FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 20, 2001
Contact: Dave Wellman, Director of Communications (304) 696-7153
Memorial Service for Paul Ambrose, M.D., is Sunday at Marshall
Paul Wesley Ambrose, M.D., a 1995 graduate of the School of Medicine
at Marshall University, will be remembered in a memorial service at 2 p.m.
Sunday at the Joan C. Edwards Performing Arts Center, President Dr. Dan
Angel announced today.
Ambrose was a passenger on American Airlines Flight 77 that crashed
into the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001, after being hijacked by terrorists.
Everyone aboard the plane, bound from Washington to Los Angeles, was killed.
Ambrose was 32.
“Dr. Ambrose loved Marshall and he loved the state of West Virginia,”
Angel said. “We’re very proud of his accomplishments and his desire to
help people. He was an outstanding representative of Marshall University,
one who was taken from us far too early. Our hearts go out to his family
and many, many friends.”
Ambrose, a 1987 graduate of Barboursville High School, was the son of
Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Paul Ambrose of Huntington. His father is chairman
of the sociology/anthropology department at Marshall, and his mother is
chief operating officer of St. Mary’s Hospital in Huntington.
Ambrose earned a B.S. degree in Zoology and Spanish Language and Literature
from Marshall in 1991, graduating magna cum laude; his M.D. from the Marshall
School of Medicine in 1995, and his M.P.H. from Harvard University in 2000.
He also studied for a year at the University of Salamanca Medical School
in Salamanca, Spain, and spent three years as a resident at Dartmouth College.
Ambrose was senior clinical advisor with the office of the surgeon general
in Washington, D.C., at the time of his death. Last year, he was named
the Luther Terry Fellow of the Association of Teachers of Preventative
Medicine.
The memorial service will include a 10- to 12-minute video, produced
by MotionMasters, that celebrates Ambrose’s life. Broadway star and Huntington
native Mark McVey will sing at the event. Other special guests, including
representatives from the surgeon general’s office and the Koop Institute,
have been invited.
Two years ago, Ambrose was instrumental in bringing former U.S. Surgeon
General C. Everett Koop to Huntington to discuss obesity and health concerns
facing Americans. Koop visited Marshall and St. Mary’s Hospital at that
time.
Dr. Robert Walker, Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs and professor
and Chairman of Community Health at Marshall, remembers Ambrose as “a joy
to be around.” Ambrose not only was a former student of Walker’s, but his
former neighbor on Gideon Road.
Ambrose has been described by his parents as a person who “loved life
and loved his friends.”
He also, Walker said, loved his work.
“He was so excited about what he was doing, so much in love with what
he was doing,” Walker said. “There are very few people in this world that
I can think of whose talents and gifts seem almost irreplaceable. He is
pretty close to that.”
Dr. Patrick Brown, associate dean for student affairs at the Marshall
School of Medicine, had known Ambrose since Ambrose’s sophomore year at
Marshall. He said Ambrose had a passion for the social side of medicine.
“Above all he was a humanitarian,” Brown said. “That is what made him
such an outstanding physician. He could identify with the common man or
woman as he could with those in the upper socioeconomic levels. He understood
people and had a magnetic personality and people were drawn to him.”
A scholarship is being established in Ambrose’s memory by the School
of Medicine, according to Linda Holmes, director of development and alumni
affairs with the School of Medicine.
Holmes said the medical school is accepting gifts for the scholarship.
They should be sent to Holmes’ attention at the medical school at 1600
Medical Center Dr., Huntington, WV, 25701. Checks should be made out to
the Marshall University Foundation, and earmarked for the School of Medicine
in memory of Dr. Paul Ambrose.
In addition to his parents, Ambrose is survived by his grandmother,
Dorothy M. Norwood of Huntington; fiancée, Bianca Angelino of Washington,
D.C., and nieces Alexandria Kyle Ambrose and Britany Miller. Ambrose was
preceded in death by his brother, Kenneth Scott Ambrose, in 1998.
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