L< BADE It Health Insurance Board To Vote Program Feb. 5;

advertisement
L< BADE It
Americana
Vol. XVII—No. 2^1
Largest
Weekly
for Public
Tuesday, January 29, 1937
40-Hr. Week
Won at Spa
By CSEA Aid
K
O/ean Red
HEtJRY
H .»
CAPn'OL
i'flM V
Employees
CALP IN
i)RAWP:R
l.T-'
'V
A'^ION
1
M V
See Page J6
Price Ten Centi
Health Insurance Board
To Vote Program Feb. 5;
Bids from Companies Next
A L B A N Y , Jan. 28—The employees at the Saratoga Spa have won
a 40-hour week, and It's already
In effect.
The Spa chapter of the Civil
ALB.VNY, Jan. 28—A broad
Service
Employee.s
Association
thanked the Association for aid health insurance program for acrendered by It.s officers and coun- Ive and retired state employees,
sel, and by the Association staff long sought by the Civil Service
In Albany, In the chapter's drive Employees Association, is close to
realization.
for this gain.
Alexander A. Palk, President of
Marie Van Ness, chapter president, freely gave the Association the State Civil Service Commission, ha.s set February 5 as the
credit for it? assistance.
The change resulted fom con- meeting date for the Temporary
ferences with the Saratoga Spa Health Insurance Board to conAuthority and the State Budget sider "detailed specifications" of
Director, and was ordered by the the program.
Once the program is approved.
Authority.
the Board can call for bids or
proposals from the insurance industry.
T h e board meeting is slated
to be held at fl:30 A.M. in Civil
Service Commission offices here.
A health insurance program for
State employees was recommended by Governor Averell Harriman
and authorized by the Legislature
at its 1956 session. The State and
the participating employees will
share the cost.
I f the Board approves the spe-
cification.s they will be sent, as cifications break the emploj'Ci
required by law, to insurance car- health program into three parts:
riers as the basis for firm pro- hospitalization, surgical and mediposals as to cost. T h e specifica- cal coverage, and catastrophe covtions have been discussed with erage. Interested carriers will b «
representatives of employee or- invited tc submit proposals on one
ganizations and will be made pub- or more of these three parts.
lic.
Among the many benefits to be
Mr. Falk said the proposed spe(Continued on Page 16)
To Focus on Sensitive Jobs,
Reid Committee Asks '
keep himself informed of developments.
Serving on a chapter legislative
al Hygiene Department employees
committee are Albert William.s,
was voted by the Fort Stanwix
chairman; Andrew Spellicy. Robchapter. Civil Service Employees ert Wilbert and Mary Barry.
Association.
Speaking for the chapter, ChairGuests were As.semblyman David man Williams asked all interested
R. Townsend. and A. J. Donnelly, citizens to acquaint themselves
with existing conditions in the
CSEA field representative.
" T h e chapter is much concern- Mental Hygiene Department and
ed over standards in all Mental if they agree with the chapter's
Hygiene
institutions and feels objectives, to write to the Goverthat untoward present conditions nor and their legislative represenare basically due to low pay of all tatives.
employee
groups," said Frank
"On October 3, 1956, the annual
French, cliapter president. "Insuf- meeting of the Civil Service Emficient pay has led to major diffi- ployees Association
adopted a
culties in recruiting and keeping resolution asking for a pay inqualified attendants, cooks, nurses, crease for all State employees," he
doctors and many others."
said. " W r i t e to the Governor, the
The members voted to support Republican and Democratic leadan intensive campaign to inform ers of the Senate and the Assemthe public and the legislative lead- bly arid, your Assemblyman and
ers of the situation, and request a Senator in support of this project." Mr, French's advice is for all
substantial pay raise.
Assemblyman
Townsend
said State employees. "Such letters are
that he is much concerned with very effective, as proven recently
conditions in the mental hygiene when the public requested a faInstitutions and with the welfare vorite television program. 'Mama,*
return to the air. It returned."
of the employees. He promised to
Stanwix Spurs Campaign for
Amend State Security Law Higher Mental Hygiene Pay
A L B A N Y , Jan. 28—An interim
report by the Committee on Public
Employee Security Procedures, of
which Whitelaw Reid is chairman,
transmitted to the Legislature by
Governor Averell Harriman, recommends the elimination of designation of "security agencies"
entirely from the present law, and
a redefinition of the term "se-
curity positions." Stress on the
sensitivity of a position is recommended as future policy.
T h e Governor commended the
report and asked for consideration and action.
Finds Far-Fetched Situation
T h e committee has not completed its study of the problem
but recommends that the Security
Syracuse Chapter to Be
Conference Host and Hail
Its Own Anniversary
Maxwell Lehman to Be Main Speaker
S Y R A C U S E , Jan. 28—Syracuse
chapter of the Civil Service Employees Association will play host
to the Association's Central New
York Conference meeting
and
workshop on Saturday, February
2 , and celebrate its 20th anniversary with a dinner-dance at the
Hotel Onondaga, Syracuse, on the
same date.
Guest speaker at the dinner,
which begins at 6:30 P.M. in the
hotel ballroom, will be Maxwell
Lehmann, Deputy City Administrator of New York City, and former editor and co-publisher of
The Leader.
Risk Law be extended for another
year with the amendments.
How Many Designated
The interim report says that
the State Civil Service Commission, which did not have the benefit of any court decisions construing "security agency"
and
"security position," has to date
designated some 20 agencies in
the State and some 40 units of the
New York City Government as
"security agencies" or as having
"security positions' within them.
" T h e immediate connection with
the 'security or defense of the
nation and the state" of many of
these agencies and positions is
not readily discernible," the report
ads. "For example, scientists In
the paleontology section of the
Department of Education have
(Continued on Page 2)
R O M E , Jan. 28—An active cam-
paign for higher salaries for Men-
ENCYCLOPEDIA GIFT IS PRESENTED
How to Make Reservations
CSEA Digest
Health Insurance Board
act on Feb. 5. See Page 1.
to
40-Hour Week for Spa employees. See Page 1.
Central Conference to meet
Feb. 3. See Page 1.
lliKher Mental Hygiene pay
asked. See Page 1.
Time olT for Sunday
See Page 16.
work.
County Division nieniberslilp
drive. See Page 16.
Oiean job reclajitjiticatlon. See
Paga 16.
Members are requested to make
reservations with Ida
Meltzer,
Workmen's Compensation Board,
214 South Warren Street, Syracuse, or Irving Kastenberg, Department of Labor, 472 South
Sallna Street, Syracuse.
Officers and members of all
County Division chapters of the
Association are urged to attend
the County Division Workshop,
to be held on the afternoon of
February 2 in conjunction with
the CSEA Central Conference.
Among the topics to be discussed at the workshop meeting include Social Security supplementation, employee-employer
relations and membership.
Mrs. Lcona Bell and Lloyd Evans at nurses' presentation of set of books to the library
at Willard State Hospital.
Social Welfare
Scholarships
Are Offered
T h e Slate Department of Social
W e l f a r e is o f f e r i n g scholaraMips
for graduate stnclv In sorial woric
and career appointinontr, after
completion of .study, as medicul
*urial work Intern, pub'ic assistance intern and youth parole apprentice. Selectee.s will receive one
year's tuition at a graduate school
of social work, plus $225 a month
for living expen.ses. They will be
notified in time to make arrangements for the school year beginning in Snptember.V
Students chosen for scholarships will be guided and supervi.sed by the department's staff,
who will visit two or three times
diu'ing the year for observation
and consultation. Although the
scholarships are open to all qualified citizens, preference will be
given to candidates studying within a reasonable distance of the
State — approximately as far as
Washington, D.C., on the south,
and Chicago on the west.
Requirenieiils
Stated
Candidates for all three jobs
must have completed one full year
of graduate social work .study by
June 30, 1957. Candidates for public assistance intern may substitute one of the following: three
years' casework experience, one
year supervisory; two years' experience in social welfare or social
Insurance, one year in public assistance, or an equivalent.
If
Qualifying on the basis of one
year's graduate study, public a.ssistance intern candidates must
also o f f e r one year's ca.sework experience. Candidates for youth
parole apprentice may substitute
two years' paid ca:,e work experience for the graduate study.
T h e Civil Aeronautics Administhe
now
nation's
expanding
"Jet-age"
to
meet
neds,
is
seeking electronic installation and
maintenance technicians, at $4,080
to
$6,250
to
start,
and
airways
operations specialists, at $3,670 to
munications, radar, teletypewriter
repair or any similar field providing a broad technical knowledge and background in electronics. Specialized experience should
include that of a radio or radar
maintenance technician, electronic specialist, or radio electrician
in the CAA, airline radio technician, military electronics officer, or college instructor in the
principles of radio. The $4,030 jobs
require 3'2 years' total experience;
$4,525, four years', and
$5,440, five years. T h e announcement is No. 2-54-1 (57).
$5,780 to start.
Candidates for operations specialist at $3,670 need one of the
following: two years as certificated or military-air-traffic control tower operator on active duty,
as an operator of ground radar
equipment or air route t r a f f i c
controller; two years as a certifiElectronic maintenance technic:«ied dispatcher; 2',2 years in
cians need the same general backflight operations or in aeronautiground, with 3!2 years' experical
air-ground-air
communicaence required for $4,080 jobs; four
tions; three y e a r s " experience in
years for $4,525; 4'2 years for
radio-telegraph or radio-telephone
$4,970, and five years for $5,440.
communications, or 250 hours' solo
T h e announcement is No. 2-54-2
flying time. Higher grade jobs re157).
quire progressively longer experiApplications may be obtained
ence. T h e announcement Is No.
at any post office, except M a n 2-54-3 (57).
hattan and the Bronx; from the
Candidates for electronic inBoard of Civil Service Examiners,
•tallatlon technician need experiC A A . Federal Building, N.Y. Inence in electricity, radio, comternational Airport, J a m a i c a ,
N.Y., or from the Second U.S.
Civil Service Region, 641 WashI I V I L b h K M l i i : LK.AUKU
ington Street, New Y o r k 14, N.Y.
Anifrlt'uii 1.1'iiflliii NttWHiiiiiuttxInt
for I'lilillr Kmiiloj'ri'i
There is no closing datf
I . K . A m a i l ' ( III.U'ATION!*, I.SC.
• 7 Dllitiir 8t., Ni-w V o ' k ) . N, I
r d r p l i n n x : IllJekinan a-UOlO
Klllrriril
•rruiid-rluai iimltM lli'tobri
4. luau, « t (hr piwt nnlir • (
Nrn
York, N. V, iiniler tlir Act of Marrb
a, 1810. Mrinhri of Amllt Hiirrau ol
CIrculiitloiia.
Suharrlpllon P r i n |3.A0 P r i t r a i
liiillvliJual c<ipl«'a. 10c
R R A D T h e Leader every wMk
for Jop Ottpurtunltlea
PRINTING WEEK HONORED
(Continued f r o m Page 1)
been specified as holding 'security
positions ' on the ground that
they they have knowledge concerning the location of caves and
their suitability for defense storage purposes. T h e Department of
Sanitation of the City of N^w
Y o r k has been designated as a
'security agency,' on the theory
that disease might spread in the
event that that department did
not perform its duty. Even probation service of the New Y o r k City
Domestic
Relations
Court
has
been designated as a 'security
position' though it would seem
to have no relationship to the
'security or defense of the nation,
and the state'. W e might expand
at length the, list of agencies or
posts which have been denominated 'security' though they have
remote, if any, connection with
matters which that term ordinarily connotes.
On completion of study, medical
.soda' work interns will work for
six months at $325 monthly. A f t e r
an additional year's work, they
will be given permanent appointments at $4,650 to S5,760 in five
annual increases. Youth parole apprentices will be given permanent
appointments immediately after
completion of study as youth parole workers, $4,420-$5.250. New
Y o r k City appointees start at
$4,426. Public assistance interns
Cites Statistical Results
will be given permanent appoint" U n d e r these broad designations
ments after completing study as
141,686 persons have been checked
senior social workers, $4.650-$5,for employment in State agencies,
760. In New York City and Rochand 13 have been disqualified or
ester, the salary starts at $5,094!
have resigned after investigation.
One Fee Suffices
The committee i j informed that
Candidates may apply for all in New Y o r k City some 100,000
of the specialties for the single employees have been investigated,
fee of $2. Only one examination and some 85,000 remain to be inwill be given, at frequent inter- vestigated. Of those checked in
vals until April 13. Applicants N e w York City some 34 have reshould ask for Examination No. signed and some 17 have been dis172.
mi.ssed. Approximately 81 percent
Apply to the Department's of- of all employees of New Y o r k City
fices in the State O f f i c e Building are in agencies or positions which
or 39 Columbia Street, Albany; have been designated as 'securR o o m 212, State O f f i c e Building, ity.' T h e committee has been told
Buffalo,
or
Room
2301,
270 that in the State government in
Broadway, New York 7, N.Y. T h e the neighborhood of 30 percent of
la.st day to apply Is Monday, the employees are in 'security'
April 1.
positions or agencies.
JET-ACE JOBS
OPEN A T C A A
tration,
Security
Change
M A C H I N I S T M E D I C A L TESTS
New Y o r k City will hold medical
tests on Thursday, January 31,
for 82 machinist candidates who
passed the performance
test.
There were 42 failures.
State Commerce Commissioner Edward T. Dickinson (left),
end Dr Charles F. Gosnell, State Librarian, opened the Commeree Department's Exhibit honoring International Printing
Week in the Sheraton Ten-Eyck Hotel in Albany. Printing
Week ended on January 19.
proper measure of a 'security' position within the meaning of the
Security Risk Law to be whether
the occupant has access to material classified as secret or top
secret by the federal government
or has opportunities substantially
greater than these available to
members of the public generally
" T h e committee believes that
by disclosure 0 fsecret information
the interpretation which has been
or by sabotage to endanger the
giver in the past by the State Civil
security of the nafrion or the state.
Service Commission to the terms
While we have not yet discovered
'security agency' and 'security pothat any such classified material
sition' is inconsistent with the
reaches the eyes of New Y o r k embasic purpose of a 'security' law.
ployees, we are attempting to obT h a t ^urpo.se is to permit relatain definitive advice on this and
tively summary and sometimes
other svibjects f r o m the responarbitrary removals from places
sible officials of the federal govwhich may fairly be denominated
ernment. T o subject to summary
'sensitive' in relation to the saferemoval procedures and the label
ty or defense of our nation or our
of disloyalty, without benefit of
state.
court trial, presumption of innoAccent on Sensitivity
cence, and confrontation of wit"Since the committee is not yet
nesses, employees who are not adin a position to propose comprevantageously situated to commit
hensive suggestions and
needs
espionage or sabotage than is the
further time for study, it suggests
ordinary citizen, is to run counter
that the Security Risk L a w be reto our history of personal rights."
enacted for one more year, but
with appropriate amendments reSecurity Position Redefined
stricting its application to posiT h e Committee asks that a "setions more closely related to se- curity position" be defined as " a n y
curity or defense, so that e f f o r t position in the public service the
may be concentrated in areas of occupant of which would ( a ) have
greatest sensitivity,
access to material classified by
"The
Committee
deems
the federal authorities as secret or top
secret, or ( b ) have opportunltlei
substantially greater than those
available to the general public,
by disclosure of secret information
on by sabotage to endanger the
security of the state or nation."
By thus restricting the Security
Risk L a w to positions which m a y
be deemed sensitive, it will be possible to concentrate on more vital
positions, and avoid dissipation
of e f f o r t , the report adds, and the
Committee believes that this will
result in more effective protection
of the security of the state and
nation.
Besides chairman
Reid,
the
Committee consists of Irving M .
Engel, Allen T . Klots, Myles J.
Lane, and Charles J. Tobln, Jr.
Nassau Group Gets
40-Hour Week
T h e Uniondale, N , Y „
School
District 2 has granted a 40-hour
week to its non-teaching employees, the Nassau chapter CSEA, announced. T h e chapter commended
Buildings Superintendent
Curtli
for his cooperation.
T h e Nassau chapter has been active in obtaining better salaries,
hours and working conditions f o r
the non-teaching school personnel
who are members of its varioui
units.
Mental Hygiene Hiring
Hungarian Refugees
A L B A N Y , Jan. 28—New Y o r k
State is preparing to fill longstanding job vacancies in its M e n tal Hygiene institutions with Hungarian refugees.
A spokesman for the Mental
Hygiene Department o u t l i n e d
long-range plans for the refugee
placement program, after Governor Averell Harriman had announced that 33 refugees have
been hired to work in Harlem
Valley State Haspital.
Directors
oX
the
Newark
and
$2,780 a year.
T h e unique recruiting program
will be carried out by Department
personnel working with Leon Cllmenko, executive assistant to I n dustrial
Commissioner
Isidort
Lubin.
T h e Harlem Valley group was
the first assigned. It was explainA Department spokesman said: ed, because the greatest number
" M o s t of the refugees will be as- of job vacancies exist there, and
signed to work as ward attend- the fact that the hospital's rural
location has made It unattractive
ants."
to many Inquirers.
The starting annual talary
Wassaic State Schools will talk to
other refugees in an e f f o r t to recruit them for work in their Institutions. Interviewing
the 28
men and five women selected lor
Harlem Valley jobs were David
Zaron, an associate personnel administrator, and Dr. Leo P. O'Donnell, hospital director.
IDEAS A W A R D S SET
NEW STATE RECORD
A L B A N Y , Jan. 28—Suggestloiu
f r o m State employees resulted In
« a v l i i g » of well over $165,000 to
State departments and Institutions during 1956, the State Employees M e r i t Award Board reports. Under the Suggestion ProK r a m, employees'
constructive
Ideas benefitted workers by $10,000 In cash awards the largest
ev'j!- awarded by tne Board during a one-year period.
Edward D. Igoe. chairman of
the Board, announced the nanips
of 10 e m p l o y e s whose Ideas were
approved f o r adoption by their
supervisors.
Woman Typist Double Winner
Two
suggestions
from
Ethel
Oe.strelcher, a typist in the Department of Labor's Workmen's
Compensation Board, New Y o r k
City, won her $50.
Other recipients of money f o r
ideas:
Helen Getschlig, a
principal
clerk In the Department of T a x a tion's Motor Vehicle Bureau, New
Y o r k City O f f i c e , $30.
K e n n e t h Gillette, an institutional vocational instructor in the
Department of Correction's W o o d bourne Correctional
Institution,
$25.
awarded to R a y m o n d A. Amado,
senior medical technician, Department of Health'* Rehabilitation Hospital, West Haverstraw;
Allan J. Lamkaq, an unemployment»lnsurance examiner in the
Department, of Labor's Division of
Employment, T a r r y town; Stanley
O. Lowe, Mlddletown, a senior
clerk In the Department of Public
Works; James T . McCarthy, a
canal electrical supei-vlsor In the
Department
of
Public
Works,
Rochester; Mason C. W a r d , Purdy's Station, a highway general
maintenance foreman in the Department of Public Works, and
W a l t e r M. Zatwarnickl,
steam
fireman in the Department of
Mental
Hygiene's
Rome
State
School.
Catherine G. Rosselll, a senior
tabulating machine operator in
the Division of Employment, A l bany, $25.
Certificates
of
merit
were
Civil Service
'
Co mm if tees of
Legislature
A L B A N Y , Jan. 28—Tlie Senate
and Assembly have announced
members of standing committee
on civil service matters.
Senate: Jol.a J Cooke, chairman; Thomas Desmond, William
Huits, Thomas Campbell, Earl
Brydges. Stanley Bauer, H a r r y
Morton, Herbert Sorin, Joseph
Marro,
Thomas
Mackell,
and
Harry K r a f . Ex-offlcio members
are M a j o r i t y Leader W a l t e r Mahoney and Joseph Zaretzkl.
Assembly Members: Orln W i l cox, chairman; Mrs. Mildred T a y lor: Miss Frances Marlatt, Charles
Eckstein, Alonzo Waters, Thomas
Ferrandina, James Grover, W i l liam
Adams. F r a n k
Caffery,
Thomas LaPauci, Felipe Torres,
William Brennan and John Farrell.
Centralized ControB Asked
In Graduate Education
A L B A N Y , Jan. 28—The final
report of the study of the Statesponsored program for education
In public administration was released
by
Comptroller
Arthur
Levitt, chairman of the sponsoring committee of tlie public administration
training
program.
T h i s committee supervises the
graduate program in public adminl.stration and the public administration internship and State
employee training programs. T h e
study was conducted by the Institute of Public Administration, a
private research agency, under the
direction of Dr. Luther Gulick,
former
City
Administrator
of
New Y o r k City.
ning and policy direction of the
Center.
A t present the Internship and
in-service training programs are
conducted by the Department of
CivH feervice. Syracuse University
and New Y o r k University, in cooperation with the State University of New York, conduct the
graduate program in public administration. More than a hundred students a year, preponderately State employees, are enrolled in the graduate program.
Forty have received the degree
Master of Public Administration.
James E. Allen, Jr., Commissioner
of Education and president of the
University of the State of New
Y o r k ; William S. Carlson, preiiident of th® State University of
New Y o r k ; Edward T. Dickinson,
Comml.ssioner of Ccmmerce; A l e x ander A. Falk, President of the
New York State Civil Service Commission; Isador Lubin, Industrial
Commi.ssloner; Milton D. Stewart,
assistant counsel to the Governor;
Harlan Cleveland, dean of the
Maxwell Graduate School of C i t izenship and Public Affairs, S y r a cuse University; and W i l l i a m J.
Members of the sponsoring com- Ronan, dean. Graduate School of
mittee, besides Comptroller, are Public Administration and Social
Budget Director Paul H. Appleby; Service, New Y o r k University.
" G o v e r n m e n t has a vital interest in recruiting and retaining
Ail-Around Tops
able persons to conduct and to
It was a record year all around
staff
agencies
and
departfor the Board.
ments." said Comptroller Levitt.
