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Rustum Roy

Rustum Roy was a physicist, born in India, who became a professor at Pennsylvania State University and was a leader in materials research. As an advocate for interdisciplinarity, he initiated a movement of materials research societies and, outside of his multiple areas of scientific and engineering expertise, wrote impassioned pleas about the need for a fusion of religion and science and humanistic causes.

Early life and education
Roy was born in Ranchi, Bihar Province, India, the son of Narenda Kumar and Rajkumari Roy. Rustum Roy married fellow materials scientist Della Marie Martin on June 8 that year. ==Career==
Career
In 1962 he was named the first director of the Materials Research Laboratory at Penn State. of a 1968 Conference on the chemistry of silicon carbide. The next year a national colloquy was held on materials science in the United States for which Roy edited the Proceedings. In 1973 he edited the Proceedings of a conference on phase transitions and their applications. In 1974 Roy and Olaf Müller published The Major Ternary Structural Families with Springer-Verlag, which described the principal crystal structures of ternary compounds. The book received two brief reviews in materials trade journals. A cement journal reviewer said it would be "Useful to the practicing materials researcher, whether in industry or university, as well as the non-specialist who needs to become informed about particular materials." A chemist writing for mineral processing readers, described its depth: :The structural descriptions are at times too brief but the chapters contain valuable information such as compositional structure field maps (radius A vs. radius B), figures of unit cells or the polyhedral arrangements in some common structures, phase diagrams (P vs. T , or P vs. ionic radius), structural relationships, and phase transition data. By 1991 he was a spokesperson for the movement and his lecture "New Materials: Fountainhead for New Technologies and New Science" was published by National Academy Press. Roy presented the lecture to learned audiences in Washington, D.C.; Tokyo, Japan; New Delhi, Stockholm, Copenhagen, and London in 1991 and 92. He made the case for linking a technical need to investigative effort, which he terms "technology traction", noting that the method is productive and cost-effective in comparison to science conducted with other purposes. Rustum Roy was referred to as "[o]ne of the legends of materials science" at the time of his death. Roy was elected as a member of the U.S. National Academy of Engineering in 1973. ==Other interests==
Other interests
Academic freedom In 1953, Roy wrote a letter to Life magazine in response to the essay "Is Academic Freedom in Danger?" by Whittaker Chambers, stating: Sirs: Chambers neglects to note that since people rarely read Congressional Records, they get their News more by headlines and the tenor of the times. Thus, most professors "know" or "feel" it is safer today to keep your mouth shut, and, if you open it, not to support any liberal or leftish views. Let Chambers continue to remind us of the very real perils of the Communist left. Fanatical preoccupation with self-preservation will lead to loss of more valuable things, not merely academic freedom, but freedom. Rustum Roy Assistant Professor The Pennsylvania State College State College, PA that the "science and engineering activity of a university ... [be organized] primarily around a dozen permanent mission-oriented interdisciplinary laboratories." To reach this conclusion he notes that "universities have been forced into new interdisciplinary patterns not only by the dollar sign but also by the inexorable logic that the real problems of society do not come in discipline-shaped blocks." The daunting structural inertia of the university did not faze him: :A human being, that is both a naked ape and a fallen angel, can manage perhaps to organize the university with both the ivory tower and service-station character. In 2010, close to the end of his life, Roy co-wrote an article in the Huffington Post called "The Mythology Of Science-Based Medicine" with nonscientists Deepak Chopra and Larry Dossey, which David Gorski characterized as "an exercise that combines cherry-picking, logical fallacies, and whining, raising the last of these almost to an art form." ==Personal life and death==
Personal life and death
Roy married Della Martin Roy on June 8, 1948. Their three children are Neill R. Roy (deceased), Jeremy R. Roy, and Ronnen A. Roy. He was survived by his wife and children. ==Awards and honours==
Awards and honours
• 1973: Member, National Academy of Engineering ==Patents==
Patents
Selection of U.S. patents for which Roy is the sole or primary inventor: • Densification of glass, germanium oxide, silica or boric acid (July 23, 1963) • Reverse thermodynamic chemical barrier for nuclear waste over-pack or backfill (February 7, 1984) • Low expansion ceramic material (June 23, 1987) • Method of preparing ceramic compositions at lower sintering temperatures (May 9, 1989) • Method for synthesizing solids such as diamond and products produced thereby (January 29, 2002) • Microwave processing in pure H fields and pure E fields (April 2, 2002) • Process for sintering powder metal components (October 19, 2004) • Metal extraction from various chalcogenide minerals through interaction with separate electric fields and magnetic fields supplied by electromagnetic energy (December 14, 2010) • Method for decolorizing diamonds (February 7, 2012) ==Publications==
Publications
MonographsEdited volumesMaterials Science and Engineering in the United States: Proceedings (1970, contributor), Pennsylvania State University Press, . • Materials Science and Engineering Serving Society (1998, with others), Elsevier Science, . • The Interdisciplinary Imperative: Interactive Research and Education, Still an Elusive Goal in Academia (2000), Writers Club Press, . Other authored/co-authored booksHonest Sex (2003 [1969], with coauthor Della Roy), Signet Press, . • ''Experimenting With Truth: The Fusion of Religion With Technology Needed for Humanity's Survival'' [1979 Hibbert Lectures] (1980), Pergamon Press, . • Radioactive Waste (1982), Pergamon Press, . • Lost at the Frontier: U.S. Science and Technology Policy Adrift (1985), ISI Press, . Other worksScience of Whole Person Healing: Proceedings of the First Interdisciplinary International Conference (2003, contributor), iUniverse, . • Observations and Studies of the Healing Efficacy of the Life Vessel (2012) [2009]. == See also ==
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