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The
year was 1939...
Mike Kulwiec, CDT, Owner
Leonard
J. Kulwiec, CDT |
...and
I was employed as a part time delivery and clean-up
boy for Janulis Dental Lab on the southwest side of
Chicago. The mode of transportation was street trolley
and walking. Most dental offices were located on second
floors above corner drugstores or retail shops. Trolley
fare was a “3 cents
token” or nickel, and with a transfer slip from
a conductor, one could “zigzag” in one
direction across all of Chicago.
It was the time of “Vulcanite” or
rubber dentures, “Herculite” or
celluloid dentures. Gold sheet “tin can” crowns,
gold wire clasps; hand-flipped centrifugal
buckets and the connecting medium
was plaster: plaster impressions, plaster models,
and plaster for articulating flasking.
Plaster dust littered the floor and all sweepings
were saved in empty barrels for possible
gold scrap. All technicians
wore a separate pair of lab shoes and then changed
to street shoes to go home. It was “woe” and “big
trouble” to delivery persons who tracked white
plaster footprints up linoleum stairs and on shining
linoleum waiting room floors of dentist accounts.
All
technology was learned “in house” depending
on skill acceptance by the owner and customer,
positive work attitudes and a desire to learn more.
Since dentists work hours
then were from afternoon to evenings, emergency
and repair work lasted to 9 to 10 p.m. If the dentist
customer lived in your vicinity, you could be called to deliver the return.
In
1943, I was drafted into the U.S. Navy. After
basic training, I was stationed in the Great Lakes
Naval Dental Lab. The Navy selected technicians with
experience in commercial dental labs. The Lab was
called “Building
600” and had a complement of 150 dental techs.
The strategy was to complete dentures for approximately
one to two recruit companies of sailors a week, while
the recruits were going through basic training. A company
was 50 to 100 men.
The laboratory worked on a department rotation of 2
months per department then on to another skill level.
All work was quality controlled by Navy Chiefs and
First Class Petty Officers, then graded and passed
on. Every tech learned to “do it the Navy way” for
form, function and esthetics. I have always felt the
Navy techs were the best trained.
I put in a request for sea duty and found myself transferred
to the Medical Division. I spent one year in the South
Pacific on landing ship L.S.T. 355 as “Independent
Duty Pharmacist Mate First Class.”
After the
WW II, I went to college on the G.I. Bill and
worked part-time in dental labs. “Wedding Bells” chimed in
1948, and an opportunity to start my own lab in 1950:
Professional Arts Dental Lab specializing in Cast Gold
and Chrome-Cobalt Partials. Technology made great advances
and the “new way” of training
technicians required finding sharper minds connected
to smarter hands.
The “Laboratory Industry” needed
certification of skills and greater knowledge
of materials used. Upon
moving to California, I started 2 new dental labs. This
gave me an opportunity to train new technicians and
retrain “used” technicians. Looking
back, I now recognize that quality standards require
a constant demand for excellence and also confidence (or pride) that
what you do should always be the best for your customers.
In 1975, I sold my patents
on substitute alloys and
spent 50% of my time on developing new products and
methods. They say “research” is a connection
to prior art and knowing how to find and make the connection
for common benefit.
In 1980, it was my son,
Michael’s turn to lead
in the Dental Laboratory Industry. I retired
and moved to the San Diego area. Now, Dental Masters
has moved “light
years” in technical advancement. Mike has surrounded
himself with a winning team, often comparing himself
to a coach and a winning coach always tells
his players: “When you are well-trained and disciplined
in your effort, playing (working) is fun.
The message is: “When
everyone is working as a team and when everyone performs
well, it’s fun!”
Leonard J. Kulwiec, CDT
Mike’s Story
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Michael Kulwiec, CDT |
When I read my father’s writing about his early
days in the dental lab business and the simplicity
of the world in which he came of age, I am reminded
of the values and determination that nourished his
work ethic. Simple, but essential to high
quality standards and sustainability is pride in
a job well done.
It is upon that basic, but solid ethic that our company
and many businesses in the US have grown.
With Dad’s dedication
to his business and the long hours that he worked,
the ‘dental
lab owner gene’ became a part of me. After
graduation from the University of Southern California,
in 1979, with a major in Business Administration and
History, I joined my father’s
company and began working. I earned my CDT in 1982.
Ten years later, when Dad retired, I had the
knowledge in dental lab management that I needed to
develop a practical plan and committed the next decade
to transforming the lab’s partials and dentures
specialty to become the full service lab Dental Masters
is today.
In tandem with our growth in product and materials,
the reality of a team working together made the opening
of our training academy in 2000 a natural, ensuring
that the team culture would become the keystone of
a premier quality, service-focused laboratory.
From the beginning, my father created the team environment
from a core value: Take care of staff and care of customers;
then success will naturally follow. That culture is
what drives Dental Masters and will continue to be
our core value as the future unfolds.
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