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UNIVERSITY OF HAWAIʻI AWARDED $100,000
IN RE-ENTRY SCHOLARSHIPS FROM BERNARD OSHER FOUNDATION
Grants will aid Mānoa and West O’ahu students returning to complete baccalaureate degrees
(Honolulu, Hawaiʻi) — The University
of Hawai
ʻi Foundation is pleased to announce that the
Bernard Osher Foundation has awarded the University of Hawai
ʻi
at Mānoa and West O
ʻahu campuses $50,000 each in
rants as part of a national program for students returning to complete a university degree after an absence of at
least five years.
"The Osher Re-entry Scholarship Program is one of the most important initiatives of the Bernard Osher Foundation,
" said Mary Bitterman, president of the Bernard Osher Foundation. "We are delighted that the University of
Hawai
ʻi submitted proposals for re-entry scholarships,
and we hope that the students receiving these scholarships will enjoy both success and happiness in the years ahead."
UH Mānoa Chancellor Denise Konan noted, "Many of these returning students are working parents with families
to support. They face special challenges in resuming their educations after a long hiatus as they juggle the pressures
of working, studying and raising a family. This gift from the Osher Foundation will be a tremendous help to these
committed students."
For UH Mānoa, the Osher Re-entry Scholarship Program will be administered by the Bridge to Hope Program, a unit
within Student Affairs. The Bridge to Hope Program specifically addresses the needs of low-income re-entry students
and has grown from a pilot project into a nationally recognized program that provides access to college for single
parents. While the program continues to target low-income adults, it also offers support services for all re-entry
students at the UH Mānoa campus.
At the UH West O’ahu campus, where the average age of its students is 33 years, the need for financial assistance
for returning students may be even greater.
"This grant from the Osher Foundation is of tremendous value in helping to better accommodate the special needs of
our mostly non-traditional student population," said Gene Awakuni, chancellor of UH West
O
ʻahu. "A survey of UH West
O
ʻahu shows that more than 70 percent of our students
report having to provide care for dependents living with them. About 80 percent work while attending classes, with 51
percent working 36 hours or more a week."
Donna Vuchinich, president of the Foundation, said, "We thank the Bernard Osher Foundation for their investment
in Hawai
ʻi’s workforce. Privately funded student
aid such as their grant is critical to ensuring access to public higher education."
About the Bernard Osher Foundation
Founded in 1977 by Bernard Osher, the Foundation provides scholarship support to colleges and universities across the
nation and funds selected integrative medicine centers on campuses in the U.S. and in Sweden. It also supports more
than 100 lifelong learning institutes at American institutions of higher education and makes arts and humanities grants
to non-profit organizations principally in the Greater Bay Area and the State of Maine.
Hawai
ʻi resident Mary G. F. Bitterman is the
Foundation’s president.
About the University of Hawaiʻi Foundation
The University of Hawai
ʻi 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 10 UH campuses. For more information on the Foundation,
visit
www.uhf.hawaii.edu.