NAPERVILLE, Ill. —
Kokomo native Dr. Troy D. Hammond, 45, a scientist, teacher and entrepreneur, will be North Central College’s next president, only the 10th in the school’s 151-year history.
Hammond earned his Ph.D. in experimental atomic physics in 1996 from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he was mentored by Dr. David Pritchard and Nobel Laureate Dr. Wolfgang Ketterle. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in mathematics in 1989 from Milligan College, Johnson City, Tenn. Hammond continued his education at Georgia Tech, where he earned a second undergraduate degree, a bachelor of science in physics in1990, and won a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship that paved his way to the doctoral program at MIT.
Hammond’s first position after graduate school was with McKinsey & Co., a management consulting firm. Based in their Pittsburgh, Pa., and Auckland, New Zealand offices, he spent eight years serving senior executives across the globe in a broad range of industries.
In 2004, he joined Plextronics Inc., a small technology company in Pittsburgh, Pa., as vice president, where he helped build it into a global leader in printed electronics. During his time at Plextronics, he also returned to the classroom as adjunct professor of business at his undergraduate alma mater, teaching quantitative methods for business for their newly established MBA program.
Hammond and his family moved to Naperville in 2010 when he became president of the energy services business at BlueStar Energy, a private firm headquartered in Chicago. With his expertise in renewable energy technologies and sustainability, he provided commercial, industrial and institutional customers with energy efficiency services.
Local News
Kokomo man to head Illinois’ North Central College
Dr. Troy Hammond has worked in several countries.
- Local News
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“We’re all in it together”
Peru Police Chief Jonie Kennedy recently joined another elite group after she was appointed Peru police chief in April.
Out of the nearly 450 municipal police departments in the state, she’s now just one of around seven female chiefs. -
Legislature had little taste for alcohol bills
When it comes to alcohol, the 2013 legislative session may be marked more by what it didn’t do to boost booze sales than what it did.
Repeating recent history, the General Assembly turned away efforts to expand Sunday alcohol sales and allow gas stations and convenience stores to sell cold beer – the latter of which has prompted a lawsuit. -
Summer Place Car Show wheels in for its 11th year
It started with a broken down car on U.S. 31. Decades later, 500-plus cars roll in and rewind time for the 11th Annual Summer Place Car Show.
Jim Richardson founded the event as a way to raise money for his family’s foundation, A Home for Every Child. The foundation, which raises money to help children in need of adoption, is one that’s close to Richardson’s heart just as his love for the 1950s is close to his roots. -
New purpose for St. Joseph Center
For 42 years, Chris Cleveland has had a special relationship with his developmentally disabled brother, Bally. He created the Bally Foundation last year to connect people with special needs and their caregivers to services and resources within 75 miles of Indianapolis. Now Cleveland wants to create a new resource, a community for families caring for special needs members.
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Question Time: Dinner for four
We received several dozen very interesting responses Friday when we asked our readers to answer the following question: “If you could have dinner with any three people living or otherwise who would it be and why?” As a result, a few us here at the Kokomo Tribune decided to give it a try as well.
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Bullying reporting now required
Oliver Jackson — known in the music world as DjBigO317 — remembers being bullied by the kids on his high school football team for being small.
He told his coaches about it, but they brushed it off and told him to do the same.
Now, his 6-year-old daughter is battling issues with bullies at her school in Indianapolis, and he won’t let it go.
He is on a crusade to end bullying, and he’s taking the message beyond his daughter’s school. -
The bully bashers speak out
Nineteen-year-old Trenton Lewis wants to change the message hip-hop music is sending to kids across the country.
The Kokomo High School graduate envisions songs that inspire change and songs that promote safer schools instead of ones that glorify drugs and violence. He wants to push the negativity out of music. - Bullying statistics - May 19, 2013
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State to spend $2 million to clean up voter rolls
Indiana’s bloated voter registration rolls, which officials say make elections more susceptible to fraud, will soon come under more scrutiny by the state.
- Public Eye - May 19, 2013
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