
The 411: At the rate he’s going, he’ll retire at 35Īt 14, Tarik Assagai could disassemble and reassemble any IBM computer at 19, he was running a business. Who knows what lies ahead? At 21, she’s got plenty of time to make it happen. I hope it gets radio play, or that people will at least buy enough of my CDs (sold online) so I can raise enough money to make another recording, she says. Although she loves all kinds of music, counting opera great Eileen Farrell and jazz legend Ella Fitzgerald among her idols, Rachel Marie’s new CD is pure pop.

A fixture on the local scene for years&emdash she’s been on stage since she was a tot and was performing with Capitol Opera by age 13&emdash the Granite Bay High grad continued her vocal studies at Brigham Young, where she earned a bachelor’s in music. The next thing I need is to get signed to a record label, says the Roseville-based singer.
#40 under 40 sacramento full
• Rachel Marie, 21įresh out of a Nashville recording studio, debut CD in hand, Rachel Marie is full of dreams. I feel I lead a more enriched life by being surrounded by these remarkable women, she says. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, Beazizo feels she gets more from her patients than she gives. Although she recently was honored as a Local Hero by the Susan G. 1 priority is the patient, and we hand-pick staff members who are able to connect well with them. She has a background in oncology nursing, so it seemed a natural next step for her to take the helm as manager of the Breast Health Center when it opened in 2001, Beazizo says. We try and take the fear out of the process. In working with breast cancer patients at Sutter Roseville Medical Center, Beazizo hopes to provide a more personal experience instead of a cattle call, she says. The 411: Helping take the fear out of breast cancerĮmpathy is something you’re born with, says Amy Beazizo, R.N., and those who know her say she’s empathy personified. With clothes, you might have to be a certain age or a certain size, but everybody can express themselves with a fun pair of shoes.Ĭlinical manager and breast health nurse, Sutter Cancer Center My customers are anywhere from 16 to 65, he says. Although his fun, funky shoes are for the hip and trendy, Schwartz says hipness has nothing to do with age. There wasn’t anyplace in Sacramento to buy contemporary, high-fashion shoes, so I felt it was time, says Schwartz, who opened Shoefly’s midtown store in 2000 and a second location in Granite Bay last year.

After getting an accounting degree, he realized that crunching numbers for a living wouldn’t make him a happy camper (I wanted to be around people) and decided to put his love of sales and fashion together in the form of a business. When I was a kid, my friends and I would go to San Francisco for clothes and shoes, says Schwartz. Noah Schwartz grew up in Sacramento, but his fashion sense has always been Big City. The 411: Bringing big-city shoes to Sacramento In the following pages, we introduce you to 40 locals, all younger than 40, who are making their mark. It takes a diverse mix of talented people to make a city or region run.
