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Generous Families Create “Toyamasaki” Scholarship Fund

February 3, 2009
Group Photo

Students wishing to transfer to UH Mānoa from any of the seven community colleges in the University of Hawai'i system are eligible to get a boost from an endowed scholarship fund established by three local families known for their contributions to education.

"Our three families have always valued education. We just wanted to do our part to help students who have aspirations and are willing to work hard to realize them. It's important to support the community colleges as well as UH Mānoa." - Jean Yamasaki Toyama 

Jean Yamasaki Toyama has spent more than 40 years sharing her gifts as a respected teacher and UH professor, earning the prestigious Regents Excellence in Teaching Award in 2000 and the gratitude and respect of thousands of students. She is a UH alumna, a French professor, and until recently, the Associate Dean of the College of Languages, Linguistics and Literature. She and her husband, Dennis, decided recently to establish a charitable remainder trust, naming the university as the beneficiary.

Dennis' sister, Hideko Masaki, was a beloved teacher for 33 years. After the death of her husband, Harry Masaki, and her retirement, she devoted much of her time to volunteer work. She and her husband had established the Halawa Hills Corporation many decades before and it was their wish to return some of its benefits to the community. Tragically, just weeks after establishing a scholarship endowment at UH in October, she was killed in a car accident in Honolulu.

Last July, Jean Yamasaki Toyama and her sisters, Bette Uyeda and Peggy Cha established another scholarship fund at Kaua'i Community College in honor of their parents, who understood the importance of a good education and worked hard all their lives to ensure their daughters would have the opportunities they never had. Noted educators in their own right, Bette Uyeda, a UH alumna, retired from the University of Hawai'i-Mānoa after 27 years of service as a financial aids and student academic adviser. Peggy Cha, also a UH graduate, recently retired as Chancellor of Kaua'i Community College after 30 years of service in the UH system.

Scholarship recipients must be full-time undergraduate students transferring from any campus of the University of Hawai'i Community College System to the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa in any area of study and must have a cumulative grade point average of 3.0 or above. Preference will be given to graduates of a Hawai'i high school.

"We all got a kick out of the name ToYaMasaki," she added. "It combined all three families in a very economical way."


If you would like to learn how you can support UH students and programs like this, please contact us at 808 376-7800 or send us a message.