay 1874-1959qGeorge V. Newman 1924-2012qGeorge Northcroft 1869-1944qHarold Judd Noyes 1898-1969qHarvey Peck 1937-1981qLowrie J. Porter 1895-1981qEarl Wiley Renfroe 1907-2000qElizabeth Ellen Richardson 1863-1938

    qTerrell L. Root 1924-1997qPer Rygh 1930-2008qIsaac Schour 1900-1964qArthur Martin Schwarz 1887-1963qJames Henderson Scott 1913-1970qGeorge Dever Selfridge 1924-2014qWilbur M. Shankland 1912-1992qEverett Shapiro 1917-2002qMilton Reginald Sims 1927-2006qThomas D. Speidel 1908-1957qHarvey Stallard 1888-1974qArthur T. Storey 1928-1998qElsdon Tony Storey 1924-1988qRichard Summa 1868-1933qAlexander Sved 1891-1969qEugene Solomon Talbot 1847-1925qArthur Thornton Taylor 1901-1987qDale B. Wade 1940-1998qLeuman M. Waugh 1877-1972qEugene E. West 1920-1995qFrederick T. West 1893-1989qAlbert P. Westfall 1902-1975

    S148S154 S147S153

  • 1 9 1 5 q 1 9 2 0 q 1 9 2 5 q 1 9 3 0 q 1 9 3 5 q 1 9 4 0 q 1 9 4 5 q 1 9 5 0 q 1 9 5 5 q 1 9 6 0 q 1 9 6 5 q 1 9 7 0 q 1 9 7 5 q 1 9 8 0 q 1 9 8 5 q 1 9 9 0 q 1 9 9 5 q 2 0 0 0 q 2 0 0 5 q 2 0 1 0 q 2 0 1 4

    Joseph R. Jarabak1906-1989

    Earl Emanuel Shepard1908-1991

    Rolf Frnkel1908-2001

    Fred R. Schudy1908-2001

    Arthur B. Lewis1909-1996

    Alton Wallace Moore1916-2007

    Samuel Weinstein1916-2008

    Anders Lundstrom1916-2009

    Tom Graber1917-2007

    Paul Tessier1917-2008

    William B. Downs1899-1966

    Lester Bodine Higley1899-1990

    Herbert I. Margolis1900-1984

    Harold D. Kesling1901-1979

    Silas Kloehn1902-1985

    John R. Thompson1910-2004

    Arne Bjrk1911-1996

    Faustin Neff Weber1911-1996

    Brainerd F. Swain1911-1999

    Egil Peter Harvold1912-1992

    Reed Holdaway1917-2009

    Robert Edison Moyers1919-1996

    C. Philip Adams1919-1997

    Samuel Pruzansky1920-1984

    Robert M. Ricketts1920-2003

    Jacob Amos Salzmann1902-1992

    B. F. Dewel1902-1999

    Wilton Marion Krogman1903-1987

    Kaare Reitan1903-2000

    Rudolf P. Hotz1905-1979

    Bernard Sarnat1912-2011

    Wendell L. Wylie1913-1966

    Robert E. Gaylord1914-2001

    Hans Peter Bimler1916-2003

    Coenraad F. A. Moorrees1916-2003

    Hays N. Nance1893-1964

    George Bernard Crozat1894-1966

    Birdsall Holly Broadbent, Sr.1894-1977

    George Walter Hahn1894-1977

    Charles Henry Tweed, Jr.1895-1970

    Gustav Korkhaus1895-1978

    Cecil C. Steiner1896-1989

    Paul D. Lewis1896-1992

    Allan Gibson Brodie1897-1976

    Paul Raymond Begg1898-1983

    Albin Oppenheim1875-1945

    Charles Virgil Mosby1876-1942

    Benno Edward Lischer1876-1959

    Martin Dewey1881-1933

    Robert H. W. Strang1881-1982

    Paul W. Simon1883-1957

    H.C. Pollock, Sr.1884-1970

    T. Wingate Todd1885-1938

    Bernhard W. Weinberger1885-1960

    Spencer Roane Atkinson1886-1970

    Oren A. Oliver1887-1965

    Joseph E. Johnson1888-1969

    Ernest Sheldon Friel1888-1970

    Harry Sicher1889-1974

    Karl Haupl1893-1960

    Paul Raymond Begg 1898-1983 qA jackaroo in Australia before coming to the United

    States to study under Angle.

    qDeveloped his own bracket in 1933.

    qIn the 1940s, developed the highly resilient, stainless steel Australian wire.

    qHis innovations came together in the multiloop light-wire Begg technique (1965).

    qPracticed orthodontics for more than 55 years and registered his last patent at age 84.

    William B. Downs 1899-1966 qMember of Brodies first class (1930) at Illinois

    and later a mainstay of the teaching staff.

    qCoauthor of classic text, Cephalometric Appraisal of Orthodontic Results (1938).

    qHis landmark study of facial relationships resulted in Downs Analysis, the first cephalometric analysis that could be applied clinically.

