Catherine Schweikert
Doctor
Dr. Catherine Schweikert is a psychophysiologist
whose research focuses on how compassion affects
our physiology. As a physician assistant in emergency
rooms and urgent care offices for over 23 years, she
has experienced difficulty maintaining compassion.
This inspired her to get a Ph.D., and her dissertation
was on compassion and physiology in health workers.
She later attended Stanford University’s Center for
Compassion and Altruism Research and Education
(CCARE) and created a program to help healthcare
workers and others create a sustainable compassion
practice that avoids the pitfalls of empathetic
overwhelm. Dr. Schweikert has delivered lectures and
presentations for audiences such as Sutter Medical
Group, the Veterans Administration, Sacramento State
University, UC Davis, Kaiser Permanente, My Sister’s
House, and the Family Justice System.
Coco Xu
Student
Coco Xu is a junior boarding student from Shanghai,
China. She loves playing basketball and competing
in track and field and is the head of two clubs at
Catalina—Cougars in STEM and Alegria (Smile Fund),
which focuses on philanthropy by organizing bake
sales to raise funds for children in Colombia who
require surgery for cleft lips. Additionally, she is in
Reverb, which is one of Catalina’s performing arts
clubs (the B. R.E.A.L. clubs).
Laura Rubio
Consultant to the UN
Laura G. Rubio studied international relations in
Mexico City and earned her master of arts in East
Asian studies at the University of Southern California
and her Ph.D. in history of forced migration at the
University of Manchester in the United Kingdom.
She has written three books and several articles
on forced migration that have been published in
academic journals and edited volumes in English
and Spanish. She was a full-time professor at the
Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM)
for 10 years and has been a consultant for the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR) for various projects focused on internally
displaced persons in Mexico and Latin America. She
has also consulted for Refugees International and
for Comisión Mexicana de Defensa y Promoción
de Derechos Humanos (the Mexican Commission
for the Defense and Promotion of Human Rights).
She currently heads a non-for-profit organization
in Mexico dedicated to development projects in the
state of Hidalgo.
Lucy Yu
Assistant
Lucy went to attend the
Collins College of Hospitality Management at Cal
Poly Pomona. Lucy became involved in Greek life
and, as a sophomore, served as her sorority’s vice
president. She leaped into student government as
a junior and was elected student body president in
her senior year. As president she managed a $30
million budget and blazed a new path as she led
30,000 students through a pandemic. Lucy started
her professional life working for the InterContinental
in downtown Los Angeles. She was soon recruited to
work for the president of Lucasfilm as her executive
assistant, which led her to her current job working
Meet the Speakers
for the president of CBS News. Lucy loves living in
Los Angeles, being immersed in the entertainment
industry, attending countless events, and, of course,
always meeting new and interesting people. Of
everything that Lucy has accomplished, the thing
she’s most proud of is having been a Santa Catalina
lifer!
Mike Marotta
Musician
Mike and Anna live in Monterey, California. As the junior class
president, Anna actively participates in the community
through performing arts, including theatre and
ecco!, as well as clubs such as the National Honor
Society. One of her favorite ways to spend her free
time is with her family. Her grandfather, Mike Marotta
Jr., is an accomplished musician and well-liked
businessman in the Monterey area. He specializes in
playing the accordion and loves to share his passion
for music with others. Mike was introduced to the
accordion by his grandfather, Aurthur Marotta, and
continued to play along with his father, Mike Marotta
Sr., who is remembered as the honorary “Mayor of
Alvarado Street.” He continues to keep the musical
traditions alive within his family and community by
playing and volunteering with various organizations
around the Monterey Peninsula. Mike and his wife
of 46 years, Laurel, have three children and eight
grandchildren.