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Rainbolt family endows $1 million chair at OMRF
Oklahoma
City, Dec. 20, 2007 – For five years, Jeannine Tuttle Rainbolt battled
valiantly against cancer. Although she ultimately succumbed in October at
the age of 77, her fight against the deadly disease will live on in a new
endowed chair at the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation.
The Rainbolt family has made a $1 million gift to OMRF to create the
Jeannine Tuttle Rainbolt Endowed Chair in Cancer Research. The scientist who
holds the chair will focus research efforts on developing a deeper
understanding of cancer’s causes and creating new therapeutic approaches for
the disease, which claims one million American lives each year.
“Jeannine’s life was taken by lung cancer, although she never smoked and
abhorred the habit,” said Rainbolt’s husband of 57 years, H.E. “Gene”
Rainbolt. “This chair is our family’s way of ensuring that her death will
not be in vain, that there will be at least one more scientist working in
perpetuity to stop an insidious disease that senselessly decimates countless
lives.”
Jeannine Tuttle Rainbolt was born in Oklahoma City, and she met her future
husband when they were sixth graders at Norman’s McKinley Elementary School.
The pair attended junior high, high school and the University of Oklahoma
together, and they married while still in college. Upon graduation, Jeannine
became a dedicated and passionate elementary school teacher, a profession
she continued while Gene served as a young lieutenant in Korea.
With her husband, who has served as Chairman of the BancFirst Corporation
since 1989, Jeannine was actively involved in Oklahoma’s civic and
philanthropic community. The couple have two children, David and Leslie, and
seven grandchildren, all of whom live in Oklahoma City.
“OMRF is deeply honored that the Rainbolt family has chosen to memorialize
Jeannine Rainbolt by endowing a chair in cancer research at OMRF,” said OMRF
President Stephen Prescott, M.D. “I can think of no more appropriate way to
pay tribute to such a remarkable, courageous woman than by working to solve
the mysteries of a disease that steals far too much from far too many.”
OMRF is an independent, nonprofit biomedical research institute dedicated to
understanding and developing more effective treatments for human disease.
Its scientists focus on such critical research areas as diseases of the
Alzheimer’s and brain diseases, cancer, lupus and cardiovascular disease.
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