I t not only gave away more
" I n a spirit of enlightened selfmoney, but received more suggesinterest the State has undertaken
tions,
made
bigger
awards,
to assist them to advance in proapd saved the state more money
fessional competence. T h e presthan at any other time in its
sent study was undertaken to
history.
evaluate the State's efforts to
A letter to the editor of T h e Leader, telling of the low pay for
I n 1956 the board received 1,000
state employees in Mental Hygiene was an accurate appraisal of a
achieve these results."
suggestions. T h e previous be.st tocritical situation. However, there were a few facts not brought out
W h a t the Reiiort Recommends
that merit public attention.
tal was 927 in 19.52; granted five
R o m e State School has responsibility for almost 5,000 mentally
awards f r o m $500 and up. T h e
Comptroller Levitt pointed out
retarded patients of all ages. These patients have many and varied
previous record was three, in this that the report does not necesneeds that are met as f a r as possible by about 1,000 employees.
group, in 1955; and counted a sav- sarily represent the views of its
T h e r e seems to be little understanding generally that mental
ings of $175,000 to state agencies members. Careful consideration retardation is a 'real affliction and need.s as much understanding and
f r o m suggestions as against the will be given to the proposals sympathetic attention as polio or rheumatic fever. A f t e r all these
previous record of $125,000.
which have been made before are the children of our friends and relatives and they could be our
children. Very little as yet is known about the causes but we do know
committee action is taken.
that the number runs .about 5 per cent of the general population,
T h e report recommends that although not all must be cared for in an institution.
responsibility for the direction of
Misconceptions Corrected
graduate education be centralized
T
h
e
public
tend.s
to
think of the.se patients as totally handicapped
within the State University, with
and needing care for their whole lives. M a n y people are not aware
adequate provision for utilizing that in New Y o r k State a child admitted to an institution is not conthe resources of private univer- sidered a pemanent resident until every e f f o r t to help him has been
sities interested in this field. I t exhausted. This e f f o r t must come from all employees and must be
W A S H I N G T O N , Jan. 28—Bills
also recommends that a continue very great because of the many handicaps to overcome.
But it Is successful as indicated by the fact that 50 per cent of
to provide a merit career system I :ing program of research in state
for Federal civilian lawyers were and local governmental processes the patients admitted to R o m e School do return to the community.
M a n y of these patients are supporting them.selves in their communitiej
introduced In Congress by Demo- be undertaken; that expanded aid and the re.st are with their families. T h e fact that such a large number
cratic Representatives Dante B. be given to programs for training are able to return to the community surely more than Justifies all
Fasceii ( F l a . ) and William L. local government officers; that e f f o r t s made in their behalf.
A situation such as the low pay for attendants is reflected in the
additional scholarships be given
Dawson (111.)
total program an institution can o f f e r . T h e pay is so low that it Is
The
measures
would
also State employees to assist them difficult to attract qualified people to this field of endeavor.
One of the remedies of the Department of Mental Hygiene ha.t
raise the status of persons pre- with graduate and professional
siding at hearings before depart- training: and that both the intern- tried on a state-wide basis is longer hours. Attendants are invited to
work 20 hours overtime every week at the beginning salary. T h i s ha.s
ments and agencies to hearing ship and in-service training pro- been accepted by a good number of attendants because they needed
grams
for
Stale
employees
be
commissioners
and
give
them
to supplement their basic pay. But has it helped in the care of our
patients? Can you do your best to remain calm and good natured
greater latitude in handling pro- expanded.
when you have already put in eight very hectic hours and are about
ceedings, and prevent conflict of
Center Is Proposed
to put in another four hours?
interest through new legislation.
T h e report proposes that a PubT h i s situation is not limited to the attendants alone but is equally
T h e bills proposed tlie creation lic Administration Center be es- a problem among many other groups. T h e r e are many vacancies for
of the OfHce of Federal Adminis- tablished within the State Univer- cooks, laundry helpers, farm helpers and many others.
trative Practice as an Independent sity and that a public administraSalaries Specified
agency to administer the new tion training committee be apT h e following figures will explain partially why there are so many
pointed to assist with the planlaws.
vacancies In these jobs:
Attendant, starting salary. $1.32 per hour. $53 per week: maximum
at 10 years. $l 67 per hour. $66.80 per week.
K i t c h e n ' helper, starting salary, $1.20 per hour, $48 per week;
maximum at 10 years, $1.54 per hour. $61.60 per week.
Assistant cook, starting salay, $1.32 per hour. $53 per week;
maximum at 10 years. $1.67 per hour, $66.80 per week.
F a r m hand, starting salary, $1.20 per hour, $48 per week; maximum at 10 years, $1.50 per hour, $61.60 per week.
Launderer, starting salary, $1.25 per hour, $50 per week: maximum
at 10 years, $1.60 per hour, $64 per week.
Typists, starting salary $1.25 per hours, $50 per week; maximum
at 10 years $1.60 per hour, $64 per week.
Compare these with Department of Labor statistics for the RomeUtica area, October. 1956, based on average work week of 40.7 hours.
Averaoie wage of manufacturing product workers, $1.91 per hour.
Average wage of non-durable goods manufacturing, $2.03 per
hour.
Average wage for primary metals manufacturing. $2.20 per hour.
Average wage for electrical machinery manufacturing, $1.97 per
hour.
Exactions of Jobs Are Cited
For Mental Hygiene Raise
Biils Ask U. S.
To Make Law Jobs
Competitive
CRAIG COLONY CHAPTER TO DANCE
Situation Getting Worse
If it is fully realized that this situation seems to be getting much
more critical and extends to all civil service Jobs generally, then the
public can expect only lower quality and quantity of work as the
shortage becomes more acute. W e believe, however, that citizens of
New Y o r k State are proud of their services to their fellow-citizens la
need of help and will wish to do something to remedy this situation.
FORT S T A N W I X CHAPTER,
Civil Service Employees As.socialion
Planning the annual Valentine dance of the Craig Colony chapter, Civil Service Employee* Attociation, are (from left) Sam Cipolla, delegate; C. M. Jones, president;
fteorg* Northrup, treasurer, and Jack Davignon, vice president. The dance will be held at
SlianahaN Hall, Sonyea, on Saturday, February 16.
IIANN1G.\N JOINS BO.AKl)
OF B U F F A L O STATE H O S P I T A L
ALBANY,
Jan.
28—Governor
Averell Harriman appointed James
J. Hannigan. Lockport, to succeed Casimir M. Ulatowskl, whose
term had expired as a member
of the Buflalo Stale Hospital's
board of visitor*.
M R S . C. K. DE G R A F F
UEAPrOINTEl)
A L B A N Y , Jan. 28—Mrs. C. Robb
DeGrafT was reappointed by G o v ernor Averell Harriman to the
board of trustees of tiie Guy Park
House and grounds.
Apply Now for March Test
Offering U.S. Career Jobs
Those who wish to take the
next written test In the Federal
Service
entrance
examination
have until Thursday, March 28 to
apply. T h e written test will be
held on Saturday. April 13.
T h e schedule of remaining te.sts
to August, 1957 follows:
Test
Closing Date
April 13
March 28
M a y 11
April 25
July 13
June 27
AuRUst 10
July 25
T h e test Is primarily for college graduates, but non-graduates
with "college-type minds" may
also apply.
Appointees will be given trainee
jobs in 18 fields, at $3,670. $4,080
and $4,525 a year or $70.60, $78.40
and $87 a week, respectively. Most
appointments will be made at
$3,670.
Jobs will be filled in New Y o r k
City, other parts of the U. S.,
« n d abroad.
Typ«K of Johs O f f e r e d
T h e fields in which vacancies
exist: general administration, eco-
NYC Seeks Laws
To Validate
Some Promotions
A L B A N Y , Jan. 28-~Two
relating to aspects of New
City's Career and Salary
were introduced in the State
islature.
bills
York
Plan
Leg-
One would provide for upgrading
without examination, based on
de.sk audits only, and the other
would allow recla-ssification of an
upgraded employee to an appropriate title where an equivalency
title is not appropriate.
In the recent Mandle case, the
New Y o r k Coimty Supreme Court
ruled against examinationle.ss promotions under the Career and
Salary Plan.
OS-5, for those who score highest, or who are hard-to-get specialists, or who qualify under the extra demands for the administration specialty.
For GS.7 (4.525)—Same educational and experience requirements as for GS-5, plus one of
the following: one years' graduate study, one additional year's
equivalent combination of education and experience. (Applicants
who complete six years of resident
college work leading to an LL.B.
or higher law degree will meet the
entire educational or experience
requirements for GS-7.
years' experience In administra
tive, professional,
investigative,
technical or other responsible related w^ork, or an eciij,iva!ent.
For GS-6 (S4,080)—Same as for
Dcubl* Boll«n
MUiii>9
save time-save
come in and see our
Health Insurance Bill
t»wb
Q U E S T I O N S on civil servv^e
and
Social
Security
answered.
Address Editor. T h e I^eader, 97
Duane Street, New Y o r k 7. N. Y .
m
mm
1.1-U-Top®
Coniilcn
fii'i
planning!
,
to
VISUAL TRAINING
Tlinnsnruls hnvi* t.ccu jiassetl by
VISU.M. THAINING
DR. HARRY BERENHOLTZ
FOR
(ll'TOMKTUiM'
Visual Triiiniiip SiJiciaiisi
For
4,-. Wi'st :Wlli St., New Vi.rk » i(y
niiokiTlilif <I-(<(IIU
By AiMit.
PATROLMAN
E.veiiiRlit
l(ri|iilr«inriit
Txsta
Dr. A. A. Markow
OfTO.MKTHIST — OBTItOflST
5016 12th. A v e . . Brooiilyn
UL :t-8)48
•NASSAU OI-FICE
QUEENS — FR 4-61.30
— By A-ppoiiitnient —
S O C I A L S E C U R I T Y news, comment, questions, answers appear
regularly in T h e Leader.
Kelly Clothes, Int.
FINE MEN'S
CLOTHES
AT FACTORY
PRICES
THAT YOU CAN AFFORD TO FAY
621 RIVER STREET
2 Blocks North of Hoosiek St.
TROY. N. Y.
But In order to get one of these Jobs, you must pass a Civil S e r v ice test.The competition in these tests is intense. In some cases
as few as one out of five applicants pass! Anything you can do to
increase your chances of passing Is well worth voiir while.
Franklin Institute Is a privately owned school which helps many
pass these tests each year. T h e Institute Is the largest and oldest
organization of this kind and It Is not connected with the G o v e r n ment.
T o get full information free of charge on these U. 6. Civil
Service Jobs fill out the coupon, stick to postal card, and mall, T O D A Y
or call at office—open 9;00 to 5:00 daily. T h e Institute will also
show you how you can qualify yourself to pass these tests.. Don't
delay—act N O W !
for all year giving . . . for any ogeaiien
Revere
. . .
Ware line!
ROEBLINC, Inc.
155 EAST 44th STREET, NEW YORK 17, N. Y.
A I r d Av«.
KtIK
These will be Jobs paying as high as $340.00 a month to s t a r t
r h e y are well paid in comparison with -the same kind of jobs In
private Industry. They o f f e r far more security than la usual In
private employment. Many of these' Jobs require little or no e v perience or specialized education. T h e y are available to men and
svomen between 18 and 5!j.
Sklflef
choo$e from our display of the complete
F.AII.
rKST?
During the next twelve months there will be many appointments to U. S. Civil Service jobs In many parts of the country.
•
S a v e y o u r f e l f e n d l e M planning and shopping t i m e tbie
y e a r ! C o m e in a n d t e e o u r w i d e » e l c c l i o n o t i b o w o r l d ' i
(ineal, most f a m o u s c o o k i n g u t e n s i l s ! T l i e y ' r e b e a u i i l u l l
T h e y ' r e i h e n i a d c - t o - o r d e r g i f t that lasts a l i f e t i m e . . .
I h e g i f t p e o p l e l o v e to r e c e i v e ! A n d t h e r e ' s a C o p p e i ^
C l a d Stainlesi Steel R e v e r e W a r e utensil f o r
tvery
kitchen need!
N « W I Squor*
.MIGHT VOt
VISION
PREPARE YOURSELF NOW FOR
COMING U.S. CIVIL SERVICE TESTS
Revere Ware
gifts from
T h e above excerpt was taken
from Governor Averell Harriman's
initial message of the Legislature
this year. T h e Governor mentions
that there are several reasons why
the 40-hour week will be delayed,
and of these, the only one that he
identifies is that of recruitment.
additional personnel and a stepped-up recruitment program. I believe that the only way we can
tackle the problem that our State
is faced with today, and be fair
to both the employee and t h e
State Is to establish a voluntary
40-hour week whereby employees
presently working 44 hours would
work at 40 hours with no loss In
pay. Those employees who need
additional money would then be
permitted to work overtime, on a
48-hour week, thereby covering
any personnel shortage which m a y
exist. Some of our employees, as
a necessity, have to work this
extra day. However, In other cases,
as where a wife and husband are
working, the true 40-hour weelc
would be preferred.
Introduced by Ash
450 Eligibles
Certified For
300 Fire Jobs
Souc« Pant
Forty-hour W e e k — " I t
is my
hope that we can move on before
long to establish the 40-hour week
f o r all State employees, but the
difficulty of recruitment of qualified personnel will, among other
factors, necessarily
delay
the
realization of this-hope."
Our employees want a 40-hour
week this year. However, the salApply to the U.S. Civil Service
aries ar? .so low that although all
Commission, Second Region, 641
our employees want a 40-hour
Washington Street, New York 14.
week, a more Important factor to
N. Y .
many of them is an increase In
T h e Governor took a fine » t e p
take-home pay. A reduction in the when he reduced the work-week
work hours with no lo.<s In pay last year by four hours, thereby
still does not give our attendants doing away with compulsory 48enough money to pay for their hour-a week for many of o»ir emfood, clothing, shelter, medical "ex- ployees.
A L B A N Y , Jan. 28—A bill which
pen.ses and educational needs of
Each employee must write to
would revi.se the law establishing
their family.
his local State Senator and Asa health insurance plan for State
semblyman as well as the G o v e r Action This Y e a r R4>que>il«d
employees so it will provide comT o esfcabli.sh a true 40-hour work nor's office, telling his or her
plete medical and hospital serweek at this time would require wishes along these lines, and invice, has been intoduced In the
sisting on full action this year.
Legislature by A.ssemblyman Sidney H. Ash, Bronx Democrat.
nomics and other social sciences,
business analysis and regulation,
social security administration, organization and methods examining, production planning, communications, personnel management,
budget
management,
automatic
data processing, library science,
statistics. Investigation, informaUnder
Mr. A.sh's bill, costs
tion, records management, food
T h e New Y o r k City Personnel and drug inspection, recreation, would be shared equally by the
Department completed the first customs, inspection and procure- State and the employees. Ash declared that the State should be
certification, of 450 names, for 300 ment and supply.
an exemplary employer and the
fireman iP.D.) appointments e f Salaries and Requirements
fective February 1. T h e last numFor GS-5 ($3,670)— Completion proposed health insurance system
ber certified was 589.
of a four-year college course lead- should be an Important step in
Of the 450, there are 369 fully ing to a bachelor's degree, three that direction.
qualified candidates, while 81 have
yet to be investigated. Conditional
medicals and loss of veteran credits account for numerical gaps in
the certification.
By A. J. C O C C A R O
MUrray Hill 2-4441
Franklin Institute, Dept. E-66
130 W. 42nd St.. N. Y . 18. N. Y .
Rush to me entirely free of charge (1) a full description of U. S.
Civil Service jobs; (2) free copy of illustrated 36-page book w l ( n
(3) list of U. S. Civil Service jobs; ( 4 ) tell me how to prepare f o r
one of these tests.
Name
Age
Street
Apt #
City
Zone . . . . . .
Coupon i i valuable. U s « it before you mislay i t
State
.....««
4
1 500 State Postal Jobs in Southampton,
Clerical Jobs Westbury and Upstate Offices
ill Be Filled
T h e U.S. Civil Service Commission is accepting applications continuously
for substitute
postal
Men and women up to 70, and clerk and .substitute city carrier,
high school students who will f o r work in some stations in New
graduate by August, 1958, nia> ap- Y o r k and New Jersey at $1.82 an
ply through February 25 for the hour.
State clerk examination schedI n New Y o r k , there are vacannled for March 30. T h e title of
the test Is beginning o f f i c e worker: the exam number, 4200.
Jobs in several titles will be
filled f r o m
the
examination—,
clerk and file clerk, at $2,620$3,340, and account and statistics
clerk, $2,750-$3,490. A number of
o f f i c e machine jobs will also be
filled from the clerk list, and the
account and statistics clerk roster
will be used for audit clerk and
bookeeplng machine operator positions. Applicants may file for a.s
many options as they choose for
the single $2 filing fee.
N o formal education or experience Is required.
Atoout 1,500 appointments are
expected throughout the State.
T h e current clerk list will expire
In August and rapid hiring f r o m
the new list thereafter is in sight.
Apply In person, by representative, or by mail at the State Department of Civil Service, R o o m
2301, 270 Broadway, at Chambers
Street. New Y o r k 7. N . Y .
Transit Police Test
About to be Opened
T h e test for N e w Y o r k City
transit patrolman is tentatively
Bet to open next month.
Several hundred appointments
are expected at $4,000-$5,315 a
year, on the basis of a 40-hour
week.
Transit Patrolmen work a 42hour week and get an additional
Ave percent.
Candidates must be between 20
and 32, at least 5 feet 7V2 inches
tall in bare feet. City residence
not required, ncr is any experience or formal education. W a t c h
T h e Leader for tl'.e official dates
and full requirements.
CLERKS,
SUNOS,
NEEDED
at least 18 to apply. T h e y must
be residents of the postal area In
which the job is located. M i n i m u m
weight f o r men is 125 pounds,
with
concessions to
veterans.
Good physical condition is required f o r the carrier Job, as apApplicants must be citizens, and pointees must handle heavy sacks
of mall and perform other arduous tasks.
cies In Southampton, Westbury,
Albion, Castleton-on-Hudson, Herkimer, M i d d l e p o r t , . Monroe, and
Saranac Lake. New Jersey jobs are
open In Edgewater, Ocean City,
Pleasantville, Ramsey.
Rlverton
and Seaside Park.
TYPISTS,
ENGINEERS
IN A HURRY
Construction
engineer,
GS-7,
$5,335, New Y o r k City. Engineering degree or four years' educa
tion and experience equivalent to
Telephone Mr. Pagliaro, P e r - a four-year college course, plus
sonnel Branch, 111 East 16lh St., six months' construction engineNew York 3, at SPrlng 7-4200, ering experience. Including estimate and specification preparaextension 351.
Clerk-stenographer, GS-3, $3,- tion.
175. One year's general office exConstruction Inspector (waterperience or high school business ways-dredging). $3,175 - $3,415,
course.
New Y o r k City. H i g h school edu
Clerk-typist, men, GS-3 $3,175, cation plus two or two and twoCaven Point, Jersey City, N. J. thirds years' general experience
One year's general office clerical as workman on waterways and
experience.
general construction, or hydroT h i r d assistant engineer (die- graphic survey experience. T w o or
.sel>, $2.66.an hour. T h i r d assist- three years' study above high
ant engineer (diesel) license, or school level may be substituted for
better, plus six months' experl- some of the experience.
enc-e on vessels.
Construction management en-
T h e New Y o r k District, Corps
of Engineers. Is accepting applications until further notice f o r the
following jobs.
T Y P I S T JOBS A T
FOKT HAMILTON '
Typist.s. may
find
Immediate
openings," starting at $2,960, with
the U. S. Army Garrison, Port
Hamilton, by phoning the Civilian
Personnel Office, Brooklyn, S H 57900, extension 22233.
gineer. a S - 9 , $6,115, Albany. Engineerlng degree or four years'
equivalent training or experience,
plus one and one-half years' construction
engineering experience
Commi.wioner Arthur C. Ford of
the Department of W a t e r Supply, involving waterway projects.
Ga.s and Electricity, has been
elected president of the Municipal
Engineers of the City of New
York.
Commissioner Ford, a civil enT h e New Y o r k City Personnel
gineer, has been associated with
the City government since' 1924. Department ordered four openHe was appointed Commissioner competitive examinations f o f enin 1954 by Mayor Robert F.
gineering
aid, illustrator,
real
Wagner.
estate manager and shorthand reOthers elected were George Ellenotf. Public Works, 1st vice presi- porter.
dent; Deputy Commissioner Meyer
Also ordered were promotion
P. Miles, Public Works, 2nd vice
examinations f o r asistant archipresident; Leo N. K o m i a k o f f , City
Administrator's Office, secretary, tect, assistant civil engineer, asand Thomas K . A.
Hendrick, sistant electrical engineer, civil
Board of W a t e r Supply, Treasurer. engineering di'aftsman and stationary engineer.
SOC'IAI- S E C U R I T Y news, comApplication dates will b « anment. questions, answers appear
nounced early this year.
regularly in T h e Leader.
Ford Is New President
Of NYC Engineers
9 Exams Started;
Applications Soon
T h e announcement Is No. J-t
(57). A p p y at any of the post o f flees mentioned above, or to th®
Second U.S. Civil Service Region.
641 Washington Street, New Y o r k
14, N . Y . Applications will be r e ceived until the need,'* of the service are met.
W o m e n M a y Apply, T o o
Both men and women may apply f o r the clerk positions, but
city carrier Jobs are open only to
men. Candidates f o r carrier must
be able to drive, and In some cases,
must furnish their own automobiles.
I n addition to a physical examination, candidates will be given a
written test rated on a scale of
100. A rating of at learst 70 on the
general abilities test and on the
written test as a whole is required.
Visual Training
OF CANDIDATES
For
PATROLMAN
TRANSIT
PATROLMAN
rOR THE EYESIGHT TESTS OF
CIVIL SERVICE REQUIREMENTS
DR. JOHN T. FLYNN
Optometrist
Ortheptlit
300 Weal 23rd St., N. Y. C
U^ \l.pt Olllj — \V4 0-."j9l0
IMPORTANT
N O T ! C E^
TO PATROLMAN APPLICANTS
Attondanc* at our remaining lecfurs classes should greafly incraasa
your chances of passing wilh a mark high enough to assure early
appointment.
MEDICAL
EXAM W I T H O U T
B t ouf guest at « class sestion — only
CHARGE
10 of which remain
before
training under instructors of long and successful experience.
COURT ATTENDANT - OFFICER
B* our guait at a clasi lassion — not 10 of which ramain b . f o r .
your official exam — and judge for youself fha v a l u . of our insfruC'
•ion. Convinc® yourself that our course should considerably enhance
prospects of achieving a high place on the eligbfle list.
THE VALUE OF PREPARATION
I t wouJd be foolhardly to claim that prcpar-aliou nione even of the flno.st
k(ad, wiil tfuttianloe allainmeut of a IUKU plaoe on an eligible list. Uiit proparatioii under tht) fruidancH of cxporifnced iusUuotora unqueshonubly should improve your praspeclA of suocosa. Sludcnta alleiuhnff Delohanty comaes receive
insU'Uctiort from experts, talco wriUen quizzes at each cla-iri aes'^ion and botie.
fit an well by iUumrniions on (ho Vn-Giaph. These leaiures are ot valuable
a'fsiataneo to our stutlenis In dcveloi)iti({: thg ability to analyze and interpret
Queatione a n J l o give correct answcra.
