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One weeknight in Omaha, a high-school junior walks into a recognition ceremony not quite sure what to expect. She’s used to working hard, leading in ways that don’t always make headlines. The student who keeps projects moving, who shows up early, who makes other people better Then her name is called For a moment, the room feels smaller and brighter all at once What comes next isn’t just applause; it’s possibility, the kind that reshapes where a young person can imagine themselves going.

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Behind outcomes like that, is a quiet network of adults doing patient, unflashy work. Theresa Clark is one of those people. Arnold Clark Photography is known as one of Omaha’s most enduring portrait studios. They are best known for high-school seniors and families. The studio has always been less interested in whatever is trending this season than in what lasts ten years from now Its signature approach to portraiture is built on longevity: make images that hold their meaning over time. That belief doesn’t stop at the studio door. It shapes how the business shows up for its profession and for the city it has served for decades.
Over the years, giving back has become part of Arnold Clark Photography’s definition of success, a steady practice rather than a campaign. The studio’s contributions land in two places that matter deeply to its identity: strengthening the photography community, and investing in Omaha’s next generation

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Why Silicon Valley keeps picking Indian CEOs

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Why Silicon Valley keeps picking Indian CEOs / 0:00 5:34
Some of the world’s most powerful tech companies are run by leaders who grew up in India. Despite making up a small share of the U.S. population, Indian-born professionals are heavily represented at the top of Silicon Valley Their backgrounds combine elite engineering education, extreme competition, and constant problem-solving. This is why global…
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