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Chronicle Giving
MCV Foundation: Serving the MCV Campus of Virginia Commonwealth University since 1949
Spring 2007 MCV Foundation’s Mission is to inspire and steward philanthropy throughout the MCV Campus of Virginia Commonwealth University. Chartered in 1949, the MCV Foundation works in partnership with alumni and friends of MCV Schools, Hospitals and the Massey Cancer Center.
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We support the institution in its quest: To preserve and restore health To seek the cause and cure of diseases To educate those who would serve humanity Through your donations, the MCV Foundation is an integral support to the dedicated teachers, clinicians, researchers and students whose efforts place the MCV Campus among the world’s leading academic medical centers providing technically superb and compassionate care to patients.
Of Gene White’s 48 years of practice, 35 years were in his office-based pharmacy. The prescription laboratory, seen here, has been preserved to inspire future pharmacists to put “patients first, products second.”
Eugene V. White, RPh, P‘50 has been called a pioneer, a maverick and a visionary. Indeed, he is all three. Thanks to his refusal to accept the status quo and willingness to take risks, he began the shift of pharmacy from a product-oriented to a patient-oriented profession, instituting practices that influenced the way pharmaceutical care is administered today. White credits the VCU School of Pharmacy for giving him the chance to enter the field and preparing him well for his 48-year career. In recognition of his education and long relationship with the school, White has included the School of Pharmacy in his estate plans. “Pharmacy gave me a good life and a good living, and if I’ve made a difference in the profession that I love, so much the better,” said White. “But it wouldn’t have happened had it not been for Wortley Rudd, dean of the MCV School of Pharmacy in 1946. I had just been discharged from the Army Air Corps and traveled to Richmond to interview with Dean Rudd. I was concerned that I wouldn’t be accepted to matriculate, because the literature said that one year of college was required. When the Dean broached the subject, I told him I was a veteran and had had only four months of college while I was an aviation cadet. He looked me in the eye and said, ‘After hearing your remarks and that you won your wings, I am convinced you will make it. At least I’m going to let you try.’” continue on back page
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