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About EVMS: News
Pepe Appointed Dean and Provost Print E-mail

May 17, 2005


Pepe_Gerald_desk
Gerald J. Pepe, Ph.D.

Dr. Pepe's Biography

NORFOLK—Gerald J. Pepe, Ph.D., a nationally recognized researcher and 27-year veteran of the faculty at Eastern Virginia Medical School, has been appointed Dean and Provost of Eastern Virginia Medical School.

He follows Evan R. Farmer, M.D., who left EVMS June 30, 2004, after three years as Dean and Provost.

A member of the EVMS faculty since 1978, Pepe is Chairman of the Department of Physiological Sciences at EVMS. He was appointed Interim Dean and Provost in July 2004.

“Dr. Pepe has also done a tremendous job as Interim Dean and Provost,” EVMS Rector and Acting President Harry T. Lester said in an email to the faculty, students, and staff. “His leadership has been vital to the success of many key initiatives this year, including the LCME site visit last fall and the launch of our new strategic initiative with Navigant Consulting. As a long-time member of the faculty and department chairman, Dr. Pepe has a strong commitment to EVMS, and his enthusiasm for this school is infectious. He has a deep appreciation of EVMS' great accomplishments during its first three decades, and a clear vision of the opportunities and potential ahead. He has my full support, and as well as the unanimous support of the Board of Visitors, the department chairs, and the leadership of the Faculty Senate.”

Pepe_congratulations

Within hours of the announcement of Pepe's appointment,
two congratulatory banners appeared on campus.

Pepe is a reproductive physiologist who is internationally recognized for his research in the role estrogen plays in pregnancy and fetal development, including estrogen's impact on fetal ovarian development and potential impact on fertility in adulthood. Working with a colleague at the University of Maryland, Pepe has earned continuous support for his research from the National Institutes of Health. The NIH is considered the gold standard for support of biomedical research.

Before he joined the EVMS faculty in 1978, Pepe served as senior staff fellow at the National Institutes of Health. He left the NIH in 1978 to come to EVMS, at the time a small, relatively new medical school. Pepe said he was attracted to EVMS by the school's novel scientific study of reproduction. He has chaired the physiology department since 1985.

Pepe frequently serves on study sections at the National Institutes of Health and referees several professional journals, including Endocrinology.

A native of Rhode Island, Pepe earned his undergraduate degree from Providence College and a master's degree from Northeastern University. He earned his Ph.D. in physiology from the University of Kansas and completed a two-year postdoctoral fellowship in reproductive physiology at Case Western Reserve.

 

For more information, contact:

Doug Gardner, Director of News and Publications
EVMS Office of Institutional Advancement
(757) 446-6070 - This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Last Updated on Thursday, 07 January 2010 12:31
 
EVMS Master of Physician Assistant Program Re-Accredited Through 2009 Print E-mail


April 20, 2005

NORFOLK—The EVMS Master of Physician Assistant Program has been granted re-accreditation by the Accreditation Review Commission on Education for the Physician Assistant (ARC-PA) through March 2009.

Physician assistants (PAs) are trained to diagnose, treat and prevent health problems. They can interpret various types of X-ray and laboratory tests and prescribe medications, all under a physician's supervision.

EVMS’ first MPA class graduated in 2001. Due to an increased demand for physician assistants, EVMS increased the number of available spaces for the class that began in January from 36 to 50.

The ARC-PA is the accrediting agency that protects the interests of the public and the PA profession by defining the standards for PA education and evaluating PA educational programs within the United States to ensure their compliance with those standards.

Thomas Parish, DHSc, assistant professor, is the MPA program director. Patricia Shull, M.S., assistant professor, previously served as interim program director for more than two years.

“This accreditation reflects a lot of the hard work of the faculty — the leadership provided by Patricia Shull as interim director, the work of Thomas Parish and the organizational skills of Jeffrey Johnson [director of EVMS' Division of Health Professions],” said Gerald J. Pepe, Ph.D., EVMS interim dean.

Parish also thanked the program's faculty and students.

“We're really happy to have approval for four more years of accreditation," Parish said. "We owe this in large part of the hard work of the interim director of the PA program, Patricia Shull. Approval for this length of time is testament to the hard work of our faculty and the quality of our students.”

