Say goodbye to the whine of the drill: Creighton’s new dental facility will feature Swiss company’s smoother-cutting – and quieter – electric hand pieces
Say goodbye to the whine of the drill: Creighton’s new dental facility will feature Swiss company’s smoother-cutting – and quieter – electric hand pieces
Creighton’s new dental building will have $2.8 million worth of equipment for a reduced cost of $880,000, thanks to the David Mosimann Foundation, named for the founder of Swiss company Bien-Air Medical Technologies. Bien-Air was the first company to introduce electric hand pieces to the U.S. in 1995. It has since become the world’s largest manufacturer of electric motors for dental use.
DAVE WEAVER/CREIGHTON UNIVERSITY
Creighton’s new dental building will have $2.8 million worth of equipment for a reduced cost of $880,000, thanks to the David Mosimann Foundation, named for the founder of Swiss company Bien-Air Medical Technologies. Bien-Air was the first company to introduce electric hand pieces to the U.S. in 1995. It has since become the world’s largest manufacturer of electric motors for dental use.
‘Anything that happens out of this will have a massive and lasting impact on the entire federal court system,’ says U.S. Marine Corps Maj. Jas…
Creighton’s new dental building will have $2.8 million worth of equipment for a reduced cost of $880,000, thanks to the David Mosimann Foundation, named for the founder of Swiss company Bien-Air Medical Technologies. Bien-Air was the first company to introduce electric hand pieces to the U.S. in 1995. It has since become the world’s largest manufacturer of electric motors for dental use.
Creighton’s new dental building will have $2.8 million worth of equipment for a reduced cost of $880,000, thanks to the David Mosimann Foundation, named for the founder of Swiss company Bien-Air Medical Technologies. Bien-Air was the first company to introduce electric hand pieces to the U.S. in 1995. It has since become the world’s largest manufacturer of electric motors for dental use.