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Leonard Morse : ウィキペディア英語版 | Leonard Morse
Leonard Jack Morse, MD (born 1929, Worcester, Massachusetts), a professor of clinical medicine at University of Massachusetts Medical School, is a former commissioner of public health for the city of Worcester. After the September 11 attacks in 2001, Dr. Morse came back from retirement to work on the town's bioterrorism plan at the request of the then-city manager. He also served as a president of the Worcester District Medical Society and the Massachusetts Medical Society in the past. He once served as chief of staff at St. Vincent Hospital, Worcester. Dr. Morse stepped into national fame for investigation of a 1969 outbreak of hepatitis A among the College of the Holy Cross football team members that forced the season closure after the team played just two games.〔 == Early life == Dr. Morse's early childhood was uneventful, with high school education in Worcester's Athol High School. Later he was accepted at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, from where he graduated in 1955. Dr. Morse did his residency at St. Vincent Hospital in Worcester, where he remains as faculty. During his medical school education, Morse met his future wife Maxine, a nursing college student. The couple remains married with four children.
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