| Media
Contact:
Dave Green,
College of Veterinary Medicine, 919/513-6662
Keith Nichols,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Sept.
23, 2005
NC
State Receives $20 Million Gift From R.B. Terry
Foundation
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
North Carolina State University and the R.B. Terry
Jr. Charitable Foundation today announced one of the
largest private gifts in the history of the College
of Veterinary Medicine (CVM), a $20 million pledge
to help establish a new veterinary hospital at the
college. The announcement was made today during the
kickoff of Achieve! The Campaign For NC State.
The college will use the pledge during the next 10
years to support the planned $40 million Randall B.
Terry Jr. Companion Animal Medical Center, named for
the late High Point businessman and philanthropist
Randall B. Terry Jr.
“The College of Veterinary Medicine is one of
several nationally ranked colleges and programs to
be found on the NC State campus,” said Chancellor
James L. Oblinger. “The college not only is a
national leader in supporting veterinary education
and animal health, but also is home to many groundbreaking
research projects that support human health. This gift
from the Terry Foundation helps keep the Achieve campaign
moving, and is a giant step toward making the veterinary
teaching hospital a reality.”
Despite
being one of the youngest programs in the country,
the CVM is ranked fourth among the nation’s
28 veterinary colleges by U.S. News and World
Report.
Including Terry’s previous gifts, the R.B. Terry
Jr. Charitable Foundation has contributed $24.2 million
to the CVM. Terry, who died in May 2004, was the publisher
of the High Point Enterprise and co-owner of the International
Home Furnishing Center in High Point.
The philanthropist became a longtime friend of the
college after his golden retrievers were treated at
the Veterinary Teaching Hospital. He served two terms
as president of the North Carolina Veterinary Medicine
Foundation and chaired the first campaign for the college
as part of the Campaign for NC State Students. In 2000,
he established a challenge gift to generate private
funds for the new hospital and for student scholarships.
“This
is a transforming gift that enables us to do important
things, both in facilities and programs,” says
CVM Dean Warwick Arden. “This pledge goes a long
way in helping to ensure our companion animal medical
center is a national leader. Such a state-of-the-art
facility will complement the
college’s outstanding faculty and students and
provide them with an outstanding environment in which
to promote animal health.”
According to Arden, the 122,000-square-foot medical
center will roughly triple the size of the current
Veterinary Teaching Hospital and allow for increased
caseloads. The medical center, which is expected to
be operational by 2009, will offer cutting-edge technologies
used for imaging, cardiac care, cancer treatments,
internal medicine and surgery.
“The commitment Randall Terry has shown to NC
State over the years is a reflection of the power of
the human/animal bond,” says Dr. Oscar Fletcher,
past CVM dean and longtime acquaintance of Terry’s. “His
great affection for his golden retrievers resulted
in him becoming involved with the college, and led
him to encourage our leadership and advance the science
of veterinary medicine in a significant way.”
The new medical center will allow the small-animal
component of the existing Veterinary Teaching Hospital
to become a center for outpatient treatment and animal
wellness, and will provide educational opportunities
for students and practicing veterinarians.
“Randall Terry absolutely loved the people at
the vet school and their ideas and wanted to help,” says
Arch Schoch, the president of the R.B. Terry Jr. Charitable
Foundation. “He was a great strategist.”
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