Recent Posts
A day in their scrubs
Meet D2 Keso Oradiegwu
Driven to serve
11 years, 43 volunteer dental missions and one AAOMS Humanitarian Award for this chief resident
Lu elected to IADR leadership
Dr. Yongbo Lu, associate professor in biomedical sciences, recently was elected to the position of vice president of the International Association for Dental Research Mineralized Tissue Group. Lu, who is currently principal investigator on a $1.7 million National Institutes of ...
Progress notes
Dr. Aaron Cho holds immense pride for the graduate prosthodontic program he oversees at Texas A&M College of Dentistry. After all, he completed the curriculum himself just eight years ago. Perhaps one of the most interesting facets of his leadership ...
Miles for Smiles: the 10th one
For the last decade, the DFW dental community has participated in this annual student-led runathon, which has generated more than $100,000 for the Social Services Dental Care Fund at Texas A&M College of Dentistry.
A day in their scrubs
Meet D1 Karen Yen
A day in their scrubs
Meet D2 Patrick Foadey
The Way I See It: Dr. Ety Friedman ’72
Consider this column a virtual office water cooler, a forum for our alumni to offer a glimpse of life as they see it. Whether these insights come at the outset or end of a career or somewhere in between, they might just spark some inspiration for the rest of us.
Our new building: What faculty have to say
It's not every day that dental school administrators and faculty overhaul the curriculum in tandem with the construction of a 157,000 square-foot, state-of-the-art clinical facility. Now, several individuals closest to the project share what excites them most about what lies ahead for students and the patients they serve.
Making our differences approachable
Within our country’s unsettled climate these days, the Committee on Inclusion, Diversity, Equity and Access at Texas A&M College of Dentistry is making the subject of our differences approachable. “It’s nice to see the conversation there,” says D2 Richard Rodriguez, ...
Seeking answers from the past
What can 10,000 year-old skeletal collections reveal about life and health in Asia through the centuries? Quite a bit, actually. Just ask this Texas A&M College of Dentistry professor in charge of a newly formed international research network.
The good run
Miles for Smiles in its 10th year