T j M A U ^ ih'on Renounces Right To Strike

advertisement
— C U H f t S W i e f t .
T j M A U ^
imertca
Larf^est It^eekly fur tublic
tmpioye
: — I — : — T " — .
««
—
c o
Vol. X X I I , INo. 12
Tuesday, November 29, 1960
Price
Officer Eligible
^I.Hahv
u p
,
^
"
S e e Page 2 2
y
SIGN THRUWAY POLICY STATEMENT
List
ih'on Renounces
Right To Strike
A L B A N Y , Nov. 28—An upstate union local which has
posed several strike threats against the Thruway Authority
in recent months, last week signed a statement of "Employee
Relations Policy" with the Authority in which the union renounced the right to strike.
In recent months, Jean Coutourier, president of Council
50, American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees, has promised his Thruway members that:
1. Union locals would strike if a work contract was nob
given to Council 50 by the Thruway Authority.
2. Promised an exclusive bargaining, closed-shop contract with the Authority.
3. Promised a work contract.
In signing the Authority statement on the rights and responsi- right to strike by accepting over
Seen here as they signed a "Statement of Employee Relations Policy" drafted by the S t a t e bilities of Thruway employees, the its signature, the Thruway policy
union backed away f r o m Its strike statement.
Thruway Authority are, from left: Joseph D. Lochner, executive director, and Joseph F.
threats and its promisees of the
Union Promises Out; Says FeUy
Feily, President, of the Civil Service Employees Association; R. Burdell Bixby, chairman
three items above.
" T h e T h r u w a y employee policy
of the Authority; Pasquale Amatucci, president of Local 1090, Council 50, A F S C M E , and
statement is not a "contract", nor
J e a n Couturier, president of Council 50. See story a t right for details.
No Contract, Says Blxbjr
does it provide exclusive bargainR . Burdell Bixby, chairman of
ing rights, or a union shop, all
the Thruway Authority, emphaof which Council 50 promised l t «
sized that the statement of " E m members," continued Mr. F'eily.
ployee Relations P o l i c y " was not a
" O u r Association conferred f o r
contract and could not be considmany houi's with Thruway officials
ered at any time to reflect a con(Continued on Page 3>
tractual relationship between the
Authority and the employee orBy J O S E P H F. FEILY. PRESIDENT
ganizations.
C I V I L S E R V I C E E M P L O Y E E S ASSN.
Albany, Nov. 28 — Chairman
Employee repre>sentatives signJames A. Lundy of the Public
The legislative session is fast approaching. We have had
ing the document were. Joseph F .
Service
Commission
has
anour preliminary discussions with the director of the State nounced the retirement of Andrew FeUy, president of the 88.000-memDivision of the Budget. I now feel that all of our own mem- H. Williamson as Chief of the ber Civil Service Employees Assobership should be fully informed as to why we feel that this P.S.C. Railroad Bureau effective ciation representing the majority of
year we are entitled to a 3-grade salary increase.
November 30 and the appointment Thruway employees; Mr. CoutourFor the first time in history, the
T h e Civil Service Leader has
of Donald A. Logan as his suc- ier, and Pasquale Amatucci, president
of
Thruway
Local
1090
of
paid
policemen and the
firemen
agreed to carry 4 or 5 letters to dustry in the two cities. T h e com- cessor.
Council 50.
of the State of New York hava
the membership through the next pasison study embraced the titles
Mr. Williamson is a native of
T h e "Statement of Employee formed a legislative coalition.
f e w issues In order that I might "Truck Driver", "Elevator Opera- B u f f a l o and attended Canisius
Under an agreement reached
Relations
P o l i c y " Issued by the
oommunicate with you directly as tor",
"Shipping
&
Receiving College. He is a licensed profesAuthority,
was between the 50,000 members of
to the State salary question.
Clerk",
"Electrician",
" H e l p e r " , sional engineer and a former Di- State Thruway
T h e purpose of these letters "Engineer Stationary", "Nurse", rector of Erie County Professional termed a "well detailed statemenl. the Police Conference of the State
of New York, Inc., the 30,000
will be to:
" T y p i s t " , Stenographer", " S w i t c h - Engineers. He resides at 5 Burhans of current Thruway employment
members of the Fire Fighters Aspolicy",
by
Mr.
Feily.
Operator",
"Key
Punch Place. Delmar.
1. To apprise our membership board
sociation, and the 500 members
" T h e most significant item con"Clerk - Aecounting",
Mr. Logan, whose home is at
where our negotians with respect Operator",
of the Association of Chiefs of
"Tabulating Machine Operator". 150 Broad Street, Salamanca, was cerning the policy statement Is
to salaries now stand;
Police, a joint legislative program
2. T o supply the factual ma- T h e titles are those used by the born in Warren, Pa., and was that Council 50, A F S C M E , the
will be submitted for considerafrom
University
of union which recently threatened a
terial which is neces-sary to sup- Bureau of Labor Statistics and graduated
tion at the 1961 session of tha
Thruway strike, renounced
its
have been matched with compar(Continued oii Page 24)
port our salary resolution;
^tate Legislature.
3. T o point out the obstacles able and identical jobs in the state
By joining forces the policemen,
(the prevalent idea, {or Instance, service.
police chiefs, and the firemen of
that the State employees received
The titles under survey
are
the State of New Y o r k
hav9
a substantial salary Increase last known as populus titles — that is
formed what they hope will be a
year.)
the employees who hold them reppowerful and unified force to as4. T o advi.se our membership resent a good segment of the state
sure the adoption of measures to
service,
in
fact
10%
of
it.
as to what action each one of us
improve the working conditions
Another Study
can take in this regard.
and the retirement benefits of uniIn another study which was
I n my first letter I will give you
formed public servants.
the results of the general survey made, it was shown that the pubFight For Pay Hike
made by our research unit as to lic employee salaries paid In New
High
among
the
items
of
Y
o
r
k
State
are
behind
those
paid
where New York State now stands
priority
are
bills
to
provide
*
for
comparable
Job-s
in
the
public
on salaries in comparison with
$6,000.00 minimum salary for all
services of other states. Seven
other areas.
policemen and firemen, a 25-year
public jurisdictions
(California,
N . Y . State Lass Agahi
retirement program at one-half
Michigan,
Illinois,
Connecticut,
pay, additional compensation f o r
New York State is again lagging T V A , Federal, N.Y.C.) were comovertime work, a m i n i m u tu
behind
industry in its salary pared with New York, embracing
monthly pension of $120.00, and
structure for State employees. Ac- 35 titles. In every Instance except
three-quarters pay f o r widows.
cording to the latest information one it was apparent that the EmLegislative
representatives
of
available — December 1959 — It pire State was behind. Connecticut
the three organizations are e x trails the New York City private was the only exception — only
pected to meet shortly to work out
Industry wage scale by 16% and here was the salary scale lower
the specific program which will be
B u f f a l o by 18%. T h e present f i g - than our own. T h i s seven state
advance of the start
ures gathered so far f o r 1960 show comparison contains such titles as Two employees of Hi* Harlem Valley S t a t e Hospital. Peter submitted
the lag to be even greater. I n a "Hospital Attendants" and " P r i s o n G a r a m o n e , chief stationary eNfineer. and Kenneth Booth, of the session. I t U expected thak
comparison study of 14 titles made Quai'd" as well as " C l e r k " and welder, w e r e a w a r d e d Certificates of Merit by the New York the group will seek the Introduof r a m the data gathered by the "Stenographer". I t represents over S t a t e C i v i l Service CommissioR for having submiHed a sug- tlon of these bills on a bi-partisan
Bureau of Labor Statistics of the 20% of the state service and is gestion of • method to repair biirned oiit baffles in gas ovens. basU,
United States Oovernment, there an unusually good and dramatic They also received a $20.1 S chock and • pocket s e c r e t a r y . U
ts shown in almoat every clasai- index.
tho above phot*. Dr. L * « P. O'Dennell, Harlem Valley S t a t e
An Open Letter
To CSEA Members
PSC Names
Donald Logan
As New Chief
NYS Police,
Firemen Form
Legislative Unit
SUGGESTIONS PAY OFF
flcatlon
M l u y
reported
level
la
that
behind
the
state
m'lvat*
In-
A
third
comparison
(CoatiaiwA
m
study
P » ( «
S)
fur-
Hospital Director, ( l e f t ) makes the presentotioa t * Mr.
fm»«a ( c M t « r )
Mr. l o e t h ( r i g h t ) .
VMS Your Mpr et The Leader
•B to • Non-member
Pope
C I V I L
T w o
By
RICHARD
EVANS
L E A D E R
Hold Test At 30
Points For T-Men
IN CITY CIVIL SERVICE
^mp-am-^H-^-^
S E R V I C E
JR.
The
written
the necessary requirements
with-
in nine months m a y also apply.
The
top
salary
is
$6,840
there are p r o m o t i o n a l
and
opportuni-
York
17, N . Y . ,
Revenue
29,
Irvoi'H
the Board
or
Service,
1
/^f
of
Internal
90 Church
St„
R o o m 1107, N e w Y o r k 7, N . Y .
Police
Requlrfmrntd
for
Nnvpnilirr
Civil Service Examiners.
ties.
examination
work is the law, ignore it openly. Federal treasury agent i T - m a n )
A m a j o r i t y of police chiefs polled will be held in M a n h a t t a n , B r o o k feel outside work does little h a r m lyn, Jamaica, Hempstead, R i v e r -
1,200 Housing Aides
Study for Promotion
TiiP'ulay,
A
Candidates must be at least 21
Sfaff
resolution
years of age and have 20/20 vision
Department
in one eye and at worst 20/30 in
non-competitive
to
staff
Nurse
include
nurSes
class.
Police
in
the
Rule
XI,
Rochelle, the other w i t h o u t glasses. T h e y P a r t I , was approved last week b y
Y
o
n
k
e
r
s
and
30
points
in
upstate must be able to hear a conversa- the N e w Y o r k City D e p a r t m e n t
ployes of the Housing Authority their forces. T h e y also said outside
necessary unless wages N e w Y o r k . Filing f o r this exam is tional voice at R distance of 20 of Pei'sonnel.
Bre n o w attending f r e e voluntary work
which now on a continuou.s basis. T h e f e e t and the whi-spered voice at
e v e n i n g courses conducted by the are rai.sed substantially,
riVIL gRKVIIR IK^DRK
15 f e e t w i t h o u t use of a hearing
C i t y Board of Education, accord- they feel is unlikely in the near test is held periodically.
Anierlra'ii l.e«ilin« N i . » ' n i . i » a i l n «
T h e salary f o r this position Is aid.
ing to W i l l i a m R e i d , chairman of future.
for Pnblip Rmtjioveei
According
the A u t h o r i t y .
The
1,200
employes
participating
are
to the e f f i c i e n c y of
head,
to
$5,355 to start.
if any h a r m
F i f t e e n percent of the 3,000 e m -
the
World
Tele-
g r a m story. New Y o r k City Police
currently
largest Commi,ssioner Stephen P . Kennedy
made a similar survey and wiuu
the
number enrolled in any term since
the
program
began
years up with the same answers, even
though he remains
"unalterably
eleven
ago.
opposed''
T h e courses now being held are
own
of two kinds:
steam
distribution,
basic elecUicity
me-
chanic's helpers), and project operating services ( f o r e m a n of housing
for
hard-to-fill
ority. I n
these courses,
get the equivalent
of
Commissioner
employes
on-the-job
experience, a prerequisite f o r c o m for
many
titles.
f c h e d u l i n g a course of
the
Civil
Services
Before
this type,
Commi-ssion
will be an acceptable substitute f o r
the experience requirement.
latter
category
Includes
courses In fundamenta!.? of
heat-
ing plant operation ihou-sing f i r e m a n duties), pest control
(exter-
m i n a t o r ) , and supervi.sing housing
groundsmen.
«
*
with
John
G u i d o as
Rev.
Guido.
Cardinal
visor
to
ment's
chairman,
Lt.
named
Lt.
Thomas
G.
Lt.
Joseph
Mgsr.
chaplain
to
take
and
WeiteLt.
An-
membership
fstablished Nov. 2 with 540 names.
T o dale, about 25 promotions have
The
previous
f r o m Dec.,
before
its
list
of
1956, was
four
years
xaji out.
•
•
included
six
new
raised
from
York
World
and Sun indicated
at
Peter
Cantono,
John
re-
for
mission, 220 East 42nd St., N e w
will
start
J.
at
$5,920,
Hardart,
Aclto, Louis G a r r a m o n e ,
FORT GEORGE RADIO CO.
Limited Time O n /
lyUgJitBtaeTV
S l G e n e r a \ t t e c t f « c 2 ^
first Time Ever!
^^
»alcV>i4
ONLY
175
^
foY"
VtARS TO
ml
F.
William
swivel t " " . '
I f the s t a r l i n g salary of the new
are
lower
than
the
» 0 1 •
old
'
till
coMPmr
i« higher than their old salaries.
*
•
•
Health, St. George
Fellowship
Supper
The
St.
George
the
New
York
will
hold
its
super
and
Association
City
of
6:30
p.m.
in the parish house of
the
First
Church, 12 W .
12lh
St.. M a n h a t t a n , on M o n d a y , Dec.
will
esignerTV
fellowship
at
Presbyterian
bring
shdrpness, contiast. i e t »$
demonitrpte oiii;
n«w (^E iet»vYou II agjoc — "The- p r W is in the picturs''
Department
quarterly
meeting
THE PROOF IS IN THE P I C T U R E !
