E i l . D E It Americans y d . XIII — No. 3 3 Largest Weekly for Public State y Expec Many Inconsistencies C K n vol. ^ Employees Tuesday, April 29, 1 9 5 2 See Page 3 Price Five Cents DON'T REPEAT THIS Ail the Newsmen !^ee I t : COP EISENHOWER-WARREN » DEMOCRATS KEFAUVER, STEVENSON, CONFUSION NEWSWRITERS who cover pol- definitely that he was a serious itics for the major New York dai- candidate. Opinion Questionnaire lies believe that the strongest This column addressed an opinpresidential candidate of the Republicans is, by a long margin, ion questionnaire to the political General Eisenhower, both in the newswriters of t h e State, who are close to public sentiment in their State and in the nation. The areas. T h e questionnaire was strongest GOP combination of worded not to elicit the personal presidential and vice-presidential preferences of the reporters but candidates, they add, would be to gauge their opinion on the relative strength of the candidates. Eisenhower and Warren. T h e questions and the tallies On the Democratic side, the ex- were: isting uncertainties are reflected 1. Which of the following prosi n the views of the newsmen. (Continued on page €) With many differences of opinion, they give their largest vote to Estes Kefauver as the man who could make the strongest race nation-wide, with Adlai Stevenson second. In New York State, they find that James A. Farley would be a potent candidate, although not in the nation. As for the strongest combination Of Democratic presidential and vice-presidential candidates, no discernible trend is noticeable among the newsmen. The names that come up most frequently as combinations are Kefauver and It will probably be the biggest Stevenson, Stevenson and K e f a u - and finest art show ever put on ver, Kefauver and P. D. R., Jr. But nearly every important name by civil service talent. Arrangements are nearly comnow contending in the race is plete for the panorama of civil mentioned by the writers. On the Democratic side, too, the service art being planned by the exit of Governor Stevenson from Metropolitan Regional Conference the race and the entrance of W. of the Civil Service Employees Averell Harriman have obviously Association. Artists living in and further confused the picture. It around the New York City metroappears that if Stevenson had not politan area are urged tp submit announced that he "couldn't" their art works. The show will be held June 4 run, he might have fared better from the newsmen. This conclu- through 15 in the lovely surroundsion is reached from the fact ings of the Riverside Museum, at t h a t the first day's returns, prior Riverside Drive and 103rd Street, to Stevenson's announcement, had NYC. a larger percentage of votes for Exhibits are already being rehim. The votes for Harriman ceived. Those who sent letters to came in after it was known fairly Art Show Chairman Henry S h e m - Dewey IssuesBifing Memo With Veto of Bill That WouldTakeAwayPensions ALBANY, April 28—Gov. Dewey issued a sharp memorandum with his veto of a bill which would have taken away the pensions of dismissed civil service employees or upon conviction of misconduct. All employee organizations have fought this measure as one depriving public aides of their rights. The Governor took the same view as the employees, adding that he questioned its constitutionality, that he opposed special penalties for public aides, and that the bill was badly drafted. Mr. Dewey's full memorandum, which is deemed by the employees to have wide significance, follows: "This bill would deny retirement benefits to any public o f ficer or employee found guilty of certain criminal acts or against whom a judgment is rendered in specified civil actions. It would also apply to an officer or e m ployee who refuses to waive his constitutional immunity when called to testify before a grand jury. It is applicable to employees presently in service and to those who have already retired. "Under existing law a person who is dismissed prior to his retirement is ineligible for retirement or pension benefits. T o this extent the bill adds nothing to existing law. "It would, however, weaken existing law by granting 'automatic retirement' to an officer or e m ployee who is eligible to retire, and is dismissed for misconduct or unsatisfactory service. Almost all of our important retirement systems require a minimum waiting period before retirement becomes effective. These restrictions have been carefully worked out through the years to prevent collusive and deathbed retirements. The bill would wipe away these careful limitations. Under the provisions of the State Constitution (Article V, Section 7) there is question whether once removed, they can later be reasserted. Litigation on this subject is presently before the courts. (Gorman v. City of New York.) In any event an 'automatic retirement' pro- • vision in such cases would c o n stitute a most undesirable weakening of the present law. Hits Retired Persons "The most sweeping change made by the bill would be to deprive persons already retired of their rights to pensions vmder certain conditions. To the extent that these provisions attempt to take away rights to pensions of persons already retired, they are of questionable constitutionality. (Roddy v. Valentine, 268 N. Y. 228.) To the extent that they a t tempt to impose a penalty for refusal to waive immunity, in addition to that specified in the State Constitution, other fundamental constitutional problems would be posed. The Constitution provides: 'No person shall . . . be c o m pelled in any criminal case to' be a witness against himself^ (Continued on page 16) Civil Service Art Show in N Y C Promises to Be Most Brilliant Event of Its Kind in will receive replies this week. Those desiring to enter their art works may bring theni in person or ship t h e m to the Civil Service Employees Association office. State Office Building, Room 905, 80 Center Street, New York City. Last day for submitting exhibits is Thursday, May 27, and art works submitted on that day must be brought between 12 noon and 8 p.m!., directly to the Riverside Museum. Categories Categories of art work included in the show are: painting (oil, water color, tempera, casein); sculpture and w o o d carving; graphic arts; ceramics; art metalwork. A distinguished array of artists and art critics is being assembled to judge the exhibit. Many prizes will be awarded. Distinguished Luminaries The show's opening to the public on Wednesday, June 4, will be a distinguished event, with many luminaries of the art world expected to attend. Persons seeking more information and the complete rules m a y communicate with Mr. Shemin through the CSEA oflace at 80 Center Street. Other members of the Art Show committee are Philip Wechsler, K e n n e t h Valentine, Edith Pruchthendler, and Mrs. Helen C. Peterson. The Art Show committee is meeting this week to decide (1) whether wives and husbands of civil service employees should be permitted to enter. The consensus is that they should, since this Is a "family affair"; (2) the area to be covered (probably the five counties of New York City, Nassau, Suflfolk, Westchester, and Rockland); and whether or not NYC employees should be eligible (the feeling at present is that employees of the City should not be eligible, since they are so large a group as to deserve a separate show of their own). Yates County Employees Organizing PENN YAN, April 28—Employees of Yates County, including all village and school district aides, are planning to organize a c h a p ter of the Civil Service Employees Association. All employees are invited to a t tend a meeting scheduled for Thursday. May 1, 8 p.m. at t h e Yates County Court House, P e n a Yan, N. Y. Two items are on the agenda: 1. Explanation of the work of the Civil Service Employees Association; 2. Discussion of the State Einployees Retirement System. Speakers will be Laurence J. Hollister and Jack Kurtzman, CSEA field representatives; and Miss Elizabeth Morse, president of the Steuben chapter. Invited speakers also include Assemblyman Vernon W. Blodgett and Harry E. Weeks, chairman of t h e Board of Supervisors of Yates County. Open to Questions All those present will be given an opportunity to ask questions concerning salaries, retirement, the civil ser/ice law, work rules^ the Association, and any employee problem. The temporary committee h a n dling the event consists of Jane Corcoran, County Welfare: William Palvey,-County Welfare; William Glen, County Director, Veterans Service Agency. Tri-Chapter Dinner in Long Island Attracts 3 0 0 LAKE RONKONKOMA, April 28 Central Islip State Hospital chapter, Kings Park State Hospital chapter, and Pilgrim State Hospital chapter held their first joint annual dinner-dance at Lakeview Inn, Lake Ronkonkoma, Saturday, April 19. More than 300 persons attended, enjoying a chicken dinner and dancing to the music of A1 McGuire's orchestra. Guests at the head table were Mrs. Ralph Currier, who acted as toastmlstress; vice-presidents of the Association J. Allyn Stearns and Joseph F. Feily; Ralph Currier; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Purtell; Mr. and Mrs. Eiwood DeGraw; Arnold Moses, president of ^alviN, a stenographer in th* Oiv. ««at«r, b«€oin«i m pvrsea of dUtiactie* at th* James E. Christian Brooklyn State Hospital chapter; i chopter, CSEA, Heoltli DeportaiMt, reaches its f o a l ef SOO Members. Rlt« Is shews as she was pre* and Charles R. Culyer, Association riH tfct »00th nfvb«r»hip h ^ 0«re«liM trew. MMiliersbip < b « l n i M l l f f t ) . while Ch«rlel«e field representative. I QammoQO, pr«4(ieQt. «a<l William Greenauer, director. DPW District No. 10 chapter. William Morrisey. president, NY. District Parole chapter, and James K a v a naugh, Long Island State Park chapter, were introduced. Prospect of Reaching 60,000 Mr. Stearns spoke for Association president Jesse B. McFarland, and congratulated the chapters o n the interest of their members. He reported on the membership of the Association, now at an all-time high, and the prospects of reaching a goal of 60,000 members this year. T h e presidents of the three chapters comprised the committee on arrangements: Tom Purtcll of Central IsUp; Ralph Currier of Pilgrim; and ElwooU D e f r a y of Kings CIVIL Page Two SERVICE Tuesday, April 29, 19:^2 LEADER $ 3 0 0 Westchester County THESE ARE THE QUESTIONS Pay Rise Is Required, Assn. Salary Survey Indicates r J QUESTIONS SUBMITTED TO BUDGET DIRECTOR ARTHUR G. SAMMARCO ON APRIL 17, BY THE WESTCHESTER COUNTY COMPETITIVE CIVIL SERVICE ASSOCIATION, REGARDING THE BARRINGTON SALARY SURVEY and $550 in the base salary of I. It appears that except for interviewing and consultation every employee and a net increase work by Barrington, the CoUnty Budget and Personnel Offices are in take-home pay of at least $300. doin^ the Survey i.e., point evaluating, establishing salary levels and The salary expert from Albany a certain amount of Uic interviewing, under over-all direction of the Headquarters of The Civil Service Budget Office. Q. True? Employees Association added that these findings were only tentative, II. It is understood the Personnel Office determined the lists of as the analysis of Westchester titles for which Position Descriptions were obtained in each departsalaries with those of comparable ment. It has been stated that only about 200 such Position Descripmunicipal and business units is tions have been requested for positions "for which no adequate still incomplete. He stated that the overall adjustment Indicated descriptions are on record." However, it is known that many posiwas merely a basic one and that tions included are ones where there have been changes of duties. Q. How did the in the case of individual positions (Ed. Note: There are about 700 County titles.) where there had been Increased Personnel Office determine, without consultation with the departduties or responsibilities there ments, which positions needed review inasmuch as the departments must be larger Increases. These change the duties of positions and in the majority of cases the would be based on studies of the Personnel Office would not know? individual position.s. HI. It is understood from statements by Barrington representaHigher E. C. Point Value tives that their contract only covers the descriptions for positions Mr. Galpin stated also that after ALBANY, April 28 — Fifty-two^J-unity to benefit from the Empire the merger of present emergency originally listed by the Personnel Office. Q. True? young men and women have quali- State's five-year-old program of compensation into base salaries IV. It is understood that some descriptions submitted at the fied for public administration i n - training college graduates in the there was need for an increase In ternships w i t h administrative broad and complex field of public the amount of emergency com- instance of the departments have been reviewed by County and not by Barrington Representatives. Q. Are these to be given less conagencies of New York State gov- administration." pensation payment per point, from sideration than those on the Personnel Office list? Q. Are position ernment, the State Civil Service 198 Applied the existing $15 to $23 or $24. This descriptions submitted by the departments, for titles which they Commission has announced. The A total of 198 applied for the would re-establish the original reyear-long intern.ships start July 1. examination. Written tests were lationship between .point values believe need reviewing, to be checked by Barrington and treated Appointments to 30 intern posts held in January, and were followed and minimum Westchester scales. exactly the same as those on the Personnel Office list? are expected at a salary of $3,541. by group oral examinations. He said that failure to Increase V. It is known that both Barrington representatives and County Beven interns are expected to Interns are assigned to a par- the payments from $15 a point to work in State ofiices in New York ticular State agency for 12 months at least $18 or $20 in the past, personnel are interviewing. Q. How is it determined who handles City and one in Ossining at Sing of on-the-job training and ex- accounted for a certain amount which interviews and do the interviews have the same importance? Bing Prison. The remaining 22 perience in government adminis- of the base salary increase now VI. Where Position Descriptions indicate to Barrington (or the will be appointed in Albany. Ap- tration. They also take part in necessary in order for County empointments will be made at a j formal training sessions. At the ployee salaries to reach comparable County) that the position title is not proper, it is understood (a) i n some instances Barrington will make recommendations for a change; placement pool slated for the a f - end of the year, they may be as- levels of other employment. (b) in other instances these will be referred for Classiiication Board ternoon of May 2 in the Assembly signed to permanent civil service Barrington Methods Assessed action. Q. Who is determining and in what manner, which shall be Chambers of the State Capitol in po.sts in State government. In assessing methods used by recommended for change in the Survey Report and which shall be Albany, The internship program was "We congratulate these success- started in 1947 with the backing Barrington in past surveys. Mr. passed to the Classification Board for future action? ful youths," J. Edward Conway, of Governor Dewey. It is admin- Galpin found fault with the inVII. It is understood that the Budget and Personnel Offices are President of the State Civil Serv- istered by the Civil Service De- clusion of one and two-man jobs ice Commission, said in making partment and guided by the Gov- in the making of a "Community actually doing the evaluating of the Position Descriptions after the Survey" and assigning to them the interviews are completed. Q. True? public the names of those who ernor's Sponsoring Committee on passed. "Our standards this year Public Administration Training, same weight as to more representative group titles. "The use of VIII. Q. What method of position evaluation is being used? ^ i. were high in the pre-test qualifi- whose chairman is Dr. T. Norman Director of the | ^"ch a Community Survey is not (a) Are the same point values being used as were used by Barrington cations candidates had to meet, Hurd, State m an area like West- in 1945 and 1946 to obtain job relationships; (b) Are the point "and in the written and oral tests. Budget. Starting in 1951, i n t e r n s Those who successfully cleared all have been selected by competitive chester' he said, "where the values being used which were used by the former Budget Director j County, demanding and obtaining in setting levels for new jobs and re-assessing old jobs, after the the hurdles now have the oppor- examination. I high type employees to perform Completion of the 1946 Barrington Survey; (c) Or is an entirely j its services, should expect to dilTercnt method of point evaluation to be used and if so, what? j compensate those employees In I comparison with better paying IX. Q. Is the same procedure to be followed as in each of the employers and not on the basis of a questionable average between two previous Barrington Surveys whereby department heads or other good paying and poor paying interested parties review group levels assigned to the various positions and then indicate re-assignment? employers." Lack of Interest by Officials X. Q. In view of the lower method of evaluation used by the He expressed surprise that neither County officials nor Bar- former Budget Director in the period following the 1946 Survey i n A letter had been received that rington Associates took advantage determining group levels of positions, will particular care be taken WHITE PLAINS. April 28—At the regular meeting of the West- day from Acting County Executive of the invitation given by the to re-evaluate the positions affected during the time so as to bring chester County Competitive Civil Edward J. Ganter, containing an Association to have a representa- them into line with the other positions evalued by the higher BarService Association on April 21, advance copy of a three-page tive appear at the employee meet- rington standards? president Anne H. McCabe re- statement which is being sent all ing to discuss the Survey and anX L The salary levels of some positions and some groups are set ported on a meeting she and As- County employees and which ap- swer questions. "In my experience sociation director Richard A. parently was intended to answer in private industry and with other in accordance with the pay for comparable positions in various Flinn had with Arthur G. Sam- most of the questions raised by public bodies I have found an al- other area's. Q. How is it determined which positions shall be so advan- treated and which shall have salary levels based solely on tiieir point marco, Westchester Budget D ^ e c - the Association, although no s p e - j• most^ 100% desire to. take . . Q. What is the tor, regarding progress of the Bar- cific reference was made to the tage of such " a an n opportunity to value relationship to other County positions? work clasely with a representative proper procedure to have the salary level of a position or a group rington Associates survey of coun- Association's questions. group like yours." He said he based on comparable outside pay rather than as compared to other t y empii'^yee salary levels. Miss Participation Asked hoped to have definite results of County jobs? McCabe reported a cordial con' After general discussion of the the Association's salary study ference held on April 17 during ^ need for participation by employee i shortly and recommended that the which 14 written questions were XIL Q. How is the determination of proper County salary representatives in the making of i attention of the Board of Supersubmitted by the Association to clarify conflicting reports regard- the Survey, a resolution was visors and the County Executive levels to be made? If outside salary comparisons are going to ing the conduct of the Barrington adopted urging the County Ex- be directed to the desirability of made, who is going to make the comparisons? "i Study. Miss McCabe stated that ecutive and the Board of Super- having the County Association XIII. Q. Is a Community Survey to be made and a present inquiries had come to the Asso- visors to permit active participa- take part in the Survey. Such ciation from all classes of em- tion by the Association in the pax'ticipation is not now being trend line established by Barrington? If so, is Barrington likely ployees and that confusing state- Survey on behalf of the employees. permitted. This was a reversal, to use the same pay-depressing approach as indicated by their ments appeared to have emanated It was pointea out that such par- he said, of the County's attitude previous recommendations that County salaries be leveled $150 belovr from the various offices making ticipation had been specifically in the original Barrington Survey, that of the Community Average? recommended by Barrington As- when the A.ssociation actively parthe survey. XIV. Q. What opportunity is going to be given the Employees sociates In their original Survey ticipated in the study. Officials Invited through their organization to take part in this Survey and to have An invitation was extended to and agreed to by the County aua hand in framing its results? Mr. Sammarco for him. one of his thorities: also that general peraides, or a Barrington representa- sonnel procedures demanded such of representative tive to appear at the Association consideration meeting and discuss the survey employee organizations. Tantalising In Flavor A dinner meeting of the Board work. However, Miss McCabe STATE stated, the invitation had not been of Directors of the Association Open-Competitive was held earlier. accepted. WHITE PLAINS, April 28 — Bpeaking before a large group of employees at the meetinc of the Westchester County Competitive Civil Service Association, on April Jlst, Henry L. Galpin, salary re•earch technician, stated that preliminary findings of an Association analysis of salaries being paid County employees indicated the Westchester minimum rate should be increased from ^ s present $2,085 ($1860 base pllus $225 Emergency Compensation) to about $2400. He stated there was no doubt that the existing $225 emergency compensation should be merged into the base scales of County employees. This would mean an increa.se of between $500 52 Qualify as 'Geniuses' In State Test Seeking 'Administrative Interns' Employee Croup Demands Part in Westchester Barrington Pay Study Eligible Lists 4 Answers Changed In Inspector Test Dongan Guild Dinner Set for June 6 The final key answers in the test for promotion to inspector of carpentry and masonry, grade 3. were issued by the NYC Civil Service Commission. Four answers were changed. The questions involved. the tentative key answers and the final answers follow: Question Tent. Final 6 A A, C or D. 18 A A or B. 36 D B or D. 64 A A or B. The test was taken on March 15 by 127 candidates. The 23 protests concerned 37 questions. The Dongan Guild of New York State Employees will dine at Whyte's Restaurant on June 6 at Tickets may be obtained from department representatives or from Mary Gavin. State Liquor Authority, 270 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y., chairman of the ticket committee. Admission is $3. Daniel Farnan and William J. Peterson made the dinner arrangements. Father J. Watson, of Brooklyn Prep will be principal speaker. 514 APPOINTED 1 ROM NYC PATROLMAN LIST The list number of the last eligible appointed NYC patrolman is 3,065. From the present ll«t 314 lavpointmentsi have been made^ . t .i •i j ) < POLICE ELIGIBLES TO MEET The NYC Police Eligibles Association. of which George Boertzel is president, will meet on Wednesday night, May 21, at Werdermann'ii HalK ThiPd Avefnue and SIxteehthi 8fcr«et,» KYC.^ ' lATK ( AN( KK IIKAD AND NKCK MIIKGKON 1. M a r f h e t t a . F r a n k , B u f f a l o 83000 FOOD .SKKVICK M A N A t i K U 1. OatiHan, I r v i n g J., Qowantiii . . 0 0 1 7 0 a . Aspcll, F r a i i f i s D.. Ctrl leliii . . . 8 7 5 0 0 U. Wheeler, Lnureiioe, U t i c a «7340 4, lioisvert, Kililh, Wingrtlale KOOOO 5. Eldrid, H>ron. I'kocpsie S5260 t!. UoiiPBtml. Eiliv, HyUo I'k 84600 7. P a t t e r s o n . H o w a r d , Ogdfiisburt.' 8 3 0 7 0 8. Filler, F r a n k A., PkeeDsio . . . , 8 3 3 4 0 0. b u t t o n , Jai'k K.. B i n i f h a m t o n . 8 ^ X 7 0 30. Hailcy, Hilda r . , W h i t e s b o r o . . . 8 1 0 0 0 11. Senion, Otto H.. W Breiitwod . . 8 0 0 0 0 l'^. Krdman, Artfio, Ctrl Isltp 70840 13. Groth, Mary N.. Ctrl luliij 77340 14. TlioniHon, Kleanor, N e w a r k ...74840 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER America's treading Newsmagazine for Public Employees LEADER ENTERPRISES. INC. 97 Duane St.. New ¥ork 7. N. Y. Telephone: BEekman 3-6010 Entered as second-class matter October 2. 1939, at the post office at New York, N. Y., under the Act or March 3. 1879. Members of Audit Bureau of Circulations. Subscription ^ o ^ $2.50 Per TREAT CRISPS aOL7>eK Always Fr*%h Kit. 1»1f • ^ftpWK POTATO At All 6oo;< Food Stores CHIPS • Always Tosfy DAVIS OPTICAL CO. (Officio! Optician for Hospitals and Clfnics of New York City) Most ol our hundreds of civil tervic* smployee patients have ordered extra pairs ot eyeglasses. The savings in our laboratory costs are due to the tremendous volume of glasses which we produce for official requirements. The complete pair of glasses from the molded optical glass blank are processed in our laboratories. Eyes Examined Prescriptions filled — Lenses duplicated Registered optometrists ond opticians In attendance at all times. SAME DAY SERVICE Honrs: OR. S< S:30 . 4:30 7 1 W ^ 2 3 S t . . N e Y e C Jfat. tIN 8:0Q I Tue»d«7, April 29, 1952 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER State Study Will Show Many Inconsistencies In Pensions, Says Van Name Page Three Dewey Takes Final Action On Bills ALBANY, April 28.—Following is the latest weekly digest of bills on which Governor Thomas E, Dewey has acted. The last day The special study of pensions, ance of 2 per cent for each year consecutive five years, will not fall for him to act has passed. l o be undertaken by the State D e - of service. Progress has been nec- short of producing quarter-pay The publication of the digests partment of Audit & Control, was essarily piecemeal because politi- pension for the basic memberwill be completed next week, hailed by Ralph L. Van Name, cians don't relish battling too service period. ENACTED Many employees remain on the secretary, NYC Employees Retire- many at one time. (The chapter number of the "In the part of the State south job long after they would have m e n t System, as an opportunity Laws of 1952 appears at the end to uncover "the many inconsisten- of the Westchester County and retired, to achieve or exceed half of each item.) cies that exist" and bring about a west of Nassau, every group of pay, especially because of the reApproved: Appropriation for City employees at one time or a n - duced purchasing power of the liberalized uniformity. Hope O'Hara, widow of Patrick F. Governor Thomas E. Dewey other has been offered the 2 per- dollar. O'Hara^ State trooper shot to It is expected that the study signed a bill which authorizes the cent retirement allowance. In the death in the performance of duty. study. The department expects to NYC Employees Retirement Sys- ] will consider also all of the sysbegin work in a matter of weeks. tem, 49 per cent of the members tems in NYC and go thoroughly Henry Gqlpia. Civil Scrvice Empioy- (520). One of the topics to be c o n - have taken it, while the remainder into all aspects of Social Security. • • s AsseeiaHen salary analyst, has Approved: Appropriation for sidered is the desirability of pro- have until June 30 to do so. In The Department of Audit & sHrveyed the wage situation in Margaret D. Adams, widow of viding coverage under Social Se- the NYC Teachers Retirement Control is not unfavorably dis- Westchester County, and arrived at Harry Adams, State trooper killed curity for those employees of lo- System more t h a n 70 per cent took posed toward Social Security, Jn the conclusion that a $300 increase in the performance of duty. (521). calities in the State that can not a like benefit, and other teachers opposing a bill that would have is indicated (story on page 2). Approved: Appropriation for come under the State Employee now have a further opportunity provided it for those local e m Patricia A. Diffendale, widow of ployees who are "pension ' o r Retirement System benefits be- to do so," Arthur C. Diffendale, State trooThe plan provides, in general,' phans," it said that the possible cause their government units are per shot to death in the performn o t employer-members of t h a t for a possible 2 per cent maximum,' effect on all systems would have ance of duty. (522). based on salary, hence half-pay to be weighed. The Governor veSystem.