Pubdate: Tue, 10 Jun 2008
Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA)
Copyright: 2008 Media General Communications Holdings, LLC.
Contact:  http://www.timesdispatch.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/365
Author: Jeremy Slayton
Note: Guest Book for Dr. Billy Ray Martin
http://www.legacy.com/TimesDispatch/GB/GuestbookView.aspx?PersonId=111217788

SCIENTIST BILLY R. MARTIN DIES

He Worked 32 Years at VCU and Was a Top Marijuana Researcher

During the past 35 years, Dr. Billy Ray Martin established himself as 
a world leader in marijuana research.

In the late 1970s, he was the first to show that most of the 
behavioral effects of marijuana were attributable to 
delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the substance's principal 
psychoactive ingredient.

Later, he was chosen by the National Institute on Drug Abuse to lead 
a team of international researchers to study anandamide, a 
marijuana-like substance that occurs naturally in the brain.

Since 2000, Dr. Martin served as chairman of Virginia Commonwealth 
University's department of pharmacology and toxicology. He died 
Sunday at his Richmond home of cancer. He was 65.

During his tenure leading the department, it ranked in the top 10 in 
the nation in terms of National Institutes of Health funding. This 
year, U.S. News & World Report ranked VCU 16th in the nation among 
programs in substance abuse.

As a leader in the department, Dr. Martin "recruited excellent 
scientists and built a highly collaborative research team," said Dr. 
Jerome F. Strauss III, dean of the VCU School of Medicine.

Dr. Martin's research into marijuana looked at both avenues of the 
drug -- its dangers and its therapeutic potential, said his mentor, 
Dr. William L. Dewey, a professor at VCU's department of pharmacology 
and toxicology.

A native of Kernersville, N.C., Dr. Martin was educated at the 
University of North Carolina. After postdoctoral work at Uppsala 
University in Sweden and Oxford University in England, he joined the 
faculty at VCU as an assistant professor in 1976.

During the course of his career, he published almost 400 scientific 
papers and served on numerous national committees and boards, 
including being an adviser to the World Health Organization.

An avid photographer and reader of nonfiction, Dr. Martin received 
many awards from all levels for his contributions in research, which 
extended to nicotine and cocaine. He won the VCU Distinguished 
Scholarship Award in 1996, and he received the Method to Extend 
Research in Time (MERIT) award from the National Institutes of Health 
for his research in drug dependence.

This Sunday, he was set to receive the Nathan B. Eddy Award, the 
highest award given by the College on Problems of Drug Dependence. In 
the fall, he was going to be recognized with the VCU Award for 
Excellence, the university's highest award bestowed on a faculty member.

Dr. Martin, described as a kind, soft-spoken man, was the founder and 
first president of the International Cannabinoid Research Society and 
won the group's Raphael Mechoulam Award for outstanding contributions 
to cannabinoid research.

Throughout it all, Dr. Martin was humble about his accomplishments 
and status as a leader in marijuana research, always recognizing and 
giving credit for the work of his students and colleagues; he'd shy 
away from accepting an award as a personal recognition, Strauss said.

Even as cancer robbed him of his sight in March -- he listened to the 
radio to hear his beloved Tar Heels play their NCAA tournament 
basketball games -- he was still going to work when he could or 
working from home, said his wife, Jean Y. Martin of Richmond.

In addition to his wife, Dr. Martin's survivors include a son, 
Zachary Lee Martin of Wilmington, N.C.; a daughter, Lindsay Brooke 
Martin of Charlottesville; a brother, Donald Lee Martin of 
Kernersville; and a stepbrother, Elmer Made Jr. of the Kernersville area.

A funeral will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the Chippenham Chapel 
of Bliley Funeral Home, 6900 Hull Street Road, in Richmond. Burial 
will be private. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake