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Authority record
Blacher, Richard S.
NA0054 · Person

Richard S. Blacher, MD was a psychiatrist on the staff at Mount Sinai Hospital from 1955-1974. He also served in the Dept. of Student Affairs of the new Mount Sinai School of Medicine.

Boas, Norman F.
NA0061 · Person

Ernst Boas, MD was born in 1891. He attended the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, graduating in 1914. He was an Intern on the Medical Service at The Mount Sinai Hospital until 1916, and returned to Mount Sinai in 1928, where he remained on staff in the Department of Medicine until he reached Consulting status in 1951. He was well known in the field of cardiology. He died March 9, 1955.

Braus, Leon
NA0068 · Person · 1891-1955

Leon Braus (later known as A. Leon Braus) was born in 1891. He received the A.B. (1913) and LL. B. (1915) degrees from Columbia University. He served as the Chief Admitting Officer of Base Hospital No. 3, A.E.F. during its service at the Vauclaire monastery in Montpon, France from 1918-19. This was the unit affiliated with The Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. When he returned home from the war, he became an art dealer and later worked in real estate. He was married to Irene Samuelson and had one son. Mr. Braus died in 1955.

NA0050 · Person · 1902-1978

Edgar Milton Bick, MD (1902-1978) was on the staff of The Mount Sinai Hospital for many years. A 1927 graduate of the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, he did his early training at the Hospital of the N.Y. Society for the Relief of the Ruptured and Crippled, now known as the Hospital for Special Surgery. He joined the Mount Sinai staff in the Orthopaedic clinic in 1930, and received an in-patient appointment in 1934. He served in the Mount Sinai affiliated unit in World War II, the United States Army 3rd General Hospital, and was chief of the orthopedic work there. He headed Mount Sinai's affiliation with the Blythedale Children's Hospital starting in 1949 and also later had an appointment with St. Clare's Hospital. Bick's early research work focused on soft tissue and bone tumors and the pathology and clinical study of osteogenesis of human vertebrae. Later he made notable contributions to the management of fractures and orthopedic disabilities in the aged. The departmental scholar -- the Orthopaedics Library was named for him in 1971 - Bick was best known for his work on the history of orthopaedics. His definitive texts, Source Book of Orthopaedics (1937) and Classics of Orthopaedics, remain the standard works on the subject. Bick remained at Mount Sinai until his death in 1978, by which time he was a Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon and Emeritus Clinical Professor of Orthopaedics.

Bottone, Edward J.
NA0065 · Person

Edward J. Bottone, Ph.D. began work at Mount Sinai Hospital in 1959 in the Microbiology laboratory. He earned his Ph.D. in Microbiology from St. John's University while working at Mount Sinai and was later named Director of Microbiology and a Professor of Medicine, Infectious Diseases. Dr. Bottone authored many articles and book chapters, and edited or wrote five books. His area of research is focused on analyzing clinically derived bacterial and fungal isolates with unusual clinical correlations.