February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJAs the corporate fundraiser for the Salvation Army Indiana Division, Mel McMahon is responsible for seeing that their red
kettles stay full to “do the most good.”
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February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJSome people start on the ground floor. Josh Miles started in the basement, launching Miles Design LLC in his home.
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February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJFor the past few years, the Statehouse has been almost a second home for Lawren Mills.
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February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJDoran Moreland discovered political science at Indiana University. After graduating in 2000, his real education in politics
began, working for Indianapolis Mayor Bart Peterson, then U.S. Sen. Evan Bayh.
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February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJUna Osili has one foot in the global community and the other in Indianapolis. A renowned researcher on philanthropic trends,
she also is a wife and mother who serves on St. Richard’s Episcopal School board and helped her husband, Vop Osili,
campaign for public office.
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February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJIn September 2001, Chad Pittman had a nice career going as a lawyer with Bose McKinney & Evans LLP, and his wife was about
to deliver the first of their now-four children. Then 9/11 happened.
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February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJDr. Matt Priddy makes house calls. At no charge.
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February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJSherron Rogers is up at 3 a.m. to hit the gym. “It works well for me,” laughs Rogers, a self-described high-energy person
who was recently promoted to vice president of patient support services at Indiana University Health. “I try to exercise a
bit, and get my day started with work.”
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February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJIn just four years, Michelle Study-Campbell has put Reach for Youth on firm financial footing while expanding its staff and
services. The not-for-profit offers counseling to Indiana youth and their families and works with the juvenile justice system
by operating a nationally recognized teen court for non-violent first offenders.
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February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJInterior designer Nikki Sutton has her fingers in many artsy pies around town. She has designed spaces for noteworthy projects
such as Indy Reads Books on Mass Ave., The Speak Easy in Broad Ripple and companies such as ExactTarget.
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February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJAs a lawyer working in higher education to help other lawyers, Chasity Thompson believes she has the best of both worlds.
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February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJWith the surname Tucker, Travis Tucker seemed destined to work in real estate.
“I get that all the time,” said Tucker,
who is not related to the family that founded the locally headquartered F.C. Tucker Co. real estate brokerage, but instead
is a vice president at Duke Realty Corp., where he handles health care projects in the Midwest.
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February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJThe next time you’re shopping and the cashier asks you if you would like to receive e-mail notices of sales and specials,
think of Bryan Wade.
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February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJSince Sahara Williams started her own engineering firm five years ago, she’s delivered on a number of high-profile projects.
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February 2, 2013
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJCorey Wilson ensures that minority- and women-owned companies have a fair shot at doing business with Indianapolis International
Airport.
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February 4, 2012
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJWelcome to the 20th annual Forty Under 40, one of Indianapolis Business Journal's most popular and talked-about
features.
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February 4, 2012
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJWhen Matthew Conrad, 33, and his wife, Nicole, married in 2008, they already had more than enough toasters, microwaves and
other household items. Instead of registering for china and silver, they formed a not-for-profit group, Love Without Boundaries,
to combat poverty and social injustice.
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February 4, 2012
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJWade Achenbach,35, revealed his interest in business early in life: He sold bubblegum to his grade-school friends.
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February 4, 2012
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJWhen Bryan Brenner, 38, started FirstPerson Benefit Advisors 14 years ago, it was just he and a part-time assistant. Today,
he has 40 employees, annual revenue exceeding $6 million and a Keystone at the Crossing address.
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February 4, 2012
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJWhen Scott Brenton, 39, became chief operating officer of Angie's List 12 years ago, he was a sort of jack-of-all trades.
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February 4, 2012
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJSince she became general counsel for Bucher & Christian Consulting (also known as BCforward) a year ago, Anika (ah-NEE-ka)
Calloway, 36, has taken control of the firm's legal matters while learning the ins and outs of the Indianapolis-based IT and
staffing company.
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February 4, 2012
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJAaron Dixon, 37, specializes in commercial real estate law at Ice Miller LLP. "Every day I learn something," said Dixon, who
grew up near the Mississippi River in Clinton, Iowa. "One day I work on a hotel development transaction, another day office-retail."
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February 4, 2012
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJSometimes your "dream job" isn't all it's cracked up to be. That's what Derek Empie, 39, former broadcast sports professional-turned-attorney,
discovered after several years working for NBC Sports, ESPN and Turner Broadcasting.
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February 4, 2012
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJWhen Frank Esposito was 5, his grandmother bought him shares of IBM. Esposito, now 38, remembers thinking, "This is how you
make money." By eighth grade, he was writing that he wanted to be a stockbroker.
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February 4, 2012
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJAttorney Kenan Farrell, 33, specializes in intellectual property issues, especially as they are tested and stretched by the
Internet and social media.
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Same kind of Luddites who oppose I-69. Guessing their 501(c)(4) application probably sailed right through the IRS.
It hurts me that Indianapolis is turning into Chicago south with the rampant corruption that exists in our local government. Favors and money being passed back and forth like candy.
With Kravitz's huge ego I'm sure he would be confident in his ability to lower the quality of arts coverage to the mediocre level to which the STAR aspires overall. Besides, coverage of the arts is largely nonideological and requires that opinion be based on knowledge, which would disqualify the vast majority of the dwindling staff.
I wonder which of the altruistic industry/civic leaders who are promoting this plan have tied up cheap land purchase options on the "prime waterfront real estate" surrounding this future reservoir?
I'm sorry but what are Abdul's credentials for giving legal advice and opinions? Paul Ogden and Gary Welsh would be much better candidates.