* "I am glad," said Mr. Van Name, retirement after 25 years' service. toed the bill. Approved: The director of the Half-Pay Good Older Employees Stay speaking of Governor Dewey, "that Division of Safety, Executive D e Experience shows that h a l f - p a y The study also will deal with h e is undertaking a survey of the partment, shall be ex-ofiicio m e m genuine inequities or shortcom- retirement results in only a small the increase in the number of e m ber of the State Traffic Commisings. When his committee gets to percentage of cases, for the full ployees between ages 55 and 70, sion, (572). work, it will be amazed to find basic period of service. The reason In NYC the increase between ages Approved: Law stenographers out how many of the Inequities is the low salaries of the early 55 and 80 averages 1,000 a year. ALBANY, April 2 8 ~ T h e New and typists of Supreme Court J u s and shortcomings are north of the years. The employee's contribu- Thus the plan that offers 2 per tions are a fraction of that salary cent total benefit possibilities is York State Department of Audit tices, Nassau County, increased to Bronx River, and constitute the annuity part of being tested in the next few years and Control will have a Com- three, from two, (585). All in NYC Had Opportunity Approved: Members of State "Here i n NYC we have been the retirement allowance. The em- for arrest or reversal of this in- munion breakfast this year on working steadily toward a unified ployer's part, called the pension, crease, There are 23,000 NYC e m - Sunday, May 4, The group will Employees Retirement System u n attend Mass at St. Mary's Church, der age 70 are permitted to borgoal, namely, a retirement allow- based on the average of the best ployees between ages 55 and 80. Albany, at 9:15 A. M., and meet row not more than 50 per cent afterward for breakfast in the of their accumulated contribuCrystal Room of the DeWitt Clin- tions, or an amount with which Interest can be repaid before they ton Hotel. reach age 70 by not more t h a n Principal speaker for the occa- 10 percent of pay. The deadline sion will be Rev. Charles C. Smith, for making such loans is made assistant pastor at St. Peter's July 1, 1953. (604). Church, Troy. Approved: Provision that the Invited guests include State recipient of a disablhty pension ALBANY, April 28—The State j names, were established in the fol- successful in more than one of Comptroller J. Raymond McGov- from the State Employees RetireCivil Service Commission has made ; lowing fields: engineering, biology, these fields. ern and Deputy Comptrollers Wil- ment System may hold a job paypublic the names of about 1,000 chemistry, mathematics, economliam' J. Dougherty. William J. Em- ing up to the difference between The Smartest m e n and women, most of them ics, statistics, library science, law, Listed below are the names, ad- bler and H. Eliot Kaplan, J, Lawr- his retirement allowance and his college seniors, who passed the psychology, and joui-nalism. An- dresses, and scores of the three ence Murray, Assistant to the final public salary is continued to State's fifth annual "college series" other list of 376 names was es- candidates placing highest in each ; Lieutenant C3rovernor, will be toast- July 1, 1953. (605). of examinations. There were 3,380 tablished for accounting assist- of the options of the 1952 New Approved: Purchasing additionapplications for the examinations ant jobs. Some candidates were York State college series of exam!-- master. The general chairman is James al annuity in the State EmployWhich were held in January. inations: P. Fitzgerald, assisted by the fol- ees Retirement System is continThe college series tests have Accounting Assistant lowing committee members: ued for another year, until July been held by the State since 1948 Nathan W. Harris, 1929 East Retirement Division: Francis M, 1, 1953. (606). primarily to bring into the career 13th Street. Brooklyn, 101,28»» Casey, Joseph Osborn, Dolores service of New York State the best Approved. Borrowing from the John H. Neeb, 31 Cayuga Street, Prenz, Helen Leahey and Cathertalent available from the pool of State Employees Retirement SysBuffalo, 97.40* ine Cramer; current college graduates. tem is allowed until July 1, 1953 Max Siegel, 95 Lewis Street, Audit & Control: Joseph Cheles, for members who are in the armed 300 Appointments New York City, 96.32* • Joseph Cranney, Thomas Nolan, Commission President J. Edforces. (628). Professional and Technical Charles Dunham; Ward Conway said that about 300 Approved: The benefits of Assistant (General) Benefits Division: William Van appointments to State jobs in variworkmen's compensation are exL. Adelman, 2604 Avenue Amburgh. ous fields are expected. The posiNew officers are to be elected by I, Elliott tended to resident physicians, Brooklyn, 106.20* • tions to which appointments usu- the Metropolitan Regional Conresident interns and assistant resRobert M. Muniz. 43-23 42nd PAYROLL E ^ ^ I N E R S ally are made carry starting sal- ference, Sidney Alexander, former ident interns employed in public aries of $3,251, $3,411, and $3,571, president, has taken a leave of Street. Long Island City, 98.00* MEET IN NYC hospitals and other public insti• Anthony D. Armer, HardscrabA large number of appointments absence from his State job. ALBANY, April 2 8 ~ A special tutions. (635). ble, Croton Falls, 97.20 Will be made in Albany and New meeting of payroll examiners in Officers nominated are: Professional and Technical Approved: The NYC Charter -York City, but others will be made the NYC area was held Tuesday, For president: Henry Shemin, Assistant (Engineering) In ofiRces and institutions throughprovision, prohibiting the holding April 22, at 1440 Broadway. State Labor Department; Thomas Edward L. Darling, 14-2 Detroit out the State. The greatest numof any job with the State or NYC, The discussion covered the pro- or any of the counties within ber of openings are in the fields Conkling, Brooklyn State Hospi- Drive, Troy, 97.00* tal. Kenneth A, Gendron, 844 3rd posal submitted by the Adminisof accounting and engmeering, NYC, or any locality in the State, For vice-president: William A. Avenue, Troy, 96.90* tration with respect to the reallo- if one receives a pension, is clariBrooklyn Man Tops List Greenauer, Dist. 10, Public Works Walter T. Leon. 828 James cation of various titles of payroll Elliott L. Adelman of Brooklyn Street, Syracuse. 96.60* examiners and the setting up of a fied to state that the pension topped the general list of candi- Department. must be one received because of new trainee position. Professional and Technical For treasurer: Clyde Morris, dates with a mark of 106.2 (this the pensioners own prior employAssistant (Biology) Long Island Inter-State Parkways. includes ten points veterans credHarry Spodak, chairman of the Emeline M. Midgett. 94 Winter Civil Service Employees Associa- ment by the City or one of its For secretary: Edith Fruchits). Robert M. Muniz of Long agencies. The pension, as forIsland City was second with 98. thendler. Public Service Commis- Avenue. Staten Island. 93.10 tion special DPUI committee, ad- merly, is suspended, unless the (Continued from page 4) Anthony D. Ai mer of Croton Palls sion. dressed the meeting. job pays less than $1,800 a year. was in third place with a score of The annuity continues. (645). 97.2. Approved: Permission to penIn addition to the general list sioners of the State Employees of 200 names, separate lists of Retirement'System to earn up to eligible candidates, containing 585 $750 a year through temporary, seasonal or occasional positions is continued until July 1, 1953. 4 to Be Honored at (646). Bear Mountain on Approved: The requirements for holding physiotherapist jobs, as Their Retirement provided in the Education Law, The Palisades Interstate Park are amended. (657). Commission chapter of the Civil Approved: Active service for Service Employees Association will State retirement purposes is dehonor /our of its members who fined to include time spent in the are retiring, at its annual dinner National Guard of Naval Militia Thursday night. May 1, at Bear on Inactive service during 10 Mountain Inn, "The four are Jesyears immediately preceding resie A. Marin, comptroller; Ivan tirement, provided the pensioner Hilton, lake area superintendent; received salary from the State William J. Cahill, storekeeper, and during the claim period, (677). Charles Werber, maintenance department. The total years' service Approved: The compensation of the four exceeds a century. of temporary interpreters is i n creased under the State Judiciary Angelo J, Donato, president of Law. (679), the chapter, will be toastmaster. He has invited the following as Approved: The effective date of speakers: Mary Goode Krone, the Local Law enacted by NYC, Deputy Tax Commissioner; J. Almaking retirement at age 63 lyn Stearns, 3rd vice president of compulsory. Is established as the Association; and H. J. BerJanuary l . 1952, (680), nard, executive editor of The Approved: Members of the NYC LEADER. Mr. Bernard was best Teachers Retirement System are nian at Mr. Donato's wedding. Miss Krone has been asked to At Lake Ronkonkoma, in o dinner-dance of-Hiree Civil Service Employees Association chapters held April given a choice In the way that scuss employer-employee rela- 19. Members ond guests were present from Central Islip State Hospital, Kings Park State Hospital, and deductions shall be made from nships; Mr. Stearns, the work, Pilgrim State Hospital. The ladies in the photo are, left to right: Mrs. Edward DeGraw, Mrs. Ralph Currier, salary for annuity purposes, (682). ".e achievements, and the goals of and ana Mrs. mrs. Thomas i nomas Purtell. rurreii. Standii^: afanaing: Edward cawara DeGraw, ue<»raw, president presiaenf of the tne Kings Park Pari chapter; Charles Culyer, field Approved: Credit for past servssots^ation; and Mi'. irefre$^totive of tiie I" Civil Service teployees f s ^ o c ^ t i o u J., AlUn Stoains. ns. 3rd 3rd vice pcdiidont, QSEA; Jaseph ice qs i/itqrn^ niay hei yurthased o| State em- Feily, Sth vis* president CSEA; Arnelf Moses. pre«idenf Broolilyn St&fo Hospital ospital chapt«rt «nd[T^o«as PurttH. in the NYC Employees Retirejansak ^* president CtiifrW ftllp choK®^.' CPh6fo'i»y'J'« T. "Seyfriied) Tei.'' System. (707), Audit-Control Communion Breakfast 1,000 Pass State College Series'; 3 0 0 to Be Placed Metropolitan Conference To Elect CIVIL Page Fourteen i DOUBLE CONVENIENCE SERVICE Activities of Employees Hornell THE HORNELL chapter, CSEA, held its annual dinner-dance party on April 17 at the Hornell CounFREE CASHING try Club. An informal business of City, State ond Federal meeting followed the dinner at p a y checks which the new officers and executive committee were installed. O f ficers for the coming year are: EASY-TO-REACH President, W. S. Rogers; viceLOCATION in the president, A. A. Hritz; secretary, A. Walrath; treasurer, W. LaMunicipal Center, near GovShure; delegate, W. Bouck; alernment offices and courts ternate delegate, H. C. Beard; A.B.C. Board, R. Maher; Shop^ F. Haynes; Maintenance, C. Newman; Health, H. Stewart; Alfred, W. S. Havens; Clerical. H. B. Arnold; Engineers, C. N. Jones; Veterans, R. A. Argyros. Following installation. President Rogers gave a short resume on the activities of the Legislature. Salary raise, retirement allowances for retired employees, the reopening of the 55-year retirement plan, and the defeat of the Mahoney bill by the Association were the major points discussed. A membership report was given which indicated the chapter went over last year's membership. Principal speaker of the evening was Dr. John McMahon, Dean of Ceramics at Alfred University, a Main Office fellow membei'. This humorous 51 CHAMBERS ST. talk on the "Tobacco Leaf." together with assorted props, proved Just East of Broadway to be the highlight of the evening. Grand Central Office The chapter voted to join the 5 East 4 2 n d Street Western Conference which is comJost off Fifth Avenue posed of chapters from western New York. Plans were made to join in July. ANTICIPATED DIVIDEND Round and square dancing to the music of Harry Kiehle's band was enjoyed by all. bard; vice-president, Bob Clark, Bernice LaRosa, Dominick Tate; secretary, Mary Doyle, Rita Franconieri, Elsa Stutz, Alice Walsh; treasurer. Mildred Bernardi, Alice Bowers. Mary Jane Carroll, Camille Polette; delegates. Richard H. Barren, Bertha Warshaw, Loretta Farley, Mildred Rodrigues, Julia Naab. Leon Kanter, Mildred Viall, Mike Lester. Elmer Lane. Dorothy Hytron. Matty Fitzgerald. Agnes Erickson, Joe Ryan and Genevieve Reilly. The new officers will be installed at a dinner to be held Tuesday. May 6. at Panetta's Restaurant, Menands. Guest speakers will be Commissioner of Motor Vehicles James R. Macduff and CSEA president Jesse B. McFarland. Dancing will follow the dinner and square dancing will be featured. The Novelteers will furnish the music, and ealler for the square dancing will be Bill Chattin. Eklith Flynn and Emma Reed are the general chairmen for the dinner. Committee members are: entertainment, Matty Fitzgerald; dinner arrangements, Alfred Weisbard; decorations, Mildred Rodrigues; tickets. Margaret Verhagen; gift. Rose Vener; program. Gladys Martin; publicity. Rose Holland. Buffalo THE A P R I L meeting of the B u f falo chapter, r.t which Charles Carlisle Jr. spoke (his talk was described in last week's LEADER) was presided over by Celeste Rosenkranz, chapter president. . . . Larry Hollister, field representative, spoke on membership. . . . Noel P. McDonald, president of the Western Regional Conference, discussed Conference gains. . . . Arthur Brodbeck. president of the Erie County chapter, was another guest of the Buffalo chapter. . . . Reminder: Don't forget the May 1 party, at the 65th Armory, Best & Masten Streets. A charge of $1 per person covers admission and refreshments. There will be dancing far into the night, to the music of John Sullivan's orchestra. Motor Vehicle Dept. p e r annum Jan. Ist to June 30th, 1952 INTEREST FROM DAY OF DEPOSIT J A « m b e r F e d e r a l Deposit Insurance C s r p o r o t i o n TH^. ALBANY Motor Vehicle chapter, CSEA, will hold its general election of officers on Thursday, May 1, at noon at the Motor Vehicle Bureau. Those nominated are: president. A1 Castellano. Rose Holland, Ann Preska, Alfred Weis- V/ORLD'S FINEST TELEVISION SET Superpowered 31 TUBES Lie. " 6 3 0 " Chassis MFR. l i e UKDER RCA PAT. 12'- C O N C E R T SPEAKER IN BEAUTIFUL HAND-RUBBED CONSOLE CABINET Price Includes Federal Tax EASY PAYMENT PLAN TRANS-MANHATTAN f r e e : 75 CHURCH ST. co. VESEY NEW YORK CITY WOrth 2-4790 Near All Subways, Buses. Hudson Tubes And All Civil Centres OPEN 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. INCL. SAT. OPEN THURS. EVE. UNTIL 8 P.M. Come and enjoy the evening with your Buffalo friends. If you haven't got your tickets, get t h e m from your delegate or at the door. A1 Killian and his committee have planned an outstanding evening for you. . . . Rita Kinney, of the Labor Mediation Board, has been ill for some time. Her chapter colleagues miss her and hope that her recovery will come fast. . . . The May chapter meeting is scheduled for May 2L Including WARRANTY Picture Adaptable To Brooklyn State Hospital Eligible Lists Window or Roof PARTS Tube Color WORK FOR U . S . GOVERNMENT! COUNTY A N D VILLAGE Promotion (rroin.), 1. Roussellc. I.. Buffalo 88070 Hyan, Klizabeth A., Buffalo ...«55i)0 Buckley, Rulh D., Buffalo 841100 4. Zientek. Helen II.. BulTalo fi45i)0 5. BaUa. Helen E.. Buffalo 8:i530 (Ai.KNDAiC KOKM CI.KKK (I'runi.), Coiiiity Clerk'n OllU-e (Clerk of Courts) Krie County 1. a. 4. 5. (1. 7. NOWi A«t Todoyl t / Prey, Max. Kenmoie !t3tia0 Perraiul, Gooryre C., Buffalo ...01700 Mueller, Oliver E., EtfKerlsvlo .OiaiO Weede. Clara L,.. Kenniore «8'^40 Mosaczyca, E. A., D<i)ew 87870 Orlando, Charles. Laekawann ..84480 O'Coniiell, Edniuiul F.. Buffalo 83450 (rroni.), ^ ^ FRANKLIN INSTITUTE (not Gov't Controlled) Dept. H-56. 130 W. 42 St.. N. Y. 36 86403 STATE Promotion I' K K S t > N NIC I, T K« 11 \ ICIA .N (K.\AMINATU»NS) Kvuiniinitioii!* ItiviHion, I)c|iurt- (I'runi.), / KKCOKl) i l.KKK Couiity Clerk's Utticr, Krie I'ounty 1. Doyle, JoUu J., SoarsUalo Be Ready When Next Examinations Are Held in New York, New Jersey and Vicinity / Iloalth STKKKT COMMISSIONKK (I'runi.). IliKliwuy Deimrtnietit, Village of Srursilale. WestelwiitiT County start High as $73.00 a week. Experience usually not needed HOW you hove the best opportunity in mony years to get a big-pay U. S. Civil Service Job with generous vacations, sick leaves, retirement pensions and other benefits. Fill out and mail coupon todayl Ltoro how you can prepare at home to ASSISTANT DIKKITOK I'ublic lleHltli NiirsiiiK, U(>|>ur(n)fnt, lCi'ii> County 1. Hopkins, Mailclyn, Buffalo 86100 3. Latona, Vincenza »'., Buffalo ..84800 MEN — WOMEN Rearmament Program has created Thousands of Additional Openings. Veterans Get Special Preference Full Particulars and 32'Page Book on Civil Service FREE 3 0 0 to G e t State Jobs As Trainees (Continued from paae 3) Gerald S. Reisner, 112 Brandle Rolad, Altamont, 90.20* Evelyn Kolbrenner, 101 Lafayette Street. Brooklyn. 89.70 Professional and Technical Assistant (Chemistry) Anna M. Sill, 42 Chadduck Avenue. BufTalo, 97.55 John S. McNamara, 39 Melrose Avenue. Albany, 96.40** Jack Rosenbluth. 2128 Webb Avenue, Bronx, 94.50 Professional and Technical Assistant (Mathematics) Abraham S. Kadish. 103 D e THE SOCIAL COMMITTEE of lancey Street, New York City, Brooklyn State Hospital chapter, 93.75* CSEA, through Mrs. Marie ConCharles J. Kaufman, 220 Caforti, chairman, reports that tick- brini Street, New York City, 87.5T) ets for the chapter's dance on Herbert Nadler, 1893 WashingMay 23rd will be available next ton Avenue, Bronx, 85,65 week. Professional and Technical To the recent list of people eliAssistant (Economics) gible for 25-year service pins add Howard Lesnick, 2120 East Trethe names of Solomon Polak, mont Street, Bronx, 99.00 » Bernard O'Callaghan, Emil AlRene Pisani, 1125 State Street, berts, making a total of 27 so far. Albany, 97.00 A Leadership course is being Marc A. Matland, 200 West worked on by the Metropolitan 108th Street, New York City, Conference, CSEA. Its course will 97.00* deal in parliamentary law, legisProfessional and Technical lature procedures, labor relations, Assistant (Statistics) and related subjects. Any chapRobert M. Muniz, 43-23 42nd ter members wishing to take ad- Street. Long Island City, 102.50* Abraham S. Kadish, 103 D e vantage of this program please forward their names to Mr. Mo- lancey Street, New York City, ses, who will submit them to the 100.25* Conference. John H. Neeb, 31 Cayuga Street^ Congratulations to Philip Holt BufTalo. 100.25* Professional and Technical on his promotion to garage foreAssistant (Library Science) man. . . . Congratulations to Mrs. William L. Woolf. 710 Avenue Mary A. Colombo, stenographer in Bldg. 10, who recently celebrated T, Brooklyn, 98.09** T. H. Altxowitz, 3619 Bedford her fourth wedding anniversary. . . . Congratulations to Mr. and Avenue, Brooklyn, 96.60* Douglas Swartout, 217 West 16th Mrs. Fred Yuille on their tax exemption, a baby girl. . . . Best Street, Elmira Heights, 96.30* Professional and Technical wishes for a long and healthy reAssistant (Law) tirement to Mrs. Elizabeth ChapAbraham Shalo, 6818 Bay Parkman who retired after nineteen years of State service. The same way, Brooklyn, 100 75** Benjamin R. Kaplan, 1201 East to Mr. Anthony Perez who is returning to his home in Panama. 22nd Street, Brooklyn, 100.00 Adele H. Graham, 102-26 29th . . . We wish the Trapanotta f a m ily, who are visiting Italy for sev- Avenue, East Elmhurst, 99.10 Professional and Technical eral months, a happy sojoiu-n. . . . Assistant (Psychology) The members of the hospital Elliott L. Adelman, 2604 Avenue wish to take this opportunity to I, Brooklyn, 109.10** wish Mrs. May DeGroot. one of Abraham Froehlich, 1112 Avethe popular telephone operators, who recently resigned from the nue R, Brooklyn, 99.50* Henry J. Swendsen, 15 Charles hospital, good luck. Street, Port Washington, 92.30* Mr. and Mrs. George Petrotta, Professional and Technical August Posa, Louis Colandro, J a Assistant (Journalism) cob Tresser, are enjoying spring Stewart Rodnon, 387 Ocean vacations. . . . Parkway, Brooklyn, 95.40* The following employees are Margaret C. Downes, 52 Mill making a good recovery in the Street, Troy, 94.40 sick bay: Mrs. Dorothy O'Reilly, James R. Murray, 322 Quail Mrs. Jane Kelly, Mi-s. A. Hilden- Street, Albany, 92.50* brandt, Mr. Matthew Roche, Mr. ** Includes ten points disabled Jack Rennie, Dr. Whitehead's son. veterans credits. James. . . . * Includes five points veterans Our sympathy to Dean Nason credits. and his family on the recent loss The complete list of eligibles will of his father and to Mr. Philip appear in succeeding issues of The Mastridge on the loss of his fath- LEADER. Read the LEADER reger. . . . Sincere sympathy to Mr. ularly for information about ^the Henry Connolly on the loss of his available jobs. aunt. INSTALLATION FOR SPECIAL ALLOWANCE BRING THIS AD : Tuesday, AprU 22, 1952 LEADER 3. 2. 3. 4. 5. 0. 7. 8. 0. inent of Civil Ser\ice Sullivan, Daniel J., Albany ..,,88880 Isaacs, Albert. Biouz 8t50;J0 Nuthorif, Hi'inz H., Albany ...SlI'UO Benoit, Kraneia 11., S. ht.ly 83010 Dubois, licnnctii B., Albany ..81340 Heme, Kliia J.. Albany 8l)'^0 Walsh, B. Thomas. Albany ....80700 Waltznian, llai, Albany 80700 MK'olIoni, Joyee E.. A!l)any . . . 8()7!J0 SKMOK I'KK.SOWKI, TKCIINH IAN (i;xAMi\A'n«>\h) St. George Group of State Employees In Communion Event The St. George Association's chapter 33, composed of State e m ployees in NYC, will receive its second annual Communion o n Sunday, May 4 at St. Peter's Lutheran Church, NYC. Breakfast will be eaten at the Hotel Shelton. The Rev. Luther K. Hannum, Jr., Protestant chaplain at Sing Sing, will address the diners. Niles R. Becker, Deputy Commissioner of Motor Vehicles, will 'oe toastmaster. William Burns, chapter president, also will speak. Muriel Maple will sinf, and Claude Allicks and Elaine McMaster will play music. MiiTs M c Master is a member of the chapter. Besides Mr. Burns the ofScers are Lyman Moakley, vice president; Gladyse E. Snyder, secretary; Manus T, Nelson, treasurer, and Ann Roesch, financial secretary. On the executive committee are George L. Pox, Charles M. Graham, David A. Mansell, William S. Webb and Hamilton M e . Innes. Mr. Nelson is chairman of the breakfast committee. The ticket committer consists of Ann Roesch, Jennie Klein, Louise McKinley^ Gertrude Hansen and Kathleen York. Send me, absolutely FREE, (1) list of avail able positions; (2) free copy of 32-page book y —"How to Get a U S. Government Job"; 13) Study books for Apprenticeship Sample test questions; (4) Tell me how to qualify (I'runi.). KjiuiuinatioiiH lliviiion. Ut'iiurt- Intern Clerk rypist. Steno File for a U. S. Government Job. inent of » ivil S» r \ l t e Clerk Housing Asst. and othe: 1. HaliJeru, Joseph B., Alliany . . 83070 popular exams are on sale at FriiUniun, Hani D., Albany Name .hsoao "... Age..... 3. Noiseiix, Ktiiel U., .Albany . .85800 LEADER Bookstore. 97 Duan' Street 4. ili luney. Anno E. Albany . .84770 Apt. No . S-iOOCf tl. Bookbintiti', WuriOi, Albany . HtJ080 Ctty ... State 7, Fik'iliuau, Alary A., Albany west ot Broadway, CIVIL ^ T—tday, April 29, 1952 State Nurses To Meet in NYC,May5-8 Leaving SERVICE Page FiT« LEADER Eliot Kaplan to Resign Deputy Comptroller NYACK, April 2^—Two deleJ, ALBANY, April 28—H. Eliot f formerly executive director of the under present Comptroller i ^ t e s from the Rockland County Kaplan, for the past three-and- Civil Service Reform Association. Raymond McGovern are these: Division of the Practical Nurses Placed the State Retirement a-half years in charge of the i He expects to enter the field of of New York, Inc., will represent State Employees Retirement Sys- management Improvement, with System on an "insurance busiihlfi area at the annual conventem, and veteran battler for civil emphasis on the installation of ness" basis with efficient, economtion of the State's nursing group, service reform, will leave his post retirement plans. The movement ical operation and courteous servto be held in New York City, May as Deputy State Comptroller on for such plans has grown greatly ice. 6-8, it was announced here rein private industry. Reorganized administrative proJune 1. cently by Mary Bianchini, presiMr. Kaplan entered State serv- cedures to bring about more e x dent of the local division. One of the best known of State ice at substantial personal finan- peditious functioning of the S y s Said Miss Bianchini: "The growofficials, Mr. Kaplan has been in cial sacrifice at the urging of tem. ing demand for nursing service in the forefront of endeavors to im- Lieutenant Governor (then Inaugurated a comprehensive the State and nation means that prove the Retirement System. Comptroller) Frank C. Moore, practical nurses must meet new He has f r e q u e n t l y travelled wlio asked him to reorganize the educational campaign so that the responsibilities in every type of around the State explaining the State Employees Retirement Sys- System would be made understandable to its members. nursing. New York, which was the intricacies of retirement to public tem. first state in the country to estabWorked toward liberalization of employees. He is also a combative His Activities lish mandatory licensure for pracretirement benefits, and helped to figure at events dealing with contical nurses, has set high standAmong the activities which are get many liberal pension benetroversial civil service matters. ards of quality and competence credited to Mr. Kaplan during his fits enacted. Will Do Managremcnt Work for its practical nurses. Through Undertook studies to assure t h e Mr. Kaplan, an attorney, was incumbency under Mr. Moore and our State organization, we will financial soundness of the Sysguard those standards during this tem. period in which we are being callSet up the first public assisted upon to assume so many new H. Eliot Kaplan, Deputy State Comp troller, has announced that he will ance program for low-paid p e n responsibilities." leave his position with the State, sioners. The Theme where he is in charge of the Em Brought up to date the hearThe theme for this year's con- ployees Retirement System. -Mr ing and determination of appeals Kaplan is going into the field of vention will be "Practical Nurses from denial of disability claims. Progress—in Ranks, Responsibili- management improvement. Among Revitalized the State Commisother things, he will set up retireties, and Recognition," the division sion on Pensions to assimie fuller ment plans for private industry and officer said. The meetings will be ONEONTA, April 28 — D e t a i l s Richard H. Knauf of Broome responsibilities in advising the for other units of government. held at the Hotel New Yorker. Governor on pension legislation. about a new sei-vice rating plan County. Made the first preliminary talks by legislative and employee Also attending the Oneonta leaders, plus a dinner and fun, dinner-dance were Mayor Roger study of social security coverage highlighted the activities of the G. Hughes and Mrs. Hughes and for State and municipal employwm Central Regional Conference and Mrs. Janet Hill Gordon, Assem- ees at the request of Governor Dewey. of the Oneonta chapter, CSEA, in blyman from Chenango County. new Inspired the plan for a new Oneonta on Saturday, April 19. Highlight of the evening was a building for the State Retirement Two sessions, afternoon and eve- balloon dance in which the dancstylMl System. ning, were held. ers had balloons attached to On specific retirement matters, Dr. David M. Schneider, chair- their ankles. Couples who still had Mr. Kaplan has been active in W I L L Y O U FIND A S E L E C T I O N AS L A R G E man of the CSEA service rating complete sets of balloons at the pushing the 55-year retirement new committee, gave the Central Con- end of the dance were given car- plan; purchase of additional a n colors! ference a detailed report on the nations. Then 200 balloons sus- nuity; extending borrowing priviAS AT new service rating methods being pended in a net above the fioor leges to age 70; liberalized deterexperimentally tried in a number were released. Five of these con- mination of 'Tmal salary" in distained one-dollar bills. of departments. ability case?; consideration of all A resolutions committee report Raybrook chapter will be the service in determining ordinary was given by Paul Swartwood of host to the Conference at their death benefit of retired members Cornell State College chapter, next meeting in June. restored to service. Ithaca. Mrs. Gladys Butts, of the ConMOWHERE! Will You Find Prices Lower ference nominating committee, gave the list of nominees for the Conference offices. Tliey are: President, Helen Musto, Cornell State College chapter, Ithaca; Yoa Are Invited to Atfend As a Guest a Class Session of Any C o u r s e 1st vice president. Mrs. Ruth New York City Entrance Exam Officially O r d e r e d for Stedman, Fort Stanwix chapter, Rome, and Charles Methe, Marcy — GRADE 2 State Hospital chapter; secretary, Mrs. Ella Weikert, Department of S2,360 A Year to Start—Annual Salary Increases Taxation and Finance chapter, FULL CIVIL SERVICE BENEFITS — PROMOTIOr^AL OPPORTUNITIES Utica; treasurer, Emmett Durr, Ages 17 Years & Upward - No Educational, Experience Requirements Raybrook State Hospital chapter. Our Course of Training Prepares Fully for Official Examination The suggestion was made that a Be Our Guest at a Class Tonight (Tuesday) at 7:30 P.M. 2nd vice president be named, and is now before the Association Applications Will Be Open June 70 to 25—-Written Exam. Oct. 2 5 board of directors for approval. It was announced that the N. Y. CITY FIRE DEPT Public Works chapter of State employees in Otsego County with Salary $92 a Week After 3 Years - $71.00 to Start headquarters in Oneonta, president Bernard Gaffney, has joined COMPLETE PREPARATION FOR BOTH WRITTEN & PHYSICAL EXAMS the Conference. at the School Where More Than 80% of N.Y. City's Firemen Trained CentralConference,Oneonta Chapter, Have Business and Fun in All-day Affair NOWHERE! DELEIIANTY of Career BIILLETII^ Opporfunifies! CLERKS FIREMAN L A R G E S T S E L E t t T I O N OF LIVING ROOM, BEDROOM AND DINING ROOM F U R N I T U R E HEADBOARD BEDS AND BEDDING $5900 THREE SOFA BEDS $8950 SHOWROOMS V A l l I E T Y F i i r i i i t i i r e Co., I n c . Designers and Distributors of Fine Furniture 518 WEST 57th STREET, NEW YORK Tel.: PLaza 7-3737 88-12 Q U E E N S BLVD. E L M H U R ' S T L O N Q I S L A N D 95 CENTRAL AVENUE WHITE PLAINS, N. Y. WHite Plains 8-6633 We Cater Especially CIVIL SERVICE To EMPLOYEES Guests Guests at the meeting were Jesse B. McFarland, Civil Service Employees Association president; Dr. Schneider, John F. Powers, Association 1st vice president; Ernest Conlon, 4th vice president; Charlotte Clapper, secretary; Elizabeth O'Hagan, Albany; Faustine Spencer, Albany office; and Charles Hall, representative of the Department of Public Works. At the close of the meeting the members adjourned to a cocktail party. The Oneonta chapter dinner dance began at 7 oclock in the Blue Room of the Hotel with a baked-ham dinner. Entertainment was in the form of dance routines by the "pupils of Peg O'Hara and minstrel acts. Importance of Assn. Mr. McFarland spoke after dinner on the importance of the Association and what it did for its members. He stressed the point that members should attend meetings and not leave everything for the officers to do. John P. Powers described legislative advances. Assemblyman Paul L. Talbot of Otsego County asked the cooperation of the A.ssociation chapters and Conferences on getting their bills Into the Legislature early so the Assemblymen would have time to study the bills. Too many bills are put in late in the session, he said, and the Assemblymen have no chance to look at them carefully. The comse of a bill through the chapters, Conferences, Association, and finally the Legislature was followed by Ai>£ieuU)lyman 0 Experipnced Instructors • liiterMting l e c t u r e * • Bome Study Material « Trial Exams • Fully Equipped Orm e Outdoor Track » Showen Classes WED. at 1:15 or 8 P.M. — Free Medical Exam N. Y. CITY EXAMINATION OFFICIALLY ORDERED FOR SOCIAL INVESTIGATOR (Dept. of Welfare) Class Lecture Wednesday at 5:45 P. M.