    Herbert I. Margolis 1900-1984 qHis cephalometric investigations combined anatomy

    with evolution.

    qDeveloped the facial line (nasion-pogonion) and maxillofacial triangle, which adheres to the concept of individual variation.

    qDesigned the Margolis cephalostat.

    Joseph R. Jarabak 1906-1989 qEducator, inventor, master clinician, biomechanic,

    and showman.

    qDeveloped a light-wire technique, first with standard edgewise brackets, then with brackets preadjusted for torque and angulation.

    qDeveloped the Jarabak bracket and preadjusted brackets.

    qWith J.A. Fizzell, developed principles governing tooth movement with light-wire technique.

    Jacob Amos Salzmann 1902-1992 qAuthor, editor, and educator.

    qChild-health advocate locally and internationally.

    qOnly dentist/orthodontist to attend World Health Conference for Children in 1940, 1950, and 1960.

    Kaare Reitan 1903-2000 qBorn in Norway, he studied dentistry in Paris and

    orthodontics in Chicago.

    qHis histologic investigation of reactions in teeth and supporting tissues incident to tooth movement are classic.

    qIntroduced the edgewise technique in his practice and shared his knowledge with colleagues, making Norway one of the first countries in Europe where modern fixed appliance treatment became widely available.

    Rolf Frnkel 1908-2001 qStudied in Germany and treated patients with

    Angles E-arch as early as 1928.

    qMilitary surgeon in World War II, treating jaw and facial injuries.

    qWorking in East Germany, he developed (in 1957) the function regulator, an appliance that corrects malocclusions by channeling growth.

    Arne Bjrk 1911-1996 qHis doctoral dissertation for the Swedish Institute

    of Human Genetics (1947) showed that growth does not proceed in a linear, translatory fashion.

    qConducted (in 1955) the first human growth study using implants, and discovered greater rotation of the maxilla and mandible.

    Coenraad F. A. Moorrees 1916-2003 qStudied in the United States but, called to duty in

    World War II by the Dutch government, he was a prisoner of war for 3 years.

    qStudied child growth and dental anthropology at the Forsyth Dental Infirmary in Boston.

    qDetermined that children often pass through abnormal stages of growth before reaching the end of puberty with acceptable occlusions.

    qConducted landmark studies of the Aleut population and longitudinal dentition of growing children.

    qUsed natural head position and demonstrated biologic variations in many craniofacial landmarks.

    Tom Graber 1917-2007 qAJO-DO Editor, author, educator, and world traveler.

    qPioneer in craniofacial biology and anomalies.

    qVolunteered for military service December 8, 1941 and served in Army Dental Corp.

    qInspired by Benno Lischer to specialize in orthodontics.

    Robert Edison Moyers 1919-1996 qHighly decorated dental officer in the U.S. Army.

    qFounding chair of the University of Toronto orthodontic department, the first in Canada.

    qChairman of the Department of Orthodontics at the University of Michigan and, later, director of the Center for Human Growth and Development.

    qHis clinical research provided a better understanding of the role of the neuromusculature in normal facial growth and during treatment.

    Samuel Pruzansky 1920-1984 qInspired teacher and investigator, advocate, and

    benefactor for patients with craniofacial anomalies.

    qInternationally acclaimed for his studies of the anatomy and growth of the craniofacial complex and for his leadership in the care and treatment of patients.

    qFounding director of the Center for Craniofacial Anomalies at the University of Illinois College of Medicine.

    Birdsall Holly Broadbent, Sr. 1894-1977 qStudied roentgenography at the Angle School, and

    wondered if images could be superimposed to reveal changes during orthodontic treatment.

    qWorked with Todd at Western Reserve to design a craniostat to standardize x-rays of dry skulls.

    qAdapted that device to the heads of living subjects.

    qResearched the cephalic development of 800 children in a study sponsored by the Brush Foundation.

    Charles Henry Tweed, Jr. 1895-1970 qExacting clinician and generous teacher.

    qConcerned with dental protrusions and unsatisfactory esthetics, he began extracting 4 premolars in some patients.

    qDeveloped the Tweed triangle (1936).

    Cecil C. Steiner 1896-1989 qAngles second student at the Pasadena school;

    he was initially rebuffed because he didnt know who Charles Darwin was.

    qPublished the Steiner analysis in 1953, a step-by-step approach that was instrumental in popularizing cephalometrics.

    Allan Gibson Brodie 1897-1976 qOne of Angles last graduates and one of his favorites.

    qEducator, author, spokesman for the new mechanism.

    qChair of the graduate orthodontic department at the University of Illinois for 36 years.

    qEstablished a correlation between successful treatment and good facial growth.

    qStudied growth and development and related laboratory findings to clinical practice.

    S152S150 S151S149