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Stanley Fausst Yolles was the second director of the National Institute of Mental Health from 1964 to 1970. His advocacy of more lenient drug laws, emphasizing treatment rather than punishment, brought him into conflict with the administration of President Richard M. Nixon and led to Yolles racing to resign before he was fired.
Yolles was born in New York City to Rose Fausst and Louis Yolles, a milliner and dress maker respectively. Yolles attended Brooklyn College, Harvard University and New York University, earning a medical degree from the last in 1951. He also earned a master of public health degree from Johns Hopkins University in 1957. Always interested in public health, Yolles started out researching the control of parasitic diseases but switched to medicine and psychiatry when "I could no longer be satisfied with a one-to-one relationship with a microscope". Work with drug addicts in Lexington, Kentucky in the early 1950s convinced him of the wrongness of treating addicts as criminals rather than patients. As director of NIMH he made a priority of changing attitudes toward addiction and advocated more lenient marijuana laws. Another priority was increasing the number of community mental health centers across the United States, avoiding the practice of sending patients to centralized catchment facilities where they are completely set apart from their families and communities.
In 1965, Yolles supported the production of a documentary about community mental health centers called "Bold New Approach", taken from a line in a speech by the late President John F. Kennedy advocating a national community health program.
Yolles married fellow medical researcher (and later fellow physician) Tamarath Knigin while they were both researching malaria in the Caribbean in 1942. Though their work often kept them apart during their careers, they managed to have two daughters. After Yolles left the NIMH, he and his wife went to work at the medical school of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, where she became associate dean while he was chairman of the psychiatry department. He was also director of the Long Island Research Institute. He retired at the end of 1981, becoming professor emeritus at the university. She died in 1985, and he died on 12 January 2001.- Art Director
- Production Designer
- Set Decorator
Bansi Chandragupta was born in 1924 in Sialkot, Punjab, British India. Bansi was an art director and production designer, known for Pather Panchali (1955), Chakra (1981) and Chakravyuha (1978). Bansi died on 27 June 1981 in Brookhaven, New York, USA.- Actor
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Rudy Pompilli started his career in jazz bands, playing tenor and bass saxophone, among other instruments. It was as a member of Ralph Marterie's Orchestra in 1955 that he caught the attention of Bill Haley. Haley hired Pompilli to play sax after original sax man, Joey Ambrose, quit. Pompilli played tenor sax, flute and clarinet for the Comets and was a featured vocalist. He stayed with Haley longer than any other musician -- from 1955 until his death from cancer in 1976.- Bernard Ebbers was born on 27 August 1941 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. He was married to Kristie Webb, Linda Pigott and Linda Pigott . He died on 2 February 2020 in Brookhaven, Mississipi, USA.