—Guests Welcome CLASS SCHEDULE OF OTHER CURRENT COURSES ACCOUNTANT, JUNIOR — Tuesday at 6. P.M. ADMINISTRATIVE ASST. — Friday at 6 P. M. ASSISTANT GARDENER — Friday at 7:30 P.M. ASST. SUPERVISOR & SUPERVISOR (Welfare)—Monday ot 6 P.M. CAPTAIN, (Dept. of Corr.)—Tues. & Thurs. at 12:30 or 5:30 P.M. CUSTODIAM-ENGINEER (Bd. of Education)—Friday ot 7:30 P.M. FOREMAN (Sanitation Dept.) — Tuesday at 1:00 or 7:30 P.M. POLICEWOMAN — Tuesday or Thursday at 7:45 P.M. SURFACE LtNE OPER. (Bd. of Transp.)—Thurs. at 7:30 P.M. CLERKS - Grade 3 & 4 CLASSES MEET IN 4 BOROUGHS MANHATTAN: Wed. at 6 P.M. — B KLYN: Tues at 6 P.M. BRONX: Monday at 6 P.M. — QUEENS: Tues. at 5:45 P.M. Special Review Classes In Manhattan Sat. 10:00 A.M. or 1:00 P.M. C o u r s e o f Preparation tor N. Y. City Examination for STATIONARY ENGINEER'S LICENSE CLASSES TUES. and THURS. at 7:30 P. M. Other License Courses for Master Plumber & Master Electrlclaa Practical Shop Training in JOINT WIPING for Plumbers DELEHJINTY **l\early 40 Yeart of Service in Advancing ths Careen of Morm Than 450,000 Stiidenta" Exdcufive OfRc»sj J^r 115 E. 15 ST., N. Y. 3 GRamerey 3-6900 Jamalci DivUloni ^0-14 Sutphin Blvd ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ JAmaloe 6-8209 DrFICa HOURS: Men. to Vri.t • •.«. to 0:30 p.n. 8»t.: 9:80 ».m. to 1 pm. Page Six CIVIL C U H H %-QAAAxiJU J L E i l ^ D E R . AmeHca'^s Largest Weekly tor Public SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, April 29, 1952 Ij^ DON'T REPEAT THIS Employees consider that Averell Harriman make the strongest team for the would be the strongest Democratic Democratic Party nation-wide? candidate in New York State. In The responses: both cases, however, only ©ne Kefauver-Stevenson 3 newsman considers either RooseKefauver-FDR, Jr. 5 velt or Harriman the strongest Democratic candidate in the n a Kefauver-Paul H. Douglas 3 tional run. Kefauver-Harriman 3 Kefauver-Farley 2 The opinions of the newsmen Kefauver-Russell 1 appear to have been weighted by Kefauver-Hubert Humphrey 1 three factors which may have a Stevenson-Kefauver 5 bearing on the result: (1) the de-i Stevenson-Russell 4 termlned eflfort being made by Kefauver; (2) the apparent exit Stevenson-Harriman 2 of Stevenson from the race, which Stevenson-Farley 1 may have cut h i s , t o t a l ; and (3) Stevenson-Barkley 1 There Is no doubt about the the entrance of Harriman i n the Farley-Kefauver 2 feeling of New York State news- race, which came after the poll Paul H. Douglas-Kefauver 2 men. They see Eisenhower as far had been sent to the newsmen. Russell-Kefauver 1 and away the strongest presidenWm. O. Douglas-Kefauver 1 3. What combination of presitial candidate, both in the State dential and vice-presidential canPaul H. Douglas-Wm. O. and i n the nation. Douglas 1 didates would, in yqur opinion, Barkley-Farley 1 make the strongest team for the 2. Which of the following pros- Republican Party nation-wide? Barkley-Russell 1 pective presidential candidates Paul H. Douglas-McMahon 1 Here, again, the newsmen demwould, in your opinion, make the re we, or are we not, to have a modern career-and- strongest Democratic run (a) in onstrated a high degree of agreePaul H. Douglas-FDR, Jr. 1 Paul H. Douglas-Farley 1 New York State; (b) in the n a - ment. They see Eisenhower and Harriman-Rayburn 1 Warren. The breakdown runs like tion? this: FDR, Jr.-Rayburn 1 salary system in NYC? Truman-Barkley 1 NATION STATE Eisenhower-Warren 30 Do we, or do we not, accept fhe principle of demo- Barkley 1 Barkley The Aparent and the Real Eisenhower-Taft 4 cratic, fair, even-handed treatment of public employees Paul Douglas 1 Paul Douglas Eisenhower-Stassen 4 Of the 25 combinations listed W . O . D o u g l a s 2 W. O. Douglas Eisenhower-Dewey 2 embodied in that big word—classification? by the newsmen, Kefauver a p Parley 16 Farley Taft-Eisenhower 2 pears on twelve as candidate e i 6 Harriman Taft-Warren 2 Can we, or won't we, rise above criticisms, disagree- Harriman ther for the presidency or t h e Kefauver 13 Kefauver Taft-Warren 3 vice-presidency. A glance at these McMahon Taft-MacArthur 3 ments, recriminations, misunderstandings, and misinter- McMahon results would seem to Indicate Rayburn Rayburn Warren-Irving Ives 1 that the presidential choice o n Roosevelt, Jr. pretations to introduce a system in which we know what Roosevelt, Jr. Russell Russell Six of the reporters saw the the Democratic side must fall every City job is, how much it pays, and what it leads to? Stevenson Stevenson strongest ticket as being a com- either to Kefauver or Stevenson, Truman bination of Eisenhower and T a f t and that the real scramble is for Will we, or will we not, have in New York City a or T a f t and Eisenhower. This the vice-presidential nomination. T h e confusions and divisions might seem an impossible combi- This would, however, be the merplan in which employees can appeal for proper titles and which are rending the Democratic nation. But the newsmen show est superficial interpretation. Note, for example, the current of votes salaries in terms of the jobs they are actually performing? Party show through these results. some hard thinking. These six for Paul H. Douglas, who appears While Kefauver and Stevenson obviously reach their conclusion run ahead of the other prospec- on the basis that the two wings on no less t h a n seven of these The time for decision has come. tive candidates nation-wide, the of the Republican Party are rep- combinations. Suppose he were a n Board H a s A l r e a d y H e a r d E v i d e n c e distribution of votes indicates no resented by these two candidates, avowed candidate? Suppose that such of opinion as exists and if they were running together Stevenson's announcement were The Formal Hearings Board set up to hear the pros on theclarity GOP side. The newspaper- they would bring about a recon- affirmative rather than negative, suppose that the draft moveand cons has already taken the evidence on the GrifFen- men consider James A. Farley a ciliation of the party and the and popular candidate in New York strongest ticket. Nevertheless, the ment for him grows? The xmderhagen project. The Board heard City employees, depart- State, taut they do not transfer over-all verdict is clear: Most current of interest in Harriman is popularity into the national powerful combination on the GOP growing. If any interpretation is ment heads, and civic organizations. It listened to ham- this to be put upon these statistics, it scene. Six of the writers deem the side—Eisenhower and Warren. Is that the Democratic party is mer-blow criticisms of many Griffenhagen proposals, and magic of the Roosevelt name s u f 4. What combination of presi- still confused and uncertain, that ficient to pull FDR, Jr. through as is groping toward the team it also some sturdy defenses. The Board is now weighing the strongest candidate the D e m - dential and vice-pi-csidential can- it ocrats have State-wide; six also didates would, in your opinion. wants but has not yet found it. the evidence and will, presumably, come up with a proThe totals in the various tallies do not match, because not all the posal of its own. Be Proud of U. S. newsmen answered all four quesThere is no doubt that the Griffenhagen plan as tions. Fifty-three newsmen rePublic Service, sponded in the poll; 50 questiondrafted contained many defects, errors, and shortcomings. naires were valid; 3 were disalRamspeck Says Even the Griffenhagen staff freely admits this. We are lowed because they were marked WASHINGTON, April 28—Inject with the names of local personlearning an old lesson over again: perfection does not pride, not poison, into the public ages or because the responses come in a day. The most significant result of the hearings service, the nation's editors were were not comprehensible. by Robert Ramspeck, ChairBecause the political situation is perhaps this: that despite the weight of criticism, The 15th Anniversary Dinner of told m a n of the U. S. Civil Service is in such flux, and because D e m nearly all recognize that we need classification and the Civil Service Technical Guild Commission, at a luncheon of the ocratic sentiment is so far from be held on Wednesday, May American Society of Newspaper jelling, this column will run a d modern pay-determining procedures in New York City. will 7, at the Grand Street Boys As- Editors in the Statler Hotel. ditional opinion questionnaires in sociation, 106 West 55th Street, Instead of editorials inveighing order to gauge public views of the A g r e e m e n t Can B e A c h i e v e d NYC. in general terms against "too many presidential candidacies. The dinner, in addition to being Government employees," give the What is required now is the achievement of a miniA detailed analysis of this poll 15th Anniversary, is a testi- people facts about services their mum area of agreement. It is our view that such an area the monial to Vice President, Louis government agencies are per- in light of current political events J. Rubenstein, who has completed forming, so that they can decide will appear in next week's column. !£ attainable. 15 years of service to the organi- intelligently where they want ecoWe urge that the employee organizations state their zation. nomies to be made, Mr. Ramspeck basic requirements for such agreement, so that at least the Among the invited guests are urged. Impellitteri, all the mem"You can't eliminate employees PAUL DOUGLAS, U. S. Senator principle of classification can be established in the City Mayor bers of the Board of Estimate, without eliminating the work they and the machinery may begin to function. Mr. John many members of the City Coun- are doing," Mr. Ramspeck said. "If from Illinois: "As long as Federal State Legislature, Commis- every U. S. employee were fired, workers are not covered by u n Leavens, who directed the study, has indicated several cil, sioners Zurmuhlen and Bingham, we would save 13 percent, about employment insurance or a sysreasonable bases for agreement; the Formal Hearings and several Supreme Court judges. nine billion dollars of our 70 bil- tem of severance pay, they should Philip P. Brueck is president of lion dollar budget. Then the govBoard and the employee organizations ought to give the organization. ernment would stop functioning." be allowed to accumulate annual leave," careful thought to his proposed seven-point plan. We (Continued from page 1) pective presidential candidates would, in your opinion, make the strongest Republican run (a) in LEADER E N T E R P R I S E S . INC. f 7 Duane Street. New York 7, N. Y. BEekman 3-6010 New York State; (b) i n the n a tion? Jerry Finkelstein, Publisher Maxwell Lehman, Editor and Co-Publisher The responses: H. J. Bernard, Executive Editor Morton Yarmon. General Manager STATE NATION N. e . Mager, Business Manager Eisenhower 43 Eisenhower 36 Subscription Price $2.50 per Annum MacArthxir 1 0 MacArthur 0 Stassen 1 Stassen 7 Taft 4 Taft TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1952 3 Warren 1 Warren Member. Audit Bureau of Circulations Published every Tuesday by MLnimum. Agreement On Career-Salary Plan A Technical Guild's 15th Anniversary THEY SAY repeat them: pay adjustments as of a specific starting date. A very ROBERT RAMSPECK, Chair1. Adopt the classification plan leaving it for a Board smaH fraction of this sum would provide for the program man, U. S. Civil Service Commission: "It will be impossible for us •f Appeals to adjust allocations of individual positions. outlined. to control Federal hiring effec2. Adopt the pay scales recommended or any adjustT h e s e Matters C a n B e A d j u s t e d ^ tively on merit system principles ment made by the duly constituted authority. If the employee organizations cannot accept all of unless the Senate restores the 3. Establish or designate an aigency of City govern- these points, then perhaps they can go along with some funds cut from our 1953 budget request by the House of Reprement; vest it with power and authority to administer the of them and add what other requirements they feel are sentatives. The cut of $3,300,000 needed. For example, they might want to add that the made by the House will open t h e classification and pay plans. 4. Establish an appeals board within such agency existing rights of all incumbent employees should be fully door to political patronage and t o personal patronage, and we don't and vest it with quasi-judicial power to hear and decide protected; they might want to be more certain about the think that's economy." meaning of point 2 in Mr. Leavens category; they might Individual complaints. NOTIFIED IN 5. Require the Municipal Civil Service Commission seek a clear-cut statement from the Formal Hearings FAILURES ADMINISTRATIVE EXAMS to work out a table of equivalencies and certify its con- Board repudiating anything in the Griffenhagen Report In the NYC open-competitive elusions to the administering agency unless it is itself the which might be extraneous to classification, like the exam to fill administrative assistant Jobs. 538 of the 1,348 candiagency. (Equivalencies refer to the problem of equitting controversial statements about vacations and leave. dates have been notified that they the titles of existing positions to the new titles devised by With good-will and a mature approach, it is possible do not meet the minimum qualifications. Griffenhagen.) to obtain now the principle and elementary machinery of In the administrator test, 39 out 6. Have the Municipal Civil Service Commission classification, with the hope of laying groundwork for of 119, and in the senior administrative assistant t«st, 62 out of apply its conclusions with respect to each "title" and the the kind of career-and-salary plan that the employees of 250 were disqualified. In the promotion exams for the rights of incumbents related to the title. New York City will feel gives them the protection they same jobs, 16 out of 250 were re7. Appropriate a sum of money, the exact amount want, salaries in line with the work they do, equal pay jected for administrative assist§ i which can only be determined after policy decisions for equal work,—and for the City, the basis for a better ant, 12 out of 25 for administrator and 6 out of 148 tor Ifinloc iir« rea^l^ed m Ui^ PA/. recosiujpieA^ations, to provide for Dersonnel system and superior government. administrator. TaMd«7, April 29, 195S CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Page Seven Activities of Civil Service Employees in N.Y. State Industry boys of the Institution, first at the are asked to contribute generously. ces Witte, former principal of the \ ice Employees Association. Academic School and then to the \Villard Connors of the Kitchen is Rockland State Hospital School of I Bollman, toastmaster for the presented Mrs. Leslie and T H E INDUSTRY CHAPTER. entire population on April 2nd and 3n vacation and will return next >Jurslng, Dr. Fritz Breuer, head occasion, Miss Isler with bouquets, a gift veek. Mr. and Mrs. Saul Lehman 4th respectively. CB&A, met on April 16 at Cayuga doctor of the hospital Infirmary, Mrs. Ella Jasnau, housemother, will take a motor trip to Florida where both women were employed; from all those present, and. on Center for its regular business of the Civil Service Emsession followed by the showing is back on the job again following starting May 4th. Happy motor- Mrsr Loretta Rourk, chief super- behalf ployees Association, gave each an ing, folks, of Interesting Kodadhrome pic- her recent Illness. vising nurse, and Emil M. R. Boll- Association pin. Both received tures of Florida. South Carolina Mrs. Harr: Stearns and about man. president of the Civil Serv- purses filled with money. and local scenes, by Arthur 25 students from Roberts Wesleyan Beaton. College have been conducting reTHE FOLLOWING were elected On April 26th several members ligious Instruction classes in the attended the meeting and diriper cottages on Saturdays for the to serve as officers of the Dept. of the Western Regional Confer- Protestant boys The Gideon So- of Albany, D.P.U.I. Chapter of ence at Brockport State Teachers' ciety has provided the boys with the Association for the coming College. These included Mr. and New Testaments for this purpose. year: President, Mrs. Margaret J. Point Preference for Veterans { of what I expected from the State Easter services were held at the Willi; vice president, Walter UnMrs. H. Kohls, Mrs. Obelene ArDO THE ADDED POINTS for Employees Retirement System. thur, Mr. Joseph McMahon, Mr. Catholic Chapel with a choir of derwood; secretary. Miss Marjorie veterans help them to pass an How does it happen that instead and Mrs. Olson and Mr. James j 30 High School Girls from H o l j E. Dorr; treasurer, Harold Schwe- exam, or are they added only after of half pay, after many years of I Rosary church singing the High beL young. one passes the exam?—O.P. service, I get only about one-third urvder the leadership of The Industry Men's Bowling 1 In Federal service, the addition- pay? I put $3,000 into the SysSister Anna Louise, their music League has ended a succe^ful al points count toward passing tem and my annual allowance will season. As the result of a tie be- teacher, and cousin of Father Jothe exam. In New York State and j be only about half of that. THERE will be a meeting of the seph Vogt, Catholic Chaplain at tween the Apache and Chippewa NYC the veteran first must pass P.W.C. executive board of the chapter at Industry. teams, a play-off was held on the test, before he gets the added The retirement allowance is The Industry Home Bureau has the Squadron A Armory on May points. April 19; Chippewas came out on granted on the basis of the re1. This time all proposals will be top. Members of the top team are elected its oflBcers for the coming R u t h Moore, chairman; taken into consideration so that Telephone Operator rromotlons tirement law. It consists of the Elbert Gumaer, captain; Richard year. employer-paid pension, based on Barron, S a m Cafalone, Peter Do- Francis Off en, co-chairman; El- the chapter delegates will be able WHAT ARE the prospects of eanor Damon, assistant chairman; to present them at the Armory telephone operator, grade 2, pro- the average of any five consecumiano, Herbert Olson. Employees Conference being held tive years of pay. and the annuTeam with the highest single Dorothy Chapin, Secretary-Treas- in the State Armory in Newburgh motions being made in NYC de- ity account, which is the $3,000 score of 867 is the Navahos. The ui-er. partments? L.O'R. on May 8th and 9th. you contributed. That contributeam with the highest three games Good, as the result of action tion on your part applies not to The candidates selected by the score of 2433 is the Chippewas. nominating committee are as fol- taken last Friday by the Board just five consecutive years but to The Individual with the highest of Estimate. As the lists have only all of the years of your service, A DINNER was given at the lows. three-game score of 623 is HowPresident: William Maher. Hq. a few months to run, the Board including the early years when ard Callahan. The individual high Romulus Hotel by the employees voted a policy of promoting the your pay was probably much lowsingle game of 244 belongs to Wil- of Willard State Hospital for Mr. Det., Henry Clark, 13th Regt.; eligibles on all of the lists. er than now. Failure fo achieve president: Jack DeLisi, liam Schroeder. He also received Alphonsus P. Driscoll who recent- Vice half pay or more, for the basic the ABC award for the individual ly retired. Mr. Driscoll was for- Rizzo, Hq. N.G.; Executive SecreNew Internal Revenue .Jobs service period, results from the Frank Wallace, 369th; bowler who improved his average merly employed at Brooklyn State tary: WHAT ARE the prospects of an annuity account being too small Treasurer: George Fisher, 102 the most during the year. The Hospital and Creedmoor. Eng.; Corresponding Secretary: exam to fill the new district com-" j to buy the same quarter-pay benmen held a banquet oti April 24 Anthony Scala, Squadron A; Re- missioner jobs in the U. S. Bu efit that the pension provides. at the Sportacade Bowling Alleys cording Secretary: Sidney Bate- reau of Internal Revenue?—K.E.C. The State pays every cent it is to which wives and friends were Some jobs are now being filled required to pay, no more, no less, man, Arsenal; Sgt.* at Arms: Invited. Charles Smith, 71st Inf., James through promotion of career em- and the pensioner gets the annuThe Industry Women's Bowling ployees of the Bureau. The New ity value of his contributions with Cassidy, 106th Inf. League reports its high team for AT THE ANNUAL meeting of Candidates will be voted on at York and Chicago district com- interest, no more, no less. Unless the season as composed of Ho- the Division of Standards and the next regular meeting, which missionerships have been filled an employee voluntarily contribneoye Falls members, sponsored Purchase chapter. CSEA, held re- will be held at the Kingsbridge that way. The IRB in Washing- utes more than the minimum to by Rittenhouse, May Merritt, Ger- cently. the following officers were Armory on May 21. ton has set up a board to select his annuity account, which he trude Briggs, Minnie Lord, Marian elected: President, Ida B. GreenThe chapter wishes that Frank employees from within that agen- may do. the annuity benefit is Plain and Hazel Robbins with the stein. Vice President. Edmond W. Gonsalves, who is doing a terrific cy to fill the remaining jobs. almost bound to be less than the high score for 3 games totaling Becker; secretary, Harriet E. Gra- job on publicity, will slow down a pension benefit. When time comes 2276 and their highest single score ham; treasurer, Raymond W. little and really enjoy his vacation. Minimum U. S. Pensions to retire it is too late to make being 841. Hazel Robbins has the Houghton. Deepest sympathy goes out to AS I AM a former U, S. em- amends. Employees should start high single score of 236 and the E. Bratten, Superintendent of the ployee receiving a pension of only early to buy additional annuity high score of 570 for 3 games. 13th Regt., whose brother Walter $900 a year. I am wondering what in the System. The Women's banquet will be died suddenly while on a business is being done about minimum penheld on May 3rd at Hillcrest THE METROPOLITAN Public trip for the U. S. Steel Corp. Also sion law for us pensioners? — Hotel. MOTORMAN ANSWERS Service chapter, CSEA, has had to Adolph Stenner of Headquar- J.T.W. From the Academic School are ters Separate Detachment on the Two questions were stricken out There are bills in Congress on a number of items regarding a t - ! ^ j ^ e ^ r i m e n t a V ^ a S s ^ loss of his father. the subject. The U. S. Civil Serv- and the answer to five others were tendance of teachers at various departmental ranks withm the ice Commission is now in favor changed by the NYC Civil Service past ten days and wish to extend conferences. Mrs. Louise Husson. their heartfelt sympathy to the of a minimum pension law, but Commission in the test for proMiss Alice Roche, Miss Thei-e.sa families of: Raymond J. McVeigh. wants Congress to make an ap- i motion to motorman, NYC Transit Snyder, and Miss Vera Costello Assistant Counsel; Ward E. HinBALLOTS have gone out in the propriation. The Smaters bill j System. attended a meeting of the Inter- man. Chief, Telephone Bureau; election of officers for the NYC national Council for Exceptional Matthew Houghton. Gas Meter chapter, CSEA . They must be re- would require that the cost be I The test was taken on March 1 Children at Geneseo State Teach- Tester; William L. P. Ingraham. turned to the chapter office, 80 defrayed by the U. S. Retirement by 1,555 candidates. The CommisSystem for the first 18 months, sion received 175 protests affecting ers' College on April 3rd. Mrs. Senior Telephone Engineer. Center Street, during voting hours, with increases to $324 a year, and 64 of the 100 questions. Husson will serve on the Program 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday, May 13. These fellow employees have lapse thereafter, if Congress then The changes from tentative to Committee for a period of 3 years. Nominated for office are tlie fails to appropriate funds to con- final key answers: Miss Synder was appointed sec- been with the Commission for following: many years, were well liked by tinue the benefit. Some Congres- Question Tent, Final retary of the association. President, Solomon Bendet; 1st 12 C C or D Charles Moore, supervisor of vo- all and shall be missed by every- vice president, A1 Corum; 2nd vice sional action now seems likely at one. this session of Congress. 28 C C or D cational education, and Charles president. Max Lieberman; 3rd 47 A A or C Biggs, student of Social Work, atvice president, Grace Nulty; treasBasis of Retirement Allowance 54 Out tended a conference at Geneseo urer, Joseph J. Byrnes; recording THE AMOUNT of retirement al67 B B or D on "The Guidance and Functional secretary, Margaret Shields; cor86 Out Part of the School Program." Mr. THE I OIJ.OWING officers were responding secretary, Elvia Hart; lowance that I will receive when 90 M E or M Moore also attended the Safety elected for 1952-53 at the regular financial secretary, Michael L. I retire next month is far short Supervisors Conference for N. Y. meeting of Cayuga Chapter, Porta. Members are also urged to ) State Employees in Buffalo on CSEA, held in the Court House vote for representatives of their April 16th. on April 21: President. David But- departments, divisions, commisMrs. Marian Chapell, Librarian, ler, County Highway; 1st vice sions, bureaus or agencies. represented the Dept. of Social president, Stephen Androsko, AuMr. Bendet, chapter president, Welfare on April '4 at a Library burn Board of Education: 2nd has issued a call for an employee Conference held in N.Y.C., called vice president. James E. Leston, to serve as publicity chief »#or the by Miss Marian Vetter of the Auburn Water Dept.; 3rd vice chapter. If you've had any newsState Educational Dept., Division president. - Joseph T. Wallace, paper or writing experience, and of Libraries. i would like to serve, please coml . u , s Mandra, Walter Cush.nan 1 S X a ' ^ E v r s ^ ^ ^ . S ^ ' S l - d ^ ' S municate with Mr. Bendet at the ALBANY, April 28 —Governor and Arthur Roberts will attend a Education; treasurer, Chester M. State Insurance Department, 61 A revised and enlarged edition Dewey has vetoed a bill which conference of Industrial Arts at Nodine, County Welfare. of that useful work, "A Guide to required that any public officer Broadway, NYC. Oswego State Teachers' College the Municipal Government of the indicted "for a crime concerning Installation of officers will take on April 25th. place at the dinner meeting of City of New York 7th edition, (N. the conduct of his office" be i m Tlie chapter welcomes to the the Chapter to be held on May Y.: Record Press, 1952, 209p.) by mediately suspended without pay. staff Donald Scott, Principal S t a - 13 at Springside Inn. on Owasco REMEMBER the last party? Rebecca B. Rankin has just ap- Tiie measure provided that the tionary Engineer, and his family, Lake. Tliey're doing it again—and bigsuspension would stand until the formerly of the Thomas Indian ger and better (what—is that pos- peared. This edition has been re- indictment were dismissed or the School. sible?). It's Thursday evening, vised in every detail and contains aide acquitted after trial. Edward Taylor, music instrucMay 1, 8:30 p.m., in the 106th up-to-the-minute information not The Governor held that "an i n tor, directed a successful comedy Armory, Masten & Best Streets. easily found elsewhere. dictment is merely an accusation. TOMPKINS chapter. CSEA, will called "Indian Nuts" given by the Tickets are $1 (if your chapter Miss Rankin takes up the work . . . The indictment itself may hold its regular meeting at Tomp- dues are paid). New members as kins County Court House Mon- of April 1 get in free. There'll be of the various branches of the gov- not be construed as evidence of ernment in detail, describing their guilt." day, May 5. at 8 p.m. dancing and refreshments. functions and interrelationships. Moreover, Mr. Dewey said, "if A report on nominations of A1 Killian is chairman of the No other book describes the gov- this bill becomes law, an irresponchapter 'officers will be made by shindig, with Helen Lonergan actthe nominating committee and ing as co-chairman. On the com- ernment of New York City as it Is sible or a misguided grand jury independent nominations will be mittee are: Ken Riexinger, Joe today. It is a mine of useful in- c o u l d p a r a l y z e government received from the floor. Dunn, Charlotte Tropman, Art formation and all citizens of our through a series of indictments of There will also be a general dis- Wa.sserman, Grace Hillery, Mary great city would do well to famili- important public officials for minor offenses. . . cussion of Ter Bush and Powell E. Malioney, Margaret Donohue, arize themselves with its pages. accident and sickness insurance. Mary Ann Ernst, Sherry Beliissi-, AI-BANY, April 28 — Stenog- Resolutions for payroll deductions mo, and Mary Lease. Overseeing Now i» the time to prepare for ih« months ahead, with raphers and typists interested in for the insurance have been everything is chapter president fin* OPHTHALMIC QUALITY, ready-to-wear sun glasses. passed by the Ithaca City CounCeleste Rosencranz. permanent Slate civil service jobs Take advontage of this unusually good opportunity for may apply for tests Mondays .sel and the Tompkins County • y e protection. Many attractive styles to choose from. through Fridays at offices of the Board of Supervisors. New York State Employment ServMRS. ELSIE J. LESLIE, R. N.. ice in Syracuse and Watertown, it was announced today by J. Edand Miss Frieda Isler, stenogward Conway, President of the THE FOLLOWING d e p a r t - rapher, were guests at a surprise Static Civil Service Commission. ments have 100% representation party given in honor of their reUNITED OPTICAL GROUP There are 57 positions to be in the Psychiatric Institute chap- tirement from' state service at The filled permanently in State offices ter, CSEA: Kitchen, Laundry, Rockland State Hospital. 