Schoolar Lecture in Psychopharmacology
The Schoolar Lecture in Psychopharmacology honors Dr. Joseph C. Schoolar, professor emeritus of Pharmacology and Psychiatry. Sponsored by the Schoolar Lectureship Endowment Fund, this annual event hosts prominent researchers in psychopharmacology. The next Schoolar Lecture will be in November, 2009.
Joseph Clayton Schoolar, M.D., Ph.D. is a professor emeritus of Pharmacology and Psychiatry at Baylor College of Medicine. He was born and grew up in the Mississippi Delta. At 17 he joined the U.S. Army and was assigned to Clemson College as an engineering student. He was then transferred to the Army Japanese Language School at the University of Minnesota. After completing his training at the University of Minnesota, he served in General Douglas MacArthur’s Headquarters.
Upon his discharge from the Army, he entered the University of Tennessee, receiving his AB in 1950 and MS (Cell Physiology) in 1952. His research for the Master’s degree involved the effects of x-radiation on living tissue, particularly the central nervous system. He then joined the laboratory of Dr. John Rust in Oak Ridge, Tenn., working on the effects of ionizing radiation on living systems, again emphasizing the CNS.
In 1954, he moved to the University of Chicago as a graduate student under Dr. Lloyd Roth. His dissertation focus was the blood-brain barrier, and with Dr. Charles Barlow, he developed an autoradiographic technique for use in a variety of studies on the brain, chiefly drug distribution and cerebral blood flow. He was awarded a Doctorate of Philosophy degree in Pharmacology in 1957, and a Doctorate of Medicine in 1960.
After a general rotation internship at the University of Chicago, Dr. Schoolar moved to Baylor College of Medicine for residency training in psychiatry. He then joined the staff of the Texas Research Institute of Mental Sciences as well as the Baylor faculty, the latter jointly in the Departments of Pharmacology and Psychiatry. His work has been in research, training, and clinical practice in psychopharmacology and psychiatry.
2009 Lecture - David A. Lewis, M.D. "Translating Neural Circuits into Novel Therapeutics for Schizophrenia"
Previous Lectures
2008 Lecture - Eric J. Nestler, M.D., Ph.D. "New Insight into the Molecular Basis of Depression"
2007 Lecture - Thomas R. Kosten, M.D. "Innovation in Pharmacotherapy of Substance Abuse"
