Decrease font Decrease font
Decrease font Decrease font
Enlarge font Enlarge font
Enlarge font Enlarge font

Support Our Annual Fund

  • Learn About Campaign Thunderbird (Flash version)

The most recent version of Flash Player is needed to view this brochure. To check your system's version of Flash or to download Flash updates, follow this link.
To view the PDF version of this brochure click here.

Business can be a leading force in eradicating poverty, protecting our natural environment and advancing peace.

Better World

Dr. Ángel Cabrera

President, Thunderbird School of Global Management

As President of Thunderbird School of Global Management, Dr. Ángel Cabrera guides a truly global learning network. An outspoken advocate of corporate social responsibility and managerial professionalism, Dr. Cabrera presently serves as senior advisor to the UN Global Compact Office on Academic Affairs. In July 2007, he led an academic delegation to Geneva, Switzerland to present the Principles for Responsible Management Education (PRME) to the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and hundreds of business, civic, government and academic leaders from around the world. The principles serve as a call for business schools and academic associations to step up and help advance corporate social responsibility worldwide.

"For many years, businesses have either played a part in, or turned a blind eye to, many of the world's social and environmental problems," Cabrera said. "It is now time for corporations worldwide to be part of the solution. But in order to effect meaningful change, those corporations need talented and ethical managers who understand fully that business can be a leading force in eradicating poverty, protecting our natural environment and advancing peace…while at the same time providing value to customers and financial returns to shareholders."


Harsha Moily '97

Founder, Chairman and CEO, MokshaYug Access

If ever there were an example of global thought leadership in practice, it would be MokshaYug Access (MYA). Harsha Moily '97 founded MYA in 2005 with the belief that the rural poor in India could be active participants in a growing economy, both as customers and entrepreneurs. To help accomplish this goal, Moily and his team leverage microfinance and private equity investments to build rural infrastructures and supply chains, provide savings and insurance services and help generate economic opportunities for local entrepreneurs.

Moily credits Thunderbird faculty for giving him a global perspective on how innovative partnerships can be developed across industries to address a bundle of needs holistically. Additionally, his Thunderbird experience, both at school and through the alumni network, taught him to not just be a spectator to the disparity in wealth and opportunity in this world, but to be an active player in bridging the divide between rich and poor. Moily believes these values will help MYA accomplish its goal of assisting more than 5.3 million rural poor by the year 2012.


Jim Alling '85

Former President, Starbucks Coffee International

How does a kid from a small Midwestern town become a leader of one of the most successful companies in the world? Just ask Jim Alling '85. "It's really important to get to know someone who's not like you, and to learn from that," he says. Alling points to the different nationalities and personalities he encountered at Thunderbird as pivotal influences on the management style he employs at Starbucks Coffee International – a style that thrives on passion, a get-things-done mentality and a good dose of humility. Good leaders, he says, feel a personal responsibility for the success of their organizations, but are also humble enough to admit they don't have all the answers.

To Alling, one of the answers to Starbucks' global business success is its ability to grow great leaders. "We have access to capital, great sites and great ideas. But we don't have unlimited access to talented leaders who are ready to step up to that next level." Alling sees Thunderbird as a valuable resource in that arena. To him, a career path is not just about "getting the right paycheck or having the right title." It's about doing something that you feel is important. "You can't change the world by being overwhelmed by all the big problems," he says. "What you can do is change it for one person you work with, and you can change it in one store you represent. Then you trust that all of those little acts will add up to making a big difference."


Merle Hinrichs '65

Chairman and CEO, Global Sources

Five years after graduating from Thunderbird, Merle Hinrichs '65 founded Global Sources with one firm conviction – that free and mutually-beneficial trade between East and West could drive global economic prosperity and, ultimately, world peace. Since then, under Hinrichs' leadership, the company has been an Internet leader for international trade. They launched Asia's first B2B online marketplace in 1996, leading The Economist to recognize Hinrichs as "Asia's e-commerce king." Today, Global Sources employs more than 3,000 employees in 60 worldwide offices to support 635,000 buyers in 230 countries – further proof that doing good in the world and achieving business success are not mutually exclusive.

Despite all his business endeavors, Hinrichs is still a "good businessman doing good things" in the world. He is the founder of the Kearny Alliance, whose "Aid Through Trade" mission seeks to advance sustainable global prosperity by creating lasting jobs, increasing efficiencies in business and promoting greater cross-cultural understanding. In 1994, Hinrichs merged his passion for higher education, information and technology by spearheading the creation of a state-of-the-art library at Thunderbird. He is also a current supporter of the Thunderbird Assistance Fund for Asian Students (TAFAS) Award, offered in conjunction by the Kearny Alliance and Asian Thunderbird alumni chapters. In addition, Hinrichs is supporting a student-led initiative to renovate the historic Tower Building on the Glendale main campus.