154 Nassau Street and Institutions in Syracuse and Housekeeping, Bacteriology and party, attended by 41 friends of tOPP. CITY HALLI the two women, was held in Home a smaller number in Oswego, the Safety Division. New York City. N. Y. Alice Thoms and Sara Klein of 29. on the hospital grounds, the Watertown. Auburn, Cortland, and other locutions. Candidates may the Record Room are accepting night of March 27. Olgby 4-6568 iiunatiuu^i to tiie Cuucer Fund. Aii ' Among thoiie present w^re Fran• t e ii>Piy lor jobii iu Aibuny. DPUl, Albany QUESTIONS & ANSWERS Mefropolifan Armories Willard State Hospital Standards & Purchase, Albany Melropolifan Public Service New York City Cayuga County New Guide Suspension To NYC Govt. Without Pay By Rankin Bill Is Killed Buffalo State Hospital Tompkins County Typist, Steno Openings In Syracuse Rockland State Hospital Psychiatric Institute SUN GLASSES CIVIL Eight SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, April 29, 1952 EXAMS FOR PUBLIC JOBS NYC Open-Competitive These NYC exams are now open. The pay stated does not include the raise contained in the executive budget. The last day to apply apears at the end of each notice. 6409. PSYCHIATRIST. GRADE 4. $6,650. Twenty-six vacancies. Hospitals. Requirements: An M.D. degree, 5 years of experience, and a NYS license to practice medicine. Persons who applied in Janwary need not file again. Fee $4, (Wednesday, April 30). 6458. CAPTAIN (FERRY SERVICE). Three vacancies at $4,950 and four at $4,800. Marine and Aviation. Requirements: U S Coast Guard certiflcates as Master of ferry, steam and water vessels and Pilot First-Class of same on bays, sounds and rivers from New York Bay and Harbor to Yonkers, East River to Stepping Stones and Btaten Island Sound. Fee $4. Exam date: Saturday, June 14. (Wednesday, April 30). 6463. JANITOR, GRADE 1. $2,400. Six vacancies. Departm e n t of Health. Requirements: Two years of experience. Fee $2. (Wednesday, April 30). 6492. PRINCIPAL LIBRARIAN. $4,271. One vacancy, William Hallock Park Laboratory, Department of Health. Requirements: Education and experience. Fee $4. (Wednesday, April 30). 6530. CONSULTANT PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE (COMMUNICABLE DISEASES). $4,271. Three vacancies. Department of Health. Requirements: Experience a n d / o r education, and a NYS registered nurse license. Fee $4. Exam date: Friday, June 20. (Wednesday, April 30). 6536. ASSISTANT CIVIL ENGINEER. $4,391. 131 vacancies. Requirements: Experience and education. Fee $4. Exam date: Saturday, June 7. (Wednesday, April 30). 6553. ASSISTANT MECHANICAL ENGINEER (BUILDING CONSTRUCTION). $4,391. Sixteen vacancies, NYC Housing Authority. Requirements: Experience and education. Fee $4. Exam date: Tuesday, May 27. (Wednesday, April 30). 6578. SENIOR PROPERTY MANAGER (CONCESSIONS). $5,000. One vacancy. Marine and Aviation. Requirements: Education a n d / o r experience. Fee $4, Exam date: Monday, June 23. (Wednesday, April 30). 6579. SENIOR PROPERTY sliYe because you are a PREFERRED RISK! clan. Exam d ^ e : Wednesday, June 25. Last day to file: Wednesday, April 30. 6459. MATE (FERRY SERVICE), (Prom.), $3,620. Six vacancies, Marine and Aviation. Fee $3. 6677. ASSISTANT DIRECTOR Eligible title: Deckhand. Require(CHILD WELFARE). $5,770 to ments: U.S. Coast Guard certifi$7,270. Seven vacancies. Welfare, cate as Inland Mate. Exam date: education. Pee $5. Exam date: Saturday, June 28. Last day to Saturday, June 28. (Wednesday, file: Wednesday, April 30. April 30). 6467. ASSISTANT DIRECTOR (Prom.), 6532. INSPECTOR OF DOCK (CHILD WELFARE), AND PIER CONSTRUCTION, $5,520 to $7,020. Seven vacancies. GRADE 3, $3,671. Eight vacancies. Welfare. Fee $5. Eligible title: Requirements: Five years of expe- Senior Supervisor (Child Welfare). rience. Fee $3. (Wednesday, April Requirements: High school graduation and education and/or ex30). perience. Exam date: Saturday, 6703. JUNIOR CIVIL ENGI- June 28. Last day to file: WednesNEER, third filing period, $3,550. day. April 30. Over 300 vacancies. Requirements: 6470. CUSTODIAN ENGINEER, Education and/or experience. Fee $3. Exam date: June 28. (Until (Prom.), $7,560 to $n,160, depending on size of building. 35 further notice.) vacancies, Education. Fee $4. Eligible title: Custodian. RequireNYC ments: NYC Stationary Engineer's Promotion License. Exam date: Monday, June 16. Last day to file: Wednesday, The following^ NYC promotion Apiil 30. exams are now opeii to qualified 6501. ASSISTANT MAINTEemployees. Candidates must have (POWER), served in an eligible title on a NANCE ENGINEER permanent basis for at least six $4,741 to $5,410. Two vacancies, consecutive months preceding the Bd. of Trans. Fee $4. Eligible title: exam date, unless otherwise noted, One year as Junior Maintenance but eligibles will not be certified Engineer (Power). Exam date: until they have been in the title Thursday, June 19. Last day to two years, unless a n open-com- file: Wednesday, April 30. petitive list in the same title ex6506. FOREMAN (BUSES AND ists, when one year will suffice. SHOPS), (Prom.). $2.22 to $2.50 5802. ASSISTANT DIRECTOR, an hour. Board of Transportation. (Prom.), $5,520 to $7,020. One Fee $4. Eligible titles: One year vacancy. Welfare. Fee $5. Eligible as Bus Maintainer, Groups A and or Mechanical Maintainer, title: Senior Supervisor. Exam B date: Saturday, June 28. Last day Group C. Exam date: Saturday, June 28. Last day fb file: Wednesto file: Wednesday, April 30. day, April 30. 6423. SENIOR SUPERVISOR 6537. COURT CLERK, GRADE (CHILD WELFARE), (Prom.), $4,740 to $5,220. One vacancy. 3, (Prom.), $3,421 to $4,020. City Welfare. Fee $4.-Eligible title: Court. Fee $3. Eligible titles: Clerk, Supervisor (Child Welfare). Re- Grade 3, 4 or 5; Stenographer, quirements: High school gradua- Grade 3, 4 or 5; Interpreter: Court tion and education and/or expe- Stenographer: or Court Attendrience. Exam date: Saturday, I ant. Exam date: Saturday, DeJune 28. Last day to file: Wednes- cember 27. Last day to apply: Wednesday, April 30. day, April 30. MANAGER (WATERFRONT). $6,300. One vacancy. Marine and Aviation. Requirements: Education a n d / o r experience. Fee $4. Exam date: Monday, June 23. (Wednesday, April 30). 6451. SENIOR RADIATION TECHNICIAN, (Prom.), $3,490, Two vacancies. Hospitals. Fee $3. Eligible title: Radiation Techni- Clerk Grades 3 and 4 Tests to Re-Open • • T h e NYC exams for promotion to clerk, grade 3, and clerk, grade 4, will be reopened for three days, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 8, 9 and 10. On Saturdays the Municipal Civil Service Commission's application bureau, 96 Duane Street, closes at noon, on other days at 4 P.M. The applications received in February were 6,691 for grade 3, 2,648 for grade 4. YOUR CHANCES OF ACCIDENTS ARE LOWER HENCE. YOUR INSURANCE RATE IS LOWER Civilian government employees save up to 30% by plocing their automobile insurance with the company organiied specifically to give government employees the finest insurance protection a t the lowest possible cost. Government Employees Insurance Company assures you unsurpassed CLAIM SERVICE backed by a vast •etwork of 500 claims attorneys and adjusters located in every siieable city in the U. S.. it's territories and Canada. It's yours wherever you are—whenever you •eed it—'round the clock or 'round the hemisphere. Up-to-the-minute •a this SEND FOR FACTS AND FIGURES NAME AGE. ADDRESS ...» I MaU Model ... No. Cy!...., Purch«f*d / / • U»«d • N«w Anticipated Mileage Next 12 months Age of Oapital Stock Comitany . . . Mot affiliated with the United States OoTemment) ^ v c r n m t n t Employees lasuronce iHlldlag Waihington (5), D. C. Type Body edition by Harry Soderman, D.Sc., and John J. O'Connell TODAY! C«r Y*ar Mormatlen Criminal Investigation INSURANCE COMPANY (• revised Modern GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES ffot 'Available Through Agents wr Brokers new Youngest Driver in your Household This toi> reXereuco book in modern police ttcienoe bas beeu brougrht right up to the minute, trivinr you all the Jateet icieutillc techniques and methods ot criminal invesitigatiou and detection. In addition to rewritten' and expanded chapteia, this new 4th Edition iucludea a vruatly enlarged eection on Peychologry tu Detective 8erTlce, plus important NKW chapters on Drugr Addiction, Police OrKaiiixatione Here and Abroa<l. Miseinir Persons. Toxieologry, Plant Protection, Problems of Uniform Police, etc. Packed with ill ust rations, diagrams, ktaiistical charts and tables. Recommended by law enforcement ofliceia from coast to coast. Price $4.76. At y « u r Bookbturu or Under Direct 2 U Car Used For Business Purposes Other Than io and from work ( ) Yei ( ) No I EMPLOYEE OF FEDERAL t I STATE | ) C O U N T Y GOVIINMFP % m m m ( ) MUNICIPAL ( ) IMSURAN$E C O M P A N Y fruui FUNK & WAGNALLS 16:t K. «41U titreet. New York 10 6593. FOREMAN, (Prom.), $3,910. Sanitation. Fee $3. Eligible title: Assistant Foreman. Exam date: Saturday, June 14. Last day to file: Wednesday, April 30. 6610. FOREMAN OF LABORERS, GRADE 4, (Prom.), $4,021 and over. One vacancy, Water Supply, Gas and Electricity. Fee $4. Eligible title: Foreman of Laborers, Grade 3. Exam date: Tuesday, June 3. Last day to file: Wednesday, April 30. 6611. FOREMAN OF LABORERS, GRADE 3, (Prom.), $3,421 to $4,020. Three vacancies. Water Supply, Gas and Electricity. Fee $3. Eligible title: Foreman of Laborers, Grade 2. Exam date: Friday, May 16. Last day to file: Wednesday, April 30. 6662. ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT, (Prom.), $4,021 and over. Parks. Fee $4. Eligible title: Base salary not less than $3,421. Requirements: One year of e x p e rience. Last day to file: Wednesday, April 30. STATE Open-Competitive These State open competitive exams are now open for filingr. The pay at start and after five annual increments is given and includes the present cost-of-living adjustment. 6062. ASSISTANT IN CHILD DEVELOPMENT, $4,964 to $6,088. One vacancy. Education, Bureau of Child Development and Parent Education, Albany, Fee $4. R e quirements: A ma.ster's degree plus experience. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. Exam date: S a t urday. June 21. 6063. ASSISTANT IN EDUCATION OF HANDICAPPED, $4,964 to $6,088. Two vacancies. Education, Bureau of Handicapped, Albany. Fee $4. Requirements: Education and experience. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. Exam date: Saturday, June 21. 6064. ESTATE TAX EXAMI(Continued on page 9) Where to Apply for Jobs In Government Service U. S.—Second Regional Office, U. S. Civil Service Commission, 641 Washington Street, New York 14, N. Y. (Manhattan) Hours 8:30 to 5, Monday through Friday; closed Saturday. Tel. WAtkins 4-1000. Applications also obtainable at post offices except in the New York post office. STATE—Room 2301 at 270 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y.^Tel. BArclay 7-1616; lobby of State Office Building, and 39 Columbia Street, Albany, N. Y.: Room 302, State Office Building, Buffalo 2, N. Y. Hours 8:30 to 5, excepting Saturdays, 9 to 12. Also, Room 400 at 155 West Main Street, Rochester, N. Y., Thursdays and Fridays, 9 to 6. Same applies to exams for county jobs. NYC—NYC Civil Service Commission, 96 Duane Street, New York 7, N. Y. (Manhattan) Opposite Civil Service LEADER office. Hours 9 to 4, excepting Saturday, 9 to 12. Tel. COrtlandt 7-8880. NYC Education (Teaching Jobs Only)—Personnel Director, Board of Education, 110 Livingston Street. Brooklyn 2, N. Y. Hours 9 t o 3:30; closed Saturdays. Tel. MAIn 4-2800. NYC Travel Directions Rapid transit lines that may be used for reaching the U. State and NYC Civil Service Commission offices J n NYC follow: State Civil Service Commission, NYC Civil ^ vice Commission—* IND trains A, C, D, AA or CC to Chambers Street; IRT Lexington Avenue line to Brooklyn Bridge; BMT Fourth Avenue local OK Brighton local to City Hall. U. S. Civil Service CommLssIon—IRT Seventh Avenue local t o CJhrlstopher Street station. Data on Applications by Mail Both the U. S. and the State issue application blanks and r e ceive filled-out forms by mall. In applying by mail for U. S. jobs, do not enclose return postage. If appljrtng for State jobs, enclose 6-cent stamped, self-addressed 9" or larger envelope. The State accepts postmarks as of the closing date. The U. S. does not, but requires that the mail be in its office by 5 p.m. of the closing date. Because of curtailed collections, NYC residents should actually do their mailing no later than 6:30 p.m. to obtain a postmark of that date. NYC does not Issue blanks by mail or receive them by mall, except for nationwide tests, and then only when the exam notice so states. The U. 6. charges no application fees. The State and the local Civil Service Commissions charge fees, and at the same rate fixed by law. Study Material For STOREKEEPER 1 to 7 STUDY BOOK UOO Sample Questions Practice Material LEADER BOOKSTORE 97 DUANE STREET No Extra Charge NEW YORK 7, N. Y. for Mall Orders if Prepaid CIVIL TiMMlay, April 29, 19S2 SERVICE Page Nin« LEADER Two DPUl Promotion Tests Open Among the State promotion exams open until Friday, May 16, are two for filling jobs in the Division of Placement and Unemplo7'ment Insurance, Department of Labor. One is principal stenographer. $3,411 to $4,212, and the other head clerk, upstate area, $4,359 to $5,189. The first figure Is the starting pay and the second the pay after five annual increments. There are five vacancies in Albany for principal stenographer, the State Civil Service Department announced, adding that vacancies iif the head clerk jobs occur "from time to time." Both written tests will be held on Saturday, June 21. The principal stenographer exam will not include a practical test in stenography. Eligribility Requirements That date is important in figuring eligibility. Candidates must be in the competitive class in an eligible title for at least one year preceding that date. For head clerk, the present job must be in the clerical service. Grade G-10 or higher. Senior stenographer is the eligible title for the other test. For head clerk, the writen test will have a weight of 3, service record rating counts 2, seniority 1, and training and experience, 4. For principal stenographer the written test counts 4. record 2, seniority 1, and training and experience, 3. The scope of the written tests follows: Principal vStenographer: office practices, secretarial procedures, supervision, reading comprehension, vocabulary, spelling, and English usagdT including capitalization, punctuation and grammar. Head clerk: administrative and office management methods and principles of organization; reporting and communication, work planning and scheduling; State Unemployment Insurance Law, rules and regulations, especially on employer coverage, tax liability, benefits and claims; and supervisory techniques. Exams Open STATE Open-Competitive (Continued from page S) NER, $4,053 to $4,889. One vacancy, Tax and Finance, Albany, Fee $3. Requirements: Experience and experience and/or education. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. Exam date: Saturday, June 21, 6065. COURT STENOGRAPHER One vacancy. Supreme Court, Buffalo, $8,300. One vacancy, Erie County Courts, $5,450 to $5,950. Candidates must be residents of Allegany, Cattaraugus. Chautauqua, Erie, Genesee. Niagara, Orleans, or Wyoming County, for four months preceding the exam date. Pee $5. Requirements: A CSR certificate issued by the Board of Regents of New York University or expeiience. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. Exam date: Saturday, June 21. 6066. DENTAL HYGIENIST. One vacancy. Health, Mt. Morris TB Hospital, $3,251 to $4,052. Twenty-two vacancies. Mental Hygiene $3,251 to $3,731. Open to residents of the Onited States. Fee f2. Requirements: License to practice as a dental hygienist in NYS. Last day to file: "Friday, June 27. No written exam. 6067. SR. LABORATORY WORKER, $2,931 to $3,731. One vacancy, NYC, May compete'also in exam No. 6068. Fee $2. Requirements: Experience and/or education. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. Exam date. Saturday, June 21. 6068. LABORATORY WORKER, $2,316 to $3,118. Four vacancies, Syracuse. Eight vacancies, NYC. May compete also in exam No. 6067. Pee $1. Requirements: Education and/or experience. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. Exam date: Saturday, June 21. 6069. HARBORMASTER. $3,091 to $3,891. One vacancy. Public Works. Buffalo. Pee $2. Requirements: Experience and/or education. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. Exam date: Saturday, June 21. 6455. INTERMEDIATE SOtTAL CASE WORKER (FOSTER HOMES), $3,075 to $3,525. One vacancy. Division of Poster Homes, Westthester County. Fee $2. ReiContimea on page XO) GET THIS PERSONALIZED BALLPOINT P E N YOURS ALMOST AS A GIFT r lE^TRA I Persomiaed WITH YOUR NAME ENGRAVB) IN 22 om^^owo Guaranteed For Life Ink Cartridge Eosy to get at For Quick Refill This sensational gift offer is Civil Service LEADER'S way of saying "Thank You" f o its thousands of long-time loyal readers . . . and also our way of introducing the LEADER t o our new readers and t o those who plan to enter civil service in the future. W e ' r e making this offer as simple as possible! The coupon below is all you need! Merely print your name (plainly please) just as you want it t o a p p e a r on t h e pen. Send it a t once with 25c in coin t o the address on the coupon. For additional pens you must secure •xtra copies of this week's LEADER in which this special offer appears. Super-Smooth Ball Point Mechonism CHECK ALL THESE GREAT FEATURES lYoii can't buy a pen that writes better! Writes better and longer than millions of ball point pens that have sold from $1.00 t o $20. It's scratch-proof, leak-proof and smudgeproof. Dries instantly, has long-life cartridge. Service guaranteed forever by the manufacturer! Handsome c a p with easy-grip clip! It's the greatest Bail Point offer ever made! Your Gift Coupon > Civil Service Leadei Box 100 97 Duane Street New York 7. N. Y. YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS TNIS O F F E R -Don't wait till it's too late. Send for this remarkable Bail Point Pen t o d a y — g e t extra pens with extra copies of Civil Service LEADER this week. Coupon must accompany 25c in coin. Gentlemen: I am enclosing 25c in coin. Please rush Ball Point Pen with following name imprinted in 22-carat gold. Name (please print plainly) Address city. \ Offer Limited- Zone. State, { CIVIL Page Ten SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, AprU 29, 1952 Exams Now Open for Public Jobs vacancies, Public Works, Albany, year as Senior Commodities Tax PHER. Social Welfare (exclusive 5051. SENIOR INCOME TAX Utica, Syracuse, Buffalo and Roch- Examiner in Taxation and Fi- of the institutions), $3,411 to $4,- EXAMINER, Income Tax Bureau^ ester. Fee $2. Requirements: Ex- nance prior to the exam date. 212. One vacancy. Fee $2. Eligible Taxation and Finance. $4,664 to f (Continued from page 9) perience or education. Last day to Tests: written, weight 4; service title: Senior Stenographer. Last $5,601. Fee $3. Eligible title: Income Tax Examiner. Last day to qulremonts: Education and exper- flip: Friday, May 2. Exam date: record rating, weight 1; seniority, day to file: Friday. May 16. weight 1; trairting and experience, ience and/or education. Last day Saturday, June 7. 5050. CORPORATION TAX EX- file: Friday, May 16. 6056. DIRECTOR OF TUBER- weight 4. Last day to file: Friday, AMINER, Corporation Tax Bureau. to file: Friday, May 16, Exam date: 5052. INCOME TAX EXAMICULOSIS HOSPITAL, $10,738 to May 2. Exam date: Saturday, Taxation and Finance, $4,053 to NER, Income Tax Bureau. TaxaSaturday, June 21, June 7. $12,950. One vacancy. Health, $4,889. Candidates may apply for tion and Finance, $4,053 to $4,889. 645G. SENIOR SOCIAL CASE 5035. SENIOR COMMODITIES No. 5053. Six vacancies. Fee $3. Candidates may apply for No. 5050. WORKER (FOSTER HOMES), Onondaga Sanatorium at Syracuse. Fee $5. Requirements: A TAX EXAMINER. $1,281 to $5,064. Eligible title: Three months as Fee $3. Eligible title: three montlu $3,465 to $4,005. One vacancy. Division of Foster Homes, West- NYS license to practice medicine, Taxation and Finance, Miscellane- Junior Tax Examiner. Last day education and experience. No ous Tax Bureau. Fee $3. Require- to file: Friday, May 16. (Continued on page 11) chester County. Fee $3. Requirements: Education and experience written te.st. Last day to file: Fri- ments; One year ac Commodities day, May 2, Tax Examiner in Taxation and and/or education. Last day to file: 6057. DIRECTOR OF CANCER Finance prior to the exam date. Friday, May 1^. Exam date: SatPATHOLOGY, $10,738 to $12,950. Tests: written, weight 1; seniority, urday, June 21. weight 4. Last day to file: Friday, 6038. ASSOCIATE IN PRIVATE I One vacancy, Health, Buffalo. Fee May 2. Exam date. Saturday, TRADE SCHOOL ADMINISTRA-1 Candidates may compete in June 7. TION, $5,774 to $7,037. One va- j exams Nos. 6059. Principal Patho5036. COMMODITIES TAX EXcancy. Education, Albany. Fee $5.' \os\st and 6060. Associate PathoRequirements: A NYS c e r t i f i c a t e , loeist. Requu-ements: A NYS li- AMINER. $3,846 to $4,639. TaxaAcademic and Conmiercial—ColleKf Preparatory for teaching and a NYS certifi- , cense to practice medicine, educa- tion .and Finance, Miscellaneous rnffi nc .=nnnrinfpnHpnf or nr high hifrb \I tion and experience. No Written Tax Bureau. This exam includes cate as superintendent EVENING HIGH SCHOOI^-for Adults. Accredited-academic commercial s u b j e c t s school principal and college train- test. Last day to file: Monday, May the one for Commodities Tax Ex- yMCA Review cia«6 lor equivalency exam. Folder, 16 W. 63d. EN. a-8117. ing and/or experience. Last day 20. Open to all United States citi- aminer and one list will be v,stablished for both positions. Require- BOKO HALL .4CADEMV—Flatbush Ext. Cot. Fulton St„ Bkiyn Reeenta approved. ^ to file: Friday, May 2. Exam date: zens. 6058. ASSOCIATE CANCER ments: Three months as Junior OK (or Or» MA a.2447. Saturday, June 7. Examiner in Taxation and 6047. PRINCIPAL CLERK (SUR- UROLOGIST, $7,916 to $9,610. Tax Bnildins A I'lant Managrmont. Stationary A Custodian Enrineers License Preparations. prior to the exam date. ROGATE), $3,237 to $3,996. One One vacancy, Health, Buffalo. Fee Finance One year as Junior Tax Examiner AMERICAN TECH., 44 Court St.. Bklyn. Stationary Englneor*. Custodians. S u p t t . vacancy, Taxation and ' Finance. $5. Requirements: A NYS license will be required before the eligible Firemen. Study bldg. & plant management incl license preparation MA 6-2714. Oneida County Surrogate's Office. to practice medicine, education will be certified. Tests: written, Candidates must be residents of and experience. No written test. weight 4; service record rating, Business Schools Oneida County for four months Last day to file: Monday, May 20. weight 1; seniority, weight 1; Open to all United States citizens. LAMB'S BUSINESS TRAINING SCHOOIy—Orefrg-Pitman Typlnn. Bookkeeping, Comppreceding the exam date. Fee $2. training and experience, weight tometry. Clerical Day-Eve Individual instruction 370 »th St. Icor 6th Ave.) Requirements: Experience. Last 6059. PRINCIPAL PATHOLO- 4. Last day to file: Friday. May 2. Bklyo 16 SOutb 8-4236 day to file: Friday. May 2, Exam GIST. $9,610 to $11,303. One va- Exam date: Saturday. June 7. MONROE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS. Secretarial, Accountinif. Typewriting, Switchboard. date: Saturday, June 7. cancy, Health. Ithaca. Fee $5. Day and evenu-g Bulletin C. Cast 177th St. and Boston Road (U K O Chester 5037. SENIOR CLERK (SURCandidates may compete in exams Theatre Bldg.l Bronx K1 2-5600. 6018. REGISTRAR. $3,237 to $3,996. One vacancy. State University, Nos. 6060, 6061 and 6057. Require- ROGATE), $2,646 to $3,389. One - Stenotj'De - Speed Classes. Low rates. CH 2-6725. 41 Union Square. Plattsburgh. Fee $2. Requirements: ments: A NYS license to practice vacancy. Taxation and Finance, SHORTH.AND W. Room 835 (33 W. 17th St.l A bachelor's degree and one year medicine, education and exper- Albany County Surrogate's Office. of experience. Last day to file: ience. No written test. Last day Fee $2. Requirements: One year in Draftluf Friday, May 2. Exam date: Satur- to file: Monday, May 20. Open to Albany County Surrogate's Office •4prfor to exam date. Tests: written, all United States citizens. day, June 7. TECHNICAL rNSTITLTB—Mechanical. A.rchitectural, Job estimating in weight 3; service record rating, NATIONAL Manhattan. 56 W 42nd Street. LA 4-2920. 214 W a3rd Street (at 7th Ave.) 6060. ASSOCIATE PATHOLO6049. INDUSTRIAL FOREMAN weight 3; seniority, weight 1; WA 4-7478. In New Jersey 118 Newark Avo^ BErgen 4-2260. (SHOE LASTING), $3,389 to $4,- GIST. $7,916 to $9,610. Three va- training and experience, weight 3. 148. One vacancy. Correction, Sing cancies, Health, State TB hospi- Last day to file: Friday, May 2. ELECTROLYSIS Sing. Fee $3. Requirements: Five tals. Fee $5. Candidates may com- Exam date: Satifirday, June 7. years of experience. No written pete in exams Nos. 6059, 6061 and KRB® INSTITUTE OF ELECTROLYSIS — Profitable full or part-time c a r e » la 5038. SENIOR CORPORATION permanent hair removal lor men and women Free Book "C". 18 B. 41st S t test. Last day to file: Friday, May 6057. Requirements: A NYS liN. Ji. C. MU 3-4408. 2. Open to all United States citi- cense to practice medicine, edu- TAX EXAMINER. $4,425 to $5,313. One vacancy. Taxation and Fication and experience. No writzens. L. B. M. Machine Last day to file: Monday, nance. Corporation Tax Bureau, 6050. INDUSTRIAL FOREMAN ten test. 20. Open to citizens and non- Buffalo. Fee $3. Requirements:, (TOBACCO SHOP), $3,389 to $4,- May and Practice on IBM Numeric and Alphabetic Key E»unch Machines One year as Corporation Tax Ex- FOB Training and Verniers. Go to The Combination Business SchooL 138 W. 126th St, 148. One vacancy. Correction, citizens of the United States. aminer in Taxation and Finance UN 4-3170. Great Meadow Prison. Fee $3. Re6061. SENIOR PATHOLOGIST, prior to exam date. Tests: written, quirements: Five years of exper- $6,449 to $7,804. Eight vacancies. weight 4; service record rating, LANGUAGE SCHOOLJi ience. No written test. Last day to Health and Mental Hygiene. Fee weight 1; seniority, weight 1; file: Friday, May 2. Open to all $5. Candidates may compete in training and experience, weight 4. CHRISTOPHB SCHOOL O t LANGUAGES, (Uptown SchooU. Learn Langiiages. CooUnited States citizens. exams Nos. 6059 and 6060. Re- Last day to file: Friday. May 2. versatlonal French. Spanish. German. Italian, etc. Native Teacher Appr. for Vets. Approved by State Depar tment oi Education. Daily 8 A. M. to 0 6051. ASSISTANT HYDftAU- quirements: A NYS license to Exam date: Saturday, June 7. P . M. 200 West 135th St. NYC. WA 6-2780. L i e ENGINEER (DESIGN), $4.- Practice medicine, education and 5039. PRINCIPAL STENOGRA710 to $5,774. Two vacancies. Pub- I experience. No written test. Last PHER, Audit and Control, $3,411 Motion Picture Operating lie Works, Albany. Fee $4. Crrfidi- ^^^ to $4,212. Two vacancies. Fee $2. Citizens. YMCA TRADE SCHOOLr—1118 Bedford Ave. (Gates) BMyn. MA 2-1100. dates may compete In exam No. ^to all" United States /-i.^.™ Eligible title: Senior Stenogra- BROOKLYN Eves. 6052. Junior Hydraulic Engineer pher. Last day to file: Friday, STATE (Desiftn). Requirements: High May 16. Musle Promotion school graduation and experience. 5040. PRINCIPAL STENOGRACOLLEGE OF MUSIC (Chartered 1878» aH branches. Private or class Last day to file: Friday, May 2. The following State promotion PHER, Commerce. $3,411 to $4,212. NEW YORK Instructions. 