Guncmt Eletlfic TV ho5 <4«vel«pe«l d pitture Ihnt leoves
nothmg to be desHed in
Amzini
Low Price!
Christmas
ter home girls assigned f r o m the
T r a i n i n g School for Girls, H u d w n .
Edith
the
S w i f t , superintendent
foster
home
program,
of
will
the supper. Election and installation of o f f i c e r s will follow.
members.
Usually with some limitations.
Members
Health
such
I'
address the p r o g r a m . A n hour of
the United States openly approve
where
Com-
are:
Charles
m a j o r i t y of police departments in
departments
Civil Service
g i f t s f o r all M e t r o p o l i t a n area fos-
Telegram
that the
their
the U.S.
T h e six new assistant foremen,
Christmas carol music will precede
for
be obtained by mail or in person
college students who m a y complete
E.
vast
Most
or
assistant
to f o r e m a n , starting
Members
A survey published last week in
work
in law
lated subjects will be accepted and
foremen
8.
•
Survey Finds
Police Moonlighting
Is "Harmless"
*utside
backgrounds
D e t a i l e d announcements i N o . 255-5 ( I 9 6 0 ) and applications m a y
and six new a'jsistant f o r e m e n .
will .start at the lowest step which
T h e C o m m i t t e e aims at p r o m o -
New
Depart-
salaries of any of these men, they
•ions f o r every eligible on the list,
the
with
Tho.se
Msgr.
Walsh;
chairman, Lt. Sidney Schnipper.
fjihausted
at
vice
Casani:
sergeant-at-arms,
Battilana,
44)4 names
work.
T h e 12 u n i f o r m e d f o r c e p r o m o .tions
L t . positions
second
secretary,
ceen made.
investigative
I.CAHKR r u n II ATHINS, INC.
01 llimMF 8t., Nrw Ynrli 7, N. V.
Trlriihonci nKrhman .S-MOIO
Entrri'it as iiecnnd-rlft^R ninller Octnbfr
3
lU.IB, at the pout cfflrt «t Ntw
YorU N Y., nnder the Art (it March
3. IR70 Member o( Aililll Blir«»u oJ
Clmilntinna
8uhirrl|ltlon Price »HM> I V '
Inillvlillinl rnplrn, K r
KK.4II The I emler et ery week
fnr Jnk Opporliinlllea
the J. G r e g o r y . Dennis J. O ' M a r a and
chairman.
Sloan:
B.
drew
inal
Albert E. Kulser.
vice
the use of firearms and must pas-
experience, sess a driver's license.
with a m i n i m u m of three in c r i m -
H l a v a t i and V i n c e n t Vetere.
elected
treasurer, L t . Jordan
kamp;
replace
employees.
as D e p a r t m e n t
Brown,
Posts asigned to other members
J.
job-related
four
High
petta, C o n o M . Babino, James B.
previous week.
first
teacher
$6,355 a year, are A l f r e d D. C a p -
Cliflord Long as its chairman. The
Richard
a
a pastorate in W a l d o n . N . Y .
Robert
were:
the
F l a t t e r y resigned o f t e r 19'2 years
mittee
was
Rev.
to
Sanitation
13,500
who
board
of
Memorial
will
the
foreman
T h e seven-man executive board
executive
Screvane,
chaplain
44,
School, Bronx
c f the F i r e Captain Eligibles C o m Thursday
R.
naming
Hayes
These
•
Lf. Long Is
Chairman of Fire
Captain
Eligibles
last
the
of
have
F^'ancis J. F l a t t e r y as spiritual a d -
help.s plan its content so that it
This
Paul
along
Sanitation
Department.
peting in the Civil Service e x a m i nations
employee^!
nounced last week by
Service Job vacancie-s in the A u t h -
years
Applicants must be proficient in
mast
—AT —
to new supervisory po.sts was a n -
Civil
Candidates
New
*
Department imiformed
2) Courses that train personnel
qualify
*
T h e promotion of 12 Sanitation
caretakers).
to
in hi.'5
12 Promotions, New
Chaplain
Announced
By Sanitation
cashier,
ifor elevator
work
Department.
*
1> Courses that help employees
i m p r o v e their present skills, such
fls
to outside
Patchogue,
of
Center,
the
Red
Brooklyn,
A
m.
W M K
Hook
led
by
•powtf
Elizabeth Pre-scott, will be hosts.
Circuitfy, up.
other
CITY EMPLOYEE EVENTS
CALENDAR
mtdtt, .Iri
O / A N A M G l ' l t u , W e l f a r e Department., First F r i d a y Luncheon, Dec.
2. 1 p.m. in St. Alphonsus Cafeteria, W e s t Broadway at Canal St.
S p e a k e r : R e v . R o m a n u s Dunne. Evening of Recollection, 6:30 p.m.
Friday,
B'NAI
Dec. 2, St.
B'KITH,
Elizabeth
Municipal
Center,
7 Gramei'cy
L o d g e , .Meeting,
8:30
p.m.
Park
West.
Wednesday.
N o v . 30. Empire Hotel, B r o a d w a y and 63d St., M a n h a t t a n .
RT. C E O K G K
nominate
ASSOCIATION,
oflicers,
5
p.m.
Correction
Tuesday,
Department,
Nov.
29, in
Meeting
the
to
FORT GEORGE RADIO
1569 St. Nicholas Ave., New York
Women's
(Bef. 188th & 189ih Sfs.)
House of Detention, 10 G r e e n w i c h Ave., M a n h .
ST. G E O K C K ASSOt'lA'l'IO.N, H e a l t h D e p a r t m e n t , Quarterly
Supper
e n d M e e t i n g , 6:30 p ni. M o n d a y . Dec. 5, First Presbyterian Church
P a r i i h Hou^e, 12 W . 12th St., M a n l i a t t a n .
•III« ' IMl
Ml
i w m i n i Muu
imniMti
wiinit
SW 5-2677
SW 5-3155
'v ^^^
EDITOMAL
U'
The Surrender
' N I O N I S M h8U5 always counted the strike as the most
potent weapon In Its arsenal and It comes as no little
aurprlse to us to hear that Council 50, AFSCME, last week
relinquished the weapon It has been brandishing at the State
Thruway Authority with such frequency these past few
months.
Jean Coutourler, president of Council 50, has been loud
and agresslve during this time as he promised his members
ft union shop, a work contract, exclusive bargaining and a
strike if the union did not get what it wanted.
Last week he qultely signed a policy statement drafted
by the Thruway Authority which emphasized that no strikes
would be tolerated and no exclusive bargaining would be
granted any organization. He also has abandoned the rest of
his program.
As is his custom, Mr. Coutourler announced the act as
a victory. It seems to us that Council 50's membership has
paid an awful lot of dues money for this poor performance.
We are pleased that Council 50 has agreed to obey the
law. We express our sympathy to those who supported a
hostile employee program that not only went up in smoke
but that had no chance of accomplishment in the first place.
