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October 29, 2012
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Dr. April P'Pool, a pediatrician, has joined Eskenazi Medical Group and Wishard Health Services as part of Cottage Corner Health Center. P'Pool holds a bachelor’s in biology from Wheaton College. She received her medical degree from the Indiana University School of Medicine.

Dr. Ashesh P. Shah, an abdominal transplant surgeon, has joined the transplant team at Indiana University Health. Shah received his medical degree and residency training at the Indiana University School of Medicine.

Dr. Saurabh Agrawal, a transplant hepatologist, also has joined the transplant team at IU Health. Agrawal, who got his medical degree from the Federal University of Paraiba in Brazil, received his residency training at Cleveland Clinic.

St. Vincent Indianapolis Hospital appointed Dr. George Shade Jr. as chief medical officer. Shade comes to St. Vincent from Detroit Medical Center, where he was chief quality officer. He has also served as an instructor at Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit, chairman of the state of Michigan Board of Medicine, and vice president of medical affairs at Sinai-Grace Hospital in Detroit. Shade replaces Dr. Daniel LeGrand, who returned to full-time private practice as a vascular surgeon at the St. Vincent Medical Group.

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  1. these guys only skill was to steal from other's hard earned savings.

  2. I voted for him last time and it WAS the LAST time. He needed to to quit running around the world on useless trips, and giving our $$ away to sports teams. I'll vote for anyone but Ballard next time. BTW...we gave $40M to the Pacers and cannot even watch the games on TV.

  3. For the people concerned about traffic, you should know that mixed-use projects (like the one being proposed), actually allows for and encourages more people to walk and bike, thereby mitigating additional automobile traffic. If we continue to design and build suburban-type projects in the City (i.e. automobile-oriented projects), we are not offering anything different from what the suburbs offer, which means we will continue to lose jobs/people to the suburbs. The reason Broad Ripple is somewhat successful today is that people want to live in a place that offers the convenience of being able to walk/bike to restaurants, retail, nightlife, the Monon, etc. Why would you not want to support a project that is complimentary to what already makes the area desirable? The real argument with this project should be its lack-luster design and layout, not the density.

  4. It is unfortunate that there is a perception that celebrities validate an event. The Indy 500 stands on its own, especially for those coming in from out of town. It was always so disturbing to read the gushing descriptions of Ashley Judd threaded throughout the local coverage. Very happy that era is at an end.

  5. Good ole' Obamacare. Thanks liberals and those who didn't bother to vote.

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