Harry W. Hays
Harry W. Hays, 91, a toxicologist who retired from
the Department of Agriculture in 1980, died Feb. 6 at
George Washington University Hospital after a heart
attack. Dr. Hays, who lived in Washington, was born in
Emmitsburg, Md., and graduated from Franklin &
Marshall College. He received a doctorate in biology at
Princeton.
He was a research pharmacologist with Ciba
Pharmaceutical Co. in Summit, N.J., and a professor of
pharmacology at Wayne State University in Detroit before
moving to Washington in 1957 to become director of the
advisory center on toxicology at the National Academy of
Sciences National Research Council. In 1966, he joined
the U. S. Department of Agriculture as director of the
pesticides regulation division.
When that division was assigned to the Environmental
Protection Agency, Dr. Hays was assigned to the national
program staff for food, safety and health. He was a
founding editor of the Journal of Toxicology and Applied
Pharmacology, a founder of the Society of Toxicology and
an adviser on toxicology for the International
Dictionary of Medicine and Biology.
After retiring from the Agriculture Department he did
toxicology consulting for five years. His first wife, Elsa L. Hays, died in 1988.
Survivors include his wife, Florence Hays of
Washington; and a son by his first wife, Gregory Hays of
Hagerstown.
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