Union Signs Statement
issued By State Thruway
Oneonta Chapter
Holds Regular
Monthly Meeting
clusive use of each employee organization.
4. Grants toll collection emT h e regular monthly meeting
ployees five days annually in ad- of the Oneonta Chapter of the
dition to the time
previously Civil Service Employees A.c.sociaavailable as compensatory time off tion was held at the Division of
f o r overtime worked In "checking Employment Offices last week. I t
o u t " at the end of shift.
was attended by 23 members.
Following the usual order of
5. Contains detailed job specifiBoland,
SUCE,
cations for maintenance positions. business Larry
6. Defines restrictions on use of Oneonta announced there would
part-time personnel In toll collec- be a dinner meeting of the M e m bership Committee soon. T h i s was
tion operations.
7. Provides for consolidation of followed by a brief discussion r e garding contemplated salary upwork rules in one manual.
grading.
M r . Bixby, In a release, noted
Miss Marion Wakin, Chairman
that the Statement "provides In
of the turkey r a f f l e , reported exone convenient document ( a ) the
cellent sales and a neat profit.
employe benefits already provided
Winners
were;
C.C.
Mackert,
by the Authority: (bi certain emA L B A N Y , Nov. 28 — Appoint- Pennsylvania;
Jean
Whiteman,
ployee relations policies which previously had existed only on an ment of Robert W . Marshlow as Schenevus, and Nancy Wood, R.D.
informal, unwritten basis; and ( c ) assistant counsel to the State O f - 2. Oneonta, New York.
Mrs. Agne.s J. Williams, social
certain
new
policies
affecting fice f o r Local Government was
announced here by Milton Alpert, chairman, announced that the
Authority employes."
annual Christmas Party would be
A major provision of the State- counsel to the state agency.
M r . Marshlow is resigning as a held at Seeley's Homestead, Colment of Employe Relations Policy
provides that the employe organi- member of the Buffalo law firm of liersville, Saturday, December 17th
zations recognize and acknowledge Falk, Twelvetrees, Johnston and at 6;00 P.M. Detailed notices r e that any action or threat of action Siemer to accept the state post. garding this affair will be discontrary to law Is ground for He plans to move his family from tributed to each member at an
with drawal of recognition by the his present residence. 17 T w y l a early date.
Following the success of the
Authority and discontinuance of Place, Kenmore, to Albany in the
deductions f o r membership dues near future. He will also resign his buffet supper held at Jerry'.s
office as Justice of the Peace of Restaurant in October under the
on Authority payrolls.
the T o w n of Tonawanda because chairmanship
of
Mina
Weir.
The Statement also re-emphaof the move to Albany.
SUCE. it was decided that the
sizes that the Authority cannot
M r . Marshlow Is expected to as- next regular meeting of the C h a p grant to any employe organization
sume his new position as assist- ter on January 17. 1961 would be
an exclusive right of representaant counsel to the State Office for a similar affair. Mrs. Margeurite
tion for Authority employes.
Local Government on or about Waters and Mrs. Marion Birdsall
Copies of the Statement will
December 1, 1960. His salary will were named co-chairman of the
be distributed to each of the 1,700
be $14,000 a year.
January meeting.
employe.s of the Authority.
(Continued from Page 1)
concerning the contents of the
policy statement, and we are sure
that employees of the Thruway
will be pleased with the detailed
manner In which the Thruway
work conditions are spelled out.
T h e policy statement does clarify
employee benefits achieved by our
Association in the pa.st, and we
will continue to work for further
improvements which we have requested which are not contained
in the policy statement", concluded Mr. Feily.
Marshlow Gets
$14,000 Post
Feily: An Open Letter
made by Northwestern University
have not been refined by statistical adjustment
These studies are extremely valuable in that they show a trend.
T h e y indicate that New York
State instead of being either a
leader in salaries paid its public
employees or maintaining a parity
with salaries paid in industry,
is and has been falling behind.
T h e studies encompass a sufficient
number of job categories to point
out that this lag is general. I t
affects not
only
the
clerical
New Policies
grades, but also those grades f o r
Here are some new policies, inwhich professional technical training is required. I t also explains cluded in the statement:
1. Provides employee organizawhy New York State is having
such difficulty In its recruitment tions recognize and acknowledge
How They Are Made
and why it ts faced with its turn- that any action, contrary to law
I n all fairness, it should be
Is ground for withdrawal of recogover problem.
pointed out that the three salary
These and other points will be nition by the Authority and discomparisons mentioned above apof
deductions
for
further explanded in subsequent continuance
proach the problem from different
membership dues on Authority
letters.
statistical bases. T h e first expayrolls.
ample, using the figures from the
2. Permits employee organizaBureau of Labor Statistics, meation to designate one officer In
sures the average wage scale paid
A L B A N Y , N o v . 28—Anthony R . each Division to deal with griein the categories enumerated. I t
PittarelU has joined
Governor vances and employee relations at
uses a .standard statistical devise
Rockefeller's Capitol staff as a the Division level.
to equate the wage ranges paid
confidential law assistant.
His
3. Provides
for
Authority
to
In Industry against the wage
salary Is $6,750 a year. M r . P i t - furnish the locked bulletin board In
ranges computed f o r the state emtarelU is a Syracuse University each toll utility building
and
ployees. T h e study made of the
graduate.
maintenance headquarters f o r exother public Jurlsdlctlon.s and that
(Continued from Page 1)
ther supports the Civil Service
Employees' Association contention
that a three grade pay increase is
needed. Northwestern University
in 1959 published a document
called " T r e n d s in the Employment
of College and University Graduates in Business & Industry". Its
studies included the starting rates
in three
fields —
Engineer",
"General
Business",
and
"Accountant". I n each instance In
1959 and f o r almost a decade
preceding. New Y o r k State has
trailed in its salaries paid to the
oollege graduates In these categories.
Study Course Is Planned
By Metro DE Unit
T w o major events for the members of the Metropolitan Division
of Employment Chapter of the
Civil Service Employees As.sociation will close out a year of activity and accomplishment.
On Capitol StafF
Rules for Chapter
News Writers
Chapters of the Civil Service
Employees Association wishing
to remit items to T h e Leader
concerning chapter
activities
are asked to observe the following
rules
when
submitting
copy;
1. Material should be typed
and double spaced. Do not send
In hand-written articles.
2. T h e first name or first two
Initials of a person's name
should always be used. People
should not be called Mr. Smith
or
Miss Jones but
Robert
Smith, R. L. Smith, etc. Do not
abbreviate titles. Use first vice
president, not 1st v . p.
3. Meeting
announcements
or other news with time elements should be mailed at least
two weeks before the date of
the meeting or event.
4. Pictures should be glossy
prints and should be clear.
Dark or extra light pictures do
not reproduce. Color prints also
are not usuable.
Observance of these rules
will do much to Kssure that
your news and pictures receive
4ulck and suitable handling In
T h e Leader.