CLASSES NOW MEETING
H I G H S C H O O L E p U I V A L E N C Y DIPLOMA
Manhattani W E D N E S D A Y and M O N D A Y — 7 : 3 0 P.M.
J a m a i c a i W E D N E S D A Y and F R I D A Y — 7 : 0 0 P. M .
P R O M O T I O N TO FIRE LIEUTENANT
Manhattan: M O N D A Y — 1 0 : 3 0 A . M . or 7:30 P.M.
J a m a i c a : T U E S D A Y — 1 0 : 3 0 A M . or 7:30 P.M.
MOTOR
VEHICLE
OPERATOR
Manhattan: T H U R S D A Y — 7 : 3 0
P.M.
PATROLMAN
CLERK PROMOTION CLASSES
Now Being Conducted in 4 Boroughs
ManhaHeni T U E S D A Y . & F R I D A Y — 1 : 1 5 , S:4S or 7 : 4 i
Jamaica W E D N E S D A Y , & F R I D A Y — 7 : 3 0 P.M.
TRANSIT PATROLMAN
ManhaHani T U E S D A Y k
Jamaicai
BRONX:-
EAST
Ot M L s i c , 30 Laf ayette A v e .
91-24 . 168th S T . cor. Juniaica A v e
TUESDAYS
WEDNESDAYS
ManhaHani W G O N E S O A Y — 7 : 0 0 P . M . — J a m a i c a i TUfiSOAY—7:00 P.M.
CURK
ManhaHan T U S S O A Y — 7 : 3 0
INSTITUTE
P.M.
& FRIDAY—1:00
P.M. or 7 : ) 0
P.M>
PROMOTION T O DISTRICT SUPERINTENPiWT
Manhattan: F R I D A Y at 3:00 P.M. or 7:00 P.M.
TKe DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
MANHATTAN:
THE D E L E H A N T Y
(INTRANCE)
P.M. — J a m a i c a : M O N D A Y — 7 : 0 0
g O U R T ATTENDANT . O F F I C E R
Manhattani W E D N E S D A Y
T h e 8 U i n e l e c t u r o w i l l he niven at e a t i i l o i a l i u u uiid tho l e c t u r e content, (>hi«Hruuni q u i z z e s uiid huiiiu Htudy niateriul w i l l coiitiiuui to
h«
j ) r e j ( a r e d h y D r . V i a c e u t J . M c L a u j i l i l i n , C h a i r n i a a oC t h e ctmrse.
P.M.
P.M.
CARPENTER.
THURSDAYS
T h e r e U also uii 8 P . M . C I , A S S I N M A N H A I T A N O N M O N D A Y S
O M . V EOR T H E B E N E F I T OF THOSE W HOSE WORKINC; H O L R S
I'REVENT THEIR ATTENDANCE AT AN EARLIER
CLASS.
& FRIDAY—7:J0
ManhaHani T H U R S D A Y — I : l i , 1:45 or 7:45 P.M.
Jamaioai M O N D A Y af 7:30 P . M .
THURSDAYS
STREET
THE TROCADERO BAI.L ROOM
5 5 5 E . T R E M O N T A V E . , cor. M o n t e r e y A v e . . .
BROOKLYN : ' A r . A D E M Y
QUEENS.-
M U
F R I D A Y — 1 : 1 $ , 5:45 ar 7:45
WEDNESDAY
SANITATION MAN
ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS—ALL CLASSES START AT 6 P.M.
MANHATTAN;-126
P.M.
JAMAICA:
PhoHt
(ll'EN M » N
VI-OI
IIS
MIRRICK
OR 3*6900 for
lo F K I
« /) M
LAST
IS S T R U T .
a««r
4 AVE.
RLVO., b « l . J a m o U a ft H l l l t i d *
InformafloH
l o tt I ' . M
—
Our
Oh
8\TrKlt\VS
»
A.M
AVM.
CoHrm
to
I
P.M.
Public
Administration
^CAAHA S-ewoiJU^
#
liEAPEIt
LETTERS
B Y W A Y O F P R O V I D I N G carowners with a means for legally
Aniprltra*M
hargent
W eekly
tor
PuMie
Kmptoyeen disposing of old, unwanted vehicles, and to prevent a flood of
Meniher Audil Biire«u oJ Cirrulalion*
abandoned vehicles on New Y o r k
City streets. Sanitation CommisHublithed
every
I iiesday
by
LEADER PUBLICATIONS. INC.
sioner Andrew W . Mulrain threw
•7 Ovaiit $»r«tt. Naw York 7. M. T.
lEakma* 3-i010 open his department's impoundJerr7 FinkeUu-in.
I'lihlinliet
ing yards for the voluntary disPaul k y e r . tdilor
H. J. Bernurd, f.'.verulir*
kditar posal of jalopies not worth insurIS. U. Maver, Uusineit
Manager
ing or licensing.
Albany Advertiiing
Office:
Each year as the J'ebruary liPlaza Book Shop. SnO Broadway. Alhany, N. Y.
censing
deadline
approaches,
10c Per Copy. Subgvriplion Price tl-BS'/j lo nicniheri of tlie Civil
Commissioner Mulrain revealed,
Service Kmployen Assoriafion.
to non-membpr*.
the department is confronted with
some 500 hulks abandoned on the
T U E S D A Y , J A N U A R Y 29, 1957
streets. W i t h the new State compulsory insurance law in effect,
he believes the number of abandoned vehicles will at least double
this year.
Frantic Antics
TO THE
STATE LABORERS
HAVE P A Y GRIEVANCE
Edito.-, T h e Leader:
W e are laborers who patch
holes, sand roads and mow grass.
Our work is termed light maintenance. If this is light, try mowing
ernt.f all day in ihe hot s-i^i on a
s t e p bank or sanding roads In
sub zero v/^it'.ier at nigiit witi
s .'.nf of th'^.e r-azy mot>r) it< on
your heels. W e get 51.38 an hour
arid all ovei' '.rns is straiidir, time.
V e t we c n n o t obtain a drcent
place to live for less than $45 a
month.
W h y are wage scales higher In
other districts? Food and other
commodities are higher hi Catskill than in the City of Albany.
Catskill, N. Y .
H K.
S L I D I N G SCALE
PENSIONS PROPOSED
Editor, T h e Leader:
T h e Governor'. mes.sage shows
that the civil service pensioner Is
the forgotten man.
I
recommend
the
following
legislation:
T h e State and municipal pensioners' initial retirement allotments should be raised or lowered
on the same percentage basis as
the cost-of-living index has risen
or fallen since the first pension
payment made.
F R A N K HERMAN
New York, N. Y .
E R R Y W U R F has come a cropper again. H e wanted
N e w Y o r k City laborers gi-aded under the Career and
Salary Plan, The W a g n e r Admmistration has decided not
to grade them. Under grading, lower and upper pay limits
would be those of some grade in the Plan's salary schedule. Instead, the laborers will be paid the rates prevailing
in local pi'ivate industry, to be determined by Comptroller
l.awrence E. Gerosa. Responsible labor leaders agreed
heartily to the City's plan, f o r it was those labor leaders'
own plan.
Owners of useless vehicles who
elect to use department facilities
rather than private means of car
disposal may do so by driving to
impounding yards in the five boroughs, signing a ^iaiple relinquistiment form, and the department
will
dispose
of
the
vehicles.
Otherwise, abandoning a vehicle
on City streets is punishable by a
$10 fine, 10 days impri.sonment,
or both.
Informed by the City of the terms of the agreement
after it was made, Mr. W u r f rejected it, so f a r as his local
is concerned, and called a meeting of laborer and assistant
gardener members, the agenda including "details and
time-table on work stoppage." Such stoppage, under the
anti-strike law, could cost the .job of any employee w h o
takes any part in it. Moreover, Mr. W u r f accused the
City Administration of "outrageous betrayal."
" W e are not going into the junk
or used car busine.ss," Commissioner Mulrain said, "but since we
*
*
•
will have to cope with all kinds of
abandoned vehicles, we are trying M E N T A L H Y G I E N E H O L I D A Y
to be realistic about it and get A N D L E A V E R U L E S S O U G H T
people to dispose legally of these Editor, T h e leader:
I am currently employed in a
unsightly, litter-producing hulks."
J
I'iasco
In Slate
Annoyed
Once
Members
More
for
Wurf
I have now worked for 10
months and have not been allowed or apparently even credited
with any of the 10 legal holidays
mentioned in the booklet "Thi.i
Is Y o u r Job," printed in Albany
Jn 1953.
M y immediate supervisor and
my building supervisor say they
have received no guidance or policy regarding such leaves.
T h e State should fully I n f o r m
us of the present legal holiday*
for institutional wo'kers and w h a t
policy has been established r e garding the granting of leave holidays. Also what is the amount of
leave allowed a year f o r those
institutional
employees on
the
40;hour shift. Also, f r o m what
fiscal date is this figured. and
what is the nia::imum accumulation allowed.
Must fl^'onder
W h a t are the regulations regarding sick leave, total accumulation, etc.?
Is there a graduated scale of
leave accrual b.^.sed on years of
service and is this ceditable r e gardless of the length of time
invoWed in a brep'- in service during prior years?
DC.
Accountants Indorse
CSEA's Bi^l On
Social Security
A L B A N Y , Jan. 28—The Slata
Association of Public W e l f a r e Accountants endorsed the Social Security bill sponsored by the Civil
Service Employees Association and
introduced by Senator Elisha T .
Barrett. He was notified of the
group's endorsement by Dorothy
W. Durham, secretary of the accountants' association and president of Orleans chapter, CSEA.
M r . W u r f ' s attack on Sanitationmen's Local 831 also
f o l l o w e d a checkoff in which that TcahiSLcr
•
>
.
only union that turned in any cards. Local 831 i.
Music Pions Told
ship practically saturates the sanilationmen rolls, 9,120
A
wide-ranged
program
of
out of 9,460, tlie missing 40 not members of any un.on.
weekly
concerts
in
libraries
I Reprisal was in order, so Mr. W u r f charged that some throughout the five New Y o r k
Naturally sucii a miserable showing required a reprisal by Mr. W u r f , so he had his brother A l , his star organizer on the State scene in the 2,000-membership fiasco,
write letters to presidents of CSEA chapters, taking a
crack at The Leader, .which publicizes the projects, activities and accomplishments of the CSEA, a f a c t that M c
W u r f does not like. W h a t was his complaint against The
L e a d e r ? That it ran news articles in its N e w Y o r k City
edition about Locals 237 and 831, Teamsters, 237 being
the City Employees Union and 831 the Uniformed Sanitationmen's Association.
IMr. W u r f complained that two employees doing work
f o r both Teamster locals had some sort of link with Communism years ago. M r . W u r f charged that 237 was Comnuinist-dominated.
He certainly had a right to complain about the t w o
employees, if he saw fit, and the t w o employees, since
luspended, will know the outcome soon. But Mr. Wi"'!" inid
no right to smear the officers of these unions, as he evidently meant to do so since the officers dominate the unions, if anybody does.
More Reverses
State hospital near Utlca, having
begun work last year a i an a t tendant working the 40-hour week.
A t the time of employment Indoctrination courses made reference
to the 40-hour shift schedule but,
as explained then no policy had
been worked out regarding holidays and vacation periods.
Society. These two men are, respectively, Henry Feinstein
and John DeLury.
The Communist-domination charge was directed
mainly against 237, and Mr. W u r f liurried to get aiowspaper publicity about it a f t e r a checkoff showed that in
the Hospitals Department, 237 beat him 2-lo-l, r.i.d in t ;o
Housing Authority 237 was the only union that ti'. i! ! in
signed checkoff cards. Naturally, such poor showings
against a younger union called f o r repiisal.
Field
He has been enjoying a rampageous career as regional director of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees. Smearing City officials as
betrayers is in line with his antics against o t h o ' employee
organizations when things don't go his way,
they f r e quently don't.
He was going to dominate the State employee liekl,
so started organizing in the' Correction and Mental H y giene Departments. He was going to put the Civil Service
Employees Association, whose membership nearly saturates the roster of State employees, out of business. W e l l ,
recently payroll deduction started in the State government. T h e CSEA has more than 70,000 members, including
employees of local governments outside N e w Y o r k City.
The checkoff of State employees showed that the C S E A
has 58,000 such members, Mr. W u r f ' s union, after three
years' effort, less than 2,000,
EDITOR
City employees were doing union work on City time, and
started a court case to stop it.
So f a r Mr. W u r f has been doing fairly well in getting
laborers to join his union, though the Teamsters report
making inroads. But when his members read of Teamsters
efforts to get higher pay' than grading would provide,
and how four unions won a court case upholding laborers'
rights to prevailing rates, they must begin to wonder how
well Mr. W u r f is serving them. W h e n membei's of M r .
W u r f ' s union find to what an extent he has anLa;;oa;-.:,od
and even infuriated the City officials, persons to whom he
must look to win gains f o r members, they may (juestion the
responsibility of his leadership.
Hesponsibility
of
Others
More than that, creation of such a fiery almosphere
in^New York City labor relations that smear tactics inevitably create must one day be repudiated by the international body that directs A F S C M E throughout the country. Not only is the heavy drain on a union treasury resulting from being outdistanced again and again by
, younger unions* and failure to make a dent on older ones,
' a serious factor, but the international union is a conservaI tive organization headed by Arnold i i a n d e r , who though
an eager and aggressive organizer, does not himself stoop
to smear tactics.
City boroughs will be' launched
early this year, said Seymour N .
Siegal, chairman of the M a y o r ' s
Committee for Living Music. M r .
Siegal, head of W N Y C , said that
the program will start in libraries
in
Manhattan,
Brooklyn
and
Queens, with the possibility of
expansion to other
community
libraries.
The
advisory
board of
th®
Mayor's Committee includes Labor
Commissioner Nelson Seitel, D e p uty Hospitals Commissioner Maurice H . ' ^ a t z k i n ; Executive Director Ralph W . Whelan,
Youth
Board; Stuart Constable, e x e c y tive officer, Parks Department! •
Music Director Peter J. Wilhousky. Board of Education; Samuel
R.
Rosenbaum,
trustee,
Musio
Performance Trust Funds, and A l
Manuti and Al K n o p f , president
and vice president, respectively,
Local 802, American Federation
of Musicians.
Police Aid Charity
T h e New Y o r k City Police Department's
Charity. Fund
contributed $500 to the Urban Leagu®
of Greater New York, and $1,006
to the New Y o r k chapter of t h t
Red Cross, for Hungarian refugee
relief.
Other recipients were the Nevf
Y o r k Heart Association, $1,000|
W . C. Handy Foundation for the
Bind, and the Emerald A.ssociatlon
of Long Island, each $300.
Mr. Zander should note well that iiis N e w York regional director, after losing battle after battle — no
way to wifi a wai'—makes himself so objectionable to
City officials that they do not have him attend an im- R E - C L A S S I I I C A T I O N
HEARINGS IN MARCH
poi'tant conference at which the pay policy of niany of the
According to an unofflcial r e »
intornational's own members will be decided. That .should port, public hearings on New Y o r k
T h e president of one of them fought Communist sympatheis in a now defunct unioii ^vith his bare fists on
the streets of the City, while the vice-president is a former
commander of the American Legion in Brooklyn. A s for
the other other union, it is headed by a man dead set
•gainst Commuuism, who i» a leader in tKe Holy Name j b e a warning of how well smear pays off.
City classification appeal* are
begin in March.
M
QUBSTION,
MARTIME M A N RETIRES
manner as clvlllaa*. Social SeFrederick W . Dlckman, property
curlty
taxes
will
be
deducted
from
appointment because of his servand supply ofTicer with the Atice connected disability; the wid- the ba.stc pay of the serviceman lantic Coast District, Maritime Adand
the
U.S.
Government
will
pay
ow (who has not remarried), of a
ministration, retired after 36'4
deceased ex-service man; or the the employer's share of the taxes. years' service.
mother (who is widowed, divorced,
or separated, or whose hu.sband Is
I ft M«r« Knw New TOTIi ». * I
permanently and totally disabled)
veteran
PLEASE
who
is
disqualified
for
plicants must eomplf with that
section B40.4.0 of the Administrative Code which provides that any
office or position, compensation
for which is payable solely or in
part from the funds of the City of e veteran who died or was disshall be filled only by a person abled on active military duty.
who is a bona-flde resident and
• • •
dweller of the City for at least
SOCIAL S E C U R I T Y
three years continuously immeW H E R E ARE applications for
Marcy State Hospital diately preceding appointment.
benefits filed? P. L.
Exceptions are: Board of EduRule II of the new Attendance
The place to make claims for
Rules effective January 3, 1957 cation, Board of Higher Educa- social security payments is the
Transit nearest social security office. The
tovers absence with pay and pro- tion, New York City
Vide that all Sundays and legal Authority, Triborough Bridge and Social
Security
Administration
holidays enumerated herein shall Tunnel Authority, New York City has district offlces conveniently
be allowed as days off or days Housing Authority. New York City located throughout the country.
shall be allowed in lieu thereof. Community College of Applied
H O W A R E servicemen covered
Election Day is one of those enu- Arts and Sciences.- and Staten
Island Community College.
Beginning
January
1, 1957,
merated.
W B A R E A T T E N D A N T S on the
lilKhl shift at Marcy Stat* Hosp i t a l O n Election Day, tha help
Vert allowed two hours to vote,
h u t the 4-to-12 and 12-to-8 shlfU
Were not allowed those two hours.
Some night help in some other
0tat* hospitals got the two hours
Off.
THE N I G H T SHIFTS
Oilcount Hout« (oi Civil S»rvic«
Empioyaai foi 27 Yaars
Rtcomm»r,di Ov»t All 0»h»ri
THE CHARLES
FURNITURE CO. INC.
AL S-1810
J2 W 20th Street. N .Y.
A MnniifBclliriT» lll«trlliiilot
shnwroont
THEIR BUSINESS POLICY I S • 5 rmi itriii'tiirHi siinniiiti'r
b B vpHi free «prvlrp iif»lir>
e. Swvi- tiiB monp> — np to
d frri' ilrrnrnlliig rniiiiurl
e:\nttnn MAKIt tKDAIS t'llKWI
e. AM fiirnlllirf iinrnilril —rti'llvfrfrt:<
Value »n».»»n < hnrlf» iirlci- »:i4.ftO
for one
CIIARI,r:.<4 .llsiilii.rn Bfilroom
l.lTlng t. Slnrcritj — Thr dulnmi-i ll alwuy«»
Room, O I N I N T Koiim unit H P I I I M O K
rlelil
In addition, certain agencies members of the uniformed services
Mr. Tobias of MUNICIP/4L l o y i
Section 226 of the Election Law
Vhlt CHARLES for F/NE FURNITURE 47 BUDGET PRICES
states: "Any person entitled to employ persons involving depart- of the United States are covered
vote at an election shall on the mental activities outside of the by social security in the same
' t !>«•
day of election be entitled to ab- City and for which positions New
sent himself from any service or York City residence is not a reemployment In which he is then quirement in the application, are
engaged or employed for a period excepted: Board of Water Supply,
of two bourse while the polls of Department of Water Supply, Gas
For Your Convenience
the election are open." " ^ I s sec- and Electricity, Department of
Health, Department of Hospitals,
tion specifically includes employDepartment of Correction, and
ees of the State and all civil diviDepartment of Welfare.
sions thereof. Including cities,"
Residence has been waived for
towns and villages.
positions of a semi-technical or
Must Be Durlnr Voting Hours
at
The two-hour period to which professional character in the Deemployees are entitled is during partments of Health, Hospitals,
tha time that the polls are open. Welfare, and Correction and the
Magistrates'
Courts,
the
The purpose of this section is to City
eliminate any penalty for exer- Court of Domestic Relations, etc.,
W A S H I N G T O N AVENUE and L A R K STREET
cising the fi-anchlse and remove for a limited period of time. In
sucl.
cases
the
announcements
of
any practical obstacles to voting.
The specific answer to your examination for such positions
contain specific information conquestion Is that the employees are
cerning ^uch r^idence waivers.
entitled t - two bourse off while
the polls are open. You were em(State of JS'ew York
Paydays)
ployed on the night shift and as a
W H O ARE entitled to 10-point
matter of equity we can see that veteran preference in Federal ex—C.E.V.
you should be given the same con- aminations?
from
sideration as employees on other
A disabled veteran (or a veteran
4:00 P.M.—.5:HO P.M.
shifts, but as far as we know the who has been awarded the Purple
•
employer Is not legally required to Heart); the wife of a disabled
give two hours off except during
such time as the polls are open.
All Services
Available
The old Attendance Rules for
Institution ' employr
in effect
Drive-in Tellers
Parking
at the time your letter was written enumerated certain holidays
that should be allowed as days
off or days in lieu thereof and the
old rules did not include Election
Day.
• 6 Evening Courses
Extra Banking Hours
Our Park Branch
Every Other Wednesday
MUNICIPAL
PERSONNEL
PROGRAM
•
•
•
W H A T ARE the residence reQUirements for New York City
government jobs, and what agencies are excepted?
—P.V.
For appointment generally, ap-
20/20 EYESIGHT
CAN BE
YOURS
'WITHOUT
GLASSES!
c^
VISVAL TRAINIISG
of
randidatet
for
PATROLMAN,
HREMAIS,
ETC.
to
achieve
eyesight
•
all
civil
service
requirements
*
•
Klear Vision Specialists
7 W«st 44fh St., N. Y. C .
MU 7-3881
« • « Daily, THOS. A Thur*. to 8 P.M.
I V i f e i ' l f i r l i i v i i l b l e Loniief
Alao A v t l l a b l s
AUTO INSURANCE
Monthly Payment*
INSUKANCB
fteorge Benia
with
Bulkir; A llurtoii Brak«n>(t Turp
11(10 FILTON 8T.
BUOOhl.VN n , N.V. NKvlii. H-'ilOl
• Fee: $12 per course
Public Spooking
Tho Supervising Stenographer
and Executivo Soerotary
Developing Your Ability to
Take a Civil Service Examination
Accounting for Non-Aceeunt<
ants
Building Construction for
Inspectors
American English
Grammar
and Usor';
Berlatratlon. in peiaoa aaa b; uiall
Vlu
I ...lui. . . ..v. . - ... . ,
January 31, thruuKrh F r i d a y , F e b ruary
15, D i v i s i o u
o£ Training:,
Deparlmeiit
o t Personnel.
