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Michael Bialoguski : ウィキペディア英語版 | Michael Bialoguski
Michael Bialoguski (19 March 191729 July 1984) was a Polish-Australian medical practitioner, musician and intelligence agent, who played a significant part in the 1954 Petrov Affair. ==Biography== Michael Bialoguski was born to Polish parents in 1917 in Kiev, then part of the Russian Empire and now the capital of Ukraine. When he was three years old, Bolshevik forces were on the point of shooting him and his entire family, when his father bribed them with his gold watch; they were forced to flee immediately, and made their way to Wilno, Poland (now Vilnius, Lithuania).〔(George Biro, Jim Leavesley, ''Flies in the Ointment: Medical Quacks, Quirks and Oddities'' )〕 He attended school there, studied violin at the Vilnius Conservatorium,〔(''Watertown Daily Times'', 12 May 1969 )〕 receiving a diploma in 1935,〔 and commenced a course in medicine at the Stefan Batory University. He had an early short-lived marriage.〔(Australian Dictionary of Biography )〕 He was twice jailed by the invading German forces in 1939. It was at this time that he had his first experience of conducting an orchestra, that of a musical comedy troupe.〔 In 1941, he travelled across the Soviet Union by train to Vladivostok, on to Japan, departing ostensibly for Curaçao (then part of the Netherlands Antilles in the Caribbean) but using forged papers to come instead to Sydney, where he worked as a violinist and music arranger. He joined the Australian Army, served as an orderly at an army hospital, and was discharged to continue his medical studies at the University of Sydney. He married again in 1943, was naturalised in 1947, the same year in which he qualified as a doctor, and he practised as a general practitioner from 1948, initially in Thirroul and later in Macquarie Street, Sydney.〔〔
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