White began his undergraduate studies at the
University of St. Thomas before entering the
University of Minnesota Medical School in 1949; he later transferred to
Harvard Medical School in 1951, where he earned his medical degree
cum laude in 1953. White had ten children with his wife, Patricia Murray, a nurse he met at
Peter Bent Brigham Hospital while completing his surgical internship and residency. A devout Roman Catholic, Dr. White was a member of the
Pontifical Academy of Sciences. He attended mass regularly and prayed before performing surgeries. White received invitations worldwide to speak, lecture and share his medical expertise. He was a consultant to the Burdenko Institute of Neurosurgery in Moscow and was the only foreign member of both Russian and Ukrainian Academies of Medical Science. He lectured extensively in the U.S., Russia, China and Europe. White founded Metro's neurosurgery department. Many people know him for being the leading target for protesters. A PETA activist went as far as to call him "Dr. Butcher" and described his experiments as "epitomizing the crude, cruel
vivisection industry." For 40 years, White was a neurological surgery professor at
Case Western Reserve University medical school, a well-liked teacher and an acclaimed surgeon. He was one of the best known neurosurgeons in the United States, notably for his head transplant experiments on rhesus monkeys. == Research ==