- Herbert Ley, Jr.
Herbert L. Ley Jr., M.D. (
September 7 1923 —July 22 2001 ) was an Americanphysician andgovernment official .He attended
Harvard College from 1941-1943, and returned there afterWorld War II , where he received his M.D. degree, "cum laude ", in 1946. In 1951, he earned anMaster of Public Health degree from theHarvard School of Public Health . From 1951 until 1958, he worked with theArmy Medical Service Graduate School inricketts ial disease research, theOffice of the Surgeon General , and as anepidemiologist inKorea andVietnam .In 1958, he accepted a position as Professor of
Bacteriology and Chairman of the Department of Bacteriology, Hygiene, and Preventive Medicine atGeorge Washington University . In 1963, he was appointed Associate Professor of Epidemiology and Microbiology at the Harvard School of Public Health, and became chairman of the Department in 1964. In September 1966, Ley took a leave of absence from his position to become Medical Director at theFood and Drug Administration On October 21, 1969,
Abbott Laboratories reported that the artificial sweetenercyclamate (in asaccharin -cyclamate mixture) had caused livertumor s in rats. Cyclamates were removed from the list ofGenerally recognized as safe (GRAS) ingredients at Dr. Ley's direction on October 30, 1969.Frustrated with the red tape and conflicts with pharmaceutical companies, Ley resigned his position at FDA on December 11, 1969.
In the San Francisco Chronicle of January 2, 1970 he is quoted as saying "The thing that bugs me is that people think the FDA is protecting them. It isn't. What the FDA is doing and what the public thinks it's doing are as different as night and day.”
His activism earned him a spot on the
master list of Nixon political opponents .References
* [http://www.fda.gov/oc/commissioners/ley.html Herbert L. Ley Jr. biography] via FDA
*Bernstein, Adam (August 15, 2001 ). Herbert L. Ley Jr. Dies at Age 77; Physician Led FDA in Late 1960s. "Washington Post "
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