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Conferences and Lectures: Samuel R. Scholes Award Lecture
Dr. Samuel
Ray Scholes served Alfred University and the Alfred
community for over 40 years as dean (1946-1948),
associate dean (1948 - 1952), head of the Department
of Glass Technology, and professor of glass science
(1932 - 1946). He established the first glass science
program in the United States at the College of
Ceramics in 1932. As a scientist devoted to the
English language, Dr. Scholes developed the program
for teaching technical writing at Alfred University.
Dr. Scholes was educated at Ripon College (BA,
1905) and Yale University (PhD, 1911). He was a
poet, scholar, and a scientific educator of the
highest caliber who believed in glass as the "eye
of science, the carrier of light."
For his contributions as a scholar, educator, administrator, and glass scientist, Dr. Scholes was honored by Alfred University with an honorary Doctor of Science degree. His name was also chosen for the Scholes Library of Ceramics, and the Samuel R. Scholes Lecture Series was established in honor of his interest in the history and philosophy of science.
As author of Modern Glass Practice, a highly acclaimed book on glass making, published continuously seven times between 1935 and 1975, Dr. Scholes helped standardize the process of glass making in the United States. He was author of three other books: Glass Industry Handbook, Glass Tank Furnaces, and Opportunities in Ceramics.
During his 19 years in the glass industry, he helped to develop automatic manufacture and general control of raw materials and standardization. He held patents for development of an improved glass-melting pot; a method of stirring optical glass; and extraction of potash from feldspar.
"...let us...each do our part in seeing that
the materials inventions of our age are made to
serve the high needs and destinies of the race..."
-Samuel R. Scholes.