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Cardiac surgeon Barsamian to receive high honor

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  • Cardiac surgeon Barsamian to receive high honor

    Press & Sun-Bulletin, NY
    May 12 2007


    Cardiac surgeon to receive high honor


    By John Hill
    Press & Sun-Bulletin

    VESTAL -- Dr. Ernest M. Barsamian has a theory about how he was
    chosen to receive an Ellis Island Medal of Honor, an award that has
    been given to Supreme Court Justices, Nobel Prize winners,
    world-class athletes and six United States presidents.

    "Probably they make mistakes sometimes, that's all I can tell you,"
    said Barsamian, who lives with his close friend Sonig Kradjian in
    Vestal half of the year and in Boston the rest of the year.

    Barsamian and 94 others will be given the award at a ceremony on
    Ellis Island today, Barsamian's 81st birthday. The Ellis Island
    Medals of Honor are handed out each year by the National Ethnic
    Coalition of Organizations to "remarkable Americans who exemplify
    outstanding qualities in both their personal and professional lives,
    while continuing to preserve the richness of their particular
    heritage," according to the group's Web site.

    Past recipients of the award include former U.S. Secretary of State
    Henry Kissinger, boxer Muhammad Ali and entertainers Siegfried and
    Roy.

    A cardiac surgeon and emeritus professor of surgery at Harvard
    University, Barsamian was working at MIT when he built one of the
    first heart-lung machines, which are used during cardiac bypass
    surgery. Much of his career was spent working with Veteran's Affairs
    hospitals in New England, and during the 1960s he began the VA's
    first open-heart surgery program.

    Barsamian moved to the United States from Beirut, Lebanon, in 1956.
    He is of Armenian descent and was born in Syria.

    Since traveling to the United States on a boat at the age of 30,
    Barsamian has appreciated the fact that a person can work his way up
    in this country, he said.

    "You have to prove yourself," said Barsamian. "Once you do, you're
    accepted like anybody else."

    http://www.pressconnects.com/apps/pbc s.dll/article?AID=/20070512/NEWS01/705120322/1006
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