HONORED AT MIDDLETOWN STATE
T h e first event is the annual
holiday dinner which will be held
December 13, at Victor's Restaurant. 1 East 35th Street. New
York City.
Max Weinstein. chief actuary of
the New Y o r k State Retirement
System will be guest speaker. He
will bring his listeners up to date
on retirement and a question and
answer period will follow
his
address.
T h e social committee reque.sts
that reservations be made by contacting any one of the following:
Dorothy Haley, Chairlady at local
office 523, Tu-2-9000; Hazel Bolduc, local office 533, Tr-5-5413;
Ethel
Ruster, N Y S E S
L05710.
Pe-6-1700.
Study Course
T h e second important event is
the study course the Chapter is
giving to aid candidates who are
preparing for the promotional examinations f o r senior employment
interviewer and employment manager. I t will consist of 12 lectures
which will be given at 247 West
54th Street, 7th floor. New York
City.
Registration will be on Tuesday,
December 6th, 1960, between the
hours of 5:30 P.M. and 7:30 P.M.
T h e lectures will be given between
S:00 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
Nineteen staff members of Middletown S t a t e Hospital w e r e
given a testimonial dinner recently in tribute to their 25 years
of civil service employment. The recipient w e r e given pins or
buttons. State Senator D. Clinton Dominick III, was on hand
to honor the employees. They a r e shown above, back r o w :
E d w a r d Von Loon, Robert Norton, A l b e r t Birdsall, C h a r l e s
Downing, Harold Edwards and Arnold Sperl. Second row:
Thomas Sheldon, Henry Tripp, Theodore Relyea, Herman Hite
and Raymond Bruyn. Front r o w : Mrs. Albertine Cole, Mrs.
Elisabeth Eckert, Mrs. Mary E. W a r n e r , Miss Dorothy Myruski,
Mrs. M a r y Tripp and Mrs. Beatrice M u r r a y .
sion is being appealed. A t this
writing
no decision has been
handed down on reallocation of
claims clerks.
T h e Chapter has been advised
by P e r s o n n e l Director Harry
Smith, that the Division of E m ployment Is complying with our
request f o r permanent appointments f r o m the claims clerk p r o motion list. T h e Chapter has also
gone on record with M r . Smith
that provisions must be made to
eliminate any l a y - o f f s in this title
In the future.
Grievance Report
Grievance
Chairman, Bob
Dailey. reports that at the request
of the organization, the administration is going to retrain personnel previously assigned to the
Health Pi'ogram in each local
office. Employees will thu.s be able
to get better service and i n f o r m a tion pertaining to their membership In a medical plan.
Mr. Dailey also reports that a
meeting between Edward Caine,
unemployment insurance superintendent, District 4 and the g r i e v ance committee, took place r e cently f o r the purpose of going
over such matters as transfer.j
iwlicy, staffing assignments, and
the hourly worker program as it
affected the Brooklyn unemployment Insurance offices.
T h e members who attended this
grievance committee meeting were
as follows: Ralph Fabiano, V i n cent D1 Grazia, Frank Ferrara,
Bernard Ellis, Rosemary Lyons,
T h e Chapter expresses its keen
Edward Murphy, Hazel Bolduc,
disappointment In the retrogresJack Koplick and Irving Sandler.
sive decision of Mr. J. Earl Kelly
Compensation and Classification
Director regarding the application
f o r reallocation of the titles of
A L B A N Y , Nov. 28 John W .
claims examiner, senior claims Winthrop, an Investment coun<
examiner, employment interviewer aeltor, has been named to t h e
and .senior employment
Inter- Council of the State Unlversltjr
viewer. As has already been an- College of Education at Potsdam.
nounced in The l e a d e r and by He succeeds Lawrence F . CuthI special C S E A bulletins, this deci- bert of Ogdensburg, who retired.
In College
Post
Army Has Business
Machine, Clerk and
Steno Openings Here
SAD DAY FOR THE "COHENS"
The
New
York
Ordnance
Dis-
Shoppers Service Guide ^ '
Help Wanted
FOR SALE
trict, U. S. A r m y , 770 B r o a d w a y , CANVASSERS
N e w Y o r k 3, New Y o r k , is urgently
in need of the f o l l o w i n g personnel:
T a b u l a t i o n p r o j e c t planner, G S 11. $7,560 to $8,860 a
year.
Electric accounting machine supervisor ( p r o j e c t p l a n n i n g ) , G S - 7 ,
$5,355 to $6,345 per annum.
Card
punch
supervisor,
GS-5,
$4,345 to $5,335 per annum.
Clerk stenographer, G S - 3 , $3,760
to $4,390 per annum.
Clerk
typist.
GS-2,
$3,500
$4,130 per annum.
For
further
tact Mrs.
informaflon.
Vogel,
Oregon
U.S. Service News Items
By CLYDE H. REID
All
Eyes
President
Federal
poi tations by m a i l to Cuba are re-
on
Elect
JFK
workers
will
keenly w h a t the new
tion
does
with
e<iministrative
stricted. Cuba Is added to the list
of
watch
administra-
career
posts
assistant
of
secretar-
restricted
destinations,
and
a
con-
7-3030,
HKN!<ATI<I\AI. MONKY M.XKKRSM
For People In a Hui-ry to make . . .
MONEY
Af'fiemble yourself f'li^h Button peufl
$18,110 per l.nofl
B'
office Penf
(Lindy T y p e ) ¥.3B.OO per 1.000. l a "
Jumbo Pens SiBB.IIO per 1000. Imprinted
per 1000 — H A N D WROtlGHT
A L U M I N U M BULL HANDLES
SIX PIECE $1B.OO
StainlcRB Steak Knite Set —
Latest Novelty $2.60 per 8et
P E R M A R I T E , 712 B way-N.Y. .1. N.Y.
to
permit
the
mailing
only.
Parcels will not be accepted f o r
on the attitude the new boss will
mailing to Cuba unless the w r a p -
KITCHEN C H A I R S
t a k e towards civil service.
pers are endorsed with the letters
D e m o c r a t s G C U . or other appropriate g e n predict that those who h a v e done eral license symbol and the words,
Some
high-ranking
good work will be retained. I t is " G e n e r a l License not required,"
e, f a c t that m a n y of the h i g h or a validated license issued by the
ranking
career
during
the
jobs were set
last
ministration
up
Democratic
and
the
ad-
new
Kennedy'.s election has derailed
fi drive f o r a shorter week in G o v ernment. H e made it clear during
campaign
he
would
flatly
oppose any cut in working hours.
Salaries
ington's
of
workers on
Capital
Hill
are
t h a n other agencies. I n
achieving
oul;-
etanding p e r f o r m a n c e s as civilian
employees of the N e w Y o r k
Audit
Dis-
Agency,
T h o y are Mrs. Rose Connelly of
335-24 Hoover Ave., K e w Gardens,
L . I., secretary to Colonel Joseph
Wiechmann,
Agency
made
the
Deputy
presenta-
tions; Sidney S. Baurmash of 1646
Southern
Drive,
North
Valley
S t r e a m , L . I., Supervisory A u d i t o r ;
« n d Samuel Edison, 1135 B o y n t o n
Ave., N e w Y o r k City, Pile
»
»
»
Family
Clerk.
