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C. GUY SUITS
1905-1991
BY WALTER L. ROBB
A GIANT AMONG US has departed. How does one, in a few
minutes, pay homage to a man's life, to the highlights of a loving
husband and father, to an adventurer, leader, pioneer, in all his
endeavors? For, yes, Chauncey Guy Suits lived a full, productive
life.
In fact, writers of do-it-yourself books might well pause to
consider his story. He designed his own boomerangs and skis;
largely furnished his home with handsome handmade repro-
cluctions of antique furniture; rewove Oriental rugs; constructed
his own customized leather camera cases; and designed, cut, and
sewed dresses for Mrs. Suits. He also, at one time or another, was
a self-taught professional clarinetist, a hiker, a hunter, a skier,
and a yachtsman, a skin diver, a pilot, and a photographer
extraordinaire.
As Guy himself put it in a 1937 talk, "I have often heard people
say that they would love to have a hobby, if they had the time.
That is doubtless true in many cases, particularly with college
students, but it is also true that it is not time that is lacking so
much as the ability to make the best use of the available time. An
active man can no more cease his activity at the point of a clock
than he can stop breathing activity is a part of his constitutional
equipment. And so a portion of his leisure time activity is
diverted to music, or painting, or archaeology, or botany, or
hiking and skiing- and the list is endless."
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MEMORIAL TRIBUTES
If Guy had pursued all of his hobbies with his customary
enthusiasm, they might well have interfered with his work. That
never happened, as evidenced in 1945 at the age of thirty-nine.
Already a distinguished scientist, he became the youngest of ricer
of GE and director of one of the world's foremost industrial
laboratories. He had been a member of the GE Research Labo-
ratory since 1930 and was widely known for his work in many
phases of scientific research, especially high-temperature, high-
pressure electric-arc discharges. His studies ultimately resulted
in seventy-seven patents.
During World War II, Guy devoted the major portion of his
time to the direction of research under the auspices of the Office
of Scientific Research and Development. As chief of Division 15
of the National Defense Research Committee, he headed the
leading U.S. effort on radio and radar countermeasures. It was
estimated that those countermeasures saved the U.S. Strategic
Air Force some 450 planes and 4,500 casualties alone, effectively
countering a $? billion Axis radar system.
At the close of the war, Guy returned to GE and directed the
extensive postwar expansion of the company's scientific re-
search activities. This included the planning and construction of
a completely new home for the research lab on a 600-acre site in
Niskayuna, New York. Today, that facility, now forty years old,
stands in clear testimony to that quality of design and construc-
tion that Guy insisted upon. No other laboratory I have visited
has stood the test of time so well, and we pledged to maintain the
lab as the living testimonial to Dr. Suit's memory.
As director of research for GE, Guy organized research teams
that made hundreds of inventions, enriched scientific knowl-
ec~ge, and yielded vast material benefits to mankind. Those
innovations included the first Man-Made™ diamonds and the
first commercial process for mass-producing them; Borazon~
cubic boron nitride, a synthetic material second in hardness only
to diamond; the Multi-Vapor(8' lamp, still the leading high-effi-
ciency light source; chemical research that led to Lexan(~' and
Noryl(8' resins, two of the world's most famous engineering poly-
mers; and the demonstration of electron tunneling—work that
later won Ivar Giaever a share ofthe 1973 Nobel Prize for physics.
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C. GUY SUITS
227
Most impressively, many young scientists Guy and his team
brought into the lab are still the world's leading experts in their
fields, even twenty-five years after his retirement. His succes-
sors Art Bucche, Roland Schmitt, and myself were hired
during his tenure, and we all owe Guy a huge debt of gratitude
for his counsel and support. He loved his family and the
Adirondacks, but he also loved GE and the people who made up
the GE family.
While it is only human for us to mourn the loss of a loyal and
courageous friend, we are also filled with thanksgiving for having
shared in even a part of Guy's full life. He made each day
exciting, each conversation stimulating, and each minute and
hour time well spent. May his love for life challenge us to look
within ourselves to inspire us to even greater undertakings,
knowing Guy would approve.
Guy was without peer- such a gentleman; kind husband and
father; devoted environmentalist and adventurer; and an honor-
able, proud, and decent American.
But Guy Suits didn't waste a lot of words explaining his
philosophy of life. On the contrary, he lived his philosophy and
led by example. His message to all of us was, "Live life to the
fullest!" He showed us the way . . . oh, so well.