Gregar receives special honor from
scientific glassblowing society
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Argonne’s Joe Gregar (CSE), center, receives the
American Scientific Glassblowers Society’s first-ever President’s
Achievement Award. Presenting the honor are society president Robert
Singer (left) and president-elect Jack Korfhage. |
Argonne’s glassblower, Joe Gregar, received an unexpected award at the
American Scientific Glassblowers Society’s 53rd Annual Symposium, held recently
in Atlantic City: the society’s first-ever President’s Achievement Award.
“They totally surprised me at the annual banquet. They purposely left it off
the printed program for the night’s activities,” Gregar said. “Needless to say,
I was overcome and almost speechless. What a surprise, and how great it was to
have this accolade and standing ovation. I’m glad Katie [his wife, Kathleen
Corrado Gregar, CNM] was there to experience it with me.”
The award recognizes Gregar’s many years of service in the dual roles of
junior member liaison and junior member workshop seminar chair.
“Your selfless devotion and dedication to this pursuit has left an indelible
imprint on hundreds of our Junior Members,” the award reads. “This dedication
will ensure a passing of skills to a future generation of Scientific
Glassblowers as well as the torch of leadership for the ASGS.”
Through the years, Gregar estimates he has helped train more than 250
glassblowers through one-on-one coaching, formal classes, invited seminars and
technical paper presentations.
A world-reknowned craftsman, Gregar has 42 years of industrial and research
glassblowing experience in specialities ranging from customized laboratory
glassware to quartz fabrication. In 1999 he was awarded the prestigious
R&D 100 Award from R&D Magazine for being a co-inventor of the Gregar
Extractor, a device that extracts chemical components from solids and places
them in a liquid—the form needed for most chemical analysis.
Gregar has also served as president of the American Scientific Glassblowers
Society and continues to be an active member in order to keep up with the latest
technologies and advances in his field.
Gregar is a fourth-generation master glassblower who has
been working at Argonne for nearly three decades. The Chemical Sciences
and Engineering Division glass shop is equipped with some of the most advanced
glassblowing tools in the nation, allowing Gregar to craft a wide variety of
custom-made glassware for use in anything from chemical reactions, to optical
laser cells, to complex vacuum systems.
For more information, visit the
Glassblowing Shop or contact Joe
Gregar (630-252-3550, jgregar@anl.gov). |