. The Palm of Alpha Tau Omega. CTOR OF GUARDIAN LIFE Well known to New York City A T n sbut no so familiar to brothers in othersections of the country is Dr. MauriceB. Bender, medical director of theGuardian Life Insurance Company ofAmerica. A graduate of Gettysburg College,class of 1909, he studied medicine atColumbia University and was graduatedfrom that school in 1914. Two years asan intern at City Hospital in New YorkCity followed and upon completion ofhis internship he was retained by thehospital as assistant medical superin-tendent. Later he was appointed resi-dent obstetrician at the Wo


. The Palm of Alpha Tau Omega. CTOR OF GUARDIAN LIFE Well known to New York City A T n sbut no so familiar to brothers in othersections of the country is Dr. MauriceB. Bender, medical director of theGuardian Life Insurance Company ofAmerica. A graduate of Gettysburg College,class of 1909, he studied medicine atColumbia University and was graduatedfrom that school in 1914. Two years asan intern at City Hospital in New YorkCity followed and upon completion ofhis internship he was retained by thehospital as assistant medical superin-tendent. Later he was appointed resi-dent obstetrician at the Womens Hos-pital, New York City. He enlisted in the Army in April,1917, was promoted to a captaincy, andwas honorably discharged from servicein March, 1919. He then engaged in pri-vate practice in New York until 1920 when he joined the Guardian as a mem-ber of the medical department. Dr. Bender is a meml)er of the As-sociation of Life Insurance Medical Di-rectors of America and of the MedicalSection of the Ainerican Life Conven-. DR. MAURICE B. BENDER tion, on the program of which organiza-tion he has appeared frequently in dis-cussions of papers. ^ He also is a member of the New YorkGettysburg Club, the City Hospitalalumni, the Womens Hospital alumni,the Gedney Farms golf club, and a 32ndDegree Mason. He is married and liveswith his wife and daughter at 15Coolidge Ave., White Plains, N. Y. TAUS CLASH IN C. I. 0. HEARING Labor troubles in Kansas City be-tween the C. I. 0. and MontgomeryWard & Company brought two A T Qsinto action. Henry H. Foster Jr., Nebraska 33,field examiner for the National LaborRelations Board, pressed the charges ofcompany interference in a Union ofWard emploj^ees. One of the attorneysrepresenting Montgomery Ward wasCarl Enggas, Michigan 21:. 330 THE PALM, September, 1937 LEADS OHIO LEGISLATURE


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