Needs
$6,084 To
Live
T h e Bureau of L a b o r Statistics*
new
estimates
costs show
proximate
of
that
family
Mving
It cost* an
ap-
$6,000.00 per y e a r
for
ft f a m i l y of f o u r to live modestly
— b u t adequate.
Actually, a survey of 20 cities In
t h e U n i t e d States showed t h a t an
Average of $6,084.00 or $117.00 per
week (including federal, state and
t l t y taxes) Is needed.
•
•
•
Mailinif To Culm
In
Restricted
R o b e r t K . Chrlstenberry,
master
of
New
York,
Post-
announces
t l i a l under the new regulations of
the
Commerce
DA 8-6543
M A R I O N E. RODDEN REST HOME recently opened, certified, in beautiful Lake
Ronkonkoma. For elderly-retired-convalescents, needing
care,
understanding.
Diet cupei'vision. Tastefully furnished
pvt.
&
semi-pvt.
rme.;
landscapeil
groimd. Churches near-by, 24 hour supervision, licensed nurae. From
$40
weekly, ROnkonkomu U-4411.
L A D I E S
HAIR EXPERTLY REMOVED
F A C E - ARMS • L E G S - BODY
PERSONAL
ATP
* N«
that
for
33 W. 42nd i t . , N.Y.C.
PE &-2920
Guaranteed Perninnent Si Pnlnlest
Recommended by Physielaiia
Addinq Machines
Typtwrittr*
Mimsographt
Addressing Machines
Goarmnteed A l i o Kentala,
Federal
f i r m i n g these titles f o r
With
a new
white
crew
CUeUea 8-8086
I I S W «Srd 8 T „ NEW V^>Kll )
house,
agen-
them.
coming
the
service
Department,
have
titles.
been
into
employees
ex-
The
agency
telling
them
plenty of t i m e remains to secure
career status f o r them and there
isn't any reason they should push
the
issue.
Last
June
more
than
10,000
temporary - appointments - p e n d (TAPER)
registers
were made. A s of
this
t i m e f e w of these h a v e been g i v e n
career
status.
SHOPPERS GUIDE
Beauty Rest Mattresses
VOD'LL
FIND
A
FULLY
QUILTED.
kUluuth Ion & buluirii UEAUTY KKST
MATTRKSS. Ym, Sir, H B E A U T T R K S T
HY SIMMONS Ht l l l « mice you would
frxpeiH io pay lor an Ordinai->' MattrfheFHEDERICKS. Com* in or call,
lit
Lex Ave., MU. a-H;r;2.
Nobody likes to think about
being sick or injured, but the sad
fact is that most of us, sometime
during our lives, will be forced
by sickness or accident to stay
out of work. Fortunately, this
period is usually short. . .
But,
you can't always count on this.
Business Opportunities
You can count on C.S.E.A. Accident and Sickness insurance to pay you a
steady income If you are disabled. Over 33,000 C.S.E.A. members enjoy
this protection—which supplements their benefits under the State Hospital
Plan. Hundreds of members already have received benefits totaling millions
of dollars.
Business Opportunity
You owe it to yourself and your family to Investigate the C.S.E.A. Accident
end Sickness insurance plan.
111- TO 86% JA.X F K E E I M U M i :
paid to yoii monthly. Smalt diveroiflcd
inveBiuifnte netting ironi 10% to
Ltd. N. Y . State leaidrnlH
Roffcr Realty Syndicatloni. BO l-Bfllie
KARN
$&0.00 D A I L Y l l
INCREDIBI.E!
rn'ENI'ING Meilran Leather Walleti. worth
if'lU.OU. Send $!< 00 your coat tor eaniple.
UnvHtibfltd—money
returned.
You Ueep
Kamide. Ruth I L«atherco , M o t o r 71L,
i;ali(.
AUTOMOTIVE. H A R D W A R E A F A S T E N E R
s.ileeman, Full or I'art Tiuie to Siivict
Boity Shops, tiarakee A Fleet Acctk,
Hilih wetlily Uiawui* Account. )"i.US,
•HONUS for regular iiroducere. W R I T E ;
AII.O ProduclK C o , Riveiton, N J . or
Call R I V E R T O N 8 '.iOliaei
LONli. ESTAUU.SllEU itiiliomry »tore In
Quiini!. near Jamaica Ave. and Railroail
Htation will) Karden-ai)t., lonv ItiiM,
tt mouth. - HO 6 IK on.
L O O K I N G FOR A H O M E
S e e Page I I
Furjull infmnuition cull or writt
'A
ll«p«ln
ALL L A N G U A G E S
TYPEWRITER C O .
career-status
some
PRIVACY
E. C A P A L D O
People
ing-establishment of
290 B r o a d w a y , N e w Y o r k City.
who
eligible
big-wigs
and one f r o m M a n h a t t a n were r e -
Chief,
Call IIVNAMIC
RlRlit Noiv
MEN
Services
T h o s e g o v e r n m e n t workers who
are
civil
T w o civilians f i o m f^ong Island
H.
"
".'irj,;
ROOM ft BOARD FOR
Appliance
Sales & Scivice
recond Kefiigs StoTCf,
Wash. Machines, combo sinka. Guaranteed
T R A C T B E F K I O E R A T I O N — C T 2-6900
240 B 148 St A 1204 Caatle Hill Av Bs.
T R A C t SBHVICINQ CORP
(regardless of their politics) would
Cited For
S. A r m y
$039
O P P O R T U N I T Y Y E A R IS H E R E M I l
Be A Wonderwear Dealer—EARN
$50.00 to $150.00 weekly p/t
DEMONSTRATE A T HOME P A R T I E S
a fabulous line of polyethylene
and vinyl household products.
Car nec. Comm. Tulip 1-720B.
UTILITIES
SUNDELL CO., INC. .'IdO Central Avenue,
Albany. N.Y. Tel. HE. 4-2800. Quaker
Maid
Kitchens. Scheirich
Kitchens.
f e e l much m o r e secure w i t h career
Achieveiuents
trict. U.
Male - Steno - Reporter
M A L E B T E N O T Y l ' E R E P O R T E R - EXPERIENCED. O P P O R T U N I T Y TO E A R N
$12.0n0 A Y E A R AND MORE. DEPENDING ON A B I L I T Y TO PRODUCE. MUST
W R I T E A T LEAST 200 WORDS PER
M I N U T E AND BE A B L E TO R E P O R T
MEETINGS, A R B I T R A T I O N S
AND
TO
WORK ON D A I L Y
COPIES. ADDRESS
A L L R E P L I E S INCLUDING PHOTO TO
MORSE, G A N T V E R G
& HODGE. 7B0
LEADER
BUILDING, C L E V E L A N D 14,
OHIO.
