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Name:
Arthur C. Sucsy
College: Grove City College & Cornell
University
SED Assignments: Chemist
- Y12 Plant;
Dr.
Sucsy graduated Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science degree in June
1942. He had a major in Chemistry and a minor in Metallurgy. He had been
accepted as a Graduate Assistant in Analytical Chemistry and a Master’s
candidate for the Fall Term at Cornell. The following accounts are taken
from his autobiography, “This is the Life”, which was published in 1999.
CORNELL
When I
started Cornell in the fall of 1942, the Japanese had
already attacked
Pearl Harbor the previous
December, and the country was gearing
up for its war effort. About the end of that first semester, which was
then early in 1943, Dr. Blomquist told me that
he had obtained for me a Merrill
Fellowship.
Apparently, the Japanese had already made great inroads in
capturing quinine-producing sources in the
Far East. Quinine was, of course, a very important medicinal for
control of malaria. Since
United States forces were expected to be fighting in that part of the
world and would be susceptible to malaria,
some strong effort on
the part of the federal government, particularly through
the existing
pharmaceutical companies such as Merrill, required that we find a
synthetic substitute for the naturally occurring quinine. There were
leads
that heterocyclic compounds would show some activity. One
of the
segments of the program given to Professor Blomquist was to prepare a
series
of
many individual compounds based on a benzothiazole nucleus.
These synthetic compounds, when prepared and
purified, would
then be sent to Merrill, who would test them for activity
against
malaria.
This
anti-malarial project separated me from my previous lab partner, Don
Spencer. I
don't
remember who was moved. I have a hazy recollection that I
was temporarily in a laboratory with a Russian woman
chemist named Nydia Goetz. It also
separated me from Professor Nichols. I was no longer able to assist for
him in Analytical Chemistry, because I was to spend the bulk of
my time on the synthetic work involving benzothiazoles.
My new partner was Lincoln Diuguid. We were both working
on benzothiazoles in the same laboratory. Apparently, Professor
Blomquist had decided to have his benzothiazole chemistry all in
one location. Lincoln Diuguid was a "black" and had come to
Cornell one or....
Please 'click' on MORE above to read the rest of this fascinating
story!!
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