Background
Hayes was the son of Arthur Hayes Senior, and Florence Gruber Hayes. His father was the president of Columbia Broadcasting System Radio.
Hayes was the son of Arthur Hayes Senior, and Florence Gruber Hayes. His father was the president of Columbia Broadcasting System Radio.
Arthur was a graduate of Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Elementary School, graduating in 1947. Around 1955, at the age of 21, Arthur received a bachelor"s degree in philosophy from Santa Clara University. After turning 23, he traveled to Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar where he earned a degree in philosophy, politics, and economics.
He earned his medical degree from Medical School in 1964.
Following his internship, residency, and a two-year term services in the Army Medical Corps, he became an assistant professor of medicine and pharmacology at Cornell in 1968, and became a director of clinical pharmacology at the Pennsylvania State University Medical School in 1972. He granted his approval for the use of the sugar substitute aspartame in dry foods and a tabletop sweetener. Hayes was Food and Drug Administration Commissioner during the Chicago Tylenol murders in 1982, which caused nationwide alarm after seven people died after taking Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules which had been laced with potassium cyanide.
Under Hayes" leadership, the government and the drug industry responded by developing the first federal regulations requiring tamper-evident packaging for all over-the-counter drugs.
After leaving the Food and Drug Administration in 1983, he was dean and provost of New York Medical College and was named president of EM Pharmaceuticals Incorporated. Hayes died from leukemia on February 11, 2010 at the age of 76.