F A B U L I T1
NEW GEMSXONE. cut like a diamond,
even as brilliant as a diamond. 74 W .
4rth St., Booth 3, CI. 7-7220.
A trait ]\ew Titles
cies are " c o o l " to the idea of con-
*
for
E A R N XMAS fun<ls taking magazine subscriptions. No obligations. C.iesell Boynton Beach. Florida.
Books
BOOKS: T E R R I F I i ; PROFITS I No Investment. Write Lindstroms, 48 Boylston
Street. Casibrldge, Mass.
•
higher
addition,
R«-ll|)holiitered like xNew
Mnke your kltclivn
N K W hnnin with
Neiv-Iooklnic fiirniUire. Your choice of
decorator oolors
Rugs for Sale
RUGS NEM.;u USED, !lxl2, $,30, also
matching pair 0x16 & 12x15 w/Joam
rubber cushions. Stainless steel cookwr.
Vac cleaner • »20. — V A L L E Y Stream
0-6,Jl7.
mailing.
•
Career-Status
the
*
cited
»
pre-
charge
•these employees.
cently
sented at time of
is
Wash-
l e t i r e m e n t benefits build faster f o r
*
Department
one
would hardly m a k e a change.
the
Commerce
SALESPEOPLE —
100%
M A R K U P . If you sell retail—2f>% markui> if you job-lot-our 'Swarvosky' Aurora
Ci-VBtal Jewelry. Sample Neckia** gt
Earrings $.S.O0. BORUCKl
JEWELRY
Co.. 5HB Williams St.. Brirdgeport, Conn.
.MEN-WOMEN top comm plus bonus sell
uniforms to Doctors, Nurses. Beauticians. waitresses—Free catalog. HOLLIDAY
U N I F O R M — 3 2 2 Livingson
St ,
Bklyn. N.Y.
Expertly
ies. Thl.s m a y give t h e m a tip-p/f
Salesmen & Agents Wanted
Beautiful roeai7 in niniulated birth^tone makes thonrhtful A cherifhed
gift. Send month of birth & fl.OO for
each rosary. RICHMORE
SERVICE.
INC.. 481 Thattord, Brooklyn 12, N.Y.
of
T Y P B W R I T E H BARQAIN8
Smlth-»17 60. Dnderwood-$22.S0; o t h e n
Pearl Bros. 4 76 Smith. Rkn TR S - 8 0 M
Salesman Wanted
F r i . I , T I M E — P a r i Time & Spare time
SiiIcBmeu, earn
added
income
ouickiy,
easily, selling popular automolive item.
F U L L details on reouest Write Mill River
Auto Products. Box 16S. Gr. Neck, N.Y.
Help Wanted - Male & Female
foods, drugs, and medical supplies
to that country
SELL.
GA.MHANDV
1 in-1
«
Cinl
Combination
Tool
sets. GAM
MF(4.
CO.,
BOX
1540CS.
Lancaeter,
Pa
BIRTHSTONE ROSARY
new general license G C U is established
Agents Wanted
to JOBBERS —
T W O — C O U N T 'EM!!
A t the Brooklyn Army Terminal soda fountain, three nominees
for the Civilian Welfare Fund Council—all named "Cohen"
and no relation—submit ballots during a soda break last week.
Voting for each other (or themselves) ore, from left to right:
Noah Cohen, Emanuel Cohen, and Irving Cohen. (PS: Stuffing
the ballot box didn't help—all three Cohens lost!)
— Part, full time. Wittnauer. Bulova Watches, clothing, no
money down, drop delivery. High Comm
Ray'i. 1248 Fulton St., Brooklyn.
P O W E L L ,
I N C ;
t4a Cllnlen St, Sthentclody 1, N Y. • Ftanklln 4-7791 * Albany S-2032
Walbrids* Bids, Bvflale 3, N Y. • Moditon 8333
S42 Moditon Av*., New York 17, N.Y. • Murray Hill 3-7I9S
N. 1
Examination For New Yoric State
Beginning Office Wori(er Will
Offer Full And Part Time Jobs
M a n y p a r t - t i m e , as well as f u l l requirements of education or
time clerical ,1obs will be In the perience.
This
o f t e r i n g f o r those who compete In
examination
filling
the State beginning o f f i c e worker f o r
e x a m i n a t i o n w h i c h opens f o r f i l - titles. T h e y
will
vacancies
be
Filing
used
in
ination
Set
Test
for
this
will
end
Date
popular
Jan.
exam-
16.
The
three w r i t t e n test is tentatively schedclerk, uled f o r Feb. 25. Candidates must
clerk. get at least 75 per cent on the
are: clerk, file
and account and statistical
ing Dec. 5.
ex-
Part-time or hourly workers will Applicants will be p e r m i t t e d to written which will weigh 100 per
be e m p l o y e d in the Division of E m - take all three of the Job options cent of the mark.
ployment. Currently there are m o r e o f f e r e d .
T h e written test will have quesAge L i m i t s
than 100 persons in this c a p a c i t y .
tions on vocabulary, reading c o m These jobs, according to officials
T o be eligible applicants must prehension,
name
and
address
in personnel, have gi-eat appeal to have lived in this state f o r one checking and arithmetic. T h e file
housewives and evening students. year preceeding the e x a m i n a t i o n . clerk section of the e x a m w i l l in
H e r e are some of the benefits T h e y must be citizens at the time all probability not contain quesshared
by
part-time,
beginning of a p p o i n t m e n t and between the tions o n ' a r i t h m e t i c . T e s t
time
office w o r k e r s :
•
ages of 18 and 70.
T h e y are paid $1.76 an hour.
Clerk
and
file
Title Examiner
Filing Will End
December 19
have
Candidates
a
who
pass
the
•
They
week"
may
basis.
work
(On
on a
one
didates
test
"skipoff
T h e State has announced it has
These
for
the careful
positions
best
r a n g e in salary f r o m $2,920 to 3,810, and there
are no
T h e written examination, schedw e i g h t of 1. T h e r e will be a per3,
past
be
accepted
ob-
at
270
Y..
Broadway,
corner
New
of
York
Chambers
7,
St.,
telephone B A r c l a y 7-1616: G o v e r nor A l f r e d E. S m i t h
State Office
Building
and T h e State
Albany;
Room
400
at
M a i n Street, Rochester
days
only I ;
Syracuse
and
i first
days of each
14i
and
Campus,
155
West
(WednesJames
third
BROOKLYN
Ilpiipnt4
Pension
EXAM
HOURS
sa\AR7E'S'?O
$6,715
OiM'n (o iiiiMi 'M tliroui;li 4;} — K»|iiirriiii'iitK iiNiuilly ini'liiile:
yrAr«
l.aw Kiiforceinpiit (»(Til-«'r. I.ilw t'tei-k or
jears of oilier i'X|ierii'iiie in New
York Court work: OK. Alliiiisnlon to New York State liar, OK Krailuatlon
from law silionl. OR unti^faclory eunililnulion of siicli Iraininu nnil riiieriencc.
