In the military, medical officers are promoted at the time they receive their M.D. diploma. Last week, College of Medicine graduates Hannah Prock Gibbs, Avery Johnson, Matthew Naedel and Joseph Ziebelman took their military orders and promotion pins moments after being declared physicians.
The person giving those orders onstage at the Addition Financial Arena was Richard Peppler, vice dean and associate dean for faculty and academic affairs, a retired Army Colonel with 35 years of service in the Army Reserve.
Peppler has given the military oath to UCF Physician Knights for the past eight years. He retires in June after 14 years leading medical education at the College of Medicine. This year 麻豆精品 S檚 military students are in the U.S. Navy and Air Force and will do their residency training in military hospitals across the country.
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Peppler, who attended a military prep school starting in the ninth grade, says military service taught him discipline and organization. He jokes that he still makes his bed every morning.
A lifelong medical educator, Peppler was the second person hired at the UCF College of Medicine in 2007. He holds a Ph.D. in anatomy and taught first-year students in the college 麻豆精品 S檚 state-of-the-art Anatomy Lab.
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