114 Eaat 85th Street. REgent 7 6761 N. X. 28. N. Y. Catalogue. Exam date: Saturday. June 7. exams are now open. The closing One vacancy. Fee $2. Eligible title: 6052. JUNIOR HYDRAULIC EN- date is given at the end^ of each Senior Radio Television Stenographer. Last day to GINEER (DESIGN), $3,846 to $4,- notice. Unless otherwise stated, the file: Friday. RADIO-TELEVISION INSTITUTE, 480 Lexington Ave. (46th St.). N. 1 . 0. Day and May 16. 639. One vacancy. Public Works, candidates must be permanently evening PL 9-5066 50^1. ASSOCIATE BACTERIOAlbany. Fee $3. Candidates may employed in the department CRKSCENT SCHOOL "One of the largest schools of its kind" CSvU Service, Radio LOGIST (Mycology), Division of compete in exam No. 6051. Assist- named in the eligible titles given and TV courses 600 Pacilie St., Bkl^n, MA 5 0220. ant Hydraulic Engineer (Design). for one year prior to the exam Laboratories and Research, Health, Secretarial Requirements: High school gradu- date. The salaries given do not $6,088 to $7,421. One vacancy. Fee ation and experience and/or edu- include the 1952 emergency in- $5. Eligible title: Senior Bacterio- DRAKES. 154 NASSAU STREET. N.Y.O. Secretarial Accounting. Drafting. Joornaliam. logist. Last day to file: Friday, cation. Last day to file: Friday, crease, but these will be added. Day-Night. Write foi Catalog BE 8-4840. May 16. May 2. Exam date: Saturday, HEFFLEY A BROWNB SECRETARIAL SCHOOL, 7 Lafayette Ave. cor. Flatbush, 5033. ASSOCIATE ARCHITECT, June 7. 5042. ASSOCIATE BACTERIOBrooklyn 17 NEvtns 8-2041 Day and evening. Veterans EUglble. $7,352 to $8,905, Two vacancies, 6053. JUNIOR GAS ENGINEER, Public Works. Albany. Fee $3. Re- LOGIST, Division of Laboratories BUSINESS INST. 2 1 0 5 - 7 t h Ave. (cor I 2 5 t h St.) N.Y.O. Secretarial $3,846 to $4,639. One vacancy. quirements: Two years as Senior and Research. Health. $6,088 to WASHINGTON and d v t l service tramin« Moderate cost MO 2-6080. Public Service, NYC. Fee $3. Re- Architect in Public Works prior to $7,421. One vacancy. Pee $5. EligiRefrigeration, OU B a m e r s quirements: High school gradua- the exam date and a NYS profes- ble title: Senior Bacteriologist. tion and experience. Last day to sional architect's license before Last day to file: Friday, May 16. NEW. YORK TECHNICAL IWSTITUTIfr--653 Sixth Ave. (at 16th St.) K. f . C. Day « 5043. SENIOR BACTERIOLOfile: Friday, May 2. Exam date: December 7, 1952. Tests: written, Eve. classes Domestic & commercial Installation and servicin* Our 42ud year. Beguest catalogue. L. CHelsaa 2-6330. Saturday, June 7. weight 3; service record rating, GIST, Division of Laboratories and 6054. BRIDGE REPAIR FORE- weight 3; seniority, weight 1; Research, Health, $4,964 to MAN, $4,136 to $4,923. One va- training and experience, weight 3. 088. One vacancy. Fee $4. Eligible cancy. Public Works, Babylon. Last day to file: Friday, May 2. title: Bacteriologist. Last day to file: Friday. May 16. Fee $3. Requirements: Eight years Exam date: Saturday, June 7. 5044. PRINCIPAL STENOGof experience. Last day to file: 5034. SUPERVISING COMFriday, May 2." Exam date: Sat- MODITIES T A X EXAMINER. RAPHER. Albany Office, Insururday, June 7. $4,923 to $5,987. Taxation and ance, $3,411 to $4,212. One va6055. CANAL STRUCTURE OP- Finance, Miscellaneous Tax Bu- cancy. Fee $2. Eligible title: Senior ERATOR, $2,646 to $3,389. Several reau. Fee $4. Requirements: One Stenographer. Last day to file: Friday. May 16. 5045. PRINCIPAL STENOGRAPHER, Buffalo Office. Labor (exclusive of the Workmen's Compensation Board, D.P.U.I.. State Insurance Fund and Board of LaGRADES 3 & 4 bor Relations), $3,411 to $4,212. Tfc« Newspaper Thai Tells What's Happening To You One vacancy. Fee $2. Eligible PROMOTION title: Senior Stenographer. Last SUBSCRIPTION $2.50 Per Year day to file: Friday, May 16.INTENSIVE COURSE TO HELP YOU PREPARE 5046. PRINCIPAL STENOGRAfOR EXAM MAY 24th PHER, Workmen's Compensation 2 LECTURES WEEKLY UNTIL DATE O F E X A M I N A T I O N CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Board. $3,411 to $4,212. Three vaInstruction by HUGH O'NEILL and EDW. 97 Duane Street. New York 7. N. T. cancies. Fee $2. Eligible title: M.ANNING, who have for many years successSenior Stenographer. Last day to Please enter my subscription (or one year. fully taught City clerical personnel for promofile: Friday, May 16. tion exams in all grades. 5047. PRINCIPAL STENOGRARegular Classes Monday or Thursday — 6 P.M. to 8. P.M. Your Name PHER, Craig Colony, Mental HyReview Classes W e d N E S D A Y or FRIDAY — 6 P . M . giene, $3,411 to $4,212. One vacancy. Fee $2. Eligible title: SenAddress • * .ni ior Stenographer (G6) or two CLERK PROMOTION. GRADE 5 years as Stenographer (G2). Last day to file: Friday, May 16. I enclose check Tuesday — 6 P.M. to 8 P.M. 5048. PRINCIPAL STENOGRASend bill to niet at my of/ict Q my department Q mf duh g] PHER. Kings Park State Hospital, Mental Hygiene. $3,411 to $4,212. One vacancy. Fee $2. Eligible title: Senior Stenographer (G6) or two 889 Broadway (19th St J , Algonquin 4-1236 years as Stenographer, (G2), Lajst day to file: Friday. May 16. 501». PKLNCll'AL SIENUGKA- ^ STATE Open-Competitive SCHOOL DIRECTORY An investment in your f u t u r e . . . CLERK SCHWARTZ SCHOOL Subscribe for fhe- LEADER CIVIL Tu-day, April 29, 1952 SERVICE Public Job Opportunities STATE Promotion (Continued from page 10) m Junior Tax Exaitiiner. Last day ^ file: Friday, May 16. • 5053. PRINCIPAL STENOGRA• T O E R , Taxation and Finance, $3,W l l to $4,212. Two vacancies. Fee Eligible title: Senior Stenographer. Last day to file: Friday. I f a y 16. 5054. SENIOR INVESTIGATOR, Bducatian (exclusive of the schools and State University). $4,• 1 4 to $5,938. One vacancy. Fee $4. Eligible titles: Investigator, D e n ial Investigator, Investigator (Public Accountancy). Last day to file: Friday, May 16. 5055. SENIOR PHARMACY INSPECTOR, Education (exclusive of the schools and State University, $4,814 to $5,938. One vacancy. Pee $4. Eligible title: Pharmacy Inspector. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. 5056. PRINCIPAL OFFICE MACHINE OPERATOR (TabulatingIBM), $3,731 to $4,532. Fee $3. Eligible title: G - 6 or higher before March 21, 1951. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. 5057. SENIOR OFFICE MACHINE OPERATOR (TabulatingIBM), $2,931 to $3,731. Fee. $2. Eligible title: permanent appointment before March 21, 1951. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. 5910. UNEMPLOYMENT IN- COAL SPRING PRICES EGG - STOVE - NUT PEA BUCK No. I - - RICE 20.75 17.00 14.25 13.25 YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD Why Not Open A Charge Acct. Now Take Months To Poy F U E L OIL No. 2 - - IIV2 FREE Oil Burner Service with the purchase of our oil Furnace & Chimney Cleaned 7.00 DIANA COAL COKE & OIL CO., INC. 3298 ATLANTIC AVE. BROOKLYN 8, N. Y. TAylor 7-7534-5 ^ REAL READER'S SERVICE GUIDE ^ O YOU'KE GOING TO KETIKEI E:vci*.yli«idy'ii Tiiinkine: about a small business? We have a retail mechanical sales & repair shop, Buy returns better than $5,000 a year. Stop in it with you. William STENOTYPB MACHINE IN brown aUi- and we willor discuss Walter Breneard, 107-05 «;iitor caso botU in t'xcellent ooudition. Hainiszelt Rockaway Blvd., Ozone Park, N. Y. Practice books iiK'liulcil. No reasonablo oHoi- rerused. Call ^14 5-0804 from 0 AM to B I^M. LO 8-7085 from 8 PM to 10 PM. Wrisf Watches SiA;oializine to Civil Service Eniployees tor Nationally Advertised Wrtat Watchea years. Discounts on Diamonds, Silverware, S0% Off Watcliee etc. Brintr this ad with you. WITl'I'S rELEVISION A APPLIANCE'S THOMAS LENIS 64 West aZnd St.. N.Y.O. OE. 6-0202 133 Nassau St.. BA 7-0045, N.Y.C. TYPEWRITERS RENTED For Civil Serviec Exams Neeesslfles We do Deliver to (be Bxamlnatloii Roonit eOH IfUUR HOME MAKING SUU1>I'IN0 NEEUS ALL Malces — Easy Terms Furniture. avDliances. grifts, etc. (at real ADDING MACHINES MIMEOGRAPHS •avinsrs) Huatcipal Bmployeet Service, 4 1 INTERNATIONAL TYPEWRITER CO. Park How. CO. 7-5390 147 Nassau St.. 240 E. 86Hi St. k e 4-7900 MYO. N . ' T . O. Opeo tui 0:80 p.m. Air. Fixit FernHere For Sale PANTS OR SKIRTS TREMENDOUS SAUB. On M f r . Samplea, To matcta yout Jackets, 800.000 patterna. Odd Pieces And Suites. Bedding, Lauips IAWBOD Tailoring A Weaving Co.. 1 0 6 and Ruga. YOU CAN TAKE 10% oB our FuUon 8t„ corner Broadway. N.Y.C. ( I already low MARKED PRICES when YOU flight up), worth a-2817-8. BRING THIS AD. LACKAWANA ICURNITURB, 68 E. 13th St., NYC (Near Broadway.) Sewing Machines Travel 20% TO 60% OFF L ^ ^ C C H l . White, rreo-weatlngbooie, New VACATION TIME IS HERE l l o i u e , Domestlo. Phoue ai before you Make arriiugements-with authorized agents buy. Mr. Lake, MA. 4-4803. in making Air-Sea trips. AU travel service f r f e local or foreign. Consult us with conTypewriters fidence for all vacation plans. Pan American and all sche<hiled airlines and steamers. TYPJiWRlTEtt aPBClAI^ $16.00. AU BITUORN 'ITIAVEL AGENCY - 864 Seventh Makei Uejited. Repaired. New Portable. Ave. Neai' 66th Street, New York City Kaay Terma, Hosenbaum't, 1682 Broadway PLasa 7-8400. Brooklyn. N T QL 8-040Q. GET THE BEST preparation you can before you take that test. Buy a specially prepared Arco Study Book. Page 15 for Ustlng. ESTATE > VISOR OF CASE WORK (Foster Homes), Foster Homes Division, HOUSES — HOMES — PCIOPERTIES. Family and Child Welfare, Public Welfare, Westchester County, $3,MANHATTAN BROOKLYN 885 to $4,725. Fee $3. Four months county residence. Candidates may ONLY $975 apply for No. 6456. Requirements: MORTGAGE MONEY 2 blocks 8th Ave. Subway A BA degree and education a n d / o r HIGHEST PRICES experience. Last day to file: Fri2 blocks Fulton Street day, May 16. VACANT 14 R O O M S . . . PAID IMMEDIATELY 6457. JANITOR, County Court STORE DEEDS PURCHASED House and Building, Hamilton New oil burner, new br.nss plumbinp, HOUSES PURCHASED County, $1,800 to $2,400. Pee $1. parquet floors, bisr i)09siblc income, big proflt. HOUSES 8z APT. HOUSES One years county residence. R e CAI.L OWNKR PL. 7-01)85 1 st, 2nd & 3rd Mortgoges quirements: experience or training. Last day to file: Friday. May available to owners. Lowest rates. Money available to purchase apartment houses 16. anywhere in Manh.attan. Bronx; Brooklyn, CIVIL SERVICE SPECIAL! .304. PATROLMAN. GRADE 2, Queene, Mt. Vernon, White Plains, New 3 family, 15 rooms", ficnii-diiplex. Br.Tes $3,350 to $4,000. Residents of Nas- Rochelle. Plumbingr, 3 car ffarapo, lovely neighborsau County for two years prior IMMEDIATE ACTION hood. Terms arranged. Many other good to the exam date. Requirements: PLaza ~-0»85 buys. between ages of 21 and 29; good C O U N T Y A N D VILLAGE physical condition; 5 feet 8 inches; LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE RUFUS MURRAY and a N Y S driver's license. Last Open-Competitive NO MORTGAGE 1351 Fulton St. MA 3-^762 day to file: Monday, May 5. REDUCED 33 1/3% These county open-competitive 305. LAW STENOGRAPHER, W. 152 St. St. Nicholos Ave. exams are now open to the pubENTIRE HOUSE VACANT! lic. Saturday, June 21, is the exam Board of Justices of the Supreme 14 rooms, 4 baths, bri'-k, FprinlilcreO, no Court, $3,995 to $5,010. Residents violations, income $09 eck, new brasH date. Family Brick. 0 rooms. Everything plumbnig, parquet floors, caeh required modern. Oil burner excellent condition. 6449. FOOD INSPECTOR, of Nassau County for one year only .n-OYo. Fine nei^hborhoo<l. IRT transportation. CALI. OWNER PL. 7- 6 0 8 5 Health, Erie County, $3,350 to prior to the exam date. One vaPrice $8,600. Cash $;I,500. $3,750. One vacancy. Fee $3. Six cancy. Fee $3. Requirements: ExHandyman Speciol month's county residence. Candi- perience and education. Last day CHAS. H. VAUGHN dates may apply for No. 6452. R e - to file: Friday, May 2. Vacant Apt. 6445. BOOK REPAIR SUPER189 Howard Ave. GI. X-VOIO quirements: Education and/or ^$1475 CASH experience. Last day to file: Fri- VISOR, Erie County Public LiBuys 65 Rooms day, May 16. brary, $3,050 to $3,350. One vaLONG ISLAND LIQUIDATION SALE 6452. MILK INSPECTOR, cancy. Fee $3. Residents of Erie No Mortgoge. Act Fast Health, Erie County, $3,350 to $3,- County six months and NYS one LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE 750. One vacancy. Fee $3. Six year. Requirements: Experience 13 pts., 4 rooms each, all r o o n s private. 3 stores. New oil burner, new brass months county residence. Candi- and education. Exam date: S a t - plumbinsr V A C A N C Y Income $350 month Expenf-es dates may apply for No. 6449. Re- urday, June 7. Last day to file: $300 Proflt $150 1 Mock sub station. EAST ELMHURST, 29 AVE. CALL OWNKK, I'L. "-CUSS quirements: Education a n d / o r e x - Friday, May 2. DITMARS BLVD. perience. Last day to file: Friday, 6446. LIBRARY CLERK, $2,450 family. Landscaped double lot. Double LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE May 16. to $2,750. Two vacancies. Fee $2. new bra«s plumbing, new combiAll Vacant — No Mortgage garage, nation sinks, modern bathrooms, tile 6453. WATER AND STREET Residents of Erie County six kitchen, parquet floors, new oil burner, SUPERINTENDENT. Keeseville months and NYS one year. R e CONVENT AVE.. 148 St. fully detachcd, sunken tubs. Price reEssex County, $2,860. One vacancy quirements: High school gradua- 13 rooms, brick, oil, brats plumbing, duced 3 5 % . Cash only $3,075. floors, BiinUc-n tnbs, big back CALL OWNKK PL. 7-6«8.'» Pee $3. One years residence in tion and experience a n d / o r educa- parquet yard. Price reduced 3 5 ' ; i . Reasonable village. Requirements: Education tion. Exam date: Saturday, June cash. CAIX OWNKR I'L. 7-6!)86 and experience. Last day to file: 7. Last day to file: Friday, May LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE Friday, May 16. 2. LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE ST. ALBANS $1975 6454. ASSISTANT SUPER6447. S E N I O R ACCOUNT NO MORTGAGE No Mortgage CLERK, Claikstown, $2,250. One ONLY 3V4 X RENT Brick 0 rooms, 3 ballis, brass plumbinp, vacancy. Fee $2. Residents of parquet floors, comb, sinks, double lot, STUDY MATERIAL FOR Clarkstown, Rockland County four WEST 161 ST.. B WAY big backyard. Price rodui'od " o ' . i . rooma, 10 bathrooms, 10 months and N Y S one year. Re- 10 pts., CALL OWNER PL. 7-f.i)85 MAINTAINER'S HELPER quirements: High school gradua- kitchens, 10 relrig. Income $133 week. Expenses $00 week. Profit $75 week. tion and/or experience. Exam New oil burner, brass pluinbin?, bldf. in Group A and C ^_ SACRIFICE BARGAIN best repairs. Price n-diKcd 3 5 % . date: Saturday, June 7. Last day (Electrical) $Z.50 to file: Friday, May 2. KE A SON ABLE rAfiH NO MORTGAGE CALL OWNKK I'L. Group B REDUCED 25% 6448. TOWN WELFARE OF(echanical Work) $2.50 FICER, Ramapo, $4,000. One vaBRONX JAMAICA — $975 CASH cancy. Fee $3. Residents of R a m 3 family, 11 rooms, brass plumbinsr, Group D Frigidaire, new comblnafior einks, apo, Rockland C o u n t y four LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE new Newly venovatfii. (Maintenance Work) months and NYS one year. R e - NO MORTGAGE — VACANT big back yard. KEASONABLE CASH Education and/or exCALL OWNER PL. 7-0085 $2.50 quirements: 16 ROOMS. 3 BATHS perience. Exam date: Saturday, BRYANT AVE. 172nd ST. Group E. (Asst. MeJune 7. Last day to file: Friday, Brick. New oil burner, sunken tnbs, all VACANT — $975 CASH May 2. chanical Maintainers) private rooms, new Frigidaires, n t w comFULL PRICE $4950 306. MEDICAL WORKER, Pub- bination sinks, tabletop stover, lull lot, $2.50 lic Welfare. $2,830 to $3,796 plus biff back yard, modi-rn kitchen. Price SACRIFICE BARGAIN reduced 3 5 % . Rea^-onable oaUi. Sample Questions — Prac- additional cost-of-living adjuste-lLL O ^ N K K I'L. 7-0985 NO MORTGAGE ment. Fee $2. Nassau County and tice Material 1 family, 5 rooms, 50 x 100 lot. 6 State residents for one year prior 97 Duane St. New York 7. N.Y. LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE minutes walk to station. House 1 year old, new brass plumbing, bathrooms, to Saturday, June 7, the exam No extra chorge for Moil Orders No Mortgage — Vocancy parquet floor.s, big backyard, lully dedate. Requirements: Education if prepaid. tached, new Frigidaire. WILLIAMSBRIDGEand experience. Last day to file: CALL OWNER P. 7-G085 NEEDHAM AVE. Friday, May 16. Leader Bookstore 8 U R A N € E ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT SUPERVISOR DPUI, Labor, $5,414 to $6,537. Two vacancies, Albany. Fee $4. Eligible title: G-16 or higher or two years as 0 - 1 4 or higher. Exami date: Saturday, June 21. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. 5908. PRINCIPAL STENOGRAPHER, (Prom), DPUI, Labor, $3,411 to $4,212. Fee $2. Eligible title: Senior Stenographer. Exam date: Saturday. June 21. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. 5909. HEAD CLERK, (Prom), DPUI, Labor, $4,359 to $5,189. Five vacancies, Albany. Fee $3. Eligible title: G-10 or higher In clerical class. Exam date: Saturday, June 21. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. COUNTY AND VILLAGE Promotion Household Pnge Eleven LEADER Eligibles for these county promotion exams must be permanently employed in the department named in tlie eligible title given for six months prior to the exam date unless otherwise noted. Saturday, June 21, is the exam date. 5417. SENIOR X - R A Y TECHNICIAN, Department of Health. Erie County, $3,350 to $3,650. One vacancy. Fee $3. Requirements: Six months in Erie County De-partment of Health as X - R a y Technician and experience a n d / o r education. Exam date: Saturday, June 7. Last day to file: Friday, May 2. 5418. ASSISTANT SUPERVISOR OF CASE WORK (Foster Homes), Family and Child Welfare, Public Welfare, Westchester County, $3,885 to $4,725. Fee $3. Eligible title: Senior Social Case Worker for one year. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. 5419. INTERMEDIATE SOCIAL CASE WORKER (Foster Homes). Foster Homes, Family and Child Welfare, Public Welfare, Westchester County, $3,075 to $3,525. One vacancy. Fee $2, Eligible title: Jr. Social Case Worker. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. 5420. SENIOR SOCIAL CASE WORKER (Foster Homes), Foster Homes. Family and Child Welfare. Public Welfare. Westchester County, $3,465 to $4,005. One vacancy. Fee $3. Eligible title: I n termediate Social Case Worker. Last day to file: Friday, May 16. U.S. The number and title of the U. S. exams now locally open are given, with starting salary and a Summer Rentals digest of requirements. The closing dat«, if any. appears at the PATCHOGUE. L. i. end of each notice. Modem 3-4-6 room bunt'ulow furmahed. t-66-2 (52). KITCHEN HELPLake Sports. Commuting. $336 - $676. fU weekUtt^ evemogi «h8.3Q p.m. (Continued on page 121 FISH AVE. - FENTON AVE. $10,500 Corner brick 13 rooms. 3 bathrooms, 3 ST. ALBANS car garaffo, sunken tubs, h.-vrdwood floors, new comb, sinks, bipr backyard, new brass Mixed neighborhood. Dftachrd 1 family, plumbing:, price reduced 3 3 1/3%, reason- 0 rooms. Enclosed Porch, .'1 bedrooms, oil heat. Garage. Ideal Locaiion. Good conable cash. dition. Must be seen. CALL 0 « NEK PL. 7 6085 Many other 1 & 3 family homes ranging from $7,500 & up. LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE WEST BRONX ONLY $1975 QUEENS REALTY 150-13 Hillside Ave. J.V 6 - 7 M 7 West 181st St., University Ave. 1 family detached. 8 rooms. 3 car gai.ige. BUY A HOME . . . TODAY 1 block New York University, 1 block Jerome Ave., 1 block echools, 1 block park. Gl's ATTENTION! Big backyard. Call Owner P L 7-6080 s o . OZONE PARK. Completely furnished. Move right In. Bring $1,500. Balance arHANDYMAN SPECIAL ranged. One family, hrii'U, attai-hcd. 5 WEST BRONX rooms, b a t h , garage. Full price $9,760. 210tli ST. & GUNHILL RD. & RESERVOIR PLACE For Homes - Houses Call 1,1 rooms with no rent control. 3 blocks Montefiore Hospital, 3 blO'.ks Jerome, 3 Mocks 8th Ave. Subw.ay. Full price only Catih $4750 Call Owner PL 7-6085 LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE WEST BRONX RUDDER ASSOC. INC. AX 7-4609 OL 8-1761 110-37 Sutphin Blvd., Jamaica ATTENTION CIVIL SERVANTS 6-Room house can be easily converted into a 3 family. All large rooms. Sun porch, garage, plot 40-07, steam heat, oil, near SHmmit Ave. — W. USth St. all conveniences, small down ^ Q CAA 1 Block Ogden Ave. payment. Price ^ T j ^ V w Detached 1 family, big backyard. Ultra Other flood Busy. Forest Hills, Baytdde, modern. Reduced. 3 3 1 / 3 off. Hollis, Klushhig and East Kliuhuntt CaU 0\vn«-r PI. 7-6085 ONLY $1475 LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE FULL PRICE ONLY $6950 West Bronx — East 206tli St. New Grand Concourse, Mosholu Porkway All Vacant S family, 14 rooms, oil beat, best neieliborhood, 1 block subway, reafeonable caeh, CHH Owner PL. 7-6085 ALLEN & EDWARDS 168-18 Liberty Ave., Janinion, N. Y. OLynipia 8-;:011—8--j015 HOLLIS ONLY $1975 All Vacant 9 rooms, 4 liuge bedrooms, oil heat, «»• rage, plot 40x100, 3 blocks Long Island Railroad. 3 blocku shopping, 196th St. & 100th Ave. LONG ISLAND COLLEGE POINT, L I. 7-Oa-llOth street—Brick. Btmi-ailetached 8 family, liS ruonia, 3 baths, Hteam, can, corner plot, 46x100 irregular, occupancy, 4 rooms immediately, $13,000. Egbert at Whitestone Hy appointment only. FL 3-7707 Prie«< ReriwMd m % Call OwMr r | . T-<Wm SACRIFICE BARGAIN - REI>U€ED TO ONLY S2780 LAURIL HMX, WOODSIOI All Vacant 7 rooma, 3 large l>n(trf>«»Mi, 1 family, 9 ^arufe, lull backyard. C«jih • I 7 t t 0 OftU Ownar PL 7-«««« Page Twelve CIVIL SERVICE Tuetdl«7, April 29, 19SS LEADEK Public Job Opportunities Throughout U .S. Photographer, Microphotogrrap- i e m , $2,200; Psychiatric Resident, cialist, Fishery Marketin|r 8p»- i Junior Scientist (Chemist, Phy- er, Photostat Operator, Blueprint ! 3,400 to $4,200; Surgical Resident, cialist, $4,205 to $9,600; Dairy attd sicist, Metallurgist), $3,410 and (Continued from Page 11) Operator, Blueprint and Photo- 4,200 to $4,700; General Practice Poultry Products Inspector a n d Photo-Reproduc- Resident, $3,400 to $3,800.—Maxi- Grader, Fresh Fraits and VereER, $2,420. Open only to those en- |4.205 (Matiiematician Electronic stat Operator, Insiieotor, Agricultoral titled to U . S . veteran p r e f e r e n c e . Scientist $3-410 Age i t o i t s . tion Trainee, various rates from mum age limit: 35. Apply to Com- tables Jobs are at Veterans A d m i n i s t r a - f o r $3 410 to 35 years, $2,500 to $3,410. Minimum age mittee of Expert Examiners, St. Commodity Market Reporter, $4,Washington 205 to $7,040. Jobs are countrytion Hospital in the Bronx. No foi $4,205 jobs, 18 to 62. An- limits: 16 for D. C. area residents; Elizabeths Hospital, wide. Announcement 257 amended. 18 for others. Announcement 294. 25, D. C. Announcement 300. . training 0£ experience is required, nouncement 276. (Thursday, May 15). Public Health Nurse, $4,205. Agricultural Research Scientist^ Medical Technical Assistant, Scientific Illustrator (Medical), Chemist — Metallurgist — Phy- I Jobs are with the Bureau of I n - $3,410 to $5,060; Medical Photo- $3,410.—Jobs are in Federal Penal $4,205 to $9,600. Jobs are countrydian Affairs on reservations west «iclst, $5,060 to $10,800; MatheCorrectional Institutions wide. Announcement 109 amended. grapher, $2,950 to $4,205.—Jobs are and matician, $4,205 to $10,800; Engi- of the Mississippi River and in country-wide. Apply to Central throughout the United States. Agriculturist, $4,205 to $10,800. Alaska. Maximum age limit: 40. neer, $5,060 to $7,040.—Apply to Board of Civil Service Examiners, Male applicants only desired. An- Jobs are country-wide. AnnounceBoard of U. S. Civil Service Ex- Announcement 243. Veterans Administration, Wash- nouncement 308. ment 202 amended. aminers, Building 37, Naval ReStaff Nurse, $3,410; Head Nurse, ington 25, D. C. Announcement Medical X-Ray Technician search Laboratory, Washington, $4,205.—For duty in the Indian 319. Cotton Technologist, $4,205 t o (Photofluorography), $2,750.—Jobs D. C. Announcement 4-34-4 Service west of the Mississippi Statistician (Mathematical, An- are country-wide. Announcement $7,040. Jobs are in Washington ,(1950). and the South and Southwest. River and in Alaska. Maximum age alytical, Survey), $4,205 to $10,- 315. Announcement 230 amended. Chemist — Physicist, $5,060 to for staff nurse: 40. Announcement 800.—Announcements 275 amendNnrsinir Consultant (Public $10,800; Meteorologist, $4,205 to 211 Tobacco Inspector, $3,410 to $5,ed, and 321. Health), $5,940. — Positions are $10,800 - J o b s are in Cambridge g^j.^ ^urse, $3,410; Psychiatric Clinical Psychologist, $5,940 to country-wide in the Children's 060. Jobs are in various States. Apply to Board of U. S. Civil SerMass. Apply to Board of 17. S. Civil Head Nurse, $4,205.—For duty in $10,800.—Jobs are country-wide Bureau. Announcement 171. vice Examiners, Department of Service Examiners Air Force ^ ^ g h i n g t o n and vicinity and in and in Puerto Rico. Apply to ComOccupational Therapist — Phy- Agriculture, Washington 25, D. C. Cambridge Research Center, 415 p^nama Canal Zone. Maximum mittee of Expert Examiners, VetClosing date; April 1, 1952. A n Summer Street, Boston 10. Mass. ^ge limit for the Panama Canal erans Administration, Washington sical Therapist, $3,410 to $5,060. Jobs are country-wide and In nouncement 320. Announcement 1-21-1 (52). Service: 35. Announcement 267 25, D. C. Announcement 247. Puerto Rico. Apply to Committee Accountant (Comprehensive Electronic Engineer — Physicist, I amended. Elementary Teacher, $3,410. — of Expert Examiners, Veterans $4,205 to $7,040. Most jobs $5,060 ^ ^ to $9,600.—Jobs . ^ are in Mass. , Veterinarian, $4,205. — Jobs are For duty in the Bureau of Indian Administration, Washington 25 Audits). are in the General Accounting and Conn. Apply to a laboratory Lountry-wide. Announcement 143. Affairs in various States and in D. C. Announcement 233. Office in Washington, D. C. A n listed in Announcement 1-34 Correctional Officer, $3,435. - Alaska. Maximum age limit: 40 Physical Therapist, $3,410 and nouncement 295 amended. <71 i • o • t o/xr ^ Jot>s are country-wide. Age limits: for places to apply, see Announce- $4,205. — Jobs are country-wide Accountant and Auditor, $3,410 • ifo^n'"®"'®. Scientist, $4,205 to 21 to 45. Apply to Board of U. S. ment 231. and In Puerto Rico and the Vir- and $3,795; Accounting and Audit$10,800. — Jobs are in Washing- civil Service Examiners, U. S. Military Training Instructor gin Islands. Announcement 169. ing Clerk, $3,175. Announcement y ^ ; Penitentiary, Leavenworth, K a n s . $3,410 to $5,060. — Jobs are in Agricultural Marketing Spe- 291 amended. ^^^ of Announcement 9-14-1 (1950). Fort Monmouth, N. J. Apply to U, S. Civil Service Examiners, ^ Board of XJ. S. Civil Service ExamBuilding 37, Naval Research LaDietetic Intern, $1,470.—Courses Fort Monmouth, N. J. Anboratory, Washington 25, D. C. will be given in Veterans Admm- iners, Announcement 4-34-4 (1949) istration hospitals in Calif., N. Y., nouncement 2-21-1 (1951). amended. 111., Tenn,, and Tex. Age limits: Public Health Educator, $5,060 17 • i 18 to 35. For places to apply, see to $8,360.—Jobs are country-wide. These mail order advertisers ofFer you cr simple and quick EngmeeT, $3,410 to $ 1 0 , 8 0 0 . - Announcement 269. , method of doing your shopping for unusual novelties and Announcement 190. Sanitary Engineer jobs are counone hard to get equipment. When you place your order be sure Research Psychologist (Psytry-wide. Maximum age for $3,410 Dietitian, $3,410 and $4,205.— jobs: 35; no maximum age for For duty in tiie Veterans Admin- chophysics), $4,205 and $5,060.— to PRINT your full name and address. higher-paying jobs. A n n o u n c e - istration country-wide and in For duty in New London, Conn. ment 301. Puerto Rico. Apply to Committee Apply to Board of U. S. Civil SerDon't Delay. Do Your Shopping a t GULKO's V rton ^ Of Expert Examiners, Veterans vice Examiners, U. S. Naval SubEngineer, $5,060 and $ 5 , 9 4 0 . - Administration, Washington 25, marine Base, New London, Conn. And Save oa Kvery Dollar You Spend Jobs are in Dayton, Ohio. Apply D. C. Announcement 240. Announcement 1-6-1 (50). List Your Cost to Board of U. S. Civil Service Ex, . tW 9 Pe. Club Aiumlnum 24.95 16.95 Social Worker, $4,205 to $5,940. aminers, Wright-Patterson Air Dietitian, $3,410 to $5,940.—Jobs Universal Steaii Knife Set Force Base (MCACXB), D a y t o n , are country-wide and in Panama. —Jobs are country-wide and In 4 Knivei, 6 Forks, Catalin Handles 9.95 3.95 Puerto Rico. Apply to Committee Ohio. Announcement 6-42-7 Announcement 52. G. E. Vacuum, Swivel Top 99.95 62.50 (1950). Dietitian, $5,060 and $5,940.— of Expert Examiners, Veterans AdRegiaa Waxers 67.50 41.85 Engineer, $3,410 and .$4,205. For duty in the Veterans' Admin- ministration, Washington 26, D. G. E. Steam Irons 18.95 13.45 Jobs are in West and M i d w e s t . Mstration, country-wide and in C. Announcement 256. Benras, Bulcva, Gryen Watches 50% Disc. Inc. PT Maximum age limit: For $3 410 Puerto Rico. Apply to Board of Training Instructor (CommuniCommunity, Rogers, H. E. Sliver 40% Disc. jobs, 35; for others, 62. Apply to United States Civil Service Bx- cations-Radio Equipment MainteWe carry full line Refrigreratora, Washing: Machines, Outboard Molora, Central Board of U, S. Civil Ser- aminers. Veterans' Administra- nance), $3,410 and $4,205.—For Lawn Mowers and 1,001 other items. vice Examiners, Bureau of Re- tion, Washington 25, D. C. Clos- duty at Scott Air Force Base, HI. Mail Orders Filled. Time PayinentH Arn»nRod. clamation, Denver Federal Center, i^H date: June 10,1953. Announce- Send applications to Board of U. Denver, Colo. Announcement 13- "^ent 322. S. Civil Service Ebcaminers, Scott 1-3 (51). Fishery Methods and Equipment Air Force Base, 111. Announcement House of Standard Merchandise Engineer (Aeronautical, Electri- Specialist, $3,410 to $8,360.—Jobs 7-46-4 (51). 1180 Broadway, NYC (at 28th St.) MU 6-8771 cal Electronics, and Mechanical) require sea duty in varying localiBefore Buying CaU Gulko For I'rice Shorthand Reporter, $3,795 to —Physicist, $5,060 to $8,360.—Jobs ties, chiefly in the Atlantic and $5,060.—Announcement 317. are at Johnsville, Pa. Apply to Pacific Oceans. Announcement Stenographer-Typist, $2,750 to Board of U. S. Civil Service E x - 310. RAZOR BLADES aminers. Naval Air Development Inspector of Locomotives, $5,940. $3,175 (most jobs start at $2,950) Center, Johnsville, Pa. Announce- Positions are country-wide. Age —No maximum age limit. MiniHATIONAILY-KNOWN BRAND ment 3-39-1 (1951). limits: 28 to 53. Announcement mum age limits: 17 for D, C. area Utrect from fiictory-single & double edge residents; IB for others. AnEngineering and Statistical 284. for (lem & Gillette typo ruzora Draftsman, $2,750 to $ 4 , 2 0 5 . - A n intelligence Research Specialist nouncement 272. i n n •aiquality as lUU t o r our 4 for 10c nouncement 2o4. —Military Intelligence Research Automobile Mechanic, $2,750 to You will thanlt us for this ad. Orders filled withlu 24 hrs. Send check or Field Representative (Electrical Specialist — Foreign Affairs Offl- $3,200.—Announcement 286. M.O. to Boiler Fireman, $2,552 to $2,974. Utiiity Management); Rural Elec- cer, $4,205 to $7,040. — AnnounceGOLOTONE RAZOR BLADE CO. —Announcement 281. trifieation Engineer (Distribution ment 258. 43!4 I'lane St., Dept. L, Newark, N. J. B o o i c b l n d e r (Hand Work), Generation, Farm Electrification), Intern in Hospital Administra$5,060 to $5,940.—Jobs are coun- tion, $1,600. — For duty in the Bookbinder (Machine Operations), try-wide. Apply to Board of U. S. Veterans Administration. Age $2.43 an hour; Cylinder Pressman, MAKE EXTRA MONEY .52 an hour; Printer-Hand ComCivil Service Examiners, Agricul- limits: 18 to 35. Apply to Comtural Research Center, Beltsviile, mittee of Expert Examiners, Vet- positor, $2.54 an hour; ElectroAH Cleaniner Compound Will Make Upholstery, Rugs, Carptets (Molder), Md. Announcement 4-69-1 (1950). erans Administration, Washing- typer (Finisher) and Look Like New Stereotyper, $2,75 an hour. AnGeographer, $4,205 to $10,800. ton 25, D. C. Announcement 277. nouncement 296. Send $1.25 for sample Librarian, $3,410. — Announce—Announcement 290. Over 100% Yield to Dealers Helper (Trainee), Duplicating, aoo Iba. - $05.00 Geologist, $5,060 to $8,360.— ment 119. Printing, and Bindery Operations, Jobs are country-wide. No maxi* Resale Value $250.00 Office Appliance Repairman, m u m age. Announcement 287. $2,750 to $3,435. — Announcement $1.06 to $1.13 a n hour. Announcement 307. AKRON RUG COMPANY Highway Engineer — Highway 293. Lithographic Draftsman, $1.41 KUC. MAM'FACTLRKKS Organization and Methods ExBridge Engineer, $4,205 +0 $5,940. • MDIOS • RANGES 695 Wooster Ave. Akron 7, Ohio —Jobs are country-wide. Apply to aminer — Budget Examiner, $4,- to $2.17 an hour.—Announcement • CAMERAS • JEWELRY Board of United States Civil Ser- 205 to $7,040.—Announcement 270. 282. Lithographic Offset Pressman vice Examiners, Bureau of Public • TEimSION • SILVERWARE Patent Examiner, $3,410 and $4,Roads, Department of Commerce, 205. — Maximum age for $3,410 (Also Foreman). $1.27 to $2.63 a n • JYPEWRITERS REFRI6ERAT0|S hour. Announcement 280. Washington 25, D. C. Announce- jobs: 35. Announcement 274. • ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES ment 323. Offset Duplicating Press OperPharmacist, $3,410 and $4,205. Inspector (Communication and —Jobs are country-wide and in ator, $1.41 to $1.76 a n hour. AnANCHOR RADIO CORP. Electronic Equipment), $5,060 and Puerto Rico. Apply to Committee nouncement 306. Operating Engineer, $2,750 to $5,940.—Jobs are country-wide. of Expert Examiners, Veterans ONE GREENWICH ST. Apply to Board of U. S. Civil Ser- Administration, Washington 25, $3,740.~Announcement 283. iCof BoHery Ploce. N Y.l Mam Mr 4*tt. truak. aiitf mwI <lra(t*. M U ^ n m i u . Ewy ta apply aj^ eaeli Plate Printer, Established Piecevice Examiners, Signal Corps, 225 D. C. Announcement 232. luSMMMaUUM tM iMt at weatharttrlpplni, TEL WHitehall 3-4280 w o r k Rates of Pay.—AnnounceS S W f S 5S. do" ar ana trunk. Ejowt South 18tli St.. Philadelphia 3, Pa. Pharmacologist, $4,205 to $10,lobby Entronce — One B'woy Bldg. ment 205. Announcement 3-40-3 (1952). 800.—Announcement 131. For D o o r t . . . . . $ 1 . 5 0 p«r 10 f t . box (OPPOSITE CUSTOM HOUSE) Printer (Monotype Keyboard rVf T ^ f c ^ ^ U o O M r 10 H. box Cowl vcnt^ikttts .SOc Men Operator and Slug Machine Operator), $2.54 an hour. — An,/oblw Oful dtfiler iwfuirXet nouncement 100. NOW ANKONK CAN t U m f WINDOWS ^ I T b . R . Product.,^Box 88, Printer-Proofreader, $2.54 an with this aniazing new COMBINATION Crav«a«nd SUUoo, Bklyn, N.Y. TOOL PU'iTY KNIFE—do a proftwalonal hour. Announcement 145. job QUiekly, eaaily. Packs inuty tightly Get Hie only book that g i v e s y o u ( l i 2 6 pages of sampio elvtl Telephone Engineer, $5,060 to —ahapea perfoctly--tritu8 evenly. Use blade f o r chippiug oft old putty and aa service exidims, all sub/ecfs; 12) requirements for 500 governmenf Pass llieb on the Assistant $7,040.—Jobs are country-wide. end scraper. Plated hardened atotA—poliehed Gardener Exam. Get a copy of Announcement 246. / o b s ; (31 Information about how to get a "patronage" fob—without handle. the Arco Study Book prepared Only 91.00 taking a test and a cemplete listing of such / o b s ; (41 full InformaDental Officer (Intern), $2,200. lAdd 10c for post, etc.) C.O.D.'s Accepted. especially for th!s test at The —Maximum age: 35. Apply to tion about v e t e r a n preference; 151 tells you how to transfer from Send R(!inittance, Save Postage Leader Book Store, i)1 Duane S^^ SAX-ON, aKIO Fullerton Ave., Vv>pt, Committee of U. S. Civil Service one job to another, and 1,000 additional facts about government New York 7. Chicago 47, 111. Examiners, St. Elizabeths Hospitsd, jobs. "Complete Guide to Your Civil S e r v i c e Job" i$ writteu so Washington 25, D. C. Announceyou can understand It, by LEADER editor Maxwell Lehman and ment 252. general manager Morton Varmon. It's oiily $1. Exercise Tiierapist, $3,410— Jobs are country-wide. Apply to Committee of Expert Examiners, LEADER BOOKSTORE Veterans Administration, Washington 25, D. C, Announcement 97 Duane Street, New York City 299. Sample Questions Practice Material Please send me immediately a copy of "Complet Guid to Year Medical Officer, $5,940 and $7,Civii Srvice Job" by Maxwell LeKman and i^tortea Yarmoa. I 040.—For duty country-wide and enclose $1 in payment, plus 10c for pottage. in Alaslca and Panama. Maximum age: Panama Canal Service, 46; 97 DUAME STREET NEW YORK 7. N. T. i Name Indian Service, 50; other agencies, 62. Announcement 217. No Erfra Ckorg* for Moll Ord*r< It Prepaid I Address Medical Offioei: ~ Bo(»(bic Im^ U.S. ^ M a i l Order Shopping Guided GULKO P R O D U C T S TO CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES Complete Guide to Your Civil Service Job POLICEWOMAN STUDY BOOK $2.50 LEADER BOOKSTORE CIVIL TiH«a«y, April 29, 1932 Edward Martin, chairman of the chapter, which Is part of Local 370 of the union, took a leading part In negotiations. The case has been before David Kornblum, the City's director of labor relations. Mr. Beame's recommendations will be made to the Board of Estimate, which must approve the raises before they can become e f fective. •The two titles that'held up the proposed settlement for a short while are porter and laborer. The other titles are foreman of porters, fireman, maintenance man, gardener, assistant superintendent, superintendent and housing a.sslstant: Page Tkirl«Mi LEAOER NYC Will Hold Two Exams For Clerk Jobs; One Requires No Experience or Background Beame Weighs Housing Pay A proposed agreement between the NYC Housing Authority and employees on the pay rates of nine titles Is before Budget Director Abraham D. Beame. He is giving the matter his prompt personal atention as the dispute has been in the negotiation stage for months. CIO Accepts Counter-Proposal The Government and Civic Employees Organizing Committee's chapter in the Housing Authority accepted the proposed rates, including the only two concerning which there had been a remaining difference of opinion. It Is reported regarding these two that the Authority met the request half way. SERVICE lege. For the college clerk jobs Those Who pass must show that a college degree may be required, they lived in NYC continuously typing skill will be, and the pay for three consecutive years i m mediately preceding appointment. will be higher. That does not apply, however, to Bill Ends Dispute Governor Thomas E. Dewey re- jobs with the Authorities, and in cently signed a bill amending the some instances to veterans. If education law, to clarify pay and veterans who were NYC residents civil service status in the Board can prove that, on their discharge of Higher Education, and includ- from military service, they couldn't ing a proviso that the Commission find a place to live in NYC, a says authorizes the Board to hold concession may be made, under a its own exams. The law also guar- Commission regulation, but it is antees annual increments to cleri- strictly applied, and few such recal and laboratory assistants after quests are granted. the salary reaches $4,000 on the Excellent Job Prospects existing schedule. The 40-hour week is to begin, The applicable sentence in the on or soon after July 1, although new law reads: "The Board of it will not affect all NYC employHigher Education shall, by appro- ees at once. No matter in what priate by-law, determine from way it will be begun, many clerks, time to time the qualification re- grade 2, are bound to be.included quirement for all positions." at the start, since they represent More Exams by Board one of the largest groups in NYC One year's experience in an in- is expected to be required of can- 75 per cent on the written were out of the exam. Any percentage Since the law grants such au- service, now total about 7,200, dividual public accountant's or didates for the accountant exam above 74 would count as if 75, thority regarding "all positions," and are in all departments. certified public accountant's office to fill jobs in the Bureau of Excise Ta^^s, NYC Comptroller's office. under present Commission prac- others also are included, such as Candidates for the clerk, grade T h ^ e would be about 100 vacan- tice, e.g., 74.1, 74.2 etc. director of the Medical Division. 2, jobs will have to pass a written cies, as part of increased effort to There has been a long dispute, test. It is expected the pass mark Idea of the Duties make business men and storekeepincluding law suits over the filling will be 70 percent. The written ers more conscious of City taxes. The accountants work without of this post by a doctor provision- test will be designed to show the Comptroller Lazarus Joseph hopes immediate supervision, conducting ally promoted. candidate's general intelligence, to increase City revenue by $12,- field audits of taxpayers,and poThe college clerk jobs were .sup- ability to follow directions, and 000,000 a year, compared to $4,- tential taxpayers' books and other posed to be filled from' the NYC knowledge of office practice, gram000,000 additional cost of the e n - records. The accountants apply clerk, grade 2, list, by .selective mar, spelling, vocabulary, arith• • • larged activities. • • • • • • the NYC tax laws to those , find- certification. Those candidates who metic and civic affairs. If the ings, particularly the sales tax, had a high school education and number of candidates reaches the Experience and Education For Work In In the last exam, held seven figure out assessments and render who could type were to be certi- 10,000 to 12,000 figure expected by Port Washington years ago. not less than four years detailed written reports and rec- fied. However, the Board never the Commission, the re-sultant Farmingdale. or • • of paid, full-time experience as an ommendations. Tax collection it- showed any interest in using the eligible list normally would be N. Y. Divisions ^ accountant was required, two years self is a function of the City list, as indicated by the fact large enough to fill the City's of Republic ^ of the four in the employ of a Treasurer's ofBce. that many provisionals are now needs for two or three years, certified or individual public acThe Comptroller will ask the serving in the clerical assistant though possibly not for the full Municipal police experience, a8:e limit 60 years. Excellent 0 countant. However, candidates Board of Estimate for $4,000,000 title. This was technically pos- four-year legal life of the list. Insurance and hospitalizacould substitute 20 credits in ac- to enable the appointment of ac- sible, since the title is not clerk, Hence all eligibles could expect to tion plan. Must provide own ^ counting courses at an accredited countants, new unit chiefs, mech- grade 2, even though the last be called to a job interview, sooner transportation. school or college, in placo of one anization of office work, and addi- clerk, grade 2, exam notice gave SALARY TO $68 • of the two minimum years' of ex- tional office space. The Bureau is encouragement to eligibles of pos- or later, depending on their standing on the list. But no pducational sub- at 74 Trinity Place, NYC. sible appointment to the college INTERVIEWS • perience. Opening Date Awaited stitution could eliminate the other jobs. FARKMNGDALE, L I . Wants Adequate Pay year of required experience. y h e Commission has not deThe Commission will notbe reHcnipstcad Tiirnrrtke ends at ® Accountants In the bureau re- sponsible for the number of pro- cided when to begin receiving apCredit will be given toward e x our door. ^ perience for possession of a certi- ceive $3,420, while senior account- visionals in any of the jobs for plications for tiie clerk, grade 2, HON. THRU FRI. ^ fied public accountant certificate, ants are paid $4,280. Part of the which the Board will hold its own jobs. As there is also urgent need « .^.M. lo :5 P.M. • if the formula in the last exami is $4,000,000 would be used for rais- exams, and is not unsympathetic for social investigators, it is conIng the pay of the present 175 to the manner in which long- sidering receiving applications for Veterans: Brins: discharge pa- ® followed. pars, proof of citizenship and A The last written test had a employees in those titles beyond standing differences between the both tests at the same time, and Social Security card. All others: ^ Bring- proof of citizenship and A weight of 50, pass, mark 75 per what the proposed city wide form- Board and the Commission have may add either or both to the monthly series any month now. Social Srourity card. cent, while experience had the ula provides. New appointments been settled by law. The Civil Service LEADER will other 50, with only 70 per cent would be made at the same higher Citywide Title the Strong Magnet REPUBLIC pass mark. The overall require- salaries. These are expected to be Many provisionals in the college help its readers prepare for these AVIATION CORP. around $4,000 and $5,000, respecexams. ment (final average) was 70 per • • • • • • • • • • jobs, since they never passed an cent, but those who didn't attain tively. The Comptroller wants sal- exam, will be glad of an opporaries that will "attract the most tunity of obtaining permanency. 54DIE BROWN SAYS: competent men." However, by far the greatest reOUR COACHING COURSE WILL The number of appointments sponse would be produced by the PREPARE YOU FOR THE from the last accountant list ran clerk, grade 2, test, because of the high— 118 out of 176 eligibles ac- easy requirements, the wide age HIGH SCHOOL cepted jobs. All on the list received limits, 18 to 69 years, and the EOUIVALKNt A job offers. Declinations, failure to hundreds of job opportunities. respond, and other reasons caused There is no minimum age for DIPLOMA the difference of 58, issued by N.Y. State Depi. of Eiluoition graduates of a senior high school. 81'ECIAL H{ WEEKS COtK.SE Also, the list moves fast, and is NEW CLASSES NOW KOKMING Friday Evenings or Salurilay Mornings now practically exhausted, save CO-EO . ENKOI.L NOW for names being restored to the list on withdrawal of declinations. LEARN A TRADE COLLEGIATE Many withdrawals were for inAato Mechanics Dieeei FTOL M a d i s o n A v e . , N . »>L. G - L S T S ind You Won't Have To Attend Classes Machinist-Tool & Die Weldlug .sufficient salary, but the pay will Oil Burner Uefrieeration rise on July 1 to $45 a week, the Radio AipConditionlnt highest NYC has ever paid for Motion Picture OperatlnR Yes, it's true. If you missed High only 90 days, if you act at once! DAY AND EVENING CLASSES those who start out as clerk, grade Jchool—you can still get a valu- Mail Coupon Now for Full Details Broolilyn Y.M.C.A. Trade School MACHINE 2. ible High School Diploma in a Let me help you help yourself SHOKTIIAND 1125 Bedfon] Ave.. Brooklyn 16, N. T. Men and women may apply. S T E N O T Y P E UA 2-1100 few short months without having to a happier future, as 1 have $3,000 to $6,000 per year to attend school one single day! done for many other grateful stuPrepare For New l!ork Stats Hearing CIVIL SERVICE COACHING lere's wiiy: Kepurler Exiinis dents. Pill out the attached couIn N. Y. State, the State Dept. pon. I will be happy to tell you, Asst. Civil EiiKr. Apprentice Eai'n while you learn. Individual Instruotion Theory to court reporting in 30 weeks Asat. Mecii'l Eiigr. Custodiaii Eiigr. ^of Education offers anyone who is without any obligation, exactly ATTENTION: Jr. Civil Eneur. Civil EDR. UraftHmun $00. 3. 0. Qoldner C.S.U. Official N.Y.S. Jnot attending high school and what you will get, what lessons Reporter. All classee 6-8 P. M. Mon. and Insp. Docks, I'iern, Coiisl. t'lerk (iratie it FIREMAN CANDIDATES fis over 21 years of age and who consist of, how little spare time Wed.—126-286 w.p.m. Tues. and T h u r s . — Foreman - I.aborer How do you score on tlie physical Classes Days, Eves. 80-125 w.p.m. test? A low ratinif can ruin your chance I passes a series of examinations a you need to devote to them, etc. qualifyiner. The Bronx Union " Y " Dictation 76c per session I HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY You may consult me personally, tor LICENSE PREPARATION offers you free, complete testing includStenotype Speed Reporting, Rm. 325 (DIPLOMA. And this diploma — without obligation, at our New ing: r e ^ i l a t i o n Bize obstacle course. Test Prot. Engineer Arch. Surveyor Master B Beekman St., N . * . FO 4-714;j MO 2-605ft Dates: Thura.. Fri., May 8, ». 7 to » (fully recognized by Civil Service York office — Room 919, Grand Electrician. StaUonar; Enrr. RefriKerap.m. Sat., May 10, 3 to B p.m. Uon. Portable Enrr. OU Burner. Plumber Commissions, City, State and Fed- Central Palace. 480 Lexington Secretarial, Drafting, Journaiisni ^ BRONX UNION Y.M.C.A. eral, as well as private employers, Ave. at 46th Street—any weekday DRAFTING, DESIGN & MATH COMMEKCIAL, SL'A.M! VU>UNIR.K«;IAL. SPANISH DEPX. 470 E. 161st St. Arch. Mecb. Electr. Struct, ropographical, trade and vocational schools, etc. from 10:30 A.M. to 5 P.M. ME 5-7800 Bldg. Est. Surveying. Civil Serv Arith. A!g. NASSAU ST. —can be yours If you enroll in my But don't delay! The sooner you (13 blocks west of 3r(l Ave. " L " ) Qeo. Trig Calculus. Pbysice. Hydraulice. I ' k n i a i i 0-484S comprehensive streamlined course take this Equivalency Homestudy NO CHAKGE • NO OBLIGATION Classee Days Eves.. Veteran Approved HOOI.S IN today. IIOKOUGHS Course—the sooner you'll be able MONDELL INSTITUTE MONTHLX RATES — \ 0 C<»NTKACT8 to take your exams — and If 330 W. 41, Her. Trib. Bldg. Wl 7-3080 Easy. Inexpensive 9 0 - 0 a y Course Bronx: 120 E. Fordiiani CY 8-3001 you obtain a satisfactory score Jamaica: 1 6 ; M 8 Jamaica Av. AX 7-2429 My course, providing easy, indl- on all parts of The State Exam, STENOGItAFIIY Over 40 yrs. preparing thousandp tor STATIONARY ENGINEERS Tldual Instruction based on your you'll get the High School EquivCivil Service Engrg.. License Exam» TYPEWRITING-BOOKKEEPING LICENSE PREPARATION own special need and background alency Diploma you want I Mall Spccial 4 Aloiitlis Cuuriie Stationary Enrloeera. Cnttodlan Gnir*. can get you this diploma and coupon NOW for FREE details. Day or Eve. Oustodian*. Superintendentr * riremeB open a new world of good. Jobs Cordially yours, STUUir BUULDINO A Calculating or Comptometry iXCiFTIONAl and opportunity for you in MILTON GLADSTONE, Director PLANT UANAOEMEN'r luteniiivc Course There will be two clerk exams In NYC, Instead of only one. NYC itself, through the Municipal Civil Service Commission, will hold the one for filing clerk, grade 2 jobs, at $45.50 a week, with no educational or experience requirements. The Board of Higher Education will hold the other, for filling clerical assistant jobs in City CX)llege, Hunter College, Brooklyn College and Queens Col- Probable Requirements For NYC Accountant Jobs : PATROLMEN : : WANTED : I CAN SHOW YOU HOW TO GET A HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA IN 90 DAYS CAREER SE?iVICE DIVISION. Arco Pubi. Co.. lnc.~EL S-6542 .MMi«taiBii>-«(BtaiBaataiBtaiaiBiBiBiiiaHiBiiiisiaiaiaiaiiiiBiaiiiii m lata u •• » ia Muwatat aaaa M M u 9AREER SERVICE DIVISION. Arco Pubf. Co., Inc. « Dept. LAS. 480 Lexington Ave., NeA^ York 17, N. Y. Please send me. FREE, full information about the Arco School High School Equivalency Course. It is understood that this request does not obligate me in any way whatsoever. Name Age........ j ^ ^ A Address c K ty . . ; : . , . . ; . . i, Apt ..; . z o n e . . . . . . State., i H M H M M H H M H M M M MMMM Mak»aMMJMUaaiWiau ?. I n d . UoBDM E>rep. * Coachins foi Bzam»—Claasrootn & Shop—3 Kven- iniTP a We^k AMERICAN TECH 44 Court St.. Bklyn. UA. S-2714 FIREMAN MEDICAL-PHYSICAL RULES OPEN FOR INSPECTION The cumpkte, oilicial medical and physical requirements for the NYC fireman test, which Is expected to be opened in a few munths, may be inspected at The LEADi<R oftice, 97 Duano Street. NYC. two blocks north of City Hall, juiit west of Broadway. iMPlOYMm OppAltlei BORO HALL ACADEMY ARt WIDiLY'ADViftJISSD fO» SECRETARIES, ^STENOGRAPHERS, TYPISTS »I0INNIR$ Ar AOVANCiO OAY-EVfNINO-PART TIMI IttliUt^**"! CO E n m ATIONAI l l W l ^ j M o d s r o t t Ral«|.intioim«nif DELEHANTYUHOOIS «*t. by N. r. Ilau 0»pl. »f fdwcalfaa us I . 0 M.-rfiR 3,I»O0 lAMAICA: SO U Sut»lii« tl«<l.>JA « »2M 427 FI.ATUtSII AVENUE EXT. Cor. Fulton St., U'kiyn MAin ii-:i447 r I I • V ••MECHANICAL a s DENTISTRY 31 year* luccentfuj grada. Complete C«ur«e» lu Plates, Uridges, i.'ru\vns, et«, in Acrylic. Ceruniiet> Steel. Viait write, pliout for r U E E Catalog C Free PlacemeDt 3ervlc« NEW YORK SCHOOL t'^S I'iB W Went Htm St. CU t.4U81 las 1U8 V WuWilii^ttbrf StWarU Mi 2-iuoii mm "I J I I €IVIL Page Fourteen SERVICE LEADER NYC Firefighters Oppose Elimination of Companies T h e fire officers and firemen of New York City have mobilized in a n effort to prevent the elimination of fire companies. Discontinuance of 52 companies h a s been recommended by the Mayor's Committee on Managem e n t Survey. I n a Joint effort, the Uniformed Fire Officers and the Uniformed Firemen's Association have Issued a petition calling for public protest against the contemplated move. It has been pointed out that in the huge fire which took place o n Reade Street, Manhattan, last Wednesday, five of the companies which responded were among those slated for elimination. Theme of the two organizations Is: "False economy will increase loss of life and property!" I n a petition which they ask citizens to sign, the firemen and officers make the following points: "The New York Fire Department's proud tradition of being the quickest agency to respond t o any emergency at any time m a y become a thing of the past. "The Mayor's Committee "" Management Survey has recommended the elimination of 52 fire companies protecting you. This will mean delay in apparatus reaching the scene of fire or emergency. Precious moments lost cannot be regained. "Less protection means greater danger. Less protection means loss of life, increased number of injuries, and huge property losses. Insurance rates will go up. Inconvenience, loss of business and time are not recompensed. 43 per- Wurf Urges Laborers to Sign Higher-Pay Pact Laborers to whom proposed agreements were submitted, whereby higher pay rates would be established, and back pay obtained, were encouraged by Jerry Wurf, general representative, American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, to sign them. "The sooner you sign them, the sooner the higher rates will go into effect," he told them. T h e agreements have to be approved by the Board of Estimate before they become effective. They involve more than $2,000,000 back pay. Mr. "Wurf said reports that laborers' pay would be reduced when the 40-hour week goes into effect were groundless. Also, he said the laborers would receive the same percentage increases that other employees will get on July 1, pending final ratification of the agreement. He emphasized that the proposed agreement is a firm one and laborers run no risk in signing it. V / cent of business fires result in permanent closing of establishments. Two Cents a Day "It now costs less t h a n two cents a day per person to operate the New York Fire Department, How can New York City afford to gamble with human lives in an effort to save a fraction of a penny per day per person? New Statute Legalizes 2 7 Promotion Lists With 1,020 Eligibles A roster of 27 competitive promotion lists on which the names of Labor Class eligibles appear was issued by the NYC Civil Service Commission. A law recently signed by Governor Thomas E. Dewey, said the Commission, validates promotions made from such lists, also the continued use of such lists, and gives to employees who lost their jobs through a Court of Appeals decision the right to have their names put on a preferred eligible list. Lists Affected The only proviso regarding continued use of such lists for making promotions is that the lists must have been in existence on July 13, 1951. They are given with the number of eligibles: Asphalt worker. Borough Presidents: Queens. 44; Richmond, 27; Manhattan, 159; Bronx, 90; Brooklyn, 135. Blueprinter, grade 3, Marine & Aviation, 1. Bridge and tunnel maintainer, Tril>oro Bridge Authority, 17. Chlorinator operator. Water Department: NYC Division, 2; Catskill, 1; Croton, 7. Elevator operator, Health D e partment, 27. Foreman (custodial), grade 2, colleges: Brooklyn, 6; City, 6; Queens, 1, Foreman, grade 2, Borough Presidents: Brookljm, 71; Manhattan, 13; Queens, 80; Richmond, 19; Bronx, 29 Foreman of laundry, grade 1, Health, 6. Foreman of porters, Housing Authority, 64. Mortuary caretaker, grade 1, Health, 3. Lundy to Name 44 Asphalt Men In Queens County At hearings of the Board of Estimate calendar last Thursday, it was decided that Borough President Luudy of Queens could have permission to appoint the 44 asphalt workers remaining on the list. The list was about to expire. B o r o u g h President L u n d y worked closely with Thomas A. Power, president of Council 42, Civil Service Forum, since Mr. Lundy's appointment in January. [The Comptroller of the State of New York will sell at his office at Albany, New Yorlc May 6, 1952, at 12:30 o'clock P.M. (Eastern Dayligiit Saving Time), $62,720,000 Housing (Serial) Bonds of th« State of New York Dated May 15, 1952, and maturing as follows t $1,280,000—annually May 15, 1954 to 2002, inclusive. ' Redeemable by State on notice, on May 15, 1992, or on any Interest payment date thereafter. Principal and semi-annual interest November 15 and May II payable at tlie Banlc of tlie Manhattan Company, New Yorkl City. Descriptive circular will be mailed upon application to J. RAYMOND McGOVERN, State Comptroller, Albany 1, N, Y. D«t«di April a s , 1952 "Do you know that the number of fire companies in New York City are 1.5% less t h a n in 1929 yet since that time population has Increased 33%, fires have Increased 77%, registered motor vehicles have doubled, fuel oil burner installations have tripled and airplane flights over the city are approaching 200,000 annually." Park foreman, grade 2, Parks, 169. Tapper, Water Dept,: L. I. Div., 1; NYC, 10. Watershed inspector, grade 2, Water Dept.: Croton Div., 4; Catskill. 7. What the Court Held The Coiu-t of Appeals held that Labor Class employees are not acceptable in exams for promotion to Competitive Class titles because they did not enter City service competitively. Labor Class employees will not be admitted to future tests for promotion to Competitive Class titles. The Commission lost no time in certifying lists, once the court decision became effective. It also expects to certify other such lists as fast as possible. Already certified are two lists for asphalt worker, Manhattan and Queens, and one for foreman of porters, grade 2 (men). Housing Authority. NYC Issues 14 Lists Tuesday, April 29, 19S2 STAFF EXPERTS who work for the U. S. Civil Service Commission in Washington and who remember when there was no complexity in the terms used to describe a job's standing, are trying to re-establish simplicity. They have come up with recommendations for a complete change in the ever-changing U. S. status n o m e n clature, whereby such terms as "probational (indefinite)" and "probational (permanent)" are bandied about. Career appointments would occupy top position. These would describe the present probational (permanent) jobs. The other types would be: „ r take months, so Federal employees are breathing easier. An unofficial estimate of th« value of unused leave, as of J a n uary 1 last, is $700,000,000. Converting leave to dollars, and calling this a debt of the U. S. t h a t must be liquidated, as Representative Thomas did, is considered by employees as an attitude hostHe to them. Some doubt was expressed b y employee groups whether annual leave accumulated prior to 1951 would be lost, if not used before the June 30 deadline, should t h e rider be enacted. Mr. Thomas gave assurances that the rider intended no such penalty. Leaders of employee groups state , t h a t if it means that pre-1951 leave would be taken away it is open-competitive exams, where the« unconstitutional as an invasion of hiring is done on a more or less established legal rights. emergency basis. This is the present probational (indefinite) type of appointment. LEGAL NOTICE Indefinite would be the word for STATE OF NEW TORK, D E P A R T M E N T appointment made without passOF STATE, 88.: ing one of the regular exams. I do hereby certify t h a t a certiflpate of of FAMAX REALTY C'ORPOTemporary would describe, as dissolution RATION h a s been filed in thia d e p a r t m e n t now, jobs filled for a specific pe- this day and t h a t it appears t h e r e f r o m t h a t such corporation h a s complied w i t h riod or which are not to last Wfe- flection one hundred and live of the yond a set time. Stock Corporation Law, and t h a t it is dissolved. Excepted appointments, as now, Given in duplicate under my h a n d and would be those made outside of ofllcial seal of the Department of State, civil service, although only on ap- at the City of Albany, this twenty-first d a y of March, one thousand nine hundred and proval by the Commission of fill- fifty. ing jobs that way. THOMAS J . CURRAN. Secretary of S t a t e , The three new designations of SIDNEY B. GORDON, existing degrees of standing, and Deputy Secretary of State. the retention of tlie two others, would make for simplicity, the WOMEN OF TWILIGHT.—Substance o l planners say. The Commission is limited p a r t n e r s h i p field in New York County Clerk's Olllce, March 7, 1 0 5 3 . weighing their recommendations. N a m e and location of business is W o m e a PAUL F. JOYNT has been appointed to a supervisory job in the Decatur, 111., post office. He resigned the vice presidency of the United National Association of Post Office Clerks so he could take the job. NYC has established the following eligible lists. There are eight open-competitive and six promotion lists. The title, number who passed, and department to which a promotion list applies, are given. OPEN- COMPETITIVE Alphabetic key punch operator, IBM, Grade 2; 37 Architect; 8 Housing manager; 14 Inspector of heating and ventilation, grade 3; 3 Inspector of heating and ventilation, grade 4; 14 Low-pressiu-e fireman; 153 Stationary engineer, electric; 6 Window shade repairer; 3 PROMOTION Architect, Education; 6 Assistant mechanical engineer. Education; 2 Assistant mechanical engineer. Hospitals; 2 Assistant superintendent, structures and track, Board of Transportation; 3 Mortgage tax examiner. Grade 5; City Register; 10 Superintendent of repairs to distribution. Grade 4, Water Supply, Gas and Electricity, NYC Division; 4 REPRESENTATIVES in Congress from the metropolitan district will be the guests of the American Federation of Government Employees at the Hotel Vanderbilt the night of Friday, May 16. FEDERAL AGENCIES have been asked to nominate employees for participation in the fourth annual "junior management i n tern program," the U. S. Civil Service Commission announced. Each year, a small group of Federal employees — the number selected is limited to 30—participate in the program, which consists of 5 months of training designed to develop management tfons shall have been paid in, any addi- •skills! T h p i r a i m 1<? t.n n r p n a r p f o r SKUIS. i n e i r aim i s l O prepare l O r persona desiring to become limited partners may do so upon complying w i t h the agreement, but shall not be entitled t o compensation except by special agreement with the general partners. No limited p a r t n e r s shall h a v e any turiority except t h a t bonds or cash deposits shall rcmala the property of the limited partner making: tho same. The partnership shall terminate upon the death, insanity or retircment of a general p a r t n e r . Unlcsa agreed to in writing by all of tho p a r t i e s hereto, no limited p a r t n e r h a s the r i g h t to demand or receive property other t h a a cash f o r h i s contribution. eventual assignment to aaministrative positions in the Government. Agencies will nominate candidates for the new program by July 14, after which the selection of the interns will be made by an interdepartmental committee on the basis of interviews and written tests. The Commission said there is a mistaken impression that college education is necessary in order to LEGAL NOTICE be nominated or selected for parTIIE TKOl'IJO OF TlIK STATE O F ticipation in the program. ActuMCW YOKK By the Grace of God Free and Inde- ally, there is no specific educapendent To ARNOLD L E E U W I N , the al- tion requirement. Neither is there leged decedent; BEKTHA DUUYF LEEU- an age limit. WIN and CELIEN LEEOWIN. whose places Candidates must have had 2 of residence, if living', are u n k n o w n and cannot a f t e r due dilierence be ascertained years of federal service, or 4 years and if dead, to their iieirs at law, next of of college education, or a combikin, distributees, euccessors in interest, creditors, assignees, executors and admin- nation of both—or they must have istrators, who and whose names and places received an eligible rating in the of residence are u n k n o w n and cannot a f t e r Junior Management Assistant exdue diligence be ascertained; DIN A LEEUWIN GODSCHALK. JACOB LOUIS GOD- amination. SCHALK, LEMAN DRUYF and LUCRETIA, T h e program is open to employJULIANA VEDER, the distributees of CLARA LEEUWIN, deceased, d a u g h t e r of ees in grade 7 ($4,205) or below. the alleged decedent who i« alleged to h a v e survived him and h a s since died; Send Greeting: Upon t h e petition of the Public Adniinistrator of the County of New York who h a s his ofDces at Hall of Records, a i Chambers StNret, New York City you and each of you are hereby cited to show cause before the Surrogate's Court of New York County, held at the Hall of Recorils in the County of Ni w York on t h e ;Jrd day of June, 11I53, at half-past ton o'clock in the forenoon of t h a t day, why the Surroirato shoulil not inquire into t h e facts and clrcunihtanceij and t h e r e a f t e r muku a decree determining the fact of death of Arnold Lit;uwin, the allegod doceilunt, determining that Bertha Druyf I.ceuwin and Cclien I.eeuwin survived the aUege<l decedent b u t predeceased Ciara Li'euwiii, anil granting Letters of Admin istration on the Goods, Chattels and Cwdits of Arnold Leeuwin, deecawed, l;ito of IMantatro I'arklaun R, Ainsteriliwu, 'J'he Netherlands. to tUo Public Administrator of the I'ounty of New York. In testimony w l u r e o f . we have caused the seal ol the Surrogate's Court of t h e eaid County of N e w ' Vork to bo h e r e u n t o allixed. Witness, Honoiable GEORGE FRANKENTHALER a Surrogate of our said county, at tho County of Now York, tiie 1 7 i h day (Seai) PHILIP Ciei'k ot Ibo A. DONAHUK Court of Twilight Co., BIS Seventh Avenue, N . Y. C. I t s business is to act as t h e a t r i c a l producers of play now entitled Women of Twiligrht. JosepQi Kipness of 65 Central P a r k West, N. Y. C. is the General P a r t ner. Limited partnera, their home addresses, contributions and percentages a r a as follows: J . L. Leban, 0 2 3 F i f t h Avenue. N. Y. C. $11500.00 2 % % , M u r r a y Olipliant, 1385 Broadway, N. Y. 0., $8400.00. 1 0 % , and Joseph Kipness. 65 Cen. tral P a r k West, N. Y. C. $10,000<-i3^<i % . No additional contributions are to be niado by the limited partners. The time w h e a the contribution of each limited partner ia to bo returned ia as follows: At euch t i m e s a f t e r the openinp of t h e play in New York City; if the p a r t n e r s h i p h a s a c a s h reserve not Jess t h a n t h e sinking f u n d , plus a reasonable a m o u n t f o r initiaJ expenses in t h e event t h a t the original company ia sent on tour, a f t e r the payment o r reasonable provisions f o r p a y m e n t of all debts, etc., all cash received f r o m time t o time by t h e p a r t n e r s h i p In excess of said cash reserve shall be paid m o n t h l y to t h e limited i^artners until their t o t a l c o n t r i b u tions shall h a v e been thereby f u l l y repaid. No assignee of t h e limited p a r t n e r s h i p shall h a v e a right to become a s u b s t i t u t e d limited p a r t n e r in t h e place of hie assig-nor. Until the aggregate limited c o n t r i b u tions h a v e been paid in, any limited p a r t ner may. in writing. Increase or decrease the a m o u n t of his contribution, and a n y additional person or persons may become limited p a r t n e r s by signing the agreement. CITY COURT OF T H E CITY OF N E W YORK. COUNTY OF NEW YORK. Plaintiff designates New York County as tho v^laca of trial. S u m m o n s - P l a i n t i f f ' s business i a New York County. H. D. SHELDON & COMPANY. INC., Plaintiff, against EK SENG COMPANY, LTD., Defendant. To the above named D e f e n d a n t : You are hereby summoned to answer tho complaint in this action, and to serve a copy of y o u r answer, or. if the complaint is n o t served with this summons, to serve a notice of appearance, on the Plaintiff's Attorney within ten days a f t e r the eervica of t h i s s u m m o n s exclusive of tho day of service, and in case of y o u r f a i l u r e to appear. or answer, judgment will be t a k e a against you by d e f a u l t f o r the relief demanded in the cpniplaint. Dated New York. F e b r u a r y 4 t h , 1058, N E T T E R & NETTER, Attorneys f o r Plaintiff, OHice and Poet Office Addrest 17 East 4 5 t h Street. WASHINGTON, April 28 - - A Borough of M a n h a t t a n , New York 17. N. Y. study of annual leave, especially COMPANY, LTD., an evaluation of its monetary T o 7: 1EKP a sSENG a r Pagi Pintu. Ketjil, value, has been ordered by the D j a k a r t a , Indonesia. TTio foregoing sununons is served upon House Subcommittee on Appropriby publicaUou p u r s u a n t to an order ations. The chairman of the sub- you of HON. JOHN A. BYRNES, Chief Justiott committee is Representative Al- of the City Court of the City of New bert Thomas of Texas, who has Vork, dated tho a 7 t h day of March. I06!l Ulod with the compl'ilut in the o«lc« been pressing for passage of his and of the Clerk of the City Cwirt of the City rider to require that all annual of New York. County of Now York, at 5 3 leave earned during a calendar Chambers Street, in the City, Cpatnty and year must be used by June 30 of State of New York. Dated. New York. March 2 8 i h . 1958. the next year. That would require NKTTEU & N E ' l T E R . liquidation of unused leave either Attorneys f o r Plaintiff, Olliee and Poet Oflice Addrca® during the remainder of the year 17 East 45th Street. in which it was earned or between Borough of Manhattuui, January 1 and July 1 of the next New York 17, N. Y. year. The fact that a study has been NOTICE is hereby given t h a t llceuse No. ordered was taken by employee lai) h a s Ixieu issued to the unaerunderleaders as indicating that senti- SB signed to 8nU beer at retail under the Alment for the rider is not too keen coholic Beverage Control L a w at 8^ Alin the committee. One way to e x - IsliUJd Avenue. Bronx, N. Y. City, N, ot on premises -con«umptton-»-Si press an adverse attitudfe,' "tliey* lWi iner and J o h n Mua.n ehia. d U-a 8. haid, is rn,to Introduce delaying . .. 1 J . ^ . ^ • f-onuiiwiy. a City Uiitud Aveuuo, Bf' tactics. TUe study Ifi expected to' ¥. cny. w, y. ^ n Tuesday, April 29, 1932 CIVIL I Estimate Board Approves $ 3 9 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 for Raises To NYC Civil Employees LEADER Page Fifteen NYC Offers Life-Time Jobs to Men Cleaners The NYC Civil Service Commisbrought beyond $10,500 by the sion has revealed how the cleaner raise. exam will be held for filling jobs Budget Director Abraham D. to $50 a week. Applications will Beame has been studying methods be received from men on Monday, of applying the formula. The Tuesday and Wednesday, May 5, present plan is to allow the per- 6 and 7. The exam for woman centage raise, computed on the cleaners will be opened probably June 30, 1952 pay, up to the next in June and the same procedure higher even $5. Where an e m - followed, if the method proves ployee is entitled to an increment i successful. on July 1, 1952, the raise would That method consists of giving be computed the same way and the increment would be granted the candidates their medical-physadditionally. The increment there- ical exam on the spot, immediately fore would not be included in com- after they have turned in their written applications. Therefore puting the raise. candidates will know at once whether they have passed or failed. The written application consists simply of giving the usual information about name, address, age, etc., and proving that one can read and write English. The $39,000,000 appropriation for raises for NYC employees was approved by the Board of Estimate last week when It adopted the 1952-53 budget without change. The funds were Included by Mayor Vincent R. Impellitteri in hJs executive budget to finance raises on the following formula: 12 percent on the first $2,000; 6 percent on the next $2,000; 5 percent ,on the remainder, no raise to exceed $500, and no salary to be Council Committee Gets Minimum Pension Bill The NYC Council referred to Its Finance Committee a bill Introduced by Councilman Edward yogel, Brooklyn Democrat, to proTide minimum pensions for retired NYC employees. A State law recently enacted authorizes the City to make such provision, but binds the State, and localities that are employer-members of the Btate Retirement System, to grant the increases on a set formula. Mr. Vogel's bill follows the State pattern, which provides for an i n crease to persons who retired SERVICE prior to January 1, 1952, are at least 60 years old, and have not less than 15 years' service, under certain conditions. . These are: number of years of service, multiplied by $40, must be less than the retirement allowance, in which case the pensioner would be entitled to the difference, but not more than $300, and no more than would bring the allowance to $1,200. The State law implies, but does not declare, that the pension raises in the separate systems shall not exceed those made mandatory I by the State upon itself. Move to Limit Benefit Of 40-Hour Week Fails 2. Filling out application blanks. There are no education or ex(Blanks cost $1). perience requirements and no spe3. Notarization of applications. cial age limits—21 to 69 are t h e practical limits. All candidates (Notary fee, 12 cents). must be citizens of the U. S. and 4. Medical-physical test. residents of New York State. Eligibles will be appointed in Numerous Vacancies the order of application. The blanks are numbered con.secu^ The cleaner jobs, assuming the pay increases are tjvely. However, as some candi- p r o p o s e d aa'^es will fail, the application adopted, as expected, would be n H b f itS'^inf n n f ^ week for 276 days, $49 a ' same, [ week for 302 days and $50 a week P^.HS i ^^^ ber of the earliest arrivals. -piie vacancies are numerous, but This is the exam for which ap- no official statement of their n u m plicants stand in line, starting the ber was issued. afternoon or evening before, to be ' Porter and other jobs may be among the earliest to recMve ap- filled from the list. plications. The first day tliere's a It's been two years since the last rush, perhaps 3,000 or more. On test was opened. During the threethe second day a sharp drop oc- day application period 3,533 apcurs, also on the third day, except plied. for the closing hours of the third | Only 44 of the applications were day, when another strong upswing marked void. The list was estabusuaily occurs. lished on August 18, 1950, three What Candidates Must Do months and two weeks after apUnusual Application Hours Candidates will fill out the applications closed. This time the plications in the building in which The hours for issuing applica- list will come out much faster, the Park Department swimming tions are unusual—8 A.M. to noon pool ts located on Fifty-ninth on each of the three days. At perhaps in three weeks. Every eligible on the list received Street, between Tenth and Elev- noon no addition to the line will job offer and after 1,485 a p enth Avenues. As different candi- be allowed, but all on line by noon 1 apointments were made the list was dates take more or less time filling I will be accommodated. Police will exhausted. Failure to respond to out applications, a steady stream be on hand to see that the rule is calls, and declinations, helped to of applicants is expected to go enforced. exhaust the list. before the medical-physical examiners. A group of doctors will serve as medical examiners. Paul M. Brennan, director of the Commission's medical-physical bureau, will be in charge. Candidates will strip to the waist and be inspected for hernia and varicose veins. Any hernia and extensive varicose veins, will rule one out of the test. Minor varicose veins will not. Everyone must lift a 40-pound dumbbell from a straightout arm HERE IS A LISTING OF ARCO position, over his head, without bending the elbow, with one arm, COURSES for PENDING EXAMINATIONS and a 30-pound dumbbell, repeatINQUIRE ABOUT OTHER COURSES ing the same operation, with the nther arm. one arm at a time. a A c c o u n t a n t ft A u d l t o r . . . $ 2 . 5 0 • B $2.50 Vision must be 20-40 or better, • D $2.50 • A d m i n i s t r a t i v e Assistant and eyeglasses may be used. Hear..$2.50 N. Y. C. $2.50 • E ing must be normal, and hearing l_j Mechonica Engr $2.50 aids also are allowed. There must • Apprentice (Fed.) $2.50 • Messenger ( F e d . ) $2.00 be no present mental illness nor Q Army & N a v y U Misc. Office any history of such affliction, nor P r a c t i c e Testi $2.00 Machine O p e r . $2.00 any other disease. Injury or ab- j G A$s'* Foreman • Motorman $2.50 normality that tends to impair (Sonitation) $2.50 • Oil B4rner Installer $3.00 health or usefulness. WONDERFUL NEW ARCO COURSES A resolution which would have | John Power, national represendenied benefits to NYC employees tative of the Government and affected by the rates paid in pri- Civic Employees Organizing Comvate Industry, when the 40-hour mittee, CIO. strongly opposed the week is made applicable to their resolution, as did Stanley B. Krajobs, was defeated last week in sowski, president of the Sanitathe Board of Estimate, The new tion Department Local, Building budget contains an appropriation Service Employees, AFL, and Robto get the 40-hour week started, ert W. Brady, president, Civil though in the beginning not for Service Forum. all employees. The resolution provided that where the work week is now more Employee Unions Protest Borough Presidents Robert F. than 40 hours, and it Is reduced Wagner Jr., John Cashmore and to 40 hours, the rate of pay would John J. Lyons' five votes out of be reduced proportionately, so that Order of Events the total 16 were enough to defeat the lessened work week would not the resolution, because it was on result in any pay increase. Not The order of events for candithe calendar for the first time. only employees whose pay is es- dates: Bince it affected the terms and tablished by Comptroller Lazarus 1. Fingerprinting. conditions of tjie budget, and the Joseph under the Labor Law, but budget was later adopted at the also others, whose pay depends same meeting,^ the resolution is indirectly on such determinations, would have been affected. dead. Report Asks Abolition Of 150 Sanitation Jobs The Trundle Engineering Company recommended to the Mayor's Committee on Management Survey, In a report issued last week, that economies be practiced in the NYC Sanitation Department, i n cluding the abolition of 240 section heaxlquarters stations and the Jobs of 150 section foremen. The report stated that the savings would be $250,000 on the stations Attractive Weekly Rates for S P R I N G alone and $270,000 more on the job elimination. The report was submitted by S, A. Peck, executive vice president of the company, to Comptroller Lazarus Joseph as chairman of the committee which had hired the company. Mr. Joseph said that 13 more reports on various City agencies would be released by the committee by June 15. Van Name Dinner Set For May 2 7 at Commodore A testimonial dinner will be f i v e n by NYC employees to Ralph L. Van Name, secretary of the NYC Employees Retirement System, at the Hotel Commodore, at 1 P.M. on Tuesday. May 27. Mr. Van Name wjll retire on June 2. T h e entire Board of Estimate, all department heads and their deputies, and large representations from organized employee groups are expected to attend, be- Privale Lake • Seasonal Sports 6otf Range • Tennis Courfs Free Horseback Riding Orchestra • Cwktail Lounge Finest Jewfsli Ainerlcan Cuisine' MONROE, N. Y. Ttl.: Monfo« •421 « N. Y. Off.: LP 4 6629 M A Y and JUNE VACATION WEEKLY BARGAINS ^ M * FOR T W O New deluxe bungalows, linens, dishes. Gas & electric. Boatiug & Fishine. Polder. KLEIN'S B U N G A L O W COLONY MONTICKLLO 2, N. S. Thoiie 1700 mtiT sides hosts of others in City service. Tickets are $10 each and are Bt« A^utlir do8 Monis P. Q. Cuimda obtainable from Veronica M. Carr, LEARN TO SKI temporary chairman of the dinInstruction and Tow Free 2 tows and on premises ner committee, at 52 Chambers CoctUail Loungeskatine rink Open Vireplaoes Street, NYC, telephone WHltehall Write tor folder or N ¥ On. PE 6-lia43 3-3600, Extension 2841. IDEAL H O N E Y M O O N SPOT Study for Apprentice Exam. Get a copy of a study book a t The Leader Book Store, 97 Duane St.. New l o r k 7. N. Y. m l U M I M FREE! • • • • • • • • • • • • n • • • • • • • • • • • n • • • • • Potrolmor (P 0 . 1 $2.50 Playground Director - . . . $ 2 . 5 0 Plumber $2 50 Policewoman $2.50 Postal Transp., C l e r k $2.00 Power Mointainer P r a c t i c e f o r A r m y Tests $2.00 R a i l r o a d Clerk .$2 00 R a i l w a y M o i l Clerk $2.50 Real Estate Broker $3.00 School Clerk $2.00 S e r g e a n t P.D ...$2.50 Social Investigator .... $2.50 Social Supervisor $2.50 Social W o r k e r $2.50 Sr. File Clerk ......$2.50 Sr. Surface Line Dispatcher $2.50 S t a t e Clerk (Accounts. File & Supply) $2.50 S t a t e Trooper $2.50 S t a t i o n a r y Engineer & Fireman ......... ......... $2.50 Steno-Typlst (Practical) $1.50 Steno Typist ( C A F - 1 - 7 ) .$2.00 S t e n o g r a p h e r , G r . 3-4 .$2.50 Structure Mointainer ...$2.50 Student Aid .....$2.00 Substitute Postal T r a n s p o r t a t i o n Clerk ....$2.00 Surface Line O p r $2.50 Technical & Professional Asst. ( S t a t e ) ....$2.50 Telephone O p e r a t o r ........$2.00 Train Dispatcher $2.50 With Every N. Y. C . A r c o Book— You Will Receive an Invaluable New A r c o " O u t l i n e C h a r t of New York City Government." ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPON — 35c for 24 hour (pedal delivtry C . O. D.'s 30c extra LEADER BOOK STORE 97 Duane St., New fork 7, N. Y. Pitai* tand ma, PEARL BAILEY BUDDY BAER TQN6 IIOTHEIS Attorney $2.50 Bookkeeper ^2.50 But M o i n t a i n e r $2.50 Car Mointainer $2.50 Civil Engineer $2.50 C l e r i c a l Assistant (Colleges) $2.50 • C l e r k J A F 1-4 • C l e r k 3-4-5 $2 50 • Clerk. G r . 2 $2.50 • NYS Clerfc-Typiit Stenogropher $2.50 • Conductor ,....$2.50 • C o r r e c t i o r Officer U.S.....$2.00 • Deputy l o n e C o l l e c t o r ....$2.50 • Dietitior $2.50 • Electrical Engineer $2.50 $2.50 • Engineering Tests $2.50 n Fireman ( F D . I • Fire C a p t $2.50 • «lre Lleutenont ...$2.50 • G a r d e n e r Assistant ........$2.00 • G e n e r a l Test Guide ..^...$2.00 • H. S. Oiplome Tests $3.00 • Hospital Attendant $2.00 • Housing Asst. $2.50 • 'nsurance Ag't-Brofcer ...$3.00 n I n t e r n a l Revenue Agent $2.50 n Investigator (Fed.) $2.50 n Jr. M a n a g e m e n t Asst $2.50 • Janitor Custodian $2.50 • Jr. Professional Asst. ....$2.50 • L a w ft C o u r t Steno $2.50 n Lieutenant ( F i r e Dept.) $2.50 n Malntolners H e l p e r • A and C $2.50 For Xour 8|iriiig Boliduy Come To L a r s o n NERBIERELOS »» • • • • • • HCIUTU REST . R E L A X A T I O N . RECREATION A 70-acr() paradise for Taeatlonera. 66 milea from NYC. Spacious (rrounds. breatbtakiny •cenery. Tenuis courtu, badminton, itandball, folley bail courts And shufflebovd. Golf practice care, puttinc green »ud driring range oo premises. Course aearby. Piaiined evening activities. wurrs roB rouDEB NEW WINDSOR t I I f! , .copiat of books ehaekad abov*. I anclota chack or monay ordar for $ Nam* Address CIfy 1 Stat« Page Sixteen / CITIL S E R V I C E L E A D E R Tuesday, April 2 9 , 1 9 5 2 latest Eligible Lists Employee Activities 1 7 0 . Moloney, J u l i a M., Albany . . 8 0 3 0 0 3 5 1 . V a n g a l e n , J . A., A l b a n y ,80840 .80840 1 7 1 . F o l l e t t , Camillo R., A l b a n y . 8 0 2 0 0 3 5 2 . B o n v e g n a , M. C. A l b a n y 1 7 3 . Rodgcrg. L a u r a V.. A l b a n y ' . 8 9 2 0 0 3 5 3 . Unger, N o r m a n R., NYC . . . 8 0 8 4 0 1 7 3 . Kennedy, F r a n c i s G., A l b a n y 8 0 2 0 0 SR. CI.KUK 3 5 4 . G r a m a c k , J u l i a A., T r o y . .80820 Te^m high scores went to Claims 1 7 4 . M o r l t z , J e a n S., T o w n Line . . 8 0 2 0 0 (I'rmn.), Interdriiurtinpntal 3 5 5 . Haobler, Annal>elle, A l b a n y .80810 1 7 5 . M o t a r o , .lean. Queens Vll . . 8 0 2 7 0 Soph with 828, Claims Srs. with 3 5 0 . N o l a n , J o h n G., Cohoes , . . 8 0 7 0 0 1. L c i f c r , EsUicr. A l b a n y 00070 1 7 0 . S c n n e t t . Angela J., Rensselaer 8 0 2 7 0 848 and Medical with 892. As the ;i57. Ajello. Jo-scph M., S t a t e n I«1 8 0 7 0 0 T H E STATE Insurance, Fund ;3. Myers. H o w a r d W.. W a t e r v U c t HOOOO 1 7 7 . Hall, S a m u e l E . , NYC 80240 3 5 8 . Carlo. C a r m e n J . . Bklyn 80700 season wanes the interest gets .1. McKunc, J a m e s . Bklyii OOaTO 1 7 8 . Znlcwski, B e r n a r d . M a s p e t h . 8 0 1 5 0 Chapter, CSEA, extends a cordial 3 5 0 . S t a h l . B e n j a m i n F., B r o n x . . 8 0 7 4 0 4 . F o w l e r , M. C., Rensselaer . . . 0 0 2 0 0 1 7 0 . KatK. S a r a . B r k l y n 80140 3 0 0 . R o b b i n s , F r e d H.. Schuylorvl 80720 welcome to the following new hotter. They'll be at it again next B. B u t l e r , . R u t h A.. A l b a n y . . . . 0 0 ( 1 5 0 1 8 0 . Y o u n g , N a t h a n B., NYC 80140 3 0 1 . R a n d o . E l i z a h e t h T.. M c h n i c v l 8 0 7 2 0 0. O'Connell. R i t a M., NYC . . . 0 5 7 0 0 members: Edna Crawford, Actu- Tuesday. Pins! Watch Out! 1 8 1 . Simon, Spencer O., A l b a n y . . 8 0 1 1 0 3 0 2 . O ' B r y a n . N o r i n e M.. T r o y . . 8 0710 7 . M a r t i n . Genevieve. B u f f a l o . . 0 5 5 0 0 182. Paul, R u t h , Albany 89070 Sure sign that spring is here is arial; Alvah Bell, Audit & Review; 3 0 3 . Marcil. E d n a J . . Cohocs . . . , 8 0 0 0 0 8. Uoed, C h a r l e s F., Albany . . . 0 1 0 8 0 1 8 3 . Acc, R o b e r t O., Bklyn 80030 .80000 .304. C o r c o r a n . Vincent. A l b a n y , Frances Osborne, Claims; Lyle the awakened interest amongst 0. Krebs, Carl E.. E b e n e z e r . . . 0 4 8 5 0 1 8 4 . F i n k e l s t e i n , R. H., B k l y n . . . 8 0 0 1 0 3 0 5 . I.ashcr, K a t h r y n 9., A l b a n y . 8 0 0 1 0 10. Q u i r k . R o b e r t L., A l b a n y . . . 0 1 8 ! J 0 Marshall, Milton Shaiman, David Fundites in the chapter softball 1 8 5 . N e u m a n n , Liicia W., D e l m a r 8 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 . Mullen, M a r i e K., B k l y n . . . .80010 11. C u r t h o y s , Allan W.. T r o y . . . 0 4 8 1 0 1 8 0 . Hickey, Carol, A l b a n y 88000 Rothenberg, Max Flamholtz, P a y - tean*. Bill Ginsberg is organizing .80010 3 0 ^ G u n t h e r , Viola, Bklyn ItJ. Baisley. J o h n A.. Bklyn 04750 1 8 7 . S c h o n g a r , George, A l b a n y . . . 8 8 0 7 0 3(!fr Fitrrell, Jc.in M.. A l b a n y . . .80(UO roll Audit; Helen Glasson, Gladys the schedule and is interested in 13. R o s e n b e n r . J o s e p h . B r o n x . . 0 4 0 5 0 188. Pctzke, John J., Elmira 880.30 .80000 3 0 0 . P i c h e n y , Rose, B r o n x 14. P o w e r s . K a t h l e e n . B r o n x 04.300 1 8 9 . A n t o i n e t t e , R. L., A l b a n y . . . 8 8 0 2 0 Walton. Beverly Bowens, E. Yanes hearing from other Chapters with . 80000 3 7 0 . Klein, Si*ra B., NYC 15. Everingrhatn. B. H.. Deiniar . 0 4 3 5 0 1 0 0 . K o r e m a n . Virginia. A l b a n y . . 8 8 0 1 0 .80500 and Ethel Mann of Underwriting. a view toward arranging for inter 3 7 1 . Dickinson, Donald, T r o y . . . 10. V a n d e w a l . D a v i d D.. Albany 045J50 1 9 1 . Carr, M.ary C., A l b a n y .88000 372. Muflileck, Barbara, Albany .80500 The rapid growth in Chapter Chapter competition. Last year 1 7 . Lilly. A n n a M.. Albany 04130 1 0 2 . Lyons, E u g e n e E., A l b a n y . . . 8 8 8 9 0 ,80500 3 7 3 . G a r b e r g , A b r a h a m , B k l y n . . 18. Bong-iorni, Marie, NYC 04070 1 9 3 . P a u l y . Charfea J . . A l b a n y . . 8 8 8 5 0 membership reflects the efforts of the Chapter team played other in.80580 3 7 4 . M c K n i g h t . H a r r y NYC 10. S k l a r , Louis, Bklyn 04020 1 0 4 . Kenreich. Virginia. R o c h e s t e r 8 8 8 5 0 . 80570 the chapter officers and commit- surance companies and industrial 3 7 5 . J o s e p h . A l f r e d A.. NYC . . . 2 0 . Conle.v, M.iry R.. A l b a n y ...O.SOOO 105. Rose. M a b u s C.. B e d f o r d HI 8 8 8 4 0 3 7 0 . Collison. J a m e s E.. T r o y . . . 8 0 5 7 0 t e e ; in developing progressive pro- plants with great zest and enjoy2 1 . D o n a h u e , M a r g a r e t T., B u f f a l o 9 3 8 0 0 1 0 0 . Bcnn, E a r l J . . J a m a i c a 88830 . 80570 3 7 7 . Miller. S e y m o u r . T r o y grams for general employee wel- ment. Any Fundites who are i n - ( S u b t r a c t one f r o m followingr n u m b e r s to 1 9 7 . B r o w n , T h e o d o r e A., NYC . 8 8 8 1 0 3 7 8 . B o u c h a r d , W i l f r e d . W a t e r v l i e t 8 0 5 7 0 1 9 8 . S w a r t z f a g e r , D. C.. B u f f a l o . 8 8 7 8 0 terested should contact Bill Ginsfare. 3 7 0 . O'Brien, L o r r a i n e A.. B r o n x 80570 No. 03.) 1 9 9 . F a v i e r . William M.. Gleiiinnt 8 8 7 5 0 berg or Fred Reinecker. There's and2 3 .inoludingr 3 8 0 . C l a r k , R o b e r t H., A1b.iny . . . . 8 0 5 5 0 Hosran, M a r g a r e t M., Clinton 0 3 7 5 0 2 0 0 . Amleror. R o s e C., A l b a n y . . . 8 8 7 2 0 3 8 1 . C l a r k . D o u g l a s B.. N T r o y . . . 8 0550 2 4 . Danzisr, A r t h u r M.. T r o y ..93740 201. Yarbrough. Walter, Albany . . 8 8 7 0 0 T h e results of the April 15 nothing lifee a good ball game for 3 8 2 . Dooley. G l o r i a M., Albany . . . 8 0 5 5 0 2 5 . K e n o s i a n . Grace. W a t e r v l i e t 9 3 0 4 0 2 0 2 . T u t m a n , W a r d J., A l b a n y . . 8 8 0 0 0 election have been announced. lots of fun! Let's see these young 3 8 3 . L e w i s . El.lred M.. NY^C 80,540 2 0 . IX!vy. H e r m a n S.. T r o y 03500 2 0 3 . Lagace. Cornelia, W., A l b a n y . 8 8 0 5 0 . 80540 3 8 4 . P h o e n i x , Kathl(<en. T r o y These officers were installed dur- fellows get out there and play ball! 2 7 . B u t t s . Glad.ve A., O n e o n t a . . . 0 3 4 2 0 2 0 4 . H a r d i n g , William P . , W y n d n c h 8 8 0 4 0 ,80530 3 8 5 . D u v a l . M. L.. Albany 2 8 . S a x b y , R u t h E., A l b a n y 03420 2 0 5 . Brill, E v e l y n , B k l y n 88040 ing the Dance and Entertainment .80520 3 8 0 . F i t z g e r a l d . Helen. Cohoes 2 9 . Krais, H o w a r d P., C o p i a g u e 9 3 4 1 0 2 0 0 . H e a r s t , Florence, A l b a n y . . . 8 8 5 9 0 held on April 25th. They are: .80510 3 8 7 . Konis. Madge M.. A l b a n y 3 0 . Heidrich, E . D., A l b a n y . . . 0 3 3 8 0 2 0 7 . F o w l e r , Helen M., F a r m i n g d l e 8 8 5 0 0 .80400 3 8 8 . Stern, F r e d R., NYC William Price, president; William 3 1 . C o n s t a n t i n o f f . E . J . . NYC . . . 0 ; ) 2 4 0 2 0 8 . V.ilenti. A u r e l i a M.. A l b a n y 8 8 5 1 0 3 8 0 . S c h m i d t , M a r y P., W e s t m c r e 80400 3 2 . S c h m i d t . A. C., W o o d h a v e n 0 3 2 1 0 2 0 0 . Clark, E u d o r a W., W e l l s b u r g 8 8 5 0 0 Dillon, first vice president, EdTHE ANNUAL Dinner-Dance of ,300. Scanlon, R e g i n a A., A m i t y vie 8 0 4 7 0 3 3 . Meiers, I d a , L.. Bklyn 03080 2 1 0 . S m i t h , E t h e l M., A l b a n y . . . 8 8 4 0 0 mund O'Donnell, second vice pres- Sing Sing Prison chapter, CSEA, 3 0 1 . H o f f e r n a n , J o h n B., A l b a n y . . 8 0470 3 4 . Norris. M . A., W a t e r v l i e t ...O.'KlOO 2 1 1 . Neiger. N o r m a n . NYC 88440 3 0 3 . Dalc.v. A n n a C.. M e c h a n i c v l . 8 0 4 4 0 3 3 . Dwyer, E m i l y W., T r o y . . . . . 9 2 0 7 0 ident, Alex Greenberg, treasurer, was held Friday evening at Bill 2 1 3 . Quest, Madeline E . , S c h t d y . 8 8 4 2 0 3 0 3 . R o s e n b l u m , A u g u s t a , B r o n x ,8(5420 3 0 . S u t i n . Helen G.. A l b a n y . . . . 0 3 0 0 0 2 1 3 . Vogel. Frietla E., B r o n x 88410 Gertrude Murphy, recording sec Reiber's Farm, Elmsford. About 3 0 4 . Stearn«, M a r y C., W a t e r v l i e t 8 0 4 0 0 3 7 . N o r t o n , .John P., T r o y 02050 2 1 4 . A t k i n s o n , Helen M., NYC . . . 8 8 4 0 0 retary, Yola Tentone, correspond- 150 members and their friends 3 0 5 . Thomiwion. W i n i f r e d , Bklyn 8 0 4 0 0 3 8 . Quinn, M a r g a r e t D., T r o y . . 0 2 0 1 0 2 1 5 . Sittig. Marion E.. U t i c a . . . . 8 8 4 0 0 3 0 0 . Gregory, Beatrice, C l a r k s v l e 8 0 3 0 0 3 0 . Coughlin, A n n a R.. A l b a n y . 0 2 0 0 0 216. Hevenor. Everett, Albany ..88300 ing secretary, William Joyce, fi- attended. Dancing followed with 3 0 7 . M c N a m a r a , R u t h M., J c k s n H t . 8 0 3 4 0 4 0 . L y n c h , Georpe A., A l b a n y . . . 9 2 8 9 0 2 1 7 . Michaelis. Lillian, B u f f a l o . . 8 8 3 8 0 nancial secretary, Edward Caro- music furnished by Bill Reiber's 3 0 8 . P a t r i c k , T h e n a K., Cohoes . 8 0 3 0 0 4 1 . S w e t z , Michael. A l b a n y 92840 2 1 8 . T a y l o r . Heni-y G., W a t e r v l i e t 8 8 3 7 0 lan, sergeant at arms. Depart- —Harmoney Boys. 3 0 0 . Wheeler, J o h n J., A l b a n y . . . 8 0 2 0 0 4 2 . Lawless, J o s e p h J., S t a t e n Isl 0 2 8 4 0 2 1 9 . B a r r , M a r i o n G., A l b a n y . . . 8 8 3 5 0 400. Totrault. Marjorie. Albany 80280 4 3 . Scanlon, K a t h c r i n e , B r o n x , . . 0 2 8 2 0 2 2 0 . KHidjian, M . A., T r o y 88340 mental representatives: Accounts James Adams, chapter president 4 0 1 . W a r d . M a r y C., Albany 80280 44. Hartigan, Margaret. Watervliet 02800 2 2 1 . Witt, I d a M., E G r e e n b s h . . . 8 8 3 4 0 and Finance, Randolph Jacobs and was toastmaster, introducing the 4 0 2 . Klein, N a t h a n . B k l y n 80270 4 5 . S m i t h , E t h e l M.. Bayside . . . 0 2 7 5 0 2 2 2 . F i n n , Helen F., R o c h e s t e r . . 8 8 , 3 4 0 4 0 3 . Swccnev, E v a Z., A l b a n y . . . . 8 0 2 7 0 John White; Actuarial, M. Buser following invited guests: Senator 4 0 . Dalton, J o s e p h M.. Albany , . 0 2 0 4 0 2 2 3 . Fedor, Helen M., B r o n x 88330 4 0 4 . Ciillahan, EiUv.ird A., NYC . . . 8 0 2 4 0 4 7 . Kaiser. A n n a K.. W a t e r v l i e t 9 2 0 2 0 2 2 4 . Boyd, Gladys M., W a t e r v l i e t 8 8 3 1 0 and E. Crawford; Claims, I. Amen- William Condon, Assemblyman ,80230 4 0 5 . H u m p h r e y , C. G., A l b a n y 4 8 . G r e e n s p a n , Milton, B r o n x . . . 9 2 5 7 0 2 2 5 . Culver, Valerie J., A l b a n y . . . 8 8 2 8 0 dola, J. Albert. Edmund Bozek; Theodore Hill, Jr., Warden and .80220 4 0 0 . J a c k s o n , Gcrahline, Bklyn 49. Lirschultz, Seymour, Bklyn . . 9 2 5 7 0 3 2 0 . Rider. M a r i a n , T r o y 88270 .80220 4 0 7 . Puleo, A n t h o n y , B k l y n . . 6 0 . Van Slyke. M a r i e T., Albany 9 2 5 4 0 Executive. C. McGuire; Legal. V. Mrs. W. L. Denno, Principal 2 2 7 . Corbett, M a r y V., Green Isl 8 8 2 7 0 4 0 8 . N e w b u r y , E l i z a b e t h , Rcns<>elr »<)210 51. D e r b y s h i r e , George. A l b a n y . . 0 2 5 2 0 3 2 8 . McMullcn, M a r y , Albany ...88200 Fiddler; Medical, L. Miller; Pay- Keeper Louis Kelley and Mrs. 4 0 0 . W h i l a k e r , F r e d A., A l b a n y . . 8 0 2 1 0 5 2 . Goldstein. Morris, B k l y n 92510 2 2 0 . S h a p i r o , M a x , Bklyn 88250 roll Audit. Helen Loos; Personnel, Kelley, Assistant Principal Keep4 1 0 . Feiinelly, P a t r i c k . T r o y 80180 6 3 . P r a e t o r i u s . Gracc, Vally S t r m 0 2 4 5 0 2 3 0 . Tooley, R a l p h G., A l b a n y . . . 8 8 2 4 0 4 1 1 . G a s s m a n , J e a n E., B u f f a l o . . 8 0 1 7 0 5 4 , S e h l e i f e r m a n , S.. NYC 92430 2 3 1 . P c r l m u t t e r , W.. Bklyn 88240 Jack White; Policyholders Service, er Charles Doyle and Mrs. Doyle, 4 1 2 . C h c r u b i n i , E v e l y n , Heliport 8 0 1 7 0 5 5 . Meyer, George F., Ridegwood 9 2 4 2 0 2 3 2 . F r a m b a c h . R u t h , Albany . . . 8 8 2 2 0 John Hession: Safety Service, J. Southern Conference President 4 1 3 . Rickort, S t e p h e n J., Rensselr 8 0 1 0 0 50. S t e w a r t , Alice J., Hornell . . . 9 2 4 1 0 2 3 3 . F r e n c h , R u t h M., U t i c a 88220 Gold, S. Mahler; Underwriting, M. Francis MacDonald and Mrs. Mac4 1 4 . G o o d m a n , Helen C., B r o n x . . 8 0 1 1 ) 0 5 7 . K e h r e r . Helen M.. Albany . . 0 2 3 4 0 2 3 4 . B a r r e t t , M a r g e r y M., U t i c a . . 8 8 2 2 0 4 1 5 . Weiss, S a r a h E., B u f f a l o 80100 58. V a n V a l k ' n b ' r g , H . R.. Albany 0 2 2 7 0 2 3 5 . Devine, Ellen C., B u f f a l o . . . 8 8 2 1 0 Bowe, K. Boyce. M. Brown. Con- Donald, Rev. Luther Hanntim, 4 1 0 . Ivcssard. George J., Cohoes . . 8 0 1 5 0 59. Cohen. S a m u e l L., NYC 92120 2 3 0 . S h a r p e , Helen A., A l b a n y . . . 8 8 2 0 0 gratulations and Good Luck to Father Thomas Donovan and 4 1 7 . Kittcl, Genevieve, E a g l e Brdg 8 0 1 4 0 0 0 . Y o u n g . M a r g a r e t E.. Albany 0 2 1 1 0 2 3 7 . Malcolm, E d y t h e M., Albany 8 8 2 0 0 these newly elected officers. It is Commander Ray Taylor, Sing 4 1 8 . Corey, B a r b a r a J . . A l b a n y . . 8 0 1 4 0 01. Biglow. A n d r e w B.. A l b a n y . . 0 2 0 7 0 2 3 8 . L u p k a , D o r o t h y R., Schtdy . . 8 8 2 0 0 4 1 9 . Morelock, Rose M., Allniny . . 8 0 1 4 ( ( 0 2 . Rossitcr, C. M., M e n a n d s . . . 9 1 9 9 0 2 3 0 . Dibtel, M a r g a r e t T., A l b a n y 8 8 1 7 0 certain that they will carry on the Sing Officer's Post, American Le4 2 0 . B a x t e r . Helen M.. NYC . . . . 8 0 1 2 0 2 4 0 . P a y n e , L c a n o r c E . , Bklyn . . 8 8 1 0 0 forward looking policies that have gion. Other guests introduced ( T h e f o l l o w i n g n u m b e r s need no a d j u s t - 2 4 1 . Brady, Madeline C., C m b r a H t 8 8 1 4 0 4 2 1 . Durkee, Hazel P . . B u f f a l o . . . 8 0 1 2 0 helped the Chapter to grow to its were: John McCue, Administra- m e n t . ) 4 2 2 . Ogsbury. E l i z a b e t h , A l b a n y 8 0 1 1 0 2 4 3 . Doyle, M a r y M., S c h t d y 88130 62. Flis. Alice S.. D e l m a r 91950 4 2 3 . S u r i a n o , Virginia. M e n a n d s . . 8 ( U 1 0 2 4 3 . H o y t , E m m e t t M., H u n t i n g t n 8 8 1 2 0 present impressive membership in tive Assistant, at Sing Sing and 03. M o a k l e y . T h o s . W.. :M;ispeth 9 1 0 0 0 4 2 4 . Coon. C h a r l e s L., T r o y . . . . . 8 0 0 7 0 3 4 4 . Browne, V i r g i n i a D., A l b a n y 8 8 1 1 0 just the few years it has been in Mrs. McCue, President Correction 04. Meyer. Helen E.. B u f f a l o . . . 9 1 8 7 0 4 2 5 . Brceu, R h e a M., S c h t d y . . . . . 8 0 0 5 0 2 4 5 . H a r r i c a , P a t r i c i a , Utica 88100 Conference Charles Lamb and 0 5 . C o c k c r o f t , E . P., D'.Imar . . . 9 1 8 0 0 4 2 0 . T u r n e r . D o r o t h y B., A l b a n y . 8 0 0 5 0 240. Risotto, Dominick, E E l m h r s t 88080 existence. 00. Joyce, J o h n J., Albany 9 1 7 9 0 4 2 7 . M c N a m c c , J a m e s W., T r o y • . 8(i040 2 4 7 . Colaneri, C a r m e n M., T r o y . . 8 8 0 8 0 Fundites exi.end sincere condol- Mrs. Lamb,.Mr. and Mrs. Roger .8(t(»20 07. S a n t o r a , N a t h a l i e , W Sand L k 9 1 0 7 0 4 2 8 . W a r e , Mclvin E., NYC 2 4 8 . Allard. Donald T., T r o y . . . . 8 8 0 7 0 ences to William Ginsberg of Beeker, Woodburne Prison, Law.8<!01(» 08. Rossi, L o u i s J., A l b a n y 01040 4 2 0 . Ross, William. Hollis 2 4 9 . Czwakiel. J a m e s G., Albany 8 8 0 4 0 09. Douglas, M a r y F., Albany . . . 9 1 0 4 0 4.30. B a r r a e o , N o r m a L., A l b a n y .80010 2 5 0 . King, R i t a C., Belle H b r . . . . 8 8 0 1 0 Claims upon the recent loss of his rence Dill, Mattewan State Hos.85000 70. Maime, Bonuuvl, B r o n x 9 1 0 1 0 4.'il. Rangcl, R.ilph J., NYC 2 5 1 . Cox, L o u i s e L., R o m e 8 8 0 0 0 pital. Sgt. and Mrs. Goldfarb, Mr. mother. 71. Lowe, Rose W., B r o n x 91010 4;t2. Windelspeeht, R u t h , A l b a n y 8501>0 2 5 3 . Bergin, Donald M., Slingerlnd 8 7 0 5 0 The Bowling League met on Ap- and Mrs. Charles Fischer, Mr. and 7 2 . Comploier, A u g u s t a . Astoria . 9 1 5 7 0 4;!3. Kosck, Eilward J . , Cohoes . . 85i)50 2 5 3 . Aciuilio, Grace L., NYC 87040 7 3 . M c M a h o n , Joseirti D., Albany 0 1 5 4 0 4 3 4 . Schroeder, Charles, Rensselr . 8 5 0 5 0 2 5 4 . H a m m , E l i z a b e t h C., Shigrlnd 8 7 0 1 0 ril 15th with the result that the Mrs. Cornelious Rush, Green H a 7 4 . Honan, M a r y S.. T r o y 91480 4 3 5 . Costanzo, P e t e r J., S t a t e n Isl 8 5 0 4 0 2 5 5 . H a m i l t o n , F l o r a C., W a t e r f o r d 8 7 8 0 0 race is as torrid as ever. The S a f e - ven Prison, Kay Randolph and 7 5 . T a f t . Orvillf R., D a n n e m o r a . 9 1 4 4 0 4 3 0 . S m i t h , M a r i o n H., Albany . . 8 5 0 0 0 3 5 0 . Sims, Gwendolyn B., J a m a i c a 8 7 8 0 0 William Nelligan of Westfield t y team was able to win only one 70. Orttfeld, E m i l y , NYC 91430 4 3 7 . Bell, A l v a h F . . R i c h m n d HI 8 5 8 0 0 2 5 7 . Dinkin, S a m u e l C., B k l y n , . 8 7 8 0 0 State Farm. 4 3 8 . Kemmy, H a r r i e t E., E G r n b s h 8 5 8 8 0 7 7 . A r o n o w i t z , S a r a h , NYC . . . . 9 1 3 9 0 3 5 8 . Hunniflirey, M a r j o r i e , D c l m a r 8 7 8 7 0 point from the front running Or7 8 . W a r h u r s t , Regina, A l b a n y .9i;ioo 3 5 0 . M a g u i r e , J a m e s J., M t . M ' G r g r 8 7 8 7 0 4 3 0 . McGiiine^*, M. M., Albany . . 8 5 8 7 U phans, while the Claims Sophs 4 4 0 . Ball, CUittil E., NYC 85850 7!». Boone, Beatrice, Bklyn . . . August Westpfal, Chairman, was 3 0 0 . S c h c r n i e r h o r n , E . K., Albany 8 7 8 7 0 .01370 4 4 1 . McNally, Willuim J . , A l b a n y 8 5 8 5 0 80. P a t e n a u d e , J o h n J.. Cohoea . 9 1 3 5 0 bowled the Claims Srs. to a 2-2 commended for the excellent job 3 0 1 . .Shillingford, C. I., NYC 87870 81. Bulger, E., G o u v e r n e u r . . . 4 4 2 . F i n k l e , Albert V „ A l b a n y . . . 8 5850 2 0 2 . Rosenberg, S a r a h H., Bklyn . 8 7 8 5 0 .91330 tie. Thus the Orphans were able he and his Committee had done 82. Peir-son, Viiia L., Ellenville . 9 1 3 0 0 4 4 3 . Bernstein, A b r a h a m , Albany 8 5 8 5 0 2 6 3 . Malone, M.ibel A., W a t e r v l i e t 8 7 8 4 0 to increase their lead over the with arrangements for the affair 83. F u n k , J u l i a M., Albany . . . . 9 1 2 7 0 4 4 4 . G r a t o n , D o r o t h y H., A l b a n y 8 5 8 4 0 2 0 4 . r a v i n e , W i l l i a m , Bklyn 87810 8 4 . Tcltsch, F l o r a , B r o n x . . . . .91240 4 4 5 . Oserin, R o b e r t R., B r o n x . . . 8 5 8 4 0 3 0 5 . T h o m e , Mabel G.. B r o n x . . . 8 7 8 0 0 Claims Srs, by one point, but the 85. H u r l e y . T h o m a s J., Albany . 0 1 2 1 0 4 4 0 . R y a n . Helcne F.. T r o y 85830 3 0 0 . H a z a r d , Etlythe M., N H r t f r d 8 7 8 0 0 flr.st five teams are all still within 80. Polifiuin, I r e n e M., Albany 4 4 7 . S i m m o n s , Ann V., A l b a n y . . 8 5 8 1 0 3 0 7 . O'Keeffe, M a r y V.. B r o n x . . . 8 7 7 0 0 .91110 a range of only IQilj points. Team 87. Williams. J a n e , A l b a n y . . . . 9 1 1 1 0 4 4 8 . Dee, C a t h e r i n e M., A l b a n y . . 8 5 8 1 0 208. Cummings, Anne P.. Albany 87780 88. Foy^ Agatlia, T r o y 4 4 9 . Vine, M a r g u e r i t e , A l b a n y . , 8 5 8 1 0 2 0 0 . Krage, H e n r y V., W a t e r v l i e t . 8 7 7 5 0 .01100 standings as of the April 15th A COMMITTEE to formulate 8 0 . Becker, H a z e l A., R i c h m n d HI 9 1 0 2 0 3 7 0 . D o n a h u e , Daniel J., B u f f a l o . 8 7 7 5 0 4 5 0 . J o h n s o n . Hilda M., A l b a n y .85700 meeting are as follows: 00. Wheeler, E d g a r T., Albany . 0 0 8 7 0 2 7 1 . D o n o v a n , V e r a M., A l b a n y . . 8 7 7 4 0 4 5 1 . Beech, Aime M., NYC .85770 w . L, Pts. plans for the annual meeting of Team 0 1 . R a p p , J o h n C., A l b a n y 9 0 8 7 0 7 2 2 . Moellcr, R u t h E . , T r o y 8 7 7 4 0 4 5 2 . O'Grady, F r a n c i s J . . A l b a n y 85770 46>2 3IV2 651/2 the Steuben County chapter, CSEA, 02. J a r o c k i , .Stella H., Albany . . 0 0 8 7 0 2 7 3 . Lii)«ky, W i l l i a m , NYC 87740 4 5 3 . Childs, R i c h a r d M., D e l m a r . . 8 5 7 0 0 Orphans 45 33 59 has already decided the date 9 3 . Walsh. E s t h e r R., Albany . . 9 0 8 5 0 2 7 4 . B u t l e r , Gloria E., B r o n x . . . 8 7 7 1 0 4 5 4 . Walker, R u t h F.. Geneseo . . , 8 5 7 5 0 Claims Srs. 0 4 . Kennedy, J o s e p h C., Nesconset 9 0 8 5 0 2 7 5 . P e t t i t . R o n a l d S.. B r o n x 87(i00 4 5 5 . A b r a m o p a u l o s , E., H City . . 8 5 7 4 0 42 36 56 Thursday evening. May 15, at the Accovmts 05. Ray, Carolyn R., A l b a n y 00820 2 7 0 . Kirton, Beatrice P., NYC . . . . 8 7 0 0 0 4 5 0 . F l a l i e r t y , Carroll, A l b a n y . . . 8 5 7 2 0 40 "2 371/2 551/2 Hotel Wagner in Bath, N. Y, 00. P a d u l a , Rooco F . . A l b a n y . . 0 0 7 5 0 277. Johnson. Ernestine, P t Chstr 87070 4 5 7 . K a u f f m a n . Dolores, B a t a v i a . 8 5 7 2 0 Medical 41 37 Members are urged to remember 55 07. Chanil.>erlain. M. E., Cohoes . 0 0 7 4 0 3 7 8 . Dahlin, Purcell, S c h t d y 870.10 4 5 8 . Young, J o h n W., T r o y . . . . 8 5 7 2 0 Claims Soph 0 8 . Croniie, Ross, A l b a n y 00740 2 7 0 . Day, R o b e r t J., Delniar 87050 4 5 0 . Browne, T h o m a s P., A l b a n y . 8 5 7 2 0 38 40 that date and to be on hand, e n 50 00. May, William F., BUIyu . . 3 8 0 . B r a h a m . Marvin J., B k l y n . . 8 7 0 4 0 Payroll Vriji.-ui, M a r g a r e t , W a t e r v l i e t 8 5 7 1 0 . 0 0 7 4 0 38 40 joying the fun and entertainment 1 0 0 . Green, S a m u e l , Bklyn . . . . . 0 0 7 0 0 3 8 1 . H u g h e s , R o b e r t M., A l b a n y . . 8 7 0 4 0 44 00 10 .. Sinclair, 48 M a r g a r e t , R c k v l Ctr 8 5 7 0 0 Safety 451/2 being arranged by Mrs. Mildred 1 0 1 . Caulfu-ld, Betty, A l b a n y . . . 0 0 0 7 0 2 8 2 . Sayewitz, S a r a h , B r o n x 341'2 431/2 87030 4 0 2 . Kalica, P a u l R., A l b a n y . . . . 8 5 0 5 0 Personnel A., Albany . 9 0 0 7 0 3 8 3 . O'Neil. R i t a E.. N T r o y 87500 4 0 3 . EdniomU. Helen K.. J k s n H t 8 5 0 4 0 471/2 431/2 Labour, Blanche Kniffin, and 11 00 23 .. SAmr tiht hu ,r , Virginia 3012 F., W a t e r v l i e t 0 0 0 5 0 3 8 4 . H a r t , H a z e l B., N a s s a u . . . . 8 7 5 9 0 4 0 4 . D o n o v a n . P h y l l i s R., Bklyn 8 5 0 4 0 Policyholders 34 44 Ethel Fisher. Elizabeth Morse is 1 0 4 . Kicffer, FDonald 43 r e d W., Bayside 90(i50 3 8 5 . H u t c h i n s o n . G. C., A l b a n y . . 8 7 5 7 0 4 0 5 . King, M a r t i n J . . B k l y n . . . . . 8 5 0 4 0 Underwriters chapter president. 1 0 5 . Morris, A m b r o s e H.. Melrose 0 0 0 5 0 3 8 0 . F a z z i o l a , F r a n k J., T r o y . . . . 8 7 5 7 0 4 0 0 . Wood, J a n e M., A l b a n y ...85040 Individual high score honors 100. Helokopil.sk.v, A., W a t e r v l i e t . 9 0 0 4 0 3 8 7 . D u b n e r , F r a n c e s , BuiTalo . . . 8 7 5 0 0 4 0 7 . Drew, E t h e l B., B u f f a l o . . . 8 . 5 0 1 0 1 0 7 . W a u g h , L u c i l e T., A l b a n y . . . 9 0 0 4 0 3 8 8 . Leibson, D o r o t h y , NYC 87540 4 0 8 . K r a u s e , R<^beeca, Bklyn ....85000 went to Mendl with 207 while 1 0 8 . Cooper, William C.. A l b a n y . 9 0 0 4 0 2 8 9 . Goldberg, Lillimi, Bklyn . . . . 8 7 5 3 0 4 0 0 . Sturgees. Mildred, T r o y 85500 1 0 0 . L a t l i n , M a r y M.. L o c k p o r t . . 0 0 0 1 0 2 9 0 . P a s s i n , J a c k , NYC 87520 4 7 0 . D e s c h a m p s , Leo J., Cohoes . . 8 5 5 7 0 1 1 0 . Wilsey. M a r i a n W.. S c h t d y . . 9 0 5 0 0 3 9 1 . O'Donnell, Charles, Bklyn . . . 8 7 5 1 0 4 7 1 . Deyo, Gordon H., Dannen>ora 8 5 5 7 0 1 1 1 . Kane, Dolores H., C h e c k t o w g a 9 0 5 1 0 2 0 2 . Wheeler. N a t h a n E . . A l b a n y . 8 7 4 0 0 4 7 2 . Desaiigea, J o h n J., B k l y n . . . 8 5 5 5 0 1 1 2 . Lcnnon, D o r o t h y A., A l b a n y .0(1510 2 0 3 . Weiss. E d i t h , B r o n x 87400 4 7 3 . Sinunons, R u b y A., Bklyn . . . 8 5 5 5 0 1 1 3 . Bernstein. Gloria, Albany . . 0 0 5 0 0 2 0 4 . Semberg, A b r a h a m , B r k l y u . 8 7 4 8 0 4 7 4 . F r e n c h , Charles G., B k l y n . . 8 5 5 5 0 1 1 4 . Bo.irdnian. R u t h , All)any . . 0 0 1 4 0 2 9 5 . Slawsky, H i l d r e t h , Albany . . 8 7 4 0 0 4 7 5 . Larose, M a r g a r e t M., Albany 8 5 5 4 0 115. Bi'linfante. Albert. Bronx . . 0 0 4 1 0 2 9 0 . Pckins, F r a n k W.. Salem 87440 4 7 0 . C a r a v a t t a Marie M., Albany 8 5 5 2 0 110. A b r a m s . H a n y . NYC . 00;i80 2 9 7 . Dolgoff. M i n n a D., A l b a n y . . 8 7 4 4 0 4 7 7 . Ballantine, E . L., W a t e r v l i e t 8 5 5 0 0 1 1 7 . Roy. J o h n C.. Albany 85500 . 9o;ioo 2 0 8 . S h a p i r o , R a c h e l , A l b a n y . . . 8 7 4 2 0 4 7 8 . K a t z , Mue, J a m a i c a W a l t e r E.. Albany . , 0 0 3 5 0 2 0 0 . Bowers. Alice E.. A l b a n y . . . 8 7 4 2 0 4 7 0 . Scalzo, P a t r i e i a J., Coeynians 8 5 4 0 0 (Continued from page 1) quire that he be punished for that 11 11 08 .. Jones, B a l k a n , Chester M., Bklyn 3 0 0 . H a n i a h a n , M a r y M., Cohoee . 8 7 4 1 0 4 8 0 . F i a n c o n e r e , M a r y K., A l b a n y 8 5 4 7 0 . 9 0 3 4 0 providing, that any public o f - crime in accordance with penal 120. F r i c k , Shirley N., Slingcrlnd OD.'MO 3 0 1 . Burko. J . G r a h a m . W a t e r f o r d 8 7 4 0 0 4 8 1 . Wilpers, Anne S., Albany 85470 1 2 1 . Malo, RosnUe, Cohoes 9()210 3 0 2 . Daley. J o s e p h i n e T., A l b a n y . 8 7 3 8 0 ficer wlio, upon being called be- sanctions applicable to all per 4 8 2 . M u n s t e r , Matliilde, NYC ...85470 Butler, B a r b a r a R., NYC . . 9 0 2 1 0 3 0 3 . Allen, Beryl R.. B r o n x 87380 4 8 3 . Neville, J a n e G., A l b a n y 85470 fore a grand jury to testify sons. If .his acts expose him to 122. 1 2 3 . Koerner, E d i t h L., Islip . . .00210 3 0 4 . L a w l e r , J o h n M., A l b a n y . . . . 8 7 3 7 0 •484. Rogers, Ora E., B i i i g h a m t o u 8 5 4 7 0 concerning the conduct of his civil liability, established proced 1 2 4 . Masiliuias, Madelon. Albany ,00200 3 0 5 . Horan, J o s e p h M., A l b a n y . . 8 7 3 7 0 4 8 5 . Bell, Lillian L.. NYC 85450 125. Rcschke, R. C., A l b a n y . . . . !)0200 3 0 0 . B a r r e t t , Gladys, M a s p e t h . . , 8 7 3 4 0 4 8 0 . F l e m i n g , E l e a n o r L., S y r a c u s e 8 5 4 5 0 office or the performance of his ures are invoked which are equal 1 2 0 . M u l c a h y . K a t h r y n , Geneva 3 0 7 . Ulaising. E l v a S.. A l b a n y . . . 8 7 3 . 3 0 4 8 7 . Werlin, A n n e T., Albany . . . . 8 5 4 5 0 .00170 official duties, refuses to sign a ly applicable to all persons. 1 2 7 . F r e d e r i c k . H a i o l d , MenanUri . 0 0 1 4 0 3 0 8 . Eisen. Dolly. Bkiyn 87310 4 8 8 . Rivet. Roger J., W a t e r v l i e t . 8 5 4 4 0 128. Boyd. Andrew M., Watervliet 9J)140 3 0 0 . Walsh, J e r r y J., A l b a n y 87200 waiver of immunity against sub4 8 0 . S t o d a r t , G. P e a i l , A l b a n y . . . 8 5 4 4 0 Special Penalty 1 2 0 . A i r i n g t o n , R u t h B., NYC . . . 0 0 1 4 0 3 1 0 . F e c i u r a , M a r t h a . R a y Brook 8 7 2 0 0 4 0 0 . H u t s o n , A u d r e y V.. A l b a n y 8 5 4 1 0 sequent criminal prosecution, or "This bill adds a special penal 130. Roeckel. Charles, W a n t a g h .00120 3 1 1 . Koerber, E d m u n d L.. Albany 8 7 2 0 0 4 9 1 . Ward, Bernice, Bklyn 85410 to answer any relevant ques- ty for a public officer or employee 1 3 1 . Alheini, William J., Albany . 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 2 . S t o r m . J o h n N., Bklyn 87280 4 9 2 . Dean. Helen C.. Albany 85;i00 tion concerning such matters over and above that prescribed in 1 3 2 . T a b a c h n e c k . Rao, Albany . . . 0 0 ( t 8 0 3 1 3 . K e h r e r , H o w a r d J., A l b a n y . . 8 7 2 5 0 4 0 3 . M c D e r m o t t . Alice E., T r o y . . 8 5 3 8 0 Mysko, Adi'lle, B u f f a l o OOlCil) 3 1 4 . Barnes. A a r o n V.. NYC 87250 491. Laiuihan. John J.. Albany . . 8 5 3 7 0 before such grand jury, shall by other cases. It would deprive him 13.'J. 134. Ycngel. E m m a L., W u o d h a v u 9(H)30 3 1 5 . P u r c e l l , J o h n J., A l b a n y . . . . 8 7 2 5 0 4 9 5 . T e p p e r . S a r a P., Bklyn . . . . 8 5 3 7 0 virtue of such refusal, be dis- and possibly his widow and other 1 3 5 . O'Sullivan. Kileeu, A l b a n y . . 0 0 0 2 0 3 1 0 . Lyons, Vera J . . B u f f a l o 87240 4 9 0 . G a r b u s , Morris, Bklyn . . , . 85;)50 L u d w i g , Matleleine, Blciyii .00010 3 1 7 . Bcllew. E t h e l T., A l b a n y . . . . 8 7 2 2 0 4 0 7 . M a l i n o w s k i , E«iward, Albany 8 5 3 4 0 qualified from holding any oth- survivors of rights to a pension 130. 3 1 8 . Oliver. J o s e p h i n e . Albany . . . 8 7 2 2 0 137. Bcnoit, J e i i i u u t t e , Cohoca 4 0 8 . H e r v i e u x . M a r y A., T r o y . . . 8 5 3 4 0 .80000 er public olfice or public employ- established by law and for which 138. Kclhey, Helen W., T r o y . . 8 0 9 8 0 3 1 9 . Shea, J o s e p h , A l b a n y .87100 4 0 0 . Sheriiian, P a u l i n e , Cohocs .85300 ment for a period of five years, he met all of the statutory re- 1 3 0 . Edgley. Lowell J , . Albany . 8 0 0 5 0 3 2 0 . Spensley, W i n i f r e d , Albany . . 8 7 1 7 0 5 0 0 . Beneti^ky, J a n e t , B k l y n . . 8 5 2 0 0 3 2 1 . Kundct, Kutlileon A,. E G r n b s h 8 7 1 0 0 140. Colling, Ann T., T r o y . . . 501. Francese. Ignatius. Troy . ,85280 und shall be removed from office quirements at the time of retire- 1 4 1 . Brt-mer. F r a n c e s G., Albany . 8809887000 3 2 2 . F i s k . Mario E.. W a t e r t o w u 5 0 2 . B a r r e t t , R u t h M., A l b a n y .85280 87J50 by the appropriate authority or ment. It bears resemblance to odi- 1 4 2 . O'Sullivan. O . P., Bklyn . . . 8 0 8 4 0 3 2 3 . K o l t k o , W a l t e r , Cohoea , . 5 0 3 . Williams, Francis, A l b a n y . 85270 87150 3 2 4 . Siscnwein, Sidney, Bronx . 5 0 4 . Bessmer, Florence, W a t e r v l i e t 8 5 2 5 0 punishments in 1 1 3 . l>riiihivalko. P a u l . Bklyn .80800 87140 shall forfeit his office at the ous medieval '125. K a r a m . Maron J., Utica 1 . Baillargcon, R. C., Cohocs 505. Hatcher, Margaret. Albany .85250 .80780 87140 •suit of the attorney-general.' which the goods and cliattels of a 11415. 3 2 0 . Bechicy. Rose. F a r R o c k w y Burke, Tiiercse V., Albany . 8 0 7 7 0 5 0 0 . L o i s o n , D o r o t h y W., C o r o n a 8 5 2 5 0 87130 C a s t r o g i o v a n u i , V., B u f f a l o , (State Constitution, Art. I, Sec. felon were forfeited to the king, I K i . Kulz. r, R a l p h E., Albany . 8 0 7 5 0 3 2 7 . M, 5 0 7 . Michel, Nancy L., S y r a c u s e 85250 ..87100 85250 and the blood of the attainted was 147. N a a b , J u l i a , A l b a n y . . . . . 8 0 7 4 0 d 2 8 . ' l u r n e y , M a r y M., Watervliet 8 7 1 0 0 5 0 8 . Williams, L o r e t t a , B r o n x 1 4 8 B n u i c r . J a n e t L.. Albany 5 0 0 . Lcmicux, Lea M., G r c e u Isl 86260 .80730 32i). R o b e r t s o n , Helen M., Albany 8 7 0 0 0 deemed corrupted so that he could O . T h o m p s o n . D o r o t h y , Albany 8 0 7 3 0 5 1 0 . Lewis, R o b e r t , B r o n x 85240 "To the extent that the bill not transmit his estate to his U 3.'iO. Brown, R u d o l p h V., NYC . . . 8 7 0 0 0 IfiO. M u r k s . May, S c h e n c v u s ....80700 5 1 1 . Fox, Willis E., CobK'skill . . . 8 5240 3 1 . Carden, Anne R.. Wuhsaic . . . 8 7 0 8 0 may be construed to impose in- heirs^and the heirs could not take 1 5 1 . Itel.veu, R u t h E., A l b a n y , . . . 8 0 0 8 0 33.'i2. 5 1 2 . White, Aiieen L „ G r a n v i l l e . 8 5 2 4 0 MeEllione. Siiirley, UinghnUn 8 7 0 5 0 152. Silverman, I r v i n g , NYC 8 0 0 8 0 5 1 3 . Hayes, Gladys L., Albany . . . ^ < 5220 creased punislunent for prior con- by descent from their convicted 3 3 3 . L a m p e r t , Lillian D., N a s s a u . 8 7 0 1 0 Mullaney, A n t h o n y , Albany . 8 0 0 7 0 5 1 4 . Bunnell, Evelyn L.. NYC . . . S S ' i J O 3 3 4 . F r a z i e r , Florence., Albany . . . 8 7 0 0 0 duct, it raises ex post facto prob- ancestor. The doctrines of at- 1.">3. 151. .'^ulirno, J e n n i e M.. Bronx . . . 8 0 ( ! 4 0 5 1 5 . R o i J o l d s , l . o r r a i n e , A l b a n y . . 8 5 2H) Browne, Gloria O., B k l y n . . . 8 7 0 0 0 lems. (U. S. Constitution, Art I, tainder, corruption of blood and 155. BouUi-eau, Allan A., .Mi nunda 80r>00 33 33 50 .. WcCormiek, 5 1 0 . W a r r e n , Carolyn F . . A l b a n y . 8 5 2 1 0 J o h n C., Albany 8 0 0 0 0 150, J l c C a r t h y , E d w a n l . T r o y . . . . 8 0 5 5 0 6 1 7 . Anderson, Helen M.. Albany . 8 5 Sec. 9.) forfeiture were for the most part 1 5 7 . Ott, P . R o b e r t , B u b y l o a . . . . 8 0 5 4 0 3;57. A a n e c h i n o , Rose M., Albany 8 0 0 0 0 5 1 8 . Devuie, M a r i a n B.. All>any . . 8 5 22 00 00 3 3 8 . F a y , E d w a r d P., A l b a n y . . . 8 0 0 0 0 Bttdiy Drafted abolished in this State in 1796. 158. S i o t t , Ruhbeil D.. NYC 80510 5 1 0 . Murru.v. D o r o t h y E., Bingnitn 8 5 2 0 0 3 3 0 . Size. Helen E., Albany 80070 150. H u n t , J o h n K., Albany 80520 u b a , K e n n e t h G., A l b a n y . . 8 5 1 7 0 "Aside from the constitutional "Although I fully appreciate the 100. Cuillo, F o r t u n a t e , Bkiyn . . . . 8 0 1 8 0 3 1 0 . Zolnowski, F . M., B u f f a l o . . 8 0 0 0 0 55 22 01 .. H F . M., L i n d c n h r s t 8 5 1 7 0 Issues, and a number of drafting indignation aroused by revelations 101. RiU-y, M a r g a r e t M., T r o y . . . 8 0 4 7 0 3 4 1 S a w i e k a , Mury R., Cnibra H t s 8 0 0 0 0 6 2 3 . Nesi-nuoiiu R o t k w e i l , T h o m a s R., Bklyii. 8 6 1 7 0 3 4 2 . VanhUbkirk, Gloria, Cohoe» . . 8 0 0 5 0 deficiencies which would require that certain public officers have 1 0 2 . Riley, M a r i o u E., A l b a n y . . . 8 0 1 7 0 3 4 3 . Hainea, E v e l y n E „ A l b a n y . . 8 0 0 . 5 0 6 2 3 . DeGrout, M a r j o r i e , Albany , 8 6 1 4 0 Uklyu , . . . 8 0 4 5 0 6 2 4 . I.ip>chilz, Morria, Bklyu . . . . 8 6 1 4 0 «i<japproval of the measure in any dishonored their trust, I think it 103. Connor. M a r y 3 4 4 . S i r a u b . F r a n e i a W., Albany ,8Ul»50 Ford, T l i o m a s V., Cohoti« . . . 8 0 1 5 0 5 2 5 . C a s t e l l a n e l a . R. V.. NYC 86130 3 4 5 . S m i t h , Ann D., A l b a n y 80050 event, the bill deserves comment is clear that the good in the 104. 1 0 5 . Wrisrht, L a u r e l M., Albuuy . 8 0 4 5 0 6 2 0 . Lupierrc, Arnold U., Mooer* 8 3 1 3 0 3 4 0 . Michon, Murcia H., 'IVoy . . . 8 0 U 3 0 80300 on the broad policy question. U n - m e a s u r e Is f a r outweighed by con- lOU. Cole, Viririnia, A l b a n y 5)47. Butler. Gladys. Rensselaer . . H 511U 3 4 7 . Melchif, E d r i e W.. Albany , . 8 0 0 3 0 107. SUupiry. Hortriido, Mrpiix . .. 803ft0 a ^ . VituOtirwcd. H., Hcli«tr 801180 6 2 8 . KiH'han, Hi;l<jii 0., A l b a n y . . H&llO der our systeni o t laws, If jy n " n STATE Promotion J State Insurance Fund Sing Sing Steuben Dewey Vetoes Pension Threat; Issues a Scathing Memo ^ i d o r a U q i v of sound i* found giitlty o f » crime we re- ea«d public policy." enlight- lUH. Irn)a K., Albitiiy .,..80300 Myen. Auae P.. 'irog KaneKua, Xeuit^b, E Ombitli 80R7O iiiV, PiMsik &U8. .SpiQane'. William. LI City Mlrabll*. CmibwI*. AlbAuy ..SSllt