UCLAAnderson | UCLA Anderson MBA Students Earn Leadership Distinction @UCLAAnderson | Uploaded March 2024 | Updated October 2024, 11 hours ago.
UCLA Anderson’s annual John Wooden Global Leadership Award gala supports fellowships for UCLA Anderson students who embody Coach Wooden’s leadership ideals and commitment to improving the lives of others.
U.S. Navy Captain Ryan Hayes (EMBA ’24) has overseen deployment after deployment. More than any multibillion-dollar aircraft carrier, helicopter fleet or weapons system, Hayes considers the navy’s people its most valuable asset. He personally stayed by the side of a sailor who lost his wife to suicide and arranged for his relocation closer to family, putting the sailor on a path to continued success in the military.
As president of the UCLA Anderson Student Association, Juhie Rathor (FTMBA ’24) values listening and working through differences to achieve common goals. Rathor ran influencer marketing for Healthline, which distributes health information as a public service. She stood by breast cancer influencers through sickness, and made a difference for her LGBTQ followers by giving them confidence to come out. Her team’s inspirational messages even prevented a suicide.
Tiffany Lin (FEMBA ’24) is a senior solution engineer at Salesforce and council president to more than 700 UCLA Anderson FEMBA students. She once was an international concert violinist who also taught violin and piano to children on the autism spectrum. She learned about leading people by listening to how they want to be led.
Andy Cofino (FEMBA ’25) was director of UCLA’s LGBTQ Center for five years and is now assistant vice president for diversity, belonging, and well-being at Princeton University. As a man of transgender experience, he is familiar with the discrimination, harassment and threat of violence LGBTQ students face, and he uses his knowledge for good every day.
Learn more about UCLA Anderson’s John Wooden Global Leadership Fellows:
https://www.anderson.ucla.edu/news-and-events/signature-events/john-wooden-global-leadership-awards/fellows
#WoodenAwards #johnwooden #UCLA
UCLA Anderson’s annual John Wooden Global Leadership Award gala supports fellowships for UCLA Anderson students who embody Coach Wooden’s leadership ideals and commitment to improving the lives of others.
U.S. Navy Captain Ryan Hayes (EMBA ’24) has overseen deployment after deployment. More than any multibillion-dollar aircraft carrier, helicopter fleet or weapons system, Hayes considers the navy’s people its most valuable asset. He personally stayed by the side of a sailor who lost his wife to suicide and arranged for his relocation closer to family, putting the sailor on a path to continued success in the military.
As president of the UCLA Anderson Student Association, Juhie Rathor (FTMBA ’24) values listening and working through differences to achieve common goals. Rathor ran influencer marketing for Healthline, which distributes health information as a public service. She stood by breast cancer influencers through sickness, and made a difference for her LGBTQ followers by giving them confidence to come out. Her team’s inspirational messages even prevented a suicide.
Tiffany Lin (FEMBA ’24) is a senior solution engineer at Salesforce and council president to more than 700 UCLA Anderson FEMBA students. She once was an international concert violinist who also taught violin and piano to children on the autism spectrum. She learned about leading people by listening to how they want to be led.
Andy Cofino (FEMBA ’25) was director of UCLA’s LGBTQ Center for five years and is now assistant vice president for diversity, belonging, and well-being at Princeton University. As a man of transgender experience, he is familiar with the discrimination, harassment and threat of violence LGBTQ students face, and he uses his knowledge for good every day.
Learn more about UCLA Anderson’s John Wooden Global Leadership Fellows:
https://www.anderson.ucla.edu/news-and-events/signature-events/john-wooden-global-leadership-awards/fellows
#WoodenAwards #johnwooden #UCLA