Classes MON. & THURS. at 1:15, 5:30 ond 7:30 P.M.
Ne»f
Exam Expected to Be Held Soon f o r N.Y.City
PATROLMAN - $5,325
to $6,706 In 3
Years
(Itaxeil on I'Miolir U'eek—InrliiileM Sil'i.'i Annual t niforni .MIowum'e)
1-KNSlON A T IIAI I r \ V AI TKK JO YRS.—1 I I.I. { I V I L SIIKVK K I l K N K H T S
CLASSES IN M A N H A T T A N : MON. & WED. at 1:15. 5:30 OR 7;30 P.M.
HIGH S C H O O L EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
Neeileil »(y Nmi-tJraduiilcs of Hifrli School lor man.v Civil Service Kxaiun.
5-Week Course l^reiiures fur Exunis (.'omhieteil by N. Y. Slate Deiil. of Ed.
START CLASSES WED., NOV. 30 ot 6:30 P.M.
N . Y . C I T Y WRITTEN EXAM SCHEDULED FOR
ASST. GARDENER -
APRIL
$3,750 - $4,500
ENROLL NOW! Class in Manhattan, TUES. at 7 P.M.
''H here Flallitisli
Meelx
I lira
Aqes to 55 . No Educational or Experience Requirements
iil .iieniie
S"
Classes Forming f o r Forthcoming
RAILROAD CLERK
Men «i Women
i'a( h iu*'w applicant appeariiiK in ))erson
•
Name.
I
I
Address
|
I
City
H
Present Insurance Company
OPEN TUtSDAYS
'TIL 8 P.M.
^
^
^
<Subway Change Maker)
Residence
On sale at our offices or by mail. No C.O.D.'s.
i
^
—
N.Y. City
NOT
Required
POST OFFICE CLERK-CARRIER
MAIL AT ONCE For Exact Rates on Your Car ^ i -
Phone
Eligible.
Exam f o r
Get Our Home Study Book for POST O F F I C E EXAMS
f ^ i 152 West 42nd St., N. V. 36 j R y M 9 - 5 2 0 0
Blue Crosi
AT CONVENIENT
2344 F L A T B U S H A V E N U E
St.,
Tues-
MIUI Clou
& JAMAICA
CLASSES IN J A M A I C A : WED. at 7 P.M. & FRI. at 5:30 OR 7:30 P.M.
p . STATE:WIDE INSURANCE COMPANY
for D a d d y ? "
Scrvlw
F I I . I . ( I V I L .SKKVK K IIKNEFITS tnoluiting I'KXSlOX, SOCIAI. SKCl K I T Y , et«.
VALUABLE FREE GIFT for
have
.\ll Civil
VISIT OUR N E W B R O O K L Y N B R A N C H
month).
do wa
&
Excellent Promotional Opportunities to Positions at $10,000 a Yr. Up
C L o v e r d a i e 9-8100
"Mom,
••^XPERIMICT* Kt'<in1red—IVIIMIOII
AGES: 19 through 28-Older f o r Vets.-MIN. HGT. 5'8".VISION: 20/30
Kiich iluy, mure ami inoie city. Htale hikI I'Vdcial
uini»loyef« dlNntver tliiit riill-cuveniKiH ntr iiiiturHiice 4-hii
(•<iMt WHH—with
State-Wide. S(iite->Vitie hiHiireH uiily
run*fiil drlverH . . . i>limliiatt'M hrokeiH' ttinl mileHineit's
coniiiiUsioMN . . . eiitK dnwii overhead cumIM . . . and
pusxeN llie
MaviiiKt* directly an to you. Full o o v
craKo tiiilorml to your needs . . . ta»«t. fair and friendly
ctuiniH Hervire throughout the I nlted Stales and Canada.
Mail tlie eou|>on today—and don't rtMiew your present
|M>lley 'til you've compared State-Wide's low, low ratest
tain applications f r o m : First floor
N.
QUEENS
YOU CAN'T BUY BETTER INSURANCE-WHY PAY MORE?
will be a part of the grade.
will
C L E R K S — $2,920 to $3,900 a Year
Promotional Opportunities to $12,000
F o r $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 ' 2 0 , 0 0 0 B o d i l y I n j u r y a n d $5,000 P r o p e r t y D a m a g e
L i m i t s , includitig c o v e r a g e s r e q u i r e d by all N e w Y o r k L a w s .
S A M E 2 0 % S A V I N G S IF Y O U L I V E E L S E W H E R E
OR W A N T H I G H E R L I M I T S
work. I n addition to this seniority
Applications
g-S01»
General Sessions, County and Supreme Courts
'84' '96" '138"
these
until Dec. 19, 1960. Y o u m a y
(Suburban)
NASSAU
the
1, 2 and
-
N. Y. STATE AND N. Y. CITY EXAMS SOON FOR
FULL YEAR PREMIUM FOR ELIGIBLE RESIDENTS OF:
inves-
uled f o r Jan. 21, 1961 will h a v e a
of
Alipt. Only
Opportunities f o r Men & Women — 17 Years and O v e r !
COURT OFFICERS
claims.
rating
Bj
PREPARE NOW! — EXAM EXPECTED SOON!
disability
depending on the quality of
• Orlhn|>i»t
300 West 23rd St., N. Y. C.
a
8 of the top 10 in the Last Exam were Delehanty Students!
S t a t e Insurance F u n d and to de-
formance
OpIomctrlHt
DR. J O H N T . F L Y N N
title
A t t r a c t i v e Salaries and Opportunitiei f o r Promotion
Interesting Duties - Short Hours > Liberal Vacations
Sick Leave - Hospitaliiation • Pension & Social Security
BE OUR GUEST AT ANY CLASS SESSION OF INTEREST TO YOU(
CLASSES IN M A N H A T T A N
I t is the duty of the compensa-
t e r m i n e the authenticity of
OF
Our iiitei)Hi\4> rt'vicw coiirsi* slinnlfl iiii'ri'iisp iiii nliplil'aiit'H riitiiiK tiy irt%
3 0 % . Dnn't talti* ctuiiK'CH! <hir llHMlfratt^ fee will ptitllilc you t » Httrnd cIll.sHe!*
rlRlit il|> to y<inr p\imi <lat<' ami whotlld jirt'aMy iMillalirc your I'tuiuccH of iiassIII); wKh a lilull rariiii*. A fi'w licrci'titaui' lioliits will uuikt* a hie (lilTi'reiu-e!
Ill IIIK last riain. No. . n i on Hie I M hail il ratins of K.~>.i:i% wliile .No. Dili
hiKl « « . - ; i i % