UB School of Management Names Nonprofit Board Fellowship to Honor Jordan A. Daniels

BUFFALO, N.Y. – The University at Buffalo School of Management has named its Nonprofit Board Fellowship in honor of the late Jordan A. Daniels, MBA ’22. The program is now known as the Jordan A. Daniels Nonprofit Board Fellowship.

In her time as a Nonprofit Board Fellow, Daniels served on the board of the Community Foundation for Greater Buffalo. She also supported the City of Buffalo Office of Diversity, Opportunity and Inclusion in her role as a UB Social Impact Fellow, along with many other professional and academic achievements, including work with Habitat for Humanity and as a graduate assistant in the School of Management’s Center for Leadership and Organizational Effectiveness.

“Jordan’s contagious enthusiasm had a profound effect on everyone she met,” says Carrie Gardner, director of internships and experiential learning in the UB School of Management. “She impressed others with her ability to take risks and put herself in new and, at times, uncomfortable situations, all in the name of growth and service. She was funny, smart and caring — all qualities we want in our students.”

The Jordan A. Daniels Nonprofit Board Fellowship introduces MBA students to the intrinsic value of board service, through a foundational curriculum that blends the concepts of board governance, servant leadership, and diversity and inclusion with an academic year of service as non-voting board members with local nonprofit organizations.

The fellows attend monthly board meetings and committee meetings, and are involved in projects that make a direct impact on their organizations. The program is a collaboration between the school’s Career Resource Center and its Center for Leadership and Organizational Effectiveness.

“I thank you from the bottom of our hearts for this honor, this privilege,” said Janessa Daniels, Jordan’s mother and UB’s senior associate director of financial aid, at a recent dedication ceremony. “For Jordan it was faith, family and community, and her legacy must be continued. As a member of the UB community I am overwhelmed with the support, love and prayers people have shown us over the last few months.”

The entire UB community was shocked and deeply saddened by the tragic deaths of Jordan, her sister, Jensen, and her father, Jonathan Daniels, MD, in a house fire last May. Jonathan served as associate director of admissions in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.

The UB School of Management is recognized for its emphasis on real-world learning, community and economic impact, and the global perspective of its faculty, students and alumni. The school also has been ranked by Bloomberg Businessweek, Forbes and U.S. News & World Report for the quality of its programs and the return on investment it provides its graduates. For more information about the UB School of Management, visit management.buffalo.edu.

The post UB School of Management Names Nonprofit Board Fellowship to Honor Jordan A. Daniels appeared first on Buffalo Healthy Living Magazine.

Related articles

Prosecutors Build Towards The Stormy Daniels Hush-Money Scheme

NEW YORK — Manhattan prosecutors teed up a key witness in Trump’s criminal trial on Tuesday to delve into the...

‘Frazzled’ Trump looks to be  ‘fraying a bit at the edges’ after days in court: expert



Reacting to an angry rant delivered by Donald Trump when he showed up for court on Friday morning, CNN Senior Legal Analyst Elie Honig noted the former president looked "frazzled," which could be a clue to prosecutors that they are getting to him after only three days in court.

Speaking with host Kate Bolduan after the former president had already been admitted into the courtroom, where he will tried on 34 felony counts in the Stormy Daniels hush money trial, Honig noted that Trump seemed agitated as he addressed the press and listed off a series of grievances.

"Elie, from just watching how Donald Trump was in speaking to reporters before he went in, he was — he was definitely at least projecting that he was angry and frustrated, if he wasn't actually angry and frustrated," CNN's Bolduan prompted her colleague. "If you're a prosecutor and you're watching him act the way he did this morning, what do you think? Do you already think you are winning?"

ALSO READ: A neuroscientist reveals how Trump and Biden's cognitive impairments are different

"So he definitely looked frazzled," the legal analyst replied and then added, "I think that's a good word we can use for this."

"If he's frazzled now, just wait until week three because I think what Donald Trump is learning is that it is enormously stressful to be on trial," he continued. "I've never even had, of course, the experience of being the defendant, I've just done it as a lawyer."

"It's incredibly stressful," he elaborated. "It's long days, it's excruciating. It can be boring. We saw him nodding off during jury selection and it will get to him.

"And I think, if I'm the prosecutor — I'm not so into the head games in the psychology of it all — but I do think I would see someone who's perhaps fraying a bit at the edges and, who knows, that may lead to poor strategic decisions by Donald Trump or other behavior that could be self-destructive."

Watch below or at the link.

CNN 04 19 2024 09 33 00 youtu.be

Where the Bands Are: This Week in Live Music and Concert News

Hello, music lovers. Contrary to the evidence outside your...

The Supreme Court will decide Donald Trump’s immunity case. Here are the arguments

Former President Donald Trump’s lawyers will appear April 25 before the Supreme Court to argue Trump’s case for legal immunity from prosecution. Here’s a rundown of arguments from both sides.

State finds fault in Erie County jail death

The Erie County Holding Center. Photo by Garrett Looker. The...