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						    | Inductees... |  |  
                                        | 
                                                        							 
						 Aylsworth, Jonas 
 
						 Bachner, Edward F. 
 
						 Bacon, Clare E. 
 
						 Baekeland, Leo 
 
						 Baer, Eric 
 
						 Bailey, James 
 
						 Beall, Glen 
 
						 Beetle, Carl 
 
						 Belcher, Sameul L. 
 
						 Bishop, Richard 
 
						 Black, Otis 
 
						 Blount, Clint 
 
						 Boeschenstein, H 
 
						 Borro, Edward 
 
						 Boyer, Raymond 
 
						 Bradbury, Williamry 
 
						 Bradt, Rexford H. 
 
						 Breskin, Charles 
 
						 Brown, Gordon 
 
						 Burroughs, Charles 
 
						 Carothers, Wallace 
 
						 Chapman, Frank 
 
						 Cleworth, C. W. 
 
						 Condit, Charles 
 
						 Conley, Fred 
 
						 Cruse, William 
 
						 Deanin, Rudolph 
 
						 DeBell, John 
 
						 Delmonte, John 
 
						 Doak, Kenneth 
 
						 Dow, Willard 
 
						 Doyle, Bernard 
 
						 Dreyfus, Camille 
 
						 Dubois, J. Harry 
 
						 Eastman, George 
 
						 Ehlers, Russell 
 
						 Ellis, Carleton 
 
						 Erikson, Erik 
 
						 Estabrook, Jr., F. R. 
 
						 Flory, Paul 
 
						 Forger, Robert 
 
						 Foster, Joseph 
 
						 Fox, Daniel W. 
 
						 Gatto, Charles 
 
						 Gigliotti, M. F. X. 
 
						 Goggin, William 
 
						 Goldsworthy, W.B. 
 
						 Gore, Wilbert 
 
						 Grebe, John 
 
						 Griffith, Henry E. 
 
						 Griffith, Palmer 
 
						 Gross, Sid 
 
						 Grote, Sr., Walter 
 
						 Haine, Walter 
 
						 Hanford, William 
 
						 Harding, Ralph 
 
						 Heckman, Jerome 
 
						 Hemming, Emile 
 
						 Hendrie, George 
 
						 Hobson, Edwin L. 
 
						 Hoffer, Robert 
 
						 Hohl, John 
 
						 Holz, Harold A. 
 
						 Huidekoper, P. 
 
						 Humphrey, G. P. 
 
						 Huntsman, Jon 
 
						 Hyatt, John Wesley 
 
						 Hyde, J.F. 
 
						 Jennings, Garland 
 
						 Karol, Frederick J. 
 
						 Kavanaugh, Lionel 
 
						 Keville, John 
 
						 Kleiderer, C. W. 
 
						 Kline, Gordon M. 
 
						 Kretzschmar, J. R. 
 
						 Kruder, George A. 
 
						 Kwolek, S. L. 
 
						 Land, Edwin H. 
 
						 Lankton, Gordon 
 
						 Lester, William M. 
 
						 Lubin, George 
 
						 Maccaferri, Mario 
 
						 Maddock, Bruce H. 
 
						 Mark, Herman F. 
 
						 Marra, Frank S. 
 
						 Marshall, Abraham 
 
						 Martinelli, Guy A. 
 
						 Marvel, Carl Shipp 
 
						 McGrath, James E. 
 
						 Morrison, Robert S. 
 
						 Muehlstein, Herman 
 
						 Nalle, Jr., George S. 
 
						 Nissel, Frank R. 
 
						 Ott, Emile 
 
						 Palmer, Spencer E. 
 
						 Peters, Don. L. 
 
						 Pitcher, Arnold E. 
 
						 Plueddemann, E. 
 
						 Plunkett, Roy J. 
 
						 Porter, Roger S. 
 
						 Quarnstrom, Ivar 
 
						 Rahm, Louis Frank 
 
						 Reib, John C. 
 
						 Reinhart, Frank W. 
 
						 Richardson, Henry 
 
						 Robertson, Harold 
 
						 Rosato, Dominick V. 
 
						 Rowan, Sr., Edward 
 
						 Rubens, L.C. "Bud" 
 
						 Rubin, Irvin I. 
 
						 Schwab, Fred E. 
 
						 Scribner, George K. 
 
						 Seabury, R. W. 
 
						 Semon, Waldo L. 
 
						 Seymour, R. B. 
 
						 Shaw, Frank H. 
 
						 Shaw, Louis E. 
 
						 Sherwood, Miller G. 
 
						 Slater, John G. 
 
						 Spaak, Albert 
 
						 Stein, Richard S. 
 
						 Stott, Lewis L. 
 
						 Stoughton, T. S. 
 
						 Swedlow, David A. 
 
						 Thomas, Islyn 
 
						 Tupper, Earl S. 
 
						 Von Holdt, John 
 
						 Whitlock, Carl 
 
						 Willert, William H. 
 
						 Wyeth, N. C. 
 
						 Zimmerman, A. S. 
 
 |  | 
            
							
					| Fred E. Schwab - Hall of Fame Entry
 
 |  
					|   | Author: Plastics Academy Staff Added: 03/29/2004
 Type: Summary
 Viewed: 520 time(s)
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    | Fred E. Schwab - Hall of Fame Entry 
 
   
|  |  | Fred E. Schwab  Birthdate:1918
 Deceased:N/A
 Induction: 1991Industry Areas: Sales, Process
 |  
 Dedicated to the growth of the plastics industry, dating back to early efforts in the developing technology of three-dimensional polystyrene products and thermoplastic extrusion and its commercial applications. Schwabs service to the U.S. plastics industry began when, as an 18-year-old immigrant from Germany in 1937, he applied his knowledge of acrylic dental materials to the young plastics industry. This led to the formation of Schwab and Frank, Inc., which manufactured and supplied plastics dental compounds. Following his service in the U.S. Army, he refocused his activities to the development of polystyrene compounds for use in packaging and decorative ornaments, leading to the development of multi-colored and double durometer cross head thermoplastic extrusion. Other innovations attributed to Fred Schwab are the development of interlocking tubing, tension springs, and extruded spiral wrappings. His activities in product development and marketing made a major impact on the use of plastics in the automotive industry. His service to the plastics industry is truly legendary. He is one of the co-founders of SPE in 1942, and a vice president, president, board member, and council member of the Detroit Section. He is currently Board Member Emeritus. Schwab has served on many SPE ANTEC committees, as well as Automotive Division Boards. He received his third Outstanding Member Award in 1969 and was honored as a Distinguished Member of SPE in 1980. Schwab received the SPE Presidents Cup Award in 1984 and was co-founder of the SPE Section in Central Europe in 1986.  He is currently a Trustee of the National Plastics Center and Museum, vice president of The Plastics Academy, and a governor of the Plastics Pioneers Association. He is a member of SPI Automotive Market Council Technical Committee, the Society of Automotive Engineers, the Engineering Society of Detroit, and an executive board member of the Excellence in Plastics and Rubber Education Committee at Ferris State University. His dedication of time and talent to the industry has earned him the title of "the heart and conscience" of the plastics industry. He was born in 1918 in Frankfurt/Main, Germany. He lives in Ann Arbor, MI, with his wife Marianne. They have two children.  | 
 
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