Acting Temple University president JoAnne A. Epps dies after falling ill on stage

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JoAnne Epps, Temple University's acting president, dies after collapsing on stage during event

Epps, 72, was attending the Charles L. Blockson Memorial Service at the Temple Performing Arts Center when she became ill. The event was being livestreamed on the university's website.

Temple University acting president JoAnne A. Epps died Tuesday shortly after becoming ill on stage during a memorial service, officials said, describing her loss as a gut punch and struggling through emotion as they recalled her nearly four decades of service.

Epps was attending a memorial service at the university for Charles L. Blockson, a curator of a collection of African American artifacts, when she suffered what a doctor speaking at a news conference described as a "sudden episode."

Epps was taken to Temple University Hospital, where she was pronounced dead around 3:15 p.m. Tuesday, the university said. She was 72.

Ken Kaiser, senior vice president and chief operating officer at Temple, declined to speculate about Epps’ health prior to her collapse, but he called her death a "gut punch for all of us right now."

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Temple Acting President JoAnne Epps dies suddenly at 72

Temple University Acting President JoAnne Epps died suddenly Tuesday after she fell ill during a campus event. FOX 29's Jennifer Lee recently spoke to Epps and joined FOX 29 News at 5 to share more on her impact on Temple.

"We are not aware that President Epps had any health issues," Kaiser said at the news conference.

Kaiser told The Associated Press that he had known Epps for three decades.

"JoAnne was full of life, somebody who was super compassionate and truly cared about other people and had a wonderful way of pulling them all together and getting people excited about even a daunting task, making things fun," he said.

Temple University Provost Gregory Mandel choked up as he described Epps.

"We are all in deep grief and at a loss for words. To know JoAnne is to be her friend," Mandel said at the news conference.

Mandel said the university’s Board of Trustees would meet Wednesday to "put together a plan for us as we work through this transition."

Epps, Temple's former law school dean and provost, was named to the post in April following the resignation of Jason Wingard, the university's first Black president, who resigned in March after leading the 33,600-student university since July 2021.

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Kaiser said Epps started out working at Temple's bookstore 40 years ago and dedicated herself to improving the university.

The Temple Association of University Professionals labor union recalled Epps’ personal touch.

"I remember her walking into my office this April, and chatting with me one-on-one about how we could work together to make Temple a better place," union president Jeffrey Doshna said in a statement.

Gov. Josh Shapiro called her loss "heartbreaking for Philadelphia, saying she had been "a powerful force and constant ambassador for Temple University for nearly four decades."

Kaiser recalled leaving the office when the COVID-19 pandemic hit and Temple was shutting down.

"It was our last day in the office, we were together and I said, ‘OK, I’ll see you in a couple weeks,’ and I didn’t really see her for two years," Kaiser said.

He later told her that if he had known they wouldn’t see each other for two years, he would have given her a hug.

A special vigil was held at noon Wednesday in Epp's honor as students, fellow staff and the community gather at the university's bell tower.