[Congressional Record Volume 147, Number 14 (Thursday, February 1, 2001)]
[Senate]
[Page S1011]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
A TRIBUTE TO BERNARD R. DICK
Mr. JEFFORDS. Mr. President, I stand before you today to pay
tribute to Bernard R. Dick, a distinguished citizen of my hometown,
Rutland, Vermont, and a man who I have deeply respected and admired my
entire life. I thought highly of Bernie's talent as a lawyer, respected
immensely his service to his country, and admired his devotion to
family and community.
I ask that The Rutland Daily Herald editorial from January 8, 2001,
be included in the record as part of this tribute:
The death of Bernard R. Dick this past weekend marks the
end of another distinguished and longtime Rutland legal
career. Only recently came the deaths of two other local
attorneys of note--Bartley J. Costello and Thomas Ryan.
Bernie Dick, born in 1909 to a Rutland family, was a whiz
at baseball at Rutland High School, where he made his mark as
varsity catcher. It was a role he remembered long after he
reached adulthood, and for years he could be seen in the
audience when the RHS baseball team played home games.
His education was quite varied. After graduating from
Rutland High he went to the University of Alabama. After
college graduation in 1931 he studied law at New York
University. He was admitted to the bar in Vermont in 1937.
As with many young men of his time, Bernie Dick was swept
up in the swirl of World War II. Eventually, after Pearl
Harbor, he enlisted in the Army as a private in November
1942. Because of his law degree he was stationed in Hawaii,
where by 1946 he had reached the rank of captain.
In Hawaii he became chief of the claims division of the
central Pacific area, and for his work received the `Army
Commendation Ribbon.' The citation said, in part: `He
reviewed and made recommendations for the payment,
disallowance or collection of almost 1,000 claims. So expert
were his decisions that no claim reviewed by him and
subsequently appealed has been reversed. He demonstrated a
high degree of professional skill and efficiency.'
After his honorable discharge in 1946, Dick returned to
Rutland and resumed his practice in the law firm of Bove,
Billado and Dick. It was an active law firm in many fields,
including politics. The senior partner, Peter A. Bove, was an
active supporter of Gov. Ernest W. Gibson and U.S. Sen.
George D. Aiken. Francis Billado ultimately went to the
Legislature and was elected Vermont adjutant general, a post
he held until his death.
In legal practice Dick was the one who kept to the daily
grind, but the three partners shared ownership with some
Castleton people to run a popular summer dance hall at
Bomoseen and the Crystal Beach facility on Lake Bomoseen,
among several enterprises.
In 1947 Dick was named judge of the Rutland Municipal
Court, in line with the policy of Governor Gibson, himself a
veteran, to name veterans to public posts. The municipal
court system preceded the present system of district courts,
and there was political guessing as to who would be named by
the governor. His Army experience served him well, and Dick
served four years.
After the departure of Bove and Billado to other jobs,
Bernie Dick ran his own practice for a while, and in 1949
formed a new legal association with Donald A. Hackel and
Richard A. Hull. It was the latest step in a long and varied
Rutland legal career.
Bernie, you will be sorely missed by all those who knew you, and by
an entire community who benefitted from your knowledge, hard work and
many talents.
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