For more information, contact:

Doug Gardner, Director of News and Publications
EVMS Office of Institutional Advancement
(757) 446-6070 - This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Last Updated on Friday, 15 January 2010 10:37
 
Remembrance Service for Mr. Hofheimer to be held February 9 at EVMS Print E-mail

February 7, 2005

hch-officeNORFOLK—Henry Clay Hofheimer II, whose pioneering spirit helped give birth to Eastern Virginia Medical School, died Sunday, February 6, 2005, at the age of 98.

Mr. Hofheimer, a native and life-long resident of Norfolk, was a leading philanthropist and community leader in the effort to advance economic development and quality of life of Hampton Roads in the decades after World War II.

Chief among his accomplishments was the establishment and development of Eastern Virginia Medical School, founded in 1973.

"The medical school has been the most important thing in my life," Mr. Hofheimer told an interviewer in 1993. "It has done more good for more people than anything I know of."

A public remembrance service will be held at Eastern Virginia Medical School at 4 p.m. on Wednesday, February 9, in Lewis Hall, 700 W. Olney Avenue, Norfolk.

Mr. Hofheimer was a leading force behind the first fundraising campaign that established Eastern Virginia Medical School, and he was the first Chairman and President of the EVMS Foundation, the school's fundraising arm.

"Eastern Virginia Medical School is a monument to Henry Clay's tenacity, willpower, and sheer force of personality," said Vincent J. Mastracco Jr., a member of the EVMS Foundation Board of Trustees and the foundation's Vice President for Investments. "For generations to come, this community will be the beneficiary of his marvelous largesse."

hch-walkingMr. Hofheimer believed that this community should have a medical school, and then worked tirelessly to make that vision real," said EVMS President Dr. J. Sumner Bell. "Through the patients we care for, the students we teach, and the research we conduct, EVMS is a living testament to Mr. Hofheimer's vision and leadership."

In addition to his philanthropic interests, Mr. Hofheimer was one of the region's most successful business leaders and investors. He remained active in business and community activities until very late in life. He could often be seen walking between downtown Norfolk and his home in Ghent, usually accompanied by one of his beloved dogs.

In the late 1960s, when a medical school in Hampton Roads was essentially just a dream, Mr. Hofheimer and 34 other business, civic and political leaders took it upon themselves to make that dream a reality. They formed a committee whose mission was to raise the dollars that would make a medical school possible. Launched in 1970, the effort to raise $15 million in three years was at the time the most ambitious fundraising effort ever undertaken in Hampton Roads.

Henry Hofheimer with other EVMS foundersIn the weeks, months and years that followed, Mr. Hofheimer dedicated himself to making the school a reality, through his own generous support and tireless fundraising.

One day, Mr. Hofheimer was walking on the beach and recognized a man whose picture he'd seen in a magazine. It was the late Sydney Lewis of Richmond, the founder of Best Products, then one of Virginia's leading companies.

"I didn't know him from Adam," Mr. Hofheimer recalled years later. "But I had read where he gave $9 million to his alma mater. I decided to meet him."

Mr. Hofheimer introduced himself on the beach, and a friendship developed. In the fall of 1972, Mr. Hofheimer encouraged Mr. Lewis to make a $1.5 challenge grant to help the first campaign for EVMS reach its goal of raising $15 million by December 31, 1972.

Understanding the value that a dramatic gesture brings to fundraising campaigns, Mr. Hofheimer then surprised the fundraising committee by bringing to the campaign's final fundraising meeting in December 1972 a $1 million check from the Andrew Mellon Foundation, a gift he had quietly solicited as the result of his friendship with the Mellon family.

The community's response to the Lewis challenge grant, followed by the unexpected support of the Mellon Foundation, spurred that first campaign to exceed its $15 million goal, raising $17.6 million by the time 1972 came to a close. As a result, EVMS gained its first accreditation and accepted its first students in 1973.

