Campaign News
Press Releases
BARRY AND VIRGINIA WEINMAN ESTABLISH DEAN’S CHAIR FUND AT UH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
$3 Million Gift Will Support Mission of John A. Burns School of Medicine
"Barry and Virginia Weinman are wonderful philanthropists who view challenges as
opportunities and then contribute both their expertise and resources to convert such
opportunities into realities. Our university and our community continue to benefit greatly
because of their understanding of many opportunities - from entrepreneurship being at the core
of business in Hawaiʻi, to recognizing a shortage of physicians, to the importance of being able
to effectively transfer university research advances to the marketplace. We are so very grateful
for their leadership in supporting UH Mānoa."
Virginia Hinshaw, Chancellor
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
(Honolulu, Hawaiʻi) —
On July 31st, the University of Hawai
ʻi Board of Regents voted to accept a gift
of $3 million from longtime UH supporters and community philanthropists Barry and Virginia
Weinman. The gift will establish the Barry and Virginia Weinman Dean’s Chair in Medicine at
the John A. Burns School of Medicine (JABSOM).
The Weinmans established the fund to inspire additional endowment gifts in support of the
University of Hawai
ʻi and JABSOM during the last year of the Centennial Campaign, signal
their support for new medical school dean, Dr. Jerris Hedges, and enhance the dean’s ability to
positively impact the future quality of health care in the state of Hawai
ʻi.
"Barry and Virginia continue to be agents for positive change at UH," said Donna Vuchinich,
president of the University of Hawai
ʻi Foundation. "This generous contribution will enable
Dean Hedges to advance the education, clinical, research and community service missions of the
medical school."
The endowment will permit the dean to take advantage of unanticipated opportunities and
address key priorities within the medical school. The funds may be used to recruit and retain
talented faculty; to support quality research and provide seed research funding, particularly
among promising junior faculty; to support initiatives which enhance the medical education
curriculum; to better address the physician and health care work force shortage in the state, and
to enhance the medical school’s role in shaping health care policy for the state of Hawai
ʻi.
"This critical funding will enhance our medical school’s ability to be a driving force in the
islands for excellence - in medical education, biomedical research, clinical practice and in health
care policy, particularly in addressing the crucial health care and workforce issues facing our
state," said Dr. Jerris Hedges, Dean of JABSOM. "We are deeply grateful to Virginia and Barry
for their continuing support and their commitment to improving health care in our state."
"Virginia and I are delighted to make this gift as part of the final phase of the university’s
Centennial Campaign," said Barry Weinman. "In my role as chair of the campaign, it is very
rewarding to see our total at $239.4 million, with just $10.6 million to go to reach our goal."
The Weinmans have been staunch supporters of UH. In 2000, they became members of the
University of Hawai
ʻi’s Founders Club when they presented the Shidler College of Business
with $1.1 million to establish the Barry and Virginia Weinman Chair of Entrepreneurship and EBusiness.
Their additional gift of $250,000 initiated the Pacific Center for Entrepreneurship and
E-Business (PACE) at the Shidler College.
In 2006, the Weinmans pledged $1 million to UH to establish the Barry and Virginia Weinman
Fellowship for ten medical students at JABSOM, to cover tuition and expenses for all four years
of medical school. Through the fellowship program, the couple is addressing the ongoing
shortage of doctors in Hawai
ʻi.
The Weinmans have requested that the recipients of the fellowships return to Hawai
ʻi after
internship and residency to practice in Hawai
ʻi, especially in rural and underserved communities.
Barry and Virginia are activists and have said, "We are concerned that Hawai
ʻi is facing a
serious medical crisis with many physicians leaving the Islands due to various obstacles, such
as prohibitively expensive malpractice insurance as a result of a lack of medical tort
reform legislation. Medicare reimbursement issues also must be addressed. The Legislature
can’t do much if anything, about Medicare, but has the power to reform escalating medical
malpractice insurance premiums, as most other states have done, to help keep doctors in Hawai
ʻi.
Hopefully the Legislature will act responsibly in the next session before much more damage is
done."
Virginia Weinman graduated from Stanford University Graduate School of Business as a Sloan
Fellow and also has a master’s in Marriage, Family & Child Counseling. She was founder and
president of Allusions.com, a California multimedia development corporation. She was a
Presidential Appointee to the Federal Advisory Committee for Trade Negotiations, and was a US
State Department delegate to the World Intellectual Property Organization in Geneva. Virginia
also co-founded Interactive Applications, and served as its CEO. The company, the first online
manufacturing software and services business, merged with Boole & Babbage and later went
public.
Barry Weinman earned a bachelor’s degree from Clarkson College of Technology and a master’s
degree from the London School of Economics/University of Southern California (USC). He
served as a US Navy officer on the USS Radford, and was a speechwriter and intelligence
briefing officer for the Commander of US Naval Forces in Europe and for the US Ambassador to
Great Britain. He held management positions with AT&T, IBM and Fairchild Semiconductor.
From 1988 to 1995, he taught in the USC Business School entrepreneurial program and lectured
on venture capital to UH MBA students. Barry has been making venture capital investments
since 1980. He co-founded Allegis Capital and Associated Venture Investors, Silicon Valley
venture capital funds which invest in early stage technology companies. He is also co-founder
and chairman of DragonBridge Capital, a merchant bank and venture capital fund, which assists
Chinese companies in the capital formation process.
The Weinmans met while Virginia was attending UH and Barry was stationed in Hawai
ʻi with
the military. They have since lived in various parts of the world and now live in Hawai
ʻi fulltime.
Barry is currently the chair of the UH Centennial Campaign Cabinet and Virginia is a
Cabinet member. Barry is also a Foundation trustee and chairs the Foundation Board’s
Investment Committee.
Left to Right: Donna Vuchinich, President and CEO, University of Hawaiʻi Foundation;
C. Scott Wo, Chair, University of Hawaiʻi Foundation Board of Trustees;
Chancellor Virginia Hinshaw, Chancellor, UH Mānoa, University of Hawaiʻi;
Barry Weinman, philanthropist and visionary; Virginia Weinman, philanthropist and visionary; President David McClain, President, UH System;
Dr. Jerris Hedges, Dean, John A. Burns School of Medicine.
Barry Weinman sharing why he and his wife are making this investment in the medical school.
Left to Right: Virginia Weinman, philanthropist and visionary; President David McClain, president, UH System;
Donna Vuchinich, President and CEO, University of Hawaiʻi Foundation;
Dr. Jerris Hedges, Dean, John A. Burns School of Medicine, UH Mānoa.
The John A. Burns School of Medicine at UH Mānoa was established in 1967 and named in
honor of Hawai
ʻi Governor John Burns, who was a vital force in establishing the school. The
medical school graduated its first four-year class in 1975 and has awarded almost 2,000 medical
degrees to date. Today, more than half of the physicians practicing in Hawaii are graduates of
the John A. Burns School of Medicine MD or residency program. For more information about
JABSOM, please visit
www.jabsom.hawaii.edu.
The University of Hawaiʻi Foundation is an independent,
university-related, nonprofit organization whose purpose is to raise private funds according to priorities determined by the
academic leadership of the University of Hawai
ʻi and approved
by the Board of Regents. Founded in 1955, the Foundation provides a full range of fund raising and alumni relations services
for all ten UH campuses. For more information, visit
www.uhf.hawaii.edu.
The Centennial Campaign is an historic private fundraising initiative to raise $250 million to
support the University of Hawai
ʻi’s commitment to our students, our community and our world.
For more information about the Centennial Campaign, please visit
www.uhf.hawaii.edu.