Room
8U0. ' i W B r o a d w a y , f r o m 8 :0(l a . m .
to
S;00
p.m.
and
on
Friday
eveninir,
February
15,
from
5
o'clock p . m . t h r o u g h 8 : 0 0 p.m.
Mail
regi.itration
eim be
accomplished by mailing: to the D i v i s i o n
ot T r » i n i n » . at the a b o v e address.
A
eheik
tor
the
amount
due,
made out t o the Boai-d of Hiffher
Kilncation w i t h a letter
containi n r tha f o l l o w i n g i n f o r m a t i o n :
o Y o u r name, addread. and y o u r
home
ami office telephone
nunibem.
e The
title
ot
the
cour»e
or
courses you wish to take,
o Y o u r Department,
• Y o u r title.
Joint proifram of the N e w
York
City Department o t f e r s t m n e l and
the E v e n i n g and Extension D i v i siim of the City College detti^fned
to , aasist City employeea to p i e p:u'e f o r
incrt^aaed
responsibility
la their jobs and f o r p r o m o t i o n .
Certificates
awarded.
10
weekly
Hrssions of 1 hour and f o r t y minutes each. Instruction starts week
of FelHUary y.%. T h e N e w
York
City
Department
ot
Pcrsonnd'a
Bureau of Kxatninations w i l l now
credit these courses as :J-point college coui'scs.
I i i f o r m i i t i o n and copies of a bulletin
describing
courses
offered
under this progruiu may be obt.iined at the D i v i s i o n o f T r a i n iigr of the Department o t Personnel, 8UI) B r o a d w a y , R o o m SOU,
For Free
THE NATIONAl COMMERCIAL BANK
AND TRUST COMPANY
ALBANY, NEW YORK
22 Officef Serving Nor+hea$+ern New York
Member Federal Depoiit Iniurance Corporation
77 EVENING COURSES
IN DOWNTOWN ALBANY AND TROY
• A p p r o v e d for Veterans
• Albany or Troy Classes
• Instructors from Business,
Government, the
Professions
$20 a C r e d i t
Includes Late Afternoons
and Saturday Mornings
Men and Wonnen
Classes Start Feb. 4
Accountliif
Art
A r t s and Sciences
Itankiiiir
Business Administration
Credit
Criminology
£(?ouomii'S
Education
English L i t e r a t u i "
Finance
Freehand Drawin*
i'rench
Geography
Government
History
Humanitiea
Insurance
Interior
Decoratiou
Two-yeur iiasociulf and four-year
professional,
individual
clas»e»,
men and women.
Italiiui
Manaijement
Marketinir
Math<-matio«
Music
Pcn()loify
Philosophy
Pre-I^w
Pre-Medicine
Pie-Hocial W o r k
Psyrholouy
Purchasinir
R e a l r.state
Sfhool Nurslii*
baccalaureate
degee
exam
preparation
Scienie
So<'iolony
Hpanisll
Sjieech
Statisticj
T V 111 S c h o o l t
Traftio
programs,
programs
W r i t e or Phone for Free Bulletin Listing Courses Available
for Spring Term Registration
Bulletin
Write or Phone
C O 7-8880, ext. 67
THE CITY COLLEGE
EVENING DIVISIONS
72 Chestnut Si., Albany (Temporary Office During Con$truct!on), 5-551!
First and ferry Sts., Troy, AShley 2-2500, Ext. 25
pre
for
Employment Labor Department, New Y o r k City.
Fee $4. Test date, March 16. Open
to any qualified U. S. citizen.
OPEN-COMPETITIVE
State public libra.-lan's profession4225. D R A F T S M A N , $3,320-$4,- al certificate, bachelor's degree
180, Department of Public Works. plus one year in a library school,
Pee $3. Te.st date, March 2. High and two years'' relevant experischool or equivalency diploma and ence. (Friday, February 15).
<,<ne of the following: a.ssociate de4235. A S S I S T A N T L I B R A R I A N
j r e e by August 31, 1957 in any ( M e d i c i n e ) . $4.430-$5,500, $4,858
engineering field, two years lead- starting salary in Albany. One curing to a bachelor's degree in en- rent vacancy. Health Department,
gineering
or
architecture,
two Albany. Fee $4. Test date, March
years' drafting experience, or a 16. Open to any qualified U. S.
time-equivalent combination. (Fri- citizen.
One of the following:
day, February 1),
bachelor's degree plus one year's
4228.
ENGINEERING
AIDE, library school and one year's ex$:?,880-$3,650. About 200 appoint- perience, bachelor's degree plus
ments will be made. Fee $2. Test two years' experience, or a timedate, March 16. One of the follow- equivalent combination. (Friday,
ing: high school graduation, with February 15).
course in mathematics, by June
4221.
GAME
PROTECTOR,
30, 1957, or high school or equiv$3,320-$4,180; 168 vacancies, Conalency diploma by that date plus
servation Department. Fee $3.
one year as a helper on engineerCandidates must have been resiing projects. (Friday, February
dents of the county in which
15),
appointment is sought for four
4229. D R A F T I N G AIDE, $2,880- months preceding the test date,
$3,650. About 200 appointments March 2. Age limits 21 to 36,
cJipected. Pee $2. Test date, March with age conce.ssion to veterans;
16, Either high .school graduation, high school or equivalency diby June 30, 1957, with courses in ploma; minimum height, 5 feet
math,
mechanical
drawing
or 10 inches; minimum weight, 160
drafting, or high school or equiv- pounds;
satisfactory
eyesight
alency diploma plus one year as a and hearing. (Friday, February
helper on engineering projects or
preparing ,simple drawings in a
4333. T H R U W A Y T O L L C O L drafting room, (Friday, February
L E C T O R , $3,170-$4,000; 50 v a 15).
4231. S A F E T Y O F F I C E R , $3,- cancies, various counties. Fee $3.
020-$3,820, Pee $2, Written test, Candidates must have been resiMarcli 16. N o training or exper- dents of one of the following
ience needed.
New York State counties for four months preceddriver's license, 20 40 vision in i.ng the examination date, March
each eye (glas.ses permitted), sat- 2; New York, Bronx, Richmond,
isfactory hearing, good physical Kings, Niagara, Orleans, Genesee,
condition, good moral character. Erie, Wyoming, Chautaqua, Cattaraugus,
Allegany.
Dutchess,
(Friday, February 15).
Orange,
Putnam,
Rockland,
4230. A S S I S T A N T D I R E C T O R Westchester, Nassau, Queens or
O F N U R S I N G I Surgery), $4,430- Suffolk. Minimum age, 21 on the
$5,500, Health Department. One test date; State driver's license;
vacancy, Buffalo. Fee $4.
Test minimum height (both men and
date, March 16. State professional women) 5 feet 4 inches; m i n i registered nurse license, gradua- mum weight, men. 125 pounds;
tion from nursing school, one year women, 115; satisfactory
eyeas operating room supervisor and sight and hearing, good moral
one additional year as either an- character. N o training or exesthetist, operating room or sur- perience needed. i Friday, Februgical ward supervisor, and two ary 1).
more years' graduate nursing ex4217. A S S O C I A T E P L . A N N I N G
perience. (Friday, Pebn.iary 15),
T E C H N I C I A N . $6,550-$7,980. One
4234. A S S I S T A N T L I B R A R I A N , vacancy.
Division
of
Housing,
$4,430-$5.500, several State de- Executive
_
Department, New York
parlment.s. One current vacancy, City. Fee $ 5 7 T e s T " d a t e , ' M L x h " 2 "
New
NEW YORK
STATE JOB
OPENINGS
York
Btate
Service.
m
T h e State Is now accepting nppllcatlons for tine following examinations. Unli.ss otherwise indicated,
tests
hre
scheduled
f o r February 167 T h e last day to
apply appears at the end of each
notice.
Unle.ss otherwise Indicated, candidates must be U. S. citizens and
must have been State residents
f o r one year immediately preceding the examination date.
Apply at one of tlie following:
Slate Department of Civil Service, Room 2301, at 270 Broadway.
New York City, corner of Chambers Street; Examinations Division,
39 Columbia Street, or lobby of
State Office Building,
Albany;
State Department of Civil Service,
R o o m 212, State Office Building,
B u f f a l o or at local offices of the
Where to Apply
For Public Jobs
t . $.—Second Regional Office.
U S. Civil Service Commission,
611 Washington Street, New York
14. N Y. ( M a n h a t t a n ) , Hours 8:30
to 5, Monday through Friday;
clo.sed Saturday. Tel.
WAtkins
4-1000, Applications also obtainable at post offices, except the
New York, N. Y., post office.
STATE Room 2301 at 270
Broadway, New York 7, N. Y., Tel.
BArciay 7-1616; lobby of Slate
Office Building, and 39 Columbia
Slreet, Albany, N Y., Room 212;
Slate Office Building. Buffalo 2.
N
Y . Hours 8:30 to 5, closed
Baturdays.
Also,
Room
400
at 155 West Main Slreet, Roche.ster, N. Y., Tuesdays. 9 to 5. All
of foregoing applies also to exams
for county Jobs conducted by the
State Commission.
N Y C — N Y C Department of Personnel, 96 Duane Street, New York
1, N. Y. ( M a n h a t t a n ) two block
north of City Hall, just west of
Broadway, opposite T h e LEADER
office. Hours 9 to 4. closed Saturdays,except to answer inquiries
9 to 12. Tel. COrtlandt 7-8880 Any
mail intended for the N Y C Department of Personnel, should be
addre.ssed to 299 Broadway, New
York 7. N. Y .
Board of Education, Teaching
Only
— Board of
Examiners,
Board of Education, 110 Livingston Street, Brooklyn 1, N. Y.
Hours 9 to 4:30, except Saturdays
and Sundays. Tel, ULster 8-1000
N Y C Travel Directions
Rapid transit lines for reaching
the U. S, State and N Y C Civil
Service Commission offices in N Y C
follow:
State Civil Service Commission,
N Y C Civil Service Commission —
I N D trains A, C, D, AA or CC to
Chambers Street; I R T Lexington
Avenue line to Brooklyn Bridge;
B M T Fourth
Avenue local or
Brighton local to City Hall.
U. S. Civil Service Commission
— I R T Seventh Avenue local to
Christopher Street station.
Data on Applications by Mail
Both the U. S. and the State
issue application blanks and receive filled-out forms by mail. In
applying by mail for U. S. jobs do
not enclose return postage. Both
the U.S. and the Slate accept applications if postmarked not later
than the closing date. Because of
curtailed collections, N Y C residents should actually do their mailing no later than 8:30 P.M. to
obtain a postmark of that date,
N Y C Issues and receives blanks
by mall when the exam notice so
states and If six-cent-stamped en
Telope enclosed, self-addressed.
T h e U. S. charges no application fees. T h e State and the local
Civil Service Commissions charge
fees at rates fixed by law.
P R O M P T and accurate reports
on civil service law cases appear!
Ill The Leader.
Bachelor's degree in public a d ministration, municipal
government, or Boning and planning;
two years' related supervisory or
administrative
experience,
and
one of the following: three additional
years'
experience,
30
graduate semester hours in political science, statistics, or economics plus one and one-half
additional years' experience; 30
graduate semester hours in public
administration,
municipal
government, zoning and
planning
plus one additional year's experience, or a time-equivalent combination. (Friday, February 1).
4222. C O U R T O F F I C E R A N D
COURT
ATTENDANT.
$4,000$5,800 starting salaries, varying
with the court to which appointment Is made. Many vacancies.
First and Second Judicial Departments. Fee $3, One of the
Frigidaire
following: three years' experience
In State court work, three y e a n
as a law cleric or public law en^
forcement officer (military police
duty Included), law school graduation, admission to the State
Bar, or a time-equivalent combination. Candidates must have
been legal residents of the county
concerned for four months preIContinued on Page 9)
C E N C 1' S
Fine American i Italian Fcod«
Full Courte Luneliei, DInneri.
2 Private Dlnlni, R c o m i and
Banquet Halls. Seatinq to 100
234 Waihlngton Avenue
Albany. N. Y.
3-9064 - 5-137B
BROADEST
A U T O P O L I C Y in the
C A P I T A L DISTRICT
REFRIGERATORS
ELECTRIC RANGES
WASHERS — DRYERS
For the BKST DE.M. In lown.
Depeiitlnltle for 37 jfars.
ARflUfil
Traffic accldcnlB are nioiintlng eacli
year—your f a m i l j needs
niosl protection
possible. SAFECO
Insurance
Compaii.T of America's ir-w ante policy
is the broadest ever desipfned—nothing
Is moia all-inclusive. Ami j o i i save
with SAFF,r<».
r.F-T A I . L T H E FACTS T O D A T !
FAYETTE 0. MORSE
440 Third Ave.. Watervliet, N. Y.
AR 3-4832
Safrrn Insurance Co. of America
. . " H o m e Olflces—Seattle 6. W a s h . . .
i . l l Bronilwny — Opp. Post OflRc®
.•Hbmiy, N, y .
ARCO
Country Squire
Motel
Carman Albany Read
Schenectady 3, N. Y.
''
Truway
•ph. ELgln 5-3110
Exit
25
C I V I L S E R V I C E BOOKS
and all tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 Broadway
Albany, N. Y.
Mail & Phone Orders Filled
DUNCAN'S INN
Famous for Fine Foods
ALBANY AIRPORT ft
WOLF ROAD
Robt. J . Connor,
Man«g«r
ST. 5-8949
^eMttainton
ALBANY,
N.Y.
^ f u M i o H o l
73
Qualify for One of the Better Pojitionj in
Government and Private Industry
Advance Your Knowledge of Management
*
Enroll
orsTER House
Steaks
• Chops
FooiU •Ino* lOIS
in
GRADUATE PROGRAM IN
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
42 s t a t e Street
•
Alboiiy
Hue Room • Main
Dining Room - Cectall
Lounge • Colonial Room
Air-Conditloned
Cut<T(;rft to HI> ()rcuf>lr,IIFI
r o n d i i c t e d j o i n t l y in A l b a n y b y N e w Y o r k
l n i \ e r s i l y and S^racll«e l!ni\ert^ity, >\ilh
l l i e o o o p e r a l i o n of the .''^lale L n i \ e r f . i l y of
Tsew ^ o r k .
T h e following course.^, given in llie e\eiung, will he
offered durinrg ihe 2n(l Term of 1950-57.
Legal Aspects of Personnel Admin.
Mon.
Regulatory Adniinisti-ation
Mon.
Community Planning
Mon.
Practice of Management
Mon.
Comparative Public Finance
Tues.
Personnel Administration
Tues.
Financial Development of the U. S.
Tues.
Contemporary Problems In Constitutional
Law
Wed.
Human Relations in Admin.
Wed.
Introduction to Public Admin.
Wed.
Camparative Operation of Economic
Systems
Thurs.
Legislatures and Legislative Proce.«;ses
Thurs.
Sampling Methods In Social and Economic
Surveys
Thurs.
5:50- 7:50
8:00-10:00
8:00-10:00
8:00-10:00
5:50- 7:50
5:50- 7:50
8:00-10:00
P.M.
P.M.
P.M.
P.M.
P.M.
P.M.
P.M.
5:50- 7:50 P.M.
5:50- 7:iO P.M,
8:00-10:W P.M.
5:50- 7:50 P.M.
8:00-10:00 P.M.
8 00-10:00 P.M.
Registration Begins Jan. 28; Classes Start Feb. 4
198 S l a t e J^lreet, A l b a n y , N . Y .
P h o n e 62-0617
Girls Wanted
to
leani
liairdressing
Colonna School of Cosmetology Offers You
thorough training In all phases of beauty cultture which will qualify you to take the N.Y.S.
licensing examination.
Day
and night
Courses.
For Information, Write
C O L O N N A S C H O O L OF C O S M E T O L O G Y
Dept.
C.
18 Chapel St., Albany, N. Y.
Pkoat 4-3372
Home of Tested Used Cars
ARMORY GARAGE
CHURCH NOTICE
ALBANY FEDERATION
'
OP CHURCHES
72 Churches united for Church
and Community Service.
MABS
GIFT SHOPS
Unique Gifts Shop fur Ciiriftmss rnrdi
now OpiMl eveniUBs til 9, Loudito Slioppijii! Center Albany i l'-H'!
PETS A S U P P L I E S
DESOTO - P L Y M O U T H
926 Central Avenue
Albany. N. Y.
Canaries, Paraiceets, M y n a h «,
Cockatiels,
Monkeys,
Hamsters,
Guinea Pigs, Rabbits. Mice.
WIGGAND'S
PET
SHOP,
1^2
Hudson Avenue. Albany, N. Y. 4 5866.
In Time of Need. Call
NEW REDECORATED
M. W. TebbuH's Sons
176 State
420 Kenwood
Albany 3-2179
Delmar 9-2212
Over too Ve«rB of
DiKtliiRiiitthf'd FiiniMul Hrrrlcr
ALBANY.
1.
NEW PRIVATE BANQUET ROOM
5 Minutes from
Albany
UNLIMITED PARKING • SPECIAL
BANQUET MENU ON REQUEST
The VAN RENSSELAER
Clinton
Open 7 Dayn
UelglUii
Rte
eS-USlO
John J. Melfe, Realtor
TROY RD., EAST GREENBUSH
Speelalhlng
In Suburbat Hemes
ALBANY 77-3315
(iaiM • KrnlHlt - All rjiin Hualcal
liiatrunirnlil - Mmiit A Privat*
liiitrurliun
ALBANY MUSIC ACADEMY
PHONE ALBANY 5-9328
FOR RESERVATIONS
R I T Z SHOE
name brands
Discount to
S. Pearl St.,
Albany N.Y.
O ' J T L E T - - Fanious
in men s shoes. 10%
CSEA members, 19
Ritz Theatre Bldg.,
B E R K S H I R E H O T E L , 140 State
St., Albany, N. Y Va block f r o m
Capitol: 1 block from State Office
Bidg. Weekly rates $14 & u a
MAYFLOWER . ROYAL COURT
A P A R T M E N T S - Furnished, U n furnished and Rooms. Phone 41994 (Albany).
I . • U'^-OUtA
Ltndui Same Manuf'*nient
Trey Mudc Academy
AITT Fiiltiin HI., 'Inijr
Kulaiiii liniuu, l-riii.
-r
CORNER DOVE ft STATE
Scrvlnii the finest In the State. The
Capital of I'rnie Beef. Feaiuiing
Luncheon & Diiiuire at vciy moderate prices, t'a.ilities foi your
next parly or tianquct, CocUtails ia
tUo bcatuiful EMBEltS ttOO-M from
6 I'.M. Hor s d veures, entertainment nlghlly. No cover, no oilulmum.
0-20
FOR RENSSELAER COUNTY
REAL ESTATE
l « Slate Ht., A i b a n ; ,
Bleecker Restaurant
" L O O K I N G I N S I D E , " a roiumn
of comment and analysis, by 11.
J. Bernard, appears often In The
Leader.
There's no Gin like
(Continued
Was ever a cart so
f r o m P a n e 81
ceding the test date, Mai-ch 2.
Age limits f o r General Sessions
courts
and county
courts of
Bronx, Kings, Queens, and R i c h mond: 21 to 41; 21 t o 46 f o r
other courts. Minimum
height,
5 feet 7 Inches; minimum weight,
140 pounds; satisfactory hearing
and eyesight, glasses permitted;
good moral character.
(Fi'iday,
February 1 ) .
PROMOTION
3151.
SENIOR
ACTUARIAL
n . E R K , $3,320-$4,180, Insurance
Department. O n e vacancy, A l bany. Permanent employment in
the Albany office of the Department for one year preceding the
test date ( M a r c h 2) in a grade
3 or higher related job. (Friday,
February 1).
3202.
PRINCIPAL
DRAFTSWAN
(ELECTRICAL),
$4,650$5,760,
Department
of Public
Works. Several vacancies anticipated. PeiTOanent employment in
the department in a grade 11 or
higher drafting or engineering
aide Job for two years preceding
the test date, March 2. (Friday,
February 1).
3203.
PRINCIPAL
DRAFTSMAN
(MECHANICAL),
$4,650$5,760,
Department
of Public
Works. Several vacancies anticipated. Same requirements as
for 3202, with specialization in
mechanical engineering or d r a f t ing. (Friday, February 1 ) .
. . . or a party so easy!
cffsci.
Tray Cart
M5.95
• An extra work surface, an ex<
tra storage unit, a handsome
serving cart , . . in onel
high, 16Vi' t 23W, Three-inch
casteri. Chromium or black legt.
COBCOAT wood-grain finish in
four colors. C o m * in and get
yours today.
3219. C A P T A I N , $5,940-$7,270,
Dfcpartment of Correction. P e r manent employment in a Correction institution f o r one year
as lieutenant, two years as sergeant), or four years (two years
as lieutenant, two years as sergeant, or four years (two years
as kitchenkeeper and two years
as prison guard) preceding t h e
test
date, March
2. (Friday,
February 1 ) .
3220.
•i!,620.
LIEUTENANT,
$5,390Correction
Department.
(Continued
on Page 12)
handy
S4.4 PROOF, 100% NEUm SPIRITS OlSllilED FROM (RAIN
CORDONS
' DRY CIN CO., ITO., UNDEN, N.I.
lladrle
Ullllty Tobl*
Prap iMf Cwt
Thh I M I eppaon ot<ly on gsnutn* CO$CO
yrodncfe. l««li for It wh«n yow i v f .
Royce-Shanley Presents
C H A I R f
Itiijrut Mao!
BUY
AND
..
f j ^ .
• Come in and see the sinertesf set in town, with the most comfortabl*
folding chair made. Has contour back and saddle-shaped seat; unique
gatefold action (seat tilts up, legs swing in!) eliminates "folding" look.
Folding table has no telltale leg braces. Both have Bonderized, chipresistant enamel finish, washable, stain-resistant Duran upholstery.
I^ine color combinations!
3
PI.ACE
itie^'at
A n d T A B L E S
SETTINGS!
GET
Chair,
PLACE SE'rriNGS
ONLY
• 9i &
f tO® ®
EACH
in most pattern*
7.45
1.Damitli Rojt*
2. Lasting Sptini*
Sillier Rose*
Table,
11.95
4. Stanton Hall*
t. Reigninf Beeuly*
C. Menaioii Houie*
Complete
Fed. T«» IiwI.