Mr. Hofheimer's remembrance service will be held in Lewis Hall, the building made possible by that first campaign that was named in honor of Mr. Lewis and his wife Frances.

hch-sissorsFor the next twenty years, Mr. Hofheimer continued to lead the fundraising efforts for EVMS as chairman and president of the EVMS Foundation. The medical school's second building, Hofheimer Hall, was named in honor of Mr. Hofheimer and his late wife, Elise.

In later years, Mr. Hofheimer continued to serve as an emeritus member of the Board of Trustees, and as honorary co-chair of the EVMS Campaign for the Next Century in the late 1990s. Mr. Hofheimer's grandson, Ted Kaufman, is a member of the EVMS Foundation's Development Committee.

The medical school awarded Mr. Hofheimer an honorary degree in 1985 in recognition of his vast contributions to the institution.

EVMS was not alone in recognizing his achievements.

Three U.S. presidents honored Hofheimer's contributions. President Lyndon Johnson appointed him metro chairman of the National Alliance of Businessmen; President Richard Nixon re-appointed him; and President Dwight Eisenhower chose him as a member of the National Cultural Center.

He was First Citizen of Norfolk in 1958; received the Distinguished Service Award of the Virginia State Chamber of Commerce in 1964; and the Navy Distinguished Public Service Award in 1983.

In 1987, the National Defense University Foundation established the Henry Clay Hofheimer Chair in Military Professionalism at the Armed Forces Staff College in Norfolk. This was the first chair approved by the foundation, which was established to serve the national War College and the Industrial College of the Armed Forces in Washington, D.C., and the Staff College in Norfolk -- the three major professional military colleges that compose the university system operated by the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

For more information, contact:

Doug Gardner, Director of News and Publications
EVMS Office of Institutional Advancement
(757) 446-6070 - This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Last Updated on Thursday, 07 January 2010 12:28
 
Unique Effort Seeks to Boost Child Immunization Rates Print E-mail
June 25, 2001

NORFOLK, VA- Residents of Grandy Village, a public housing community in Norfolk, will be the focus of a unique effort to boost child immunization rates.

An open house will be held from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m., Tuesday, June 26, at Grandy Village, 3151 Kimball Terrace, to introduce the Browning Ambassador project, which will use volunteers to spread the word about the importance of immunization and proper health care for children.

Volunteers will be on hand to assess children's immunization records, give vaccinations and offer information about free health insurance programs.

The Browning Ambassador project, a pilot program, is funded by a $250,000 anonymous gift to the Center for Pediatric Research in memory of Rudy and Olive Browning, a Virginia Beach couple killed in a plane crash March 16, 1999.

The Center for Pediatric Research is a joint program of EVMS and Children's Hospital of The King's Daughters.

In Hampton Roads, the immunization rate for children at 24 months is only 70 percent. And 40,000 children in the region are uninsured, even though many are eligible for coverage at no cost.

Last Updated on Sunday, 31 May 2009 18:20
 
The Jones Institute for Reproductive Medicine to Hold Free Seminar on Infertility in Bethesda, Maryland Print E-mail
June 11, 2001

FAIRFAX - The Jones Institute for Reproductive Medicine's Northern Virginia/D.C. Center, a program of Eastern Virginia Medical School, will conduct a free seminar on infertility at the Bethesda Marriott Suites on Tuesday, June 19, at 7:00 p.m.

Suheil J. Muasher, M.D., will be the featured speaker on causes of and treatments for infertility. Muasher is medical director for the Jones Institute's Northern Virginia/D.C. Center.

The Jones Institute is nationally and internationally recognized as a world-class medical facility for the treatment of infertility. Birthplace of the nation's first in vitro baby and home of today's foremost reproductive medicine program, the institute offers infertility treatment for women and men and conducts research in menopause, infertility, contraception and pre-implantation genetic diagnosis.

Located in the Prosperity Medical Center at 8501 Arlington Boulevard in Fairfax, the Jones Institute Northern Virginia/D.C. Center provides diagnostic and treatment services for infertility.

The Bethesda Marriott Suites Hotel is located at 6711 Democracy Boulevard in Bethesda, Md.

There is no charge to attend the seminar, but registration is required. Reservations can be made by calling the Jones Institute at 703-876-6311.

Last Updated on Sunday, 31 May 2009 18:21
 
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