Regents’ Medals of Distinction
The Regents’ Medal of Distinction is awarded by the Board of Regents to Individuals of exceptional accomplishment and distinction who have made significant contributions to the university, state, region or nation or within their field of endeavor.
PDF on awarding of medals of distinction.
2019 Recipient
- Chuck Gee, co-founder and longest-serving dean of the Â鶹´«Ã½Manoa School of Travel Industry Management.
2009 Recipient
- William Kwai-Fong Yap, higher education advocate and benefactor
2008 Recipient
- Winona Kapuailohiamanonokalani Desha Beamer, kumu hula, educator, author, composer and entertainer
2007 Recipient
- Alice Augusta Ball, pioneering chemist
2006 Recipient
- Abraham Piianaia, Hawaiian cultural expert
2005 Recipient
- Eliot Deutsch, philosophy scholar
1999 Recipient
- Noel P. Kefford, former College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources dean and author of the Industry Analysis System
1997 Recipients
- George Chaplin, editor-in-chief of the Honolulu Advertiser for 26 years and honored by three nations for promoting better understanding between countries
- Elmo Hardy, evolutionary biologist and world authority on big-headed flies important in agro-ecosystems
- Hiroshi Tanaka, community advocate and education proponent instrumental in the development of Â鶹´«Ã½Hilo
- Mamoru Yamasaki, a staunch supporter of higher education during 33 years as a legislator
- Wood Zimmerman, renowned entomologist on Oahu and a union activist on Maui
1996 Recipient
- Gerald Sass, Freedom Forum executive supporting Asian studies fellowships at the University of Hawaii
1995 Recipients
- Ernest Akamine, a Â鶹´«Ã½plant physiologist who laid the foundation for handling tropical crops developed in Hawaii
- Mackay Yanagisawa, the "shogun of Hawaii sports," a player, coach, manager, club owner and creator of the Hula Bowl Classic
1994 Recipient
- Maya Angelou, a writer, educator, humanitarian and social activist hailed as one of the great figures in contemporary literature
Medal Recipient
Alice Augusta Ball
Presented posthumously, January 2007, Â鶹´«Ã½Manoa
The first woman and first African American to earn a master’s degree from the University of Hawaii (known as College of Hawaii in 1915), Alice Ball developed an injectable form of the active agents in chaulmoogra oil, which was used for 20 years to treat Hansen’s disease.
Born in Seattle in 1892, Ball moved with her family to Oahu in 1903 to accompany the ailing J. P. Ball Sr., her grandfather and a famous abolitionist and photographer. Her family moved back to Washington shortly after his death in 1904, and she continued her high school and undergraduate studies there, earning a pharmaceutical chemistry degree in 1912 and a bachelor’s degree in pharmacy in 1914 from the University of Washington.
Ball’s master’s thesis, The Chemical Constituents of the Active Principle of the Ava Root, is still a part of the holdings in Â鶹´«Ã½Manoa’s Hamilton Library. It focused on her research extracting the active ingredients from the ava (kava) root.
Hearing of her chemical skills, a U.S. public health officer asked her to try her technique on chaulmoogra oil, which had been used for centuries to treat Hansen’s disease but with unreliable results.
Ball isolated the active agents from the oil, a chemical extraction process that had thwarted researchers for years. It became known as the Ball Method. With the new treatment, no new patients were banished to Hawaii’s Kalaupapa colony between 1919 and 1923, and for the first time some Kalaupapa patients were released.
Unfortunately, Ball did not live to see the results of her research. She returned to Seattle in 1916 after becoming ill and passed away on Dec. 31 at age 24.