»nly
Here's • wonderful opportunity to gel
• service-for-rour, and actually pay
f o r only 3 place settings! Clioose f r o m
these six stunning patterns . . . each
one is modern, up-to-date, beautiful!
Y o u pay only $28.00 f o r each place
setting, except in Silver Rose, S29.25.
and Stanton Hall, $3I.2S. Each place
setting includes knife, fork, teaspoon,
cream soup spoon, salad fork —
Budget Terms.
41.75
ROEBLINC
155 EAST 44th STREET. NEW YORK 17. N. Y.
OFFER ENDS FEB. 4 t h - A C T NOW!
•Trade martii e( Otieidt ltd.
Set^
Piicei Include Federal Tai
ROYCE-STANLEY, Inc.
48 W«st 48th Street. New York 6. N. Y.
J U d i o a A-7*14
Bet. Ltxinqten A 3rd Av«.
GET
VOUR
ARCO
BOOK
K.MLROAO CLERK
FOR
tXAM
MUrray Hill 2 4441
"Looking Inside,"
LEADER'S
S O C I A L S E C U R I T Y news, . o m weekly column of analysis and
forecast, by U. J. Bernard. Read iiient. Questions, answers apijeitr
regularly in The Leader.
14 regularly.
C I V I L
Trnt
er f o r six months preccdinn M a y
11 to file, two years f o r appointment. (Thursday, February 21).
T h e foUowInf New Y o r k City
JOIMI open f o r application on Febrnary 1. T h e closlnar date appears
at the end of each nistice.
Apply f o r any of these Jobs In
person, by representative or by
mail to the Department'; Application Division, 96 Duane Street,
New York 7, N. Y . No mall application will be honored unless
aocompanied by a self-addressed,
six-cent stamped envelope at least
nine Inches wide. Do not attempt
t * apply before February 1.
7581. F O R E M A N O F B R I D G E M E N A N D R T V E T E R S , $32.80 a
day. Public V/orks Department.
One current vacancy, others f r o m
time to time. Opens for filing F e b ruary 1. Fee $.50. Permanent employment In the department as
brldgeman and riveter for six
months preceding M a y 11 to apply. two years to be appointed.
(Thursday, February 21).
7580. F O R E M A N OF C A R P E N T E R S , $26.85 a day. Departments
of Education and Public Works.
Two
current vacancies,
others
f r o m time to time. Filing opens
February 1. Pee $.50. Permanent
employment in one of those departments as carpenter for six
months preceding the test date.
M a y 11, to file, two years, for
appointment. (Thursday, February 21).,
S E R V I C t
L S A D E R
Coll«g« Courses
For NYC Empley«*t
Register Now
Registration for special New
Y o r k University and City College
courses f o r City employees this
Spring will begin on Thursday,
January 11 and Friday, February
15, Personnel
Director
Joseph
Schechter announced.
T h e New Y o r k University courses cover human relations, personnel management, statistics f o r the
layman, transit police administration, problems of the adolescent,
planning f o r retirement, correctional institutional
management
and organization and methods.
T h e City College courses cover
public speaking, office practice,
civil service testing, coi-'ect English usage, accounting and building construction.
Employees may also register by
mall with the Division of T r a i n ing Department of Personnel, at
299 Broadway, New Y o r k 7, N. Y .
Purpose ot Courses
T h e courses will assist City employees to prepare f o r increased
responsibility in their jobs and f o r
promotion. Certificates will
be
awarded
to
all
who complete
courses.
T h e Department of Personnel
of all employees
who
complete
will n o t i f y the heads of agencies
courses so that they will receive
departmental recognition.
All of the courses start the week
of February 25 and will be given
in various locations in the City
Hall area.
Additional Infomation and copies of a bulletin describing these
programs may be obtained at the
Division of Training. Department
of Personnel. 299 Broadway, New
Y o r k 7, N. Y .
OPEN-fOMPET'T""''
7832. S T A T I O N A R Y
ENGINEER. $20.G4 a day, 59 vacancies,
Tarlous City departments. Opens
f o r filing February 1. Pee $.50.
U.S. cltizensliip and State residence required, plus stationary
7582. P L U M B E R , $26.25 a day,
engineer's llcen.se issued by New
Y o r k City Buildings Department. Brooklyn College, Departments of
Correction, Education, Hospitals,
(Tiiursday, February 21).
Parks, Police, Public Works, SanPROMOTION
itation, Housing Authority and
7861. S E N I O R
S H O R T H A N D Queens President's office. T w e n t y
REPORTER.
$4,850-$6,290,
Ds- vacancies. Filing opens February
partments of Investigation and 1. Fee $.50. Permanent employPersonnel. Vacancies from time to ment in one of the departments as
time. Opens f o r filing February 1. plumber's helper for six months
Pee S4. Permanent employment preceding the test date, June 11,
In one of those departments as to file, two years for appointshorthand
reporter
(oJd
title, ment. (Thursday. February 21).
stenographer (reporting), grade
ASSISTANT COURT
CLERK,
3> for six months preceding M a y
25 for filing, two years for ap- $4.550-$5.990. (Domestic Relations
No. 7895;
pointment. (Thursday, February Court, Examination
No. 7429; Special Sessions Court,
21'.
No. 7572, and City Magistrates'
7.-)79. F O R E M A N O F B R I D G E Courts, No. 7868). Vacancies f r o m
P A I N T E R S , $6,070 for 250 days. time to time. Pee $4. Permanent
Public Works Department.
One employment in one of the above
current vacancy, others f r o m time courts as uniformed court officer
to time. Opens for fUlng February or interpreter f o r six months pre1. Fee $'). Permanent employment ceding the test date (April 27)
4 MORE NYC TITLES
in the department as bridge paint- to apply, for two years to ge a p STUDY
pointed.
iThursrday,
February S U B J E C T T O
T h e New Y o r k Cit:
Person21).
nel Department authorized City
A CUib-SdeotBcl Story I'ayii Tou
departments and agencies to dis$100,000.
tribute
position
classification
GREENBERG HEADS JEWISH
questionnaires to department .senFEDERAL EMPLOYEE GROUP
ior librarians, foremen of traffic
Toil can wrile a Slory, Play h'lction.
Mux Greenberg was installed as device maintenance,
psychiatric
Novel or a Book; at homo in spare
president of the Harvar Society social workers and social investiino. Multe biK money. A complete
OUIMHO. 14 ean.v Lessons In One Hook.
of Jewish Federal Employees. Les- tigators.
Sliowi i'oil How.
$2. Order Now I
ter Levey and Hy Cole" were inWrite: I'Iflt.K.MON CO.. Cotleise Station,
2 HONORED AT
lliil ;tO:», New York 30. N . V.
stalled as vice presidents.
FORT WADSWORTH
Thomas A. Swanton and Merritte C. Powell, civilian employees
at P o r t Wadsworth, Staten Island,
received gold and ruby emblems
f o r 25 years' ioyal service.
LEARN TO WRITE
Shoppers Service Guide
H/ /,P
ff ANTED—M
IlKI.l'
WAMFD
-
MALE
RETlHI'l)
Policeman
or
Fireman
for
supervition of normal teen-ase bo.v» in
downtown B'kiyn institution. Must live
til. Case and sroup work services on
premaies. Call Mr. Molliro. MAin 4-135;j.
AGKM
S
If
NECESSITIES
KEN VAN L O A N , Homes * Farms Olst
for NOItClE tiomea. Route t) East Oieen
bush Phones A l b a n j 77-8.121. 77 332'i
JOK'S BOOK SHOP, B50 Broadway at
Steuben St., Albany. N. T Books from
•U Publishers Open Eves. Tel. C-US:-}
rYPKWUITKKS KKM'KD
WB
(.'ivil S e r v i c e
OIOLtVmt
ro
TBB
Kxams
EXAM
A l l IMuUfs — Kasv
UOOM
l'<>rnis
M l M E O G U A f l l S . 4DD1NQ MACHtNKS
I N T C K N A T I O N A L T V I ' E W I C I T l t R CO
2'to K Kfilh SI
"
*
Sew or renewe<l subaorlptionj—to
iiagazine. Tel. Foundation 8-9199.
Buy your Arco Civil Service stud/ books
in Queens Jamaica Book Center, 146-16
Jamaica
Ave., near Sutphln Blvd
JA
0-5399
FREE FRENCH C L A S S
offered in e.\ohan«e fur otllce work, sewing
or publicity. M l ' 5-41110.
ALBANY
W H I T E s w a n R E S T A U R A N T . 215 Lark
St.
doors soutti ot State). Albany. N.
T. Lunches 11 :;10-!:, dinners 6 7:30. Monday thru Fri. Home cooking away from
home. AH pastry Sc rolls baked here. Available for banquets and parties on Saturdays.
00-80 capacity t'hone O'l S'JSS for reservationa
BOOKKEEPING
25
l,'<'|i<iir»
ALL L A N G U A G E S
TYPEWRITER C O
l l v n ::iiii s'l.. Nr^ \iiiiii i N
l ilrlara SvtUMH
OR
SKIHTS
I'o match youi )B( keti, StiO.OOO patterns
Luwson Tailoring & Weaving Co., 165
b'ulton St., Corner Broadway N T 0. t l
Needs only the space of A
kitchen chair. Exclusive
Aerator action—washes the
whole f a m i l y wash sparkling clean.
With
FOLD-IN
flfCrRfC-WRINGER
Gleaming white table top
for many household uses.
On wheels — stores easily
in closet.
(light upl wo.ih 8 asn-s
PIANOS
—
ORGANS
Save at B K t n v N ' i l Pl.V.MI M A I I T , Trl
City's
largest
piano-organ
store
l'^5
pianos and organs
11)47 Uentral
Ave..
Albany. N
V t'hone 8 855'.'
'Register
ed" Hiano Service Upper N
V Slate's
only discouut piann store
t A V B . Oueo
9 W ».
•
•
A
MONITOR
Product
DRAKE
Home Appliance, Inc.
119 Fulton St.
llA7-1fU
N. Y. J l . N. y.
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICER $3.00
TOLL COLLECTOR (Thruway)
$2.50
RAILROAD CLERK
$2.50
SANITATION MAN
$2.50
SURFACE LINE OPERATOR
$2.50
•
POLICE SERGEANT
$3.00
•
JUNIOR ACCOUNTANT
$3.00
PATROLMAN
$3.00
•
•
•
•
Simpit study inaferial. •xam qusttioni and answtri suitabU for th*
Stat* tat*.
ConMini official 1952, 1953, 1949 and 1947 Railroad Clarli quattioni
and answart. Rules and regulations for Transit Authority employees.
Municipal geography.
Previous civil service enaminafions held for Sanitation Man. Helpful
hints on how to pass the test. Reading interpretation.
Contains 1947, 1950 and 1952 eicaminations and answers. Also analysis of these tests. Driving regulations and Interpretation of rules
and reports. Mechanics of an automobile.
Last si> Sergeant axaminiations and answers. Police promotion quizzar.
Law enforcement evidence. Legal definitions and laws, terms and procedures used in police work.
Previous city examinations. How to open and close books. How to
operate the main ledger controlling accounts .Partnership accountg.
previous questions and answers. Electrical work.
(An A R C O PUBLICATION)
Five latest previous tests. Sped fic analysis of one other. Police
judgement; Laws and Procdures; Evidence; Vocabulary; Math; Reading Interpretation! First Aid.
a FEDERAL ENTRANCE EXAMS
$3.00
•
HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA TESTS
$4.00
CLERK (City)
$3.00
POSTAL CLERK-CARRIER
$2.50
SOCIAL INVESTIGATOR
$3.00
ELEVATOR OPERATOR
$2.50
•
STENO-TYPISTS (Practical)
$1.50
•
CHEMIST
$2.50
HI ELECTRICIAN
$3.00
•
$3.00
Exams will be open continuously to College graduates and College
seniors. Sample study questions and helpful hints.
•
•
any
BOOKS
—
YOU GET A HIGHER GRADE
•
MAGAZINES
PANTS
Also KeiilulH
5 minutes!
WANTED
0 0 you want a part tiraa bookkeeper)
1 can serve you evenings and Saturdays
—reasonable. Call BE 3 C089 or
wnie
B o i '.iUl c/o Civil Servli-o Leader. I>7
Duane St.. N Y C
Olinriitllei'tl
II
W O M E N : Earn part-time money at tioma,
addresaing envelopes ( y t p t n i or longhand)
for advertisers
Mail SI tor Instructtoo
Msnnal tetitnt tiow i M n e y - b w k luarantee) Sterllnc Valve Co.. Corona. N. T
Open Ull 6 SO p m
Typtwriicrg
Addliif Maehlats
Addr«i(in9 Machins
Mimaoqraphi
Washes 5 ibs.
MONITOR B O A R D O P E R A T O R Sc T Y P I S T
U to 6; Hve day weds. W A 1) 8107.
RESTAVHANTS
BOOKS WILL HELP
ui«ek>r i; ihc
- Male or Female
HELP
n K M T I I R E . Rlins
A T I ' K K K N VOU C.AN A H O K D
f u f n t t u r e . ap|)lianee«. gifts. elutliloK. ect.
at real sitTinK*. Municipal Kmpluyecs Her*
f i c e , K»um 4'!8. 19 Park Kow. I l l 7 a»9U.
For
HELP WANTED
A R C O CIVIL SERVICE
•
DO yOD N E E D M O N E Y ! Vou can add
$3B $50 a week to your Income by devoting IS hours or more a week sup
plyin*
Consmuers
with
llawlelsli
Pro.
ducts. Write RawlelEh's Box 1348. Altiany. N. I.
ANTED
M A K E E X T R A C A S H — Q U I C K L Y I Show
newest b i j I'alue I f l , $l.3r>. $1.50 asHortnientH o l Birthday, Get Well, Valentine.
Kaster Ureetinff Card.". Gift Wrappingra.
Stationeiy Gifts — in spare time. Big profit«. bonus. Friends, others buy on siiflit.
W r i l e for Samples on approval. Free Gift
Offer, details. Hedenkamp SOI Broadway.
Dept. Ci-3. New Y o r k
HOlSmOLD
HELP
tf^ANTED
Male & Femnlo
iLE
P A R T - T I M E . NI'W & iinuBUal oppor(unit.T
to atari siiect;s»iul business. Ininiediate income. No invest. Ideal lin»band & wife
team. UNireraity 4-0350
Tuetdar* J a n « M 7 S 9 , . l M f
Tells how to get a high school equivalency diploma in 90 days.
General background exams. Social studies U. S. History. General
Science, Spelling, Math, Literature, Grammar and English.
For beginning clerks in city civil service. Two previous examinations,
office practice, language, arithmetic.
(An A R C O PUBLICATION)
Covers all subjects of Civil Service examination.
A real addition to every social work, library. Practical instruction In
duties, laws, budgeting, interviewing public assistance. Previous exams.
Practical material for City exam. Previous tests. Vocabulary, Judge,ment proverbs and numerical relations.
Study and preparation for passing performance test for stenographers
and typists. Practice material, English and ipelllng.
STATE TROOPER
B STATIONARY ENGINEER
$3.00
•
$3.50
REFRIGERATOR LICENSE
ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPON
ISa fof 24 hour gpe^al deRviry
C. O. D.'i lOo eitr*
LEADER BOOK STORE
97 Duane St.. N o w York 7. N . Y.
Pleaie send m*
...^...eoplti of beaki eheclted abev*.
I •ncloM ohecl or menity order fof I-,-,,,-,.,,,
• 'f
V*• ^ 1 ' •
TiicKlay, January 29, 1957
C 1
150 Postal Cleric
Jobs to be Filled
In Brooklyn
V
I L
' » E K V I <; E
R E A L
T h e Brooklyn Post O f f i c e will
f i l l about 150 substitute clerk Jobs
f r o m the Brooklyn clerk-carrier
list Issued recently by the U.S. Civil
Service Commi.ssion. T h e list contains 998 names; 4,340 candidates
competed in the examination. NoL O N G ISLAND
tices went out to candidates on
January 15.
ST. ALBANS
SI 0.990
Ellgibles summoned for interDetached f r o m a newly decorated
vlew.<! by the post o f f i c e must pass lovely home. Vacant, interracial.
a medical te.st before appointment. Owner desperate—must sell this
week-end. Modern
kitchen, oil
P a y starts at $1.82 an hour.
heat, garage.
BO 3-3093
lEDERAL ACCOUNTANTS
T O MEET
BROOKLYN
T h e Federal Government Accountants of New Y o r k will meet
on Wednesday, January 30, at
8 P.M. in the Commuters Cafe, 32
Cortlandt Street, New Y o r k City.
,
' L ^ A b E It
EilKl A
HOUSES — HOMES -
•
J , ; f
Page tlcTca
E
PROPERTIES
THE BEST GIFT OF ALL — YOUR OWN HOME
I.K<i,\r, NOTICE
CITATION
T H E I'EOI'I.K OK T H K ST.\TE OT
NKW YORK
By Ihc Giai'e cif (J(nt I'ri'e anil Inclppcndent
TO
«
HENRY
ROXHURGH.
as noniioillary
Exwiiliii- oiiil a/lminintralor nanicil \iii(li>r
the La I Will anil Ti'Hiaincnt of
Taiil
Woritz RoHfnlici'K. dporascd
K U N E S T I N E lalsn linovm as E R N A GAI.I l ' K I ) ROSENBERG, if livinif. anil if rieaJ,
to IHT iinUnowii cxci'iilois. ailminislcaloin,
ilistribnif'cs and assiKn*
bi'iiiir IMe piTsonB inliTfsleil as irwlltnrs,
IrB.^toi.'K, ili-visi-es, l)i-ni'fii'faric». (Ii»lrilmIccs. or oltini-wifte in llie estato of P A U L
JIOKITZ ROSENHERG, lale of llle jjpthpr
hinila. ilpirawpil. who al t\»e time of hi8
ilcath wan a «l airless rcsiilint of
the
Nethpflanils.
Sciltl (li-cetliiKs;
Kpnn the pptilioil of l l l i n O l . F CAI.LM.VNN. iPBiilinsr at 117 I t Union Tltrn))iUe, Kew (Jai-ilcns, Ni'w Voilt.
You and i'ai.h of .volt are hcfoby intcd
to bhow
Pause before the Surropate'B
t om-t of New York t'ounly. held at the
Hall of Ri'i'ords in the county of New
York, on the 1st day of Mari-li, li)57, at
balf-piu^t tort o'l'Iofk in tlie forrnoon of
that day, why Iho acoount of proiwdine-B
of RUDUr-E
COr.TJMANN, as Ani'iliary
AdniiniKt.ator wilti the Will Annexed of
J'AUL M O R I T Z
ROSENHERG,
deeeasid,
•.iioulil not be judicially settled anil why
K deeree Bhoidd not be made and entered
juilieiallj
deelariiiK
that
ERNESTINE
(also known iiB E R N A C A L I C K I I ROSENHI-:UG( former w i f e o t said deeetlent, pre
ileiioased feaid dei-edent. and tixiuK eouusel
f.B of Ri nor.E C A I . L M A N N , in the mini
of
I..•1(10.0(1, of which f l . ' l d n . o o has
b'''u V)aid on ai-i-ount.
lu I Hllmofty where of. we have r-aused
tlH« fleal of (hp Surroffate's Court of said
rounly of
New
York
to he heretuito
BlIiTe'd.
(SRM.)
Witness, Honorable S. S A M U E L
DiKAI.CO u. SurroKatP of our
vaid eountyC al the Coiuity of
New York, (he IVth day of
•laiuiar.v, in liie year of
our
l.iiril one 1hou-and nine Inmdred
Hiid f i f t y S(;ven.
I ' l l l l . l l ' A. nON'AHITR
Clerk of the Siu'i-ojjate's t^ourt
• r i ' A T I O N — T H E P E O P L E OF T H E
S P A T E OE N E W YORK By the Grace of
lind Free and luilepeudeut
TO E R N E S T P A V E A N T O S . R E V . JOHN
P VI'l'ALEONinAS, NIKOI.ETA OIVAKOS
Nil ( ) L E T A
RYE.
KINODO.M
OE
CREECE (Inheritanec Tax Colle.torl, A T
TAI.OS
C.
CAHAMITROS,
SINIJEMOS
l l E l - b l N l K E S K I N O T I T O S OF CHICAGO
NASSOIT-SIFLZIIERCER
&
COMPANY
A I T I E I O R O H E R T I E I i O . .M.D., CONSOL
I D A T E D EDISON CO. OF N. Y.. INC.,
P E N E L O P E S A L A A S I.ASKAS. Individually and aa sole iliKtributee of M I C H A E L 1)
S A L T A S , Deceased. P E N E L O P E A N G E U - l i
D E M E T K I O S .lOHN S A L T A S , A N A S T A S I A
A. I.OCLIS, E F S T R A T I O S A. I.OtlLIS, AS.
TOXIOS LOI LIS, ORESTES I'.OULIS, NICHOLAS l>OULIS, CHRISTOS LOITLIS, I'ANA(;H10S T A P H O S beluc the persons intei-eBteil as creditors, leffatces, devisees,
benctleiai'ies, distributees, or otherwise in
the estate of ARSENIOS S A L T A S , deceased, who at (lie (ime of his death w;i8
a resident of H I East 17lli Street, Manhattan, New York Cit.v SEND ( i R E E T l N U :
(•poll the petition of A N T H O N Y CAMBontAKlS,
residing
at
'.'ru Chestnut
Blreet, Nut ley. New .fcrsey
You and each of you arc hereby cited
to show cause before the
Suri-osale's
Court of New York Counly, held at the
Hall of Reeords in tile County of New
York, on the •;(llh day of February. 11157.
at half-Past ten o'clock in tlie foi'euoon
of that tiay. why the aeeouut of proceedings of
ANTHONY
( : ; A M B 0 r R A K l S as
Executor should not be judicially settled.
JN T E S T I M O N Y W H E R E O F . « o have
eaused the seal.of (he Surrotrale's
Court of the said (-•oun(y of New
York (o be hereunto ailixod.
W I T N E S S . H O N O R A H L E S. SAMriEL 1)1 FAI.CO. a Surrogate of
our said county, al the County
of New York, the l ( l ( h day of
Jautiary
the year of our Lord
one thousand nine luindred and
lllirty-scven
(L 5 )
P H I L I P ' A . nONOHI E
Clerk of the Suirogatt's
Court
r o x . I.EO KING—Pursuant lo an order
« f Hon. S. SiiiniicI Ui Falco, Surrogate of
Ihe County of New York,
NOTICE IS HEREHY G I V E N , a.'cordIng to law, to all persons having claims
a;;aliist LEO K I N G FOX, late of the Counly of New York, deceased, to present the
same, with the vouchers tlicreof, to the
u^llW'rsigned. Executor of the Last Will and
'rctotament of the said deceased, in care of
Lucien R. Tharauil, HO Broad Street, New
York 4 . N. Y., attorney fo«- the Executor,
• n or befora the MUth of July 1!I67.
