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A FAMILY AFFAIR: RETIRING CHANCELLOR AND SISTERS HONOR PARENTS THROUGH GIFT TO KAUAʻI COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Scholarship Fund Will Benefit Students in Financial Need
"Many hands and hearts are responsible for each accomplishment."
Peggy Cha
(Lihue, Kauaʻi) —
Tsutomu Yamasaki and Fumie Yoshimori Yamasaki were only able
to attend school until the 8th grade. Perhaps that is why they valued the importance of a
good education and worked hard to ensure their daughters would have the opportunities
they never had.
In their memory, Peggy Cha, Bette Uyeda and Jean Toyama have established a
scholarship fund to benefit students in financial need at Kaua
ʻi Community College.
Preference will be given to single parents and first generation college students. Cha is the
Chancellor of Kaua
ʻi Community College who recently announced her retirement.
Tsutomu Yamasaki was born in 1914 in Makawele, Kaua
ʻi. He attended Makawele
School and then lived in Waimea where he trained to be a carpenter. He moved to
Honolulu in 1938 to work in defense projects for the military. In 1940 he returned to
Kaua
ʻi to marry Fumie Yoshimori and together they moved to Honolulu. He worked as a
carpenter in the construction industry until he died of cancer at the age of 45.
Fumie Yoshimori Yamasaki was born in 1920 in Koloa, Kaua
ʻi. She attended Koloa
School and then studied sewing at the Waimea Sewing School. After moving to
Honolulu with her husband, she worked at various manufacturing companies to support
the family. In 1958 she and her husband opened their own dress shop called "Bette
Jean’s" on King Street. In 1963 she bought and opened a second shop on Hotel Street in
the downtown area.
As a small business owner, Fumie designed all the dresses for her shop, produced the
patterns and supervised the cutting and sewing of the garments. After her husband passed
away, she also carried out some of the financial responsibilities of running the business
including doing the payroll and paying appropriate taxes. In the early 1970s, when all
her daughters had completed their education and were married and settled, Fumie sold
her dress shops and began working at various manufacturing companies as a pattern
maker and factory supervisor until her retirement in 1982.
A special dinner celebration, entitled "Growing a Legacy" will be held August 28, 2008
at the Kaua
ʻi Marriott Resort and Beach Club to reflect on Peggy’s ten years as
Chancellor and her vision for the college. Proceeds will benefit the fund established by
Peggy and her sisters to honor their parents in perpetuity. "Since all three of us received
scholarships and financial aid while attending college, we wanted to give others the same
opportunity to pursue their educational goals," said Cha.
Dr. Peggy Cha was appointed Chancellor of Kaua
ʻi Community College in 1998 and has
served in the University of Hawai
ʻi system for more than 30 years. During her tenure as
Chancellor, the college has become a University Center and now brings more than 30
baccalaureate and graduate programs within the reach of Kaua
ʻi residents. Additional
accomplishments include founding the Academy for Future Nurses, developing Student
Learning Outcomes, establishing a summer internship program and enhancing
Electronics to a transfer level program, securing funding for renovations for the culinary
arts facility and the new "One Step Center," and helping to establish the "Bridge to
Hope" program to assist struggling single parents.
"She is a Student Services Chancellor," said Kaua
ʻi Community College Dean of Student
Services Earl Nishiguchi. "She is all about the students and it has been an honor and a
pleasure to work with her."
Jean Yamasaki Toyama has taught French at the University of Hawai
ʻi-Mānoa for more
than 30 years and received the Regents’ Medal for Excellence in Teaching in 2000. For
the last eight years she has also served as Interim Associate Dean of the College of
Languages, Linguistics and Literature. In addition to her scholarly work, she enjoys
creative writing and has had her poetry and fiction appear in local publications such as
"Bamboo Ridge."
Bette Yamasaki Uyeda retired from the University of Hawai
ʻi-Mānoa after 27 years of
service as a financial aids and student academic adviser. Since her retirement, she has
worked at Palama Settlement as fund development administrator and applied the
knowledge and skills she developed through her work at the university to the non-profit
sector.
"It’s interesting that we’re all UH alumni and worked for the UH system," said Cha. "In
fact, two of our husbands are UH alumni and also worked for the UH. The university has
truly been an important part of our family."
For more information about the Growing a Legacy event, contact Shirley Tani at
808.245.8377.
Attending the recent gift signing ceremony are, left to right, Peggy Cha, Bette Uyeda,
Jean Toyama and UH Foundation president Donna Vuchinich.
Kauaʻi Community College
is situated on the island of Kaua
ʻi, the northernmost and
oldest of the major Hawaiian islands. It is a two-year public community college and the
only college on the island. Its 200-acre campus is located just west of the major town of
Lihue. Kaua
ʻi Community College is committed to the students
and community that it serves.
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 10 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.