Dated this JKih day of Januaiy. I!lft7.
FKEDERICK W
HlLDl M.
Fxeeutor
r r C I E N R. T H A R A I ' D .
Altoroey for Executor
Om.e i P (). \.|dlebB.
%i) llrottil sireet, BuroU|h of Manhattan
i>t* Voik i, K. I .
LONG I S L A N D
F
•
>
•
BROOKLYN'S
•
BEST BUYS
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
CUMMINS REALTY!
•
•
•
DIRECT FROM OWNERS
ALL VACANT
Bedfotd A r e
(No«tr«nd>
»
tamilj,
Brownstcne, I S rooms. Oil, Parauet,
Brass pluinbinf Down payment, $2,500.
St Marks Ave 8 family Modern Qoo(3
Income Vaeaney I'rire S19.S00 Cash
.'B3.600
H A L S E T S T . — ( B u t h w i c k ) ? family, » 5
car f a r a t o . All » « c a n t . Price $11,000
Flushing, L. I. (Spcdal at 7Btb KtJ.H
7 room trodern, Briek, Seml-Detaehed,
Garage
Price $13,000
Atlantic Aye
(Nostrandl 3 story. Store Oil. Price |
58,600 Cash, $1,200
Dean St, ( A t N. » A v e . i 2 story bricli,
2 car garage. Price $T.OOO Cash $900
Uany SPECIALS tyallaMe lo GU
DON'T WAIT ACT TO DAT
A s k for L e o n a r d C u m m i n s
! • Macnuiigui 81
Brooklrag
P R . 4-6611
Ilper Sundays
II
>•
«
IlllfHi'T'i •• I '
I.F.GAI.
.NOTICE
H U N T I N G T O N , COLLIS P . — T l T - V r l O N —
T H E P E O P L E OP T H E S T A T E OF NEW
YORK
By the Grace of God Free and
Independent, T o W A L T E R R. P O W E R S
a« administrator c. t. a. of the e»t.atc of
Collis
H.
Sammis.
deceased:
FOSTER
FOUNDATION: ANNA
HY.A.TT
HUNTI N G T O N and J. P. M O R G A N & CO., INCORPORATED. as executors of the cst.^to
of
Archer
M.
Hnntinston,
deceased:
S E C U R I T Y F I R S T N A ' J I O N A L B A N K OP
f.OS A N G E L E S , as surviving executor of
the estate of Henry E. Huntington, de^
ceased: H E L E N K, P E L L , as surviving
executor of (he estate of Edith H. Wake,
neui Kenilrick deceased: COLLIS H U N T .
I N G T O N H O L L A D A Y , as executor of the
estate of Caroline H. Holladay, deccas(.d
T H E HROOKS B A N K
& T R U S T COM
P A N Y , as executor of
the estate of
Adeline Dunbar, deceased: E V E R E T T H
(JOSLEE and COLLIS E. GOSLEE.
«!
e.xecutors of the estate of Harriet L
Dunbar, deceased: L O R A L A K I N BROWN
I N E Z E. L A K I N :
BERTHA
L. B E N T
L E Y - .lAMES W . W H I T N E Y :
WALTER
E. W H I T N E Y ; P A U L W H I T N E Y : MEKV I N S. GILES as executor of the estate
of Mary Pardee Giles, deceased: M E K V I N
S. GILES, as sole surviving executor of
the estate of Mary E. Lewis, deceased:
S I D N E Y H. P A R D E E : as eiilwtituted administrator of tlie estate of Franklin J.
Pardee,
deceased:
MARGARET
WATK E Y S BOEHNER, as executrix o l the
estate of Birdella WatUcys. deceased (also
known
as
Burdella
Watkeysl :
MARY
WASHBURN
ABEL:
MILDRED
CUISS
CATLIN:
THE
HANOVER
BANK,
as
ancilUary administrator c. t. a. of the
estate of Helen CranviUe-Barker deceased:
EDWARD
D. E.
ANTOINE:
ROBERT
M A R T I N : C. D. M E D L E Y and ( i L A D Y S
H U N I T N G T O N , being .all the persons who
are entitled absolutely or contingently by
the terms of (he will or by operation of
la.w or otherwise to share in the funds
or in the proceeds o[ iwoperty held ,by
The Hanover Bank as trustee of the trusts
created by Artii-lcs Kifdi and Sixth of
tli^ I.ast Will and Testament of Collis
P. Huntington,
deceased, who
at
the
time of his death was a resident of the
(•(ranty of New York, SEND G R E E T I N G S ;
Upon the petition of Tlie Hanover Bank,
having its principal ollice at 70 Broiulw.l,v, B<u'oueh of .Manhattan, New York
City. Y'ou and each of you are hereby
cited to show cause beore the Surrosate's
(^ourt of New York County held at the
Hall of Records in the County of New
York on the 'itKh day of February 11157,
at half-p;uit (en o'clock in the forenoon
of (hilt day, why the accounts and supplemental accoun(s of procreedings of The
Hanover Bank, as (rlisice of the trusts
lo rthe benelit of Arabella D Huntington
and Archer M. Hun(ing(on and remaindermen under Articles F i f i h and Six(h of
the I.ast Will and Testament of Collis P .
Huntington,
dcceaseil,
should
not
be
judicially
settled
and
why
said
will
should not be coustrned as lo the dispo.
sitioii of the remainders of said trusts,
and why a distribution of the funds of
said trusts to the persons entitled thereto
should not be direi-ted.
IN
TESTI.MONY W H E R E O F we have
caused the seal of the Surrogate's
Court of the said Counly of New
York
lo be hereunto
atlixcd.
W I T N E S S , H O N O R A B L E 9. SAMI ' K L D1 FALCO, a Surrogate of
our said Coun(y, s( (lie Couu(y
of New York, the 10(h day of
.l.inuary ni Ih eyetu* o four Lord
eiiH (hoilsand nine hiinilred and
tlKy-seven.
P H I L I P A. DONOHVE
(SEAL)
Clerk of the Suirogates Court
\
i
Gall JA 6-8269 i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
LONG
WHY PAY
BAISLEY PARK
RENT
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
nol.M.S—I
family B rooms,
modern bath
& kitclx-n, oil
heat, 2 "car garage,
llnished
basement with bar, detacheil 40
xlOO, Owner's sacrilice, ^1,000
down.
Price
$11,900
V A N \\\(K <;\KI)KNS — 6
room brick Kmieh. 5 j e a r old.
40x100 modern
lhiMi-ou». oil
hoal. copptT plumbing, many
extr{i». $1,500 down
$13,900
BPRINGFIELD,
GARDENS—7
rnt. Colonial modern, -15x1 DO,
«il
heat,
cotiper
plumbing
garage. tLOOO d'
Asking
$15,900
Lakeside
ST. ALBANS
Take O v e r G l M o r t g a g e
Area
CASH $290 Gl
Fully
Detached
ISLAND
Home
5 oversized rooms,
modern
kitchen & bath, o,l slcain.
Full
basemenl. d i i u ' w a y
*
garage. All eviras liicliided.d
Keduced to SlO.'.'iul for uuicU
lale.
B lll-l
$2500 CASH ALL
$85 Monthly Pays All
Conlcmporary American Colonial, tl fill rooms, .'I bedrooms.
-Modern kitchen, ;!fl f t . living
room. Full basement, garage,
Kxtras include si-rcens, stormv,
Venetian
blinds:
built
in
breakfast nook. Now vacant,
po.fsession 2 weeks. Keduced
to ¥l'a„-.00 f o r (lulck sale,
B-.Srtfl
32S ether clieice 1, 1. 3 famly hornet located Richmend Hill,pue«niVillag«, Jamaica.
E-S'S'E-X
LIVE
G l & FHA
M O R T G A G E S SECURED
.
^
112-52 17Stli P L A C i
ST. ALIANS
JA 6-8269
A
r
Call 24 Hour,
^
OPPORTUNITIES
Barber shop - BeaiKy Parlor . neltcatesstrn - other business propeides. call
lor e a r j f appointment
to n e these
e.xeellenl buys.
•
SPRINGFIELD
ST. AL,BArvS
1 family, brick .-itlai-hcd, slone, J .-ar
garage. :;0
ll)() plot. H roonif. New
kitchen .wall (o wall to wall I'arpKiiig,
ex(ra l,-iva(ory—o(her ex(raH,
S13.000
GARDENS
B'i
rooms. Ranch, briik on 4 0 x i n 0
plot, :t bedrooms, wall to wall .arpetins', refrigerator, oil heat, all iiiode; n
other extras,
NEW HOMES
HOLLOS
3 family brick,
and 4 rooms,
both apts, vacant on title finished
basement, with kitchen in basement, steam healed garage,
all
modern eiiuipmcnt. Many
extras.
Cash 10 all $:i,500. Full
price
$1!).500,
SPRINGFIELD
GARDENS
1 family, cathcdral dining room,
finished basement, l.irge plot, a
dream house with :J large bedrooms, call for appoin(ment (o see
this
special
—
price
$14,000,
Terms arranged.
ST. A L B A S S
1 family, 5 rooms, finished basement, large plot, garage, beautiful
tree-lined
street
with
all
conveniences, Price $10,000.
Terms
arranged.
Act Quickly I
OTHER 1 AND a FAMU,IES
MALCOLM REALTY
II4-I\:< r a m i p r i Hlvd, 81. Alhsn.
HOIIIs 8-0707 — 0708
ST. ALBANS
4
& 3 rooms
oil
$13,i50
$13,850
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
oil
Lee Roy Smith
192 11 LINDEN BOULEVARD. ST. ALBANS
LA 5 0033
BRAND NEW HOMES — BRAND NEW HOMES
L O C A T I O N — B a i s l c y Pk., St. Albans. S. Ozone Pk., Hempstrail.
T Y P E S O F H O M E S — 3 betlroom Ranch Homes, Cape Cod Bun.
galows, 2 faniil.v Homes. Semi-attached & detaclied.
All brick. Brick & Shingle, Johns-Mansvilie ShinRle,
E X T R A S — I n wall ovens, birchwood cabincts, Hollywood baths
vcnitlan blinds, choice of decor, fixtures and color
scheme.
F I N A N C I N G — G : I,'s Down P a y m e n t as low as $1,000, 25 lo
30-yr. mortgage arranged. Low carrying charges,
C I V I L I A N — L o w down payment with F H A or Conventional mortgage arranged.
CALL OR W R I T E OUR OFFICE F O R AN E A R L Y
A P P O I N T M E N T T O SEE T H E S E E X C E L L E N T V A L V E S
ALLEN
&
EDWARDS
GOOD
BUYS
ST. ALBANS — 1 family brick. Asking $17,000
8 rooms, steam heal, modern
SPRINGFIELD
kitchen and bath,
GARDENS
—
garage,
Asking $11,000
6 room frame, steam oil, modern kitchen and bath, giirage.
$12,950
Lew Down Payment
Mortgage! Arranged
PLEASE, P H O N E F O R A P P O I N T M E N T T O
INSPECT
MANY OTHER 1 and 2 FAMILY HOMES
C A L L J A 6-0250
The Goodwill Healty C o
WM R I C H
Uo. Broltei lieai Kstate
lOB-lil New tnrU llliil. i a n m l r *
up.
Vacant 6 yrs, old brick & asbestos shingle, 5 rooms & finished
basement. I ' a baths, v/blinds, storms-screens, oil heat.
3 bedrooms, brick & asbes'fos
I V i baths—Excellenf buy,
detacfied,
J It 2 tomijy kemet. Pr/ced from $10,000
Also busintt
propert/es.
ST. ALBANS — 1 family home. Asking $13,900.
$16,900
MOLLIS
6 large rooms,
G o o d buy at
tliiinle. C
b.iih. L.,w
Prompt Personal Service — Open Sujidays and E v e n l n n
OLympia 8-2014 8-2015
Lois J. Allen
Licensed Real Estate
Andrew Edwards
ir.8-18 Liberty Ave.
Brokers
lamalca N Y
GOOD VALUE!
Two family
heat.
INBAYSIDE
Semi attai-hed, Bri.k
&
rooms .'1 bedroonts, 1 ' i
doun payment.
$16,800
Oilier
In St. Albans. Hollii
Springfield Gardeni, Etc.
.A
IN Q U E E N S
y
FOR BETTER HOMES
^Jk..
INTfR R A C I A L
BUSINESS
ARTHUR WATTS, J r A
Dally
4
4
4
4
JAMAICA, L. L
. • A X . 7-7900
<
<
<
<
4
143-01 Hitlside Ave.
IIUI.I.I8 — 2 family detached
brick
4> Slu.i-o,
rooms
down,
up, patio, knoHy
pine 'flnished basemenl,
I'ar
garage. 40x100. f o r onick sale,
$1,500 down,
CI 4
9 0 0
Price
•
i
A. B. THOMAS
N.I
116-12 Merrick Blvd.. St Albans. N Y LAurelton 8 CriK6. 8 U719
City: 209 W I2.5th St.
9:30 to > P.M - Sunday 10 to 7 P.M
Q U E S T I O N S on civil service
L O O K I N G INSIDE
neut and
and
Soclil
Security
answeri'tl. T'cws b* II. J. Berna'-d appears Questions answered un civil ser
Ad;li\'ss i;:!itor, Tlie l.t'.itler, !)7 orten in T h e IJC.^DER. Don't vice. Address Editor I'he L L A D E K
97 D u w i « Street, New I'ork 7, S.Y
l ) u a n « Street, New i'ork 7, N. X. oiiss U.
S O C I A I S E I T R I T ^ i oi p u b l i c
emp1o,vees Follow Hie m-hs on thi(
important subject in The Leader.
f l «
Twiv
C I V I L
* AUTOMOBILES
*
I B R V I C B
L E A D E R
TMMlar, Jmiiwt
AUTOMOBILES
AUTOMOBILES
VOLUME
DEALER
NtM/'57 FORD
Attention Civil Service
Employees Only!
special f o r Civil Sprvicft TTmployeoi
I
I
Shop pvfiryonp Rt'T
Don*t full to nhop iit
HKtOKR YOU HLYt
FIPfAL CLOSE-OUT
Now for the first time Civil
Service omployoet can own a
'57 FORD
with NO MONEY DOWN-3 YEARS TO PAY
W e will have your credit checked and cleared in
3 hours. N o gimmicks, ne red tape. T h i s plan
has been worked-out f o r Civil Service employees
only! and does not apply te the general public.
All cars at substantial discounts!
m
^
"IN THE HEART
f
RIDGE"
OF BAY
entli St. & Ft. HnniUloii
P'kwa.T, B-klyn, N. V.
8H 5-«3!l . I'L a-SOO.-J
A
M O N T H
Includei
Taxes
&
Only $150 DOWN
Act NOW
3227.
SENIOR
ACTUARIAL
C L E R K , $3,320-$4.180, State I n surance Fund,
Department
of
L.abor. T w o openings. New Y o r k
City. Permanent employment in
the Fund in grade 3 positions
or higher for one year preceding
the test date, March 2. (Friday,
February 1).
3228.
PRINCIPAL
CLERK
(PERSONNEL),
$3,840-$4,790.
New Y o r k Office, State Insuranca
Fund. Labor Department.
One
opening. Permanent employment
in the New Y o r k office of cha
Fund in a grade 7 or higher
clerical job for one year preceding the test date, March 2. ( F r i day, Febiuarj^ 1).
3229. D R . ^ F T S M A N , $3,320-$4.180, Public Works Department.
Permanent employment in the
department in a grade 5 or hir.'.'.Rr
drafting or engineering position
for six months preceding the test
date, March 2. (Pi'iday, February
1).
3230. E N G I N E E R I N G
TECHNICIAN.
$3.320-$4,lB0,
Public
iWorks Department.
Same
requirements as for 3229. T e s t data
March 2. (Friday, February 1).
\iVrl
6 PASS
SEDAN
R U S S E L L
E.
LOWELL
Insiiranc*
G * n « Sava
Leu t a r l e l a
A.. f.r
212-50 JAMAICA AVENUE
ALSO A-i USED CARS
Open III lOP.M • H0llis 5 8200
U « l l f H I •
I N C
<„r
Atl»i>tlo Are.) Serrlcing
Bklyn, N. Y.
iorili Over 40 ¥e»rt
-55 BUICK Sed. $1480
'53 BUICK Riv.
860
•52 BUICK Sed.
390
M E I I C U I I Y
And What a Deal
if you iiava a Tradtl
Final Clo.«e-Ottt
(41 -56 IMercury-s
(1)
'56 Lincoln
Sucrlflced Priceil!
NO FIXED DOWN
YEARS TO PAY
AUTO
• FS-I on the Spot
• Low Rates
Attention
LU 5-SOOO
• $20 Down for Qualified Risks
• Easy Monthly Payments
PREFERRED INS. BROKERAGE C O .
CO 7.S414
AUTO INSURANCE
ROY DOUNAVENT
UN 5-3411
AVE.
AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE
DAVID I. GERTNER 384 EA^T U^stret
COMPULSORY
AUTO INSURANCE
• I'li-aonal Attention lo A l l Inqiviilee
• 't'inio I'aynienis Arranged
• Immediate C o v e r a j e by Phono It
ViMi Qualify
• Sit
Obtained
ROBERT R. BOTFELD
lilt Mnldrn T.une, N.YX'.
MpaelalUf
WH 8-«U»8
AUTOMOBILE
I I J S U R A N C I
I
LEFTOVERS—BIG
«
COMPULSORY
LIABILITY AUTO
INSURANCE
14} 4tli Av«.. Bklyn . SO. B-4351
IIB PlatbMili Avi., Biilyii
NE 1-1 BOO
Island Motor Co., Inc.
Ouetni
IL 8-S7n
• MONTHLY PAYMENTS •
JACKSON MOTORS C O .
Autboriied
DeSoto-Plymoutb
Dealei-*
tfl-1.1 NORTHERN HdUI.EVAKD
IL 7-«IIM>
Dealers
S-6M)U
1954 CHEVS
1 Yr. Written
Guarantee
ANY CAR
•
ANY DUVEfl
•
122 FIFTH A V i . (44tii ST.)
nuTO
insuRiiniE
»795
1957
PLATES
IIL A-.tAM
•
EASY PAYMENTS•LOW COST
cAu
'
•
•
down on
oioit IA iroforrod ratlnit
• t* •
•
"L" MOTORS
SHOP
US AMD SEE
G O TO "L"
•
Authorized Dodje-Plymouth Dealer
"Briuulwnf * 17Mh St., N .
l\
WA, s-7seo
T. O. MEEHAN & CO., INC.
INSURANCE
BROKERS
'25
NOBODY. BUT NOBODY
UNDERSELLS
MO 5 - 8 5 3 0
Alt Sorvleo lasiiraiico
337 I . 149«<i Strot
FAST PLATE SERVICE
Onci
Sokoll & Lowenthal
Caiirt Ht. Km I ' i l l
Bklyn:
Bronx: MIO Nelrote Ave. Km
AUTO INSURANCE
•jr^'llWi^im
ALL FORMS OP IN3DRANCE
14* BROADWAY
BE 3-5233
LOW D O W N PAYMENT
on CompuUcry IntUfonce
McnlDly Payments - Bank Plan
CARS. TRUCKS, CABS. MOTORCYCIES
A U T O
I N S U R A N C E
• N» Itttwn I'aynient
• Inatnlliiieiit
Freiilluiii« urraiiKed • Open Dally Till
—><»t. « Sun Till 4.
YOUNft BROKERAOE
•S BUka A>r., Hklyn
UI e-«a«0
(IRIIN BROKERAGE T R S - 8 1 ' 2 0
36 Court St «
ttrooKiyn
:
BAUMEISTER & BAUMEISTER
•
Plates At
BANK TIIMI PAYMENTI
3-T«iie, Kiiiilpiieil
Polo Oround Motors, AU 6-1910
ISS St. & Amttordam Avo..-N.Y.C.
1956 CHEVROLETS — ALL
MOD. at Terrific Sovinqi
Park Slope Chevrolet, i n c .
Dodge-Plwioulb
TR
BRIDGE MOTORS Inc.
8302 9ueens Blvd.
62 WILLIAMS ST., N. Y. C.
SW S-M02
HA 2-S767
ml.)
75 FlatliiKh Ext., Ilowntuwn Bklyn
BRAND NEW I.Et^ OVERS
AT TERKiriC SAVINGS
Alio DMitr In Used C « r (
P. M. SYMONS & C O .
do.
ARMA MOTORS. INC.
IBM
Elmlmrft
Delivery
RICE PONTIAC
Authorized
AZnA St.)
af
Immediate
j U B t h S t . a, Bwoy . LO 8-7400
|II5
-ISS
Dodges - Plymouths
Ceatft
DISCOUNTS
1957 PONTIACS
"MEYER THE BUYER"
l « » M t t 4 Car
-No Cash Down!-
Plates and Liability Insurance
Included in Payments
For Quick Serv/ce Call IL 8-9200
n'n P'ymt wkly
•a:l I'lyfii Sedan
»'J
'i't:! Ford
ti
•Kl Hnlrk
3
•A:< t'knv nel Air
3
(Hil» Mwlaii
3
'S:t Merc Mnnl
3
'.'>1 Stiide t'liHUiii
3
M3 ItIdH Air fond
4
•at I'uiit thief
4
*51 t'tiryiiler linii
5
ANNEX AUTO CORP.
_ _ _ _ 77-31 Oueins Blvd. _ _ _
1956 PONTIACS
|
|
« « • « Onm* Csnrourae — I83ril StrMt
t'Y 6-4343
OR ANY FORM
OP IHSURANCE
312 ST. NICHOLAS
re K-'.!7INI
I8TK llroailnoT
l\r
PL. T-OMIO
AUTOMOBILES
Authori/pd Ford Dealer
100 NeDliine Ave., Bklyn.
M 6-8S7«
M O T O R S ;
•{IS WII.I.V.S overliauled Bngine ..
'5<) Meri'iir/ HriUii
'.55 P l y m . 4 dr 8 c j l . P o w e r i m e $144S
•55 Chev. 4 dr fi cyl. Powerglido $14';5
'65 P o i d 2 dr 8 d . Fairlano
Fordamatic
$1475
Wolff Motors, Inc.
EZEY
COMPARE
INSURANCE
I MOTT STREET. H. Y. C.
CI S-O^AO
FLI.L I VEAK OUAKANTEE
Anywhere In 1', H,
InrhidlitK Tarti* Si Ijl'bor
:
•
J
iiilliorjzci) Lincoln-Mercury Dealer
Ut^O
AVE. (Ul ST.)
Open E r e s
Falcon Bukk
AUTHORIZED BUICK DEALER
I B l j t St. & Grand Concourse, Bronx
•
RKUCKMCK ni.VD.
,
'57
$1890
Courteous
STUTZ SALES
QUEENS V I L L A G E , L. I.
— See it here NOW
YoueanhiiifaBMickhomus!
SEDAN
New r o i k i oldest Studebaker dealer
ofTei'fl f u l l y re-condttloned and Kuaranteed Used Cars at tremendous eavinss.
SO models to c h o o i e f r o m .
USED CARS
If you can buy any c a r . .
'58 BUICK
STUDEBAKER
HK.\UQUARTKK»
New Cur* at Klflit Prleee
AMERICA'S No.l MERCURY DEALER
I I HART 1285 Bedford Ave.,
Ua
(Continued from Pace 9)
Permanent employment In a Correction institution for one year
as sergeant or three years (ona
year as kitchenlceeper and twa
years as prison guard) preceding
the te-st date, March 2. (Friday,
February 1).
3221. S E R G E A N T ,
$4,650-$5.760. Department of Correction.
Permanent employment as pri.son
guard In a Correction Institution
for two years preceding the e x amination date, March 2. (Fi-1day, February 1).
3225. P R I N C I P A L C L E R K . $3,840-$4,790,
Department
of
Health. Permanent
employment
in the Department in a grade 7
or hieher position for one year
preceding the test date, March
2. (Friday, February 1).
3226. P R I N C I P A L F I L E C L E R K ,
$3,840-$4.790.
Department
of
Health. One vacancy. Division of
Laboratories and Research, A l bany. Permanent employment as
senior file cleric for one year preceding the test date, March 2.
(Friday, February 1).
— For Civil Servlcs Workers
New '57 FORD
$ 5 0
Dealer
1
^
Used Cor Lot
B3I7 4th Ave.
n-kljn, N. Y.
Nr. Belt Pkwny nUtli St.
Ferry Exit OE 8-61««
SPECIAL
Aiillinrlieil
1B8I Jerome Ave. (177 St.)
Bronx
CV 0-3100
mERCURY
^
CONDON MOTORS
New Cor Showroom
the NEW
" 9 5 7
HIGHEST TRADE-IN A L L O W A N C E S
BRING IDENTIFICATION
For Fast Action Call G E 9-6186
29,1917
USE OUR I'AYMENT PLAN
MU 2-3BU
•
NO
INTIREST
C H A R G E S
I
• r i l l ?
T i m d a y , Jmiiiary
1 , .
29,1957
Overseas Jobs
Investigator Test
Feb. 9 for 775
the Azores, Japan, Korea, Tceland,
About 755 candidates will be
North A f r i c a and Newfoundland called to the written test f o r New
in a wide variety of titles in- Y o r k City Investigator, scheduled
cluding
engineers,
librarians, for Saturday, February S.
The
teachers, itenographers, electric- four-hour test, weighted 100, will
ians, auto mechanics and others. be held at Beward Park H i g h
Duty tours are one to two years. School, 350 Grand Btreet, N e w
Free
transportation,
post
ex- Y o r k City, starting at 8:30 A.M.
change privileges are among the
T h e Personnel Department disbenefits. In some areas, quarters, qualified 200 of the 959 candidates
heat and utilities allowances are who applied for the $4,000 Job.
included. Age limits are 21 to 55 T h e r e
are
»bmit
66
current
for men, 21 to 45 f o r women. Ap- vacancies.
Accounting and AuditingMale and female public ac- ply to A. Baglino, Chief, Overcountants are needed for two- seas Recruitment Bianch, 111
COURT
REPORTING
year duty tours as auditors, con- East 16th Street, New York City.
Court Reporting dictation rectrollers, and accountants in the
ords. T w e n t y discs, three speeds,
F a r Ea.st, Formosa, Indo-China,
perfect condition. Reasonable CO.
6-2559 A f t e r elx.
Korea and other countries. Salaries range from $8,500 to $12,500, and benefits include those
T h e Brooklyn A Hospital Lb In
for travel, housing and others,
in addition to a liberal home and urgent need of volunteer aids. Dr.
OAt a EvI. co-so.
OU» OIPIOMA ADMITS TO COUICi
annual
leave system.
Families Alexander W . Kruger, ho.spital
DOKO HALL ACADEMY
may accompany appointees ex- manager, announced.
Nt«r at 17 SMnH STREET
Persons with experience in nurscept to Korea, Apply to R, h.
AfoMO ' i ;
a.ssistance, library
«ervice,
Lamkin, Recruitment Office, R e - ing
a M<Wtt c«tlta( • flMll Nsw •
cruitment
Branch,
Interna- teaching a foreign language, or
tional
Cooperation
Adminl.'itra- Just good conversationalists, are
all valuable. Dr. Kruger «ald. Call
TO VETERANS SERVICE
tion, Wa.shington 26, D. C.
TErrace
6-6600, extension 226.
ORGANIZATIONS
OF
T h e r e are vacancies In Alaska,
W O R L D WAR I INC.
T h e r e are many overseas Jobs
now open for business and professional persons and technical
specialists.
Women may apply for Jobs as
Kocrelaries and court reporter* in
the Far East and other locations
by contractinK S. Finkel, U. S.
Employment Office, 1 East 19th
Stieet, New York City, or at varlotii State Employment Service
offices throughout the State.
•
•
•
U l T R A
J U t T
f M A I I T
I I K I
I L i C T I I I C
C L O C K I
Separate Clasies F a n
FOR PERSONAL SATISFACTION
FOR JOB PROMOTION
FOR ADDITIONAL EDUCATION
S e n d for B o o k l e t CSE
Mcelinir
6:30
to
8:30
Sit*
ATTENTION
INTENSIVE COURSES
W* M<U Kot Accept Von
l l n l a a a W c Can Teiieh TOD a n d
Help Vao Get a Job
COMPLETE
Write or
PRINTING
Photo OfFset
LINOTYPE
PREPARATION
Phone
for
Information
Eaitern School
AL 4-1029
133 Ind Ave., N. Y. 3 ( a t a St.)
Prepare for Federal Examt la
MIM. Office AppUance Operator
Offnet DoplicatinK Pre«« tlperator
Llthofraphlc 0(r»et PrM«maii
8lii( Machine Operator
Salaries Rang* up to $3.01 br.
VRRt OUUU KAKMINO finvBB
All Teta Approrad
rtf ai rum lawa at m « * m eM»
Write rsr f t - Bwiklel •
333 «tli A « *
MANHATTAN
PRINTING
I New
*
*
*
*
Lead Wiping
Pipe Caulker
Plumbing Inspecter
Heusing Inspecter
Torfc 14
C L A S S i S START
T h i i r t . J o n : 31 t t
' W A 4-Ba47
AI.L i i m W A T i T O P AT O i m IMMIH*
Coll
EnglnNring Exams
MONDELL INSTITUTE
aao W . 4 1 S t . H e r T r l b B I d g , W 1 7 2 0 8 7
Ovor 46 yra Preparing T h o u e a n d e
for Civil Servlnc E n r l n e e r i n g E i a m i i
Y Mt A
SOCIAL SECVRITi; f o r p u b l i c
employees. Follow the news on this
important subject In T h e L E A D ER weekly.
Where LIRR t All Subwayt Mee<
1
HIGH SCHOOl I
AT HOME!
DIPLOMA
I
Indeiitd by iM^Int xlufaltti, Themondi *( «ur fiaduelti have ftne an t« ktlUt lobi,
ilcher llvn and echitvad aultlandina lacaidi In avar 500 diffarant fallagai and linlvai|lll«i.
$i manlhly <avafl oil baaki and Iniltuillan lafvlcai. If yau aia 17 ar avar ond have laN
lihaal, land fat Intatailing fREE baoklall
Phen* BRyant f-2604 Doy or Nlqht or Writ*
A m e r i c a n S c h o o l lE$fablUhed
7 8 9 7 , Not
Dept. CSL, 130A W. 42 St.. New York 3i
Sand ma yaur fUff l«,»aaa
NAMI
taaklal Ibol ihawi ka» I
<on lai a Hl(h tchaal dl.
plania SI Kama In my >pa>a
AODaill,
lima.
CITY
^
I
_
•
•
f o r Frofft)
S-5«03
vhlf
BERK TRADE SCHOOL
STATIONARY ENOINEKH
REKRHiEHATlON OTKHATOR
C1a«pes Mon, and Wpd. Evening
MASTER Er.BCTRICIAN
riapBPB Tucb anil Thurfl, Eveninpa
Drafting — Deflgn — Malliematioi
C.S, Arith, A l g , Geo. Trig, Gale, P h j e ,
55 Hanson PL, ST 3-7000
UL.
or
J r , A Aset. Civil, Mecb.. Elec. E n g i n e e r
Civil, Mech,, Elee, E p t r g .
DrhttarnaD
Civil Engineer
Jr, D r a f U m a n
Engineer Aide
Subway E x a m e
Bulliilnc Supt.
Borough I n s p e c t o r
LICENSE PREPARATION
Professional Insfruction
C o m p l e f e , Regulation-S!xe
Obstacle Course & High-Wall
Evening C l a s s e s — Start any time.
Low Rates include Membership
Privileges.
L
Now
Wedneidaya
PIRtONAL
and other Civil Service Exams
I
jMonilayn (1:.1() to S ;;tO
Begins Feb. 4 at 0:30
Cloiteg of LlmHtd
PHYSICAL EXAMS
I
SENIOR CLERK
YMCA EVENING S C H O O L
10 W>«t OSrd St., New Vork 99. N. 1
T«li RNdlrott a.SIlT
PATROLMAN
I
4iinoiiK*0*
SUPERVISING CLERK
TRY THE " Y " PLAN
PRIPARE FOR
W
(Equlval*. oy|
•TART ANVTIMB
119 roHc Avt., Brooklni IT, M- t(Main SI* t o r n o n M m l c * c o n n e t M t f
tVorM W a r 1 V t t t r a o i p t n t l v n far
',h0M r c a c h l n s t f a i l r S M b
blrthdaj
T h t i * ncnaloDi a t a r t at SflA.lB s m e R t b
rUlnr to $78.76 Mcinb«riblp d n » ar*
fio a year. w U e and w i d o w . J 8
SlairiDcd a d d r e B « e n r t l o p e . p l i ^ a m
A N
EASTERN SCHOOL
$40~Total Cosl-440
Many Jobs as Aides
Open in YA Hospital
L O O K t
Do You Neod A
High School Diploma?
.A6i_
J T A I I _ _ J |
314 Atlantic Ave., B'klyn. .N. Y.
Sadie Brown
loyt:
VETERANS
and CIVILIANS
NOW It the time to prepare far
EXCELLENT
JOBS!
Free
Placement
Service
DAY AND EVENING
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL
wltb aueelallzatlon In Snlesiuaneblp,
Advertising, Herehandlelng,
Betalling, l^hiance, Mannfacttirlng
Radio am) Televlalon, etc.
—ALSO—
HIGH S C H O O L
I9U1VALENCY
DIPLOMA
COLLEGIATE
BUSINESS
iei
Madaon A T * .
INSTITUTE
( S « 8t,> P L S - l B f t
FVENING and
SATURDAY COURSES
DEGREE and
Cf RTmCATE, PROGR A M I
Chenletl • CMiimreial Art
CeMtruetlen • Advertising PrednttlM
Eltctrieal • AecMntinf • Htt*)
MtolHMicil' DaatolLati • RtMl
M««mI Ltb • Mintriil O t t t r l t o ^
REQUES'T CATALOeUE J
tflNM tlilMBigiM Flk. 4
Raiistration:
Jm. a«-2i-M, 6-8:30 P.M.
MINIMUM pees
Cwew Covnieling Aroiloblt
SCHOOL DIRECTORY
lUwl
l « < l l « ' i Richcil
AMltaM*
Tm«I
Zenith-quality epaaker*
are a c t i v a t e d b y the
naogt powerful magnetic
(aaaterial known—Alnioo
N o . B! I t puta extra tone
quality in Zenith ep«ak>
ere...adds to your liB<
tening pleaeurel
"t,,
dilMt
our free
home
trial
offer!
ROEBLINQ Inc.
155 EAST 44th STREET
NIW
Ujfliftcn
BOHO
HAIX^AMDEM*.
IT
Smllb
St.
A
Ird
YORK
Ave,
17. N .
Y.
MUrroy
Hill
2-4441
(af.
College
Fultoo
freparalor;
St.)
BkljTi.
fl.
L
Approved.
Bualncaa ScliooK
W A i j H I N U T U N B I K I N K K S INST., !ill)8 '/th A v e . feor, 126lh St.) N, T , C, Secretarial
IBM Key PuiKli, Steiiomupliy, Day
Eve Claksee, Moderate coit, MO 6-4102
M O N H D B S C I I t M t L U V B U S I N E S S ,I, I B M K e y p u n c b ; S w li t oc hb b o a r d : T y p i n g ;, C o n i pp t o m
e t r j r ; S p a u l e b h M e d i c a l S t e o o g rraaiiAA i y ; A o c o u B t I. n g ; B_ u t l .n e a a A d m i n , v e t e r a n T r a l D
U i f , C i v i l S e r v i c e P r e p a r a t i o n B.
E. 1 7 7 91, A G. X r e m o n t , B r o n x . K I S - S e O O
I. U, M.
Ask about
It*.
Acadamla and ComniercUl
HAVHINES
RomiHgton R a n d or IBM K«y Punch & T A B Training
Day, Nigbt. Weekend Claaeea I n t r o d u c t o r y t.ecaon $S. f r e e I ' l a c e m e n t S«rvlee
E N U O L L T O D A Y C o m b i n a t i o n B u i l u e t a School, IBO W I Z t t h 8 t „ f e l ON «
81)87. N o A g a L I m l l . N o e d u c a t i o n a l re i j u i i c n i e n t i .
Secretarial
URAHES,
N A S S A U S T R E E T , N.V.li. Hecretarlal Accounting. Drafting.
Day N l i g b t . W r i t e lor C a t a l o g i3E a 4 8 4 U
Journallun
O E N E V A S C H O O L O E Bl'SINEIM, 2 2 0 1 B d w a y ( S ^ n d S t . ) ; S e c r e t a r i a l
SpatiUli, Frciich: Typewriting. UooUhccping, Coniptonietry. 8U 7-3234.
In
EVENING CLASSES
TYl'INtJ, S E f H E T A H I A L . i O 8 0 1 0 8
J 4 6 l h Bt., N. y. C.
English
tOl
W
PATROLMAN
TRANSIT PATROLMAN
SANITATIONMAN
MENTAL
AND
PHYSICAL
CLASSES
* Small Group*
• Indivldttal Instruction
* Free Medical Examination
• Pull Memberthlp Privile«e(
BRONX UNION YMCA
470 Eatt U l s t St, ME S-7100
Patrolman Study Aid
*
55. punctual (A» clear ( B ) honThe following continues the ser- headed by ( A ) Stephen P. Kenial publication of the questions nedy (Bi Luthtr H. Oulick; ( C ) est (C) polite (Di prompt ( E )
Edward F. Cavanagh, Jr. ( D ) prudect,
and key answers In the last patrol- Anna M. Kross (E) Francis W.
46. precarious ( A ) abundant
Votk City. The written test will H. Adams.
(Bi alarmed ( C ) cautious ( D )
b « held on Saturday, February 16.
50. The one zl the following insecure (Ei olacid.
types of busines-ses In New York
57. foster f A ) delegate ( B ) de39. An off-duty policeman was City which generally does not remote (C) encourage (D) plead
•eated In a restaurant when two quire a license for operation is
(E) surround.
men entered, drew guns and rob- a (A> private detective agency
58. pinnacle ( A ) center ( B )
bed the ca.shler. The policeman (Hi retail liquor store ( C ) retail
crisis (C» outcome ( D ) peak (E)
made no efTort to prevent the clothing store chain ( D ) barber
personification
robbery or apprehend the crim- shop (E) restaurant.
59. component f A ) flattery ( B )
inals. Later he justified his conIn each of Questions 51 to 70, opposite (C» part ( D ) revision
duct by stating that a policeman
(E) trend.
when off-duty Is a private cltiaen select the lettered word or phrase
60. solicit (A* ask ( B ) prohibit
with the same duties and rights which means, most nearly, the
of all private citizens. The police- same as the first word in the row. (Ci promise (Di revoke (Ei surman's conduct was ( A ) wrong; a Place the letter which corres- prise.
61. liaison (A> asset ( B ) copoliceman mu.st act to prevent pondi* to your choice in the propordination ( C ) difference ( D ) polcrimes and apprehend criminals erly numbered answer space.
51. imply ( A ) agree to ( B ) hint icy (E^ procedure.
at all times (B) right; he was
62. allege ( A ) assert (Bt break
out of uniform at the time of the at (C> laugh at ( D ) mimic (E)
( C ) irritate ( D ) reduce (E> wait.
robbery ( C ) wrong; he had his reduce.
63. infiltration ( A ) consump52. appraisal ( A ) allowance (Bt
gun with him at the time of the
robbery (D» right; It would have composition (C) prohibition ( D ) tion (Bt disposal (C* enforcement
( D ) penetration (E) seizure.
been foolhardy for him to Inter- quantity (B) valuation.
64. salvage ( A ) announce ( B )
53. disburse ( A ) approve (B>
vene when outnumbered by armed
robbers (E) wrong; he should expend ( O prevent ( D ) relay combine (C) prolong ( D ) save
( E ) try.
have obtained the necessary in- (E> restrict.
65. motive
(A>
attack
(B)
54. posterity (A> back payment
formation and descriptions after
( B ' current procedure ( C ) final favor ( C ) incentive ( D ) patience
the robbers left.
effort ( D ) future generations ( E ) ( E ) tribute.
40. Drivers with many convic- rare specimen.
68. provoke ( A ) adjust ( B ) Intions for TrafRc Law violations
sometimes try to conceal this record by cutting off the lower part
of tlie operator's license and attaching to it a clean section from
• blank application form. A patrolman who stops a drive and
notices that his operator's license
torn and held together by transparent tape should first ( A ) verif y the driver's explanation of the
torn license ( B ) examine both
parts of the license to see if they
match
(C»
request
additional
proof of identity (D) take the
motorist to the station house for
further questioning (E) check the
records of the Bureau of Motor
Vehicles for unanswered summonses.
41. Of the following, the major
economic problem which faced the
U.S. in 1955 was ( A ) the rising
co.st of living (B) increasing unemployment (C) declining farm
prices ( D ) increasing business
failures (E) declining business
profits.
42. Of the following items, the
one whose price in New York City
Is not regulated by any governmental agency is ( A ) rent (B>
•-1 UM«rW UUWr TabUi DouU* coo-«
ttop MmIi 14' bi»h. Kubbtr-,
telephone rates (C) taxi fares ( D )
T « i e i i c * o « U « t . I«V4'>>!th,
trailed ' W n g «w«y" rt^. All-*®bread (Ei gas and electricity.
C h r o m i u m l « c ' . T w o - c o « t bakcd-oa ~ h o m I flaUh, t h c M e o l o r i .
43. The main function of the
1 S>uh. tbrt* colon.
' > ^ $ ^ 9 5
Waterfront Commission of New
York Harbor has been to (A) at$ 1 0 "
tract additional business to the
New York Harbor ( B ) eliminate
Cl ime and racketeering In employment on the docks (C) mechanize
the cargo handling procedures
(D> regulate the leasing of dock
facilities (E) Inspect incoming
cargo tor contraband and sabotage.
44. Of the following traffic control mea.sures, the one which has
not yet been adopted in New York
City is ( A ) one-way avenues (B>
traffic signals for pedestrians (Ci
alternate side of street parking
( D ) roving police traffic squad
' E ' penalties for pedestrian violations.
45. The president of the new
AP of L-CIO labor organization
is ( A ) Walter Reuther (B) George
Meany ( O John L. Lewis (D»
Michael Quill (E) James P. Mitchell.
46. Tlie Hayden Planetarium is
noted for its ( A ) classical music
concerts CBi rehabilitation work
with disabled veterans (C) astronomy displays ( D ) meteorological
studies (E) medieval art exhibits.
47. Of the following, the coun
try which has had the most frequent changes in government
since the end of World War II is
(A> France ( B ) The Soviet Union
(C) Great Britain ( D ) Australia
(El West Germany.
48. During
the recent
New
Year's weekend, the Police Commissioner put Into operation a
plan to reduce traffic accidents
The unusual feature of this plan
wax the ( A ) reduction of speed
limits on heavily travelled roads
( B ) detention of all drivers who
did not observe traffic safety reg
ulations (C) patrol of road.s by
police officers in unmarked • rs
(DI retiming of traffic signais to
speed up traffic flow at important
Intersections (E> placement of
emergency squads In all boroughs
tu handle accidents without delay,
49. The Department of Correc
tlon. which operates the penal
Institution* of New York City, u
E L E C T R I C A L INSPECTOR
T E N T A T I V E K E Y UNCHANGED
The tentative key answers In
the electrical inspector examination
were
approved
without
change, for the final key, by the
New York City Civil Service Commission. The written test was taken on November 3 by 110 candidates. Four prote.sts, affecting 13
answers, were received.
Columbians In HA
Hold on Election
Joseph Canzonlero, Jr.. wa»
elected president of the Columbia
Association of New York City
Housing
Authority
employees.
Chosen to serve with him wer®
Philip Solimlne, first vice president; Edward Christlanl, second
vice-president; Pat Del Mastro,
treasurer; Dominic J. Cavala, financial secretary; Salvatore Oalletto, secretary, and Anthony Costantini, sergeant-at-arms.
Elected as new members to t h »
board of directors were Vincent
Basilotta, Carl lella, Sal Galletto,
Mr. Solimlne, Daniel Loscascio,
and Hary J. Trivisonno. The new
borouSh vice presidents are Mr.
Costantinl, Manhattan;
Donate
Marotta, Bronx; John Castellano,
Brooklyn; Nick Padula, Queens,
and Ormando Orfice, Richmond.
cite ( C ) leave ( D ) obtain (B)
practice.
67. surge (A^ branch (Bt contract (C) revenge ( D ) rush (E)
want.
•
68. magnify (A^ attract ( B )
demand ( O
generate ( D ) increase (E) puzzle.
69. preponderance ( A ) decision
(B) judgment ( C ) outwelgKing
( D ) submission (E) warning.
70. abate ( A ) assist ( B ) coerce
( C ) diminish ( D ) indulge ( E )
VET CENTER GIVES
trade.
FREE T A X ADVICE
P A T R O L M A N K E Y ANSWERS
New York City veterans and
39, A; 40, B; 41, C; 42, D; 43, B; their beneficiaries may receive
44, E; 45, B; 46, C; 47. A ; 48, C; free assistance in preparing their
49, D; 50, C; 51, B; 52, B; 53, B; State and Federal income tax re54, D; 55, D; 56, D; 57, C; 58, D; turns at the Veterans' Servics
59, C; 60, A; 61, B; 62, A ; 63, D; Center, 300 West 43rd Street,
64. D; 65, C; 66, B; 67, D; 68, D; Manhattan,
Monday
through
69. C; 70, C.
Friday from 9 A.M. to 5 P.M .
Lighten your work —brighten your home
with COSCO products DUANE APPLIANCES
,
l-D I
niuni
»M4IS*IRT. K ' M C H . O V O .
bt Dnraii npho(9ter)r, ns
DUANE APPLIANCES
M
iMf UHMy Carti I t ' hich. Top
OMVC* up), 14' Z 41Chromium, with
CoicoAT ftnWi hi wood (rain pattern.
t h r « eolori.
5
cosct.
Tray Cart
»15.95
• An extra work lurfact, an extra itorags unit, a handiom*
lerving cart . . . in one I
high, 16'/i' X
Three-Inch
caittri. Chromium or black legs.
COICOAT wood-grain finish ia
four colors. Come in and got
your* today.
95 Duane St.. N. Y. C.
C O 7 6411
TaMday, lanawy I9« 1957
C I V I L
S E R V I C B
L e A D e II
Clerk Exam Study Aid
The followinc continues the
questions and answers In the last
clerk test held by New York City.
This Is published to aid candidates In the new test, to be held
on Saturday, March 23, applica*
tlons for which closed recently
with 8,607 candidates.
38. Richard White, who has
been employed In the department
lor 12 years, receives $5000 a year
lis a civil engineer In the Con•tructlon Division. He is 38 years
old. He should be coded (A) 20665-16-03-4
(B)
20-665-15-02-1
(C) 20-633-14-04-2 ( D ) 20-865-15C2-5
39. An 18 year old cleric appointed to the department six
months ago is assigned to the
Record Division. His annual salary is $2160. He should be coded
( A ) 70-115-11-01-1 ( B ) 70-115-1201-1 (C) 70-115-12-02-1 ( D ) 70• 155-12-01-1
40. An employee has been coded
40-155-12-03-3. Of the following
statements made regarding this
employee, the most accurate one
Is that he Is ( A ) a cleric who has
been employed In the department
for at least 6 years ( B ) a typist
who receives an annual .salary
which does not exceed $2400 ( C )
under 30 years of age and has
been employed In the department
lor at least 11 years ( D ) employed In the Supply Division at a
salary which exceeds $1800 per
annum.
41. Of the following statements
regarding an employee who is coded 60-175-13-01-2, the least accurate statement Is that this employee ( A ) is a stenographer In
the Personnel Division ( B ) has
been employed in the department
for at least one year ( C ) receives
an annual salary which exceeds
$2400 ( D ) is more than 20 years
of age.
Army Civilian Jobs Op«n to Ci«rk-Typists
43. T h e following ftre the names .salaries ranging from $3001 to
of four cmployeM sf tha depart- $3600.
ment with tholr code numbers:
K E Y ANSWERS
James Black, 10-345-18-03-4; Wil38, A ; 39, B ; 40, B; 41, D; 42, A ;
liam White, 30-633-14-03-4; 8am 43, D ; 44. B; 45, C.
Green, 80-115-12-03-3; John Jones.
10-237-13-04-5. If a salary increase
is to be given to the employees
who have been employed In the
department for H years or more
and who earn less than $3601 a
year, the two of the above employees who will receive a salary
Increase are ( A ) John Jones and
William White ( B ) James Black
and Sam Green ( C ) James Black
and William White ( D )
John
Jones and Sam Green.
43. Code number 50-865-14-02-6,
which has been assigned to a machinist, contains an obvious inconsistency.
This Inconsistency
Involves the figures ( A ) 50-865
( B ) 865-14 ( C ) 14-02 ( D ) 02-6
44. T e n employees were awarded merit prizes for outstanding
service during the year.
Their
code numbers were: 80-345-14-044, 40-155-12-04-4, 10-115-13-03-2,
80-175-13-05-5, 10-115-12-04-3. 40155-12-02-2,
10-115-12-02-2, 80115-13-02-2,
10-115-13-02-3.
30633-14-04-4
Of these 10 outstanding employees, the number who were
clerks employed in the Accounting Division at a salary ranging
from $2401 to $3000 per annum Is
(A) 1 (B) 2 (C) 3 (D) 4
45. The most accurate of the
following
statements
regarding
the 10 outstanding employees listed in item 44 above is that ( A )
fewer than half of the employees
were under 40 years of age ( B )
there were fewer typists than
stenographers ( C ) four of the
employees were employed in the
department 11 years or more ( D )
two of the employees in the ReMod«l 40-A
search Division receive annual
$11,350 Job To Be Filled m NYC
T h e New York City Board of licensed teaching of the physically
Education is now accepting appli- handicapped in day schools.
cations for director of education
The application fee is $10.
of the physically handicapped
Apply to Associate Superin(other than visually and acoustic- tendent Edmund J. Gannon, Room
ally), paying $11,350 a year. T h e 510, Board headquarters, 110 Livboard of examiners will give a ingston Street, Brooklyn, N. Y .
non-competitive test to all ap- The last day to apply is Friday,
plicants.
March 22.
Candidates need a baccalaureate
degree or its equivalent (they will B R E N N A N IS ELECTED
have until October 1, 1958 to E M I G R A N T B A N » : P R E S I D E N T
At the annual meeting of the
complete their degree), plus 30
semester hours in approved grad- board of trustees of Emigrant I n dustrial Savings Bank. New York
uate courses. Education must in- City, John T . Madden, chairman
clude 45 semester houi's in re- of the board and president of the
lated professional courses, eight bank since January, 1945, was recf which must have been super- elected board chairman and chief
executive officer, and Joseph C.
visory or administrative, and 20
Bennan, former vice president and
In related subjects or specializa- assistant to the president, was
tion. Also needed are eight years' elected president.
»
The news that's
happening to you!
Here is the newspaper that tells you about what Is happening in civil service, what Is happening to the Job you have and
the job you want.
Make sure you don't miss a single Issue. Enter your subscrlption now.
And you can do a favor for someone else tool
Have you a relative or a friend who would like to work for
the State the Federal government, or some local unit of governInent?
I
Why not enter a subscription to the Clv?l Service Leader f o i
him? He will find full lob listings, and learn a lot about clvU
service.
The price is $3.50—That brings him 62 Issues of the ClvU
filled with the government job news he wants.
1Service
N A M S Leader,
...
You can tubscrlbe on the coupon below:
I
jI CADDRESS
I V I L SERVICE LEADER
I 97 Duane Street
I New York 7, New York
ciry
ZONE
! I enclose $3.50 (check or money order) for a year's subscrlp{ tlon to the Civil Service Leader. Please enter the name listed
below:
Pag« KiftfMi
T h e New York District, U.S.
Army CoKps of Engineers, urgently needs clerk-typists at $3,175.
Required typing .speed Is 40 words
a minute. A written test will be
given. Appointments will be career
conditional.
Contact A. J. Rlzzo, Chief, Personnel Branch, District Engineer'^
Office, 111 Bast 16th Street. New
York City. The telephone number
is spring 7-4200, extension 353.
Bockrejt movct up ond down...In and out.,.lilti automaticollyl
COSCOM/l^ei'JDe^ie
Posture Step Stool
$
17
95
• Enjoy greater-than-ever c o m f o r t . . . end
save up to 25% of your energy by working
sitting down on this sensational new Cosco
Step Stool! Extra-large, sloping seat.
R o o m y , rubber-treaded " s w i n g - a w a y "
(tept. Sparkling chromium or smart black
enamel finish; washable Duran upholstery
in choice of colors. Comfort adjustments art
mad* easily without tools. Come in and teel
Was ever a cart so handy
. . . or a party so easy!
CffSCff.
Tray Cart
M5.95
• An extra work surface, an e«tra storage unit? a handsome
•erving cart . . . in onel 29V4'
high, 16Vi' I 23Vi'. Three-inch
casters. Chromium or black legs.
CoscoAT wood-grain finish in
four colors. Come In and get
youri today.
• I I T H I I I OTHIR
rAVOtlTII
llt<«r<«
Utility Table
$10.95
1Ml (Ml oppcon only on gonuin* C O S C O
^r»dvc<«. look for II when yow byyw
A. WESTREICH
Jamaica, N. Y.
87-78 Sufphin Blvd.
JA 3-6500
Time Off for Sunday Work
Confirmed for Fiscal Year
That Contains 53 Sundays
Healh Insurance
(Continued f r o m Page
A L B A N Y , Jan.
28—Chairman cial W e l f a r e the fact that there
Alexander A, Falk of the State are 53 Sundays in the current
Civil Service Commission has no- fiscal year and that employees
t i f i e d the Departments of Correc- who were required to work on any
tion, Health, Mental Hygiene and Sunday could expect to be granted
Social W e l f a r e in writing that equivalent compensatory time-off.
employees working on Sunday are Each of these agencies was so noentitled to compensatory time o f f , tified by telephone.
regardless of whether there are
" T h e new Attendance
Rules,
62 or 33 Sundays In a fiscal year. which became effective on JanT h e present one has 53. T h i s let- uary 3, 1957, do not contain any
ter confirms information to save fiscal year '.imitations with rethem orally.
spect to the granting of equivaT h e letter to Deputy Commis- lent t i m e - o f f . T h e r e f o r e , in consioner Charles S. Antollna of the formance with Rule I I , subdiviCorrection Department is repre- sion I . (Sundays and Holidays)
any employee who is required to
sentative:
" I n July of the past year, this work on Sunday shall be allowed
department (Civil Service) was equivalent time-off 'in lieu thererequested to call to the attention of.
of the Departments of Correction,
Health, Mental Hygiene and So-
I)
Included in the plan, in addition
to hospitalization and
medical
services, are cost of durgs and
medicines, nursing service, ambulance service and prosthetics.
A f t e r proposals are received, the
plan will be embodied in a contract or contracts with the carrier or carriers approved by the
Board.
"Sincerely,
" A . A. F A L K "
are now enjoyed by other
nical
employees
of
the
Refund Checic
Mailing Nears
Its Wind-Up
ALBANY,
Jan. 2H—More
thousands of notices were mailed out
this tceek by the Civil Service Employees
Association,
notifying
group life insurance
policyholder!
of a refund,
and enclosing
the
tech- check.
depart-
Joseph Lochner, executive
director, CSEA, said that all checks are
- F o r the first time, we will to be in the ninils by Thursday,
have a comprehensive approach to January 31,
T h e plan was developed jointly all forest, land and wildlife probW h o Got Checks
by the Conservation Department lems in each area," said Governor
The refund checks go la memRnd the Division of the Budget. Harrlman. " T h i s means better
Under the plan, functions of service to the public, hunters, bers who were insured under the
the department will be admin- fisherman, landowners and the Group Life Plan of the CSEA as
istered through 12 regional dis- many other u-sers of the outdoors, of August 1, 1956. The insurer is
Company
tricts that will be uniform f o r who nee dcontact only one field the Travelers Insurance
fish and game and lands and office in order to get information of Hartford, Conn. The checlis covforests management. This struc- and a.ssistance from the Conserva-' er a six-weeks period. In amount
ture will replace 40 administrative tion Department. In addition to they range from $2.50, the minidistricts of the various services in better direction of all programs, mum anybody gels, to $46.59.
the Department.
this step will make possible coThe refunds are made possible
W i t h i n each district there will ordinated planning for the best by the fact llial the members' rege a common headquarters for the use of all our natural resources— cord is better than the one prefish and game, and lands and forests, land, water and wildlife." dicted by actuarial
computations.
forests programs, with the disGovernor Harrlman stated that This means fewer deaths occurred
trict supervisors of these pro- the Budget Division and the Con- than probabilities
indicated.
As
grams working side by side for servation Department are work- death payments are recorded
by
luore effective coordination. Each ing on the financial details of the insurance
companies,
for
bookdistiict supervisor will be re- reorganization. T h e supplemental keeping purposes, as "losses,"
the
sponsible for all programs, facil- budget will contain the proposed refunds arise from
a
"favorable
ities and installations in his dis- appropriations.
loss
experience."
trict. Greater responsibility for
making decisions will be placed
In the district offices.
ment.
Some New Jobs
I n each headquarters an administrative services unit will handle
all necessary business management and housekeeping functions,
freeing professional field personnel f r o m excessive paper work.
T h e Commissioner's top stafT
will include two assistant commissioners in the civil service
class who will head the divisions
of flsh and game, and lands and
forests. Technical specialists in
the central office whose time is
now spent on the supervision of
field work will spend their full
time in helping the Commissioner
develop overall plans for the department. One person in each
division in the central office will
be in charge of field activities. A
new position of Assistant Commissioner for Administration will be
established, also in the civil service classification, to supervise and
coordinate
all
"housekeeping"
functions, such as budgeting, perscainel administration, management
improvement
and
accounting.
Forest Kangers to Be Ueclassifled
T h e reorganization plan provides for the first time for givinb'
fore.st rangers, now in the exempt
class, the same advantages of
civil service status and tenure a s '
E L M I R A , Jan. 28 — Representatives f r o m five chapters of the
Civil Service Employees Association discussed with Association
officials at the M a r k T w a i n Hotel
means of increasing membership
in the local groups. Mrs. Lula W i l liams of Broome County chapter,
co-chairman of the Association's
statewide membership committee.
County, presided.
Mr. Falk said the Board will
consider whether or not State
employees in the New Y o r k City
area will be permitted to elect
one of the health Insurance plftns
List Posting Recommended
already in operation there, proThose attending were Charles
vided it meets standards approved Kehler, Elizabeth Morse, and Florby the Board.
ence Q. Johnson, Steuben County
chapter;
Ben
Roberts,
CSEA
field representative; John P. Madden and Charles Epstein, Chemung County chapter; Albert J. De
Renzo, Elmira County chapter;
Allen Marshall, Tompkins County chapter, and Ernest Conlon,
CONSERVATION DEPT.
TO BE REORGANIZED
ALBANY,
Jan.
28—Governor
Averell H w r i m a n approved a plan
submitted
by
Commissioner
Sharon Mauhs to streamline the
Conservation Department.
Plans Discussed for Getting
More County Division Members
OLEAN IS GETTING
JOB RECLASSIFICATION
AND NEW PAY PLAN
O L E A N , Jan. 28—A job classification and salary plan f o r employees of the city of Olean is
under way. Joseph Silverman, Edward Margosian and James G a l lagher of the State Civil Service
Department's Municipal Service
Division are making the study.
T l i e survey got started as a result of the convincing arguments
of the Cattaraugus County chapter of the Civil Service Employees
Association that a reclassification
is sorely needed. Chapter representatives urged M a y o r Ivers J. N o r ton to call for such a project. A f t er giving the proposal careful
study, the Mayor complied. T h e
Mayor's energy put the wheels
in motion.
T h e tiuee State txperts have
held several meetings with M a y o r
Norton and the local Civil Service
Commission.
Blank forms were handed out
to all City employees. Each employee describes his work. T h e
forms were mailed to the Albany
o f f i c e , and work got started on
the reclassifiication.
T h e proposed reclassifications
as set forth by this committee are
to be distributed to City employees
this week; an opportunity f o r appeals will be provided. Later the
s a l a r y schedule to accompany
these reclassifications will be presented to the Common Council
f o r approval, all to be accomplished before the City budget is adopted this year.
M A U H S IS C O N F I R M E D
A L B A N Y , Jan. 28 — T h e Senate confirmed the appointment of
Sharon J. Mauhs, Cobleskill, as
Conservation
Commissioner
to
succeed Louis A. Wehle.
Exam Study
Books
Exeellant ifudy books by Areo,
la preparation
for current
and
coming •xams for public
fobi,
or* on $alo at The LIADIR
bookitore, 97 Duane St., New York 7,
N. r . two blocks north of City
Hall, lutf west of Iroadway. See
advertliemenf
Inside.
former Association field representative.
A m o n g the suggestions made
were posting complete member
lists in various county departments, holding dinner meetings
and giving a free dinner to th,e
person bringing in the greatest
number of new members.
Messrs. Madden and Epstein reported on Chemung County chapter's obtaining
Christmas
and
New Year's holidays for all members.
New legislation proposed by the
CSEA was also discussed. R e p r e sentatives of Steuben and Chemung County chapters announced
plans for a meeting with their
legislators, to be held at the same
location. T h e date will be a n nounced.
ACTIVITIES OF EMPLOYEES IN STATE
Onondaga
Onondaga chapter's
executive
committee
neld its
first
1957
meeting January 8 at the Onondaga City Hall.
Reports were
made by the various committees;
the membership committee reported a substantial gain over
last year.
Plans were made for the County
Division Work.shop, to be held In
conjunction with the quarterly
meeting of the CSEA
Central
Conference and the Association,
scheduled for February 2 at the
Onondaga Hotel. Topics to be
di.scussed Include Social Security
supplementation,
employee-employer relations and membership.
Officers and members of all county division chapters art urged to
attend.
T h e chapter congratulates officers and membei's of Syracuse
chapter, CSEA, who wih celebrate
their 20th anniversary at a dinner
dance on February 2 at the hotel,
an added attraction of the Central Conference meeting.
Chapter President David Rogers
has been named representative of*
the County Membership Committee for the CSEA.
A speedy recovery to the husband of L. Katherine Ballou, case
supervisor, who is seriously ill; to
Charlie Noice, and to M a r g a r e t
Maloney,
Welfare
Department
clerk.
Congratulations and best wishes to Thomas J. M c M a h o n and
Merle Gettlno, f o r whom wedding
bells rang on December 29.
serve with
him
were
Joseph
Guinn, first vice president; Beulah Allman, second vice president; Mrs. Arnott, secretary; Lea
Bouladier, treasurer; Jessie K a u f mann, unit representative, and
Gertrude Glaccum, county home
representative.
T h e officers were installed r e cently at the W e l f a r e D e p a r t ment's B a y Shore office. Mr. Culyer was the Installing officer. Following the ceremony, he spoke
briefly on the history of S u f f o l k
chapter and the W e l f a r e Department unit.
Mr. Culyer summarized the A s sociation's efforts on behalf of
the
local
W e l f a r e Departments
throughout the State to standardize
professional-staff
wages.
H e then reported on the C S E A
legislation on this subject and
the favorable reaction f r o m the
County W e l f a r e
Commissiriiers'
Association. H e also summarized
the Social Security supplementation bill and the work involved
on the local level to assure its
passage this session.
Tompkins
News f r o m the Board of Education: Doris Nadge is back at work
after vacationing.
A speedy recovery to
Mary
Stack, a patient at Tompkins
County Hospital.
A warm welcome to T h e l m a
Cornelius and Wesley Inman, back
on the job at Tompkins County
Hospital after their recent illnesses.
Tompkins
County
Highway
notes: get-well wishes to John
Goodwin, W i l l i a m Dean, Laurence
Bentley, Chester Brown and W i l liam Powers. Both Mr. Brown and
On December 12 the board of
Mr. Powers
were
patients
at
directors
of
Suffolk
chapter,
Conklin Sanitarium.
CSEA, honored Past President
Carl Helms at a dinner at Bronco
Charlie's
Restaurant,
Oakdade.
Mr. Helms recently resigned as
unit representative to the SufMrs. Harriett Clark Sier was
folk board. A m o n g those who elected
president
of
Westfield
paid him tribute were Charles State Farm chapter, CSEA. Chos.
Culyer, CSEA field representative, en to serve with her were M a o
and Fred Musse, T e r Bush & Causey, vice president;
Ernest
Powell representative.
Russell,
secretary;
Bemlce
J.
Mr.
Culyer
spoke
on
M r . Marsow, treasurer; James D. GilHelms' untiring efforts in the len, delegate, and M a r y P. R .
chapter's behalf since its con- Garigliano, alternate delegate.
ception over eight years ago.
T h e officers were installed b y j
Another speaker of the evening Charles Lamb, Sing Sing Prisor
was Fred A. Vopat, former pres- chapter, at the chapter's r e g u j j "
ident of Suffolk
chapter,
who meeting on January 9. M r . Lan
praised Mr. Helms' devotion and as guest speaker, gave an intS
loyalty to his fellow employees.
esting and inspiring talk to tTI
President Arthur J. Miller pre- meiobers. Several Sing Sing c h a l
sented the honoree with a g i f t ter membrs were
among
til
f r o m Ihe board of directors. A guests.
token of appreciation was also
T h e new employees were feted
presented by Mr. Busse.
at the chapter's open house a n d "
Among the guests were Mrs. Christmas party on December 10.
Helms, George K e l l y and RichOn January 18, Westfield F a r m
ard Pearsall, Babylon H i g h w a y chapter delegates attended the
unit; Glendore App, Health De- CSEA Southern Conference meetpartment; Eve Armstrong, Baby- ing at West Haverstraw, N. Y .
lon T o w n Hall; Michael ManiscalThe
chapter's
next
regular
co, new pre.sident of Mr. Helms' meeting is scheduled for Wednesunit; Jack Newschaffer and Mer- day, February 13, in the employry Arnott, W e l f a r e Department; ees' lounge at the Farm. Guest
John Steller, T h i r d Supervisory speaker will be Leroy
Peters.
School District, and Edmund Buz- American Red Cross, who will
iak, Riverhead Highway unit.
show a disaster film..
M r . Helms will be greatly misMembers' best wishes go to Joan
sed f o r the humor and spirit he O'Brien, engaged to J. Jerald
displayed at chapter meetings.
Byrne of Croton Falls, New Y o r k ,
Mr. Newschaffer was elected and to Betty Jean Grimes, bepresident of the Suffolk County trothed to Joseph F. Fazzinga of
W e l f a r e Department. Chosen to B e d f o r d Hills. N . Y .
Suffolk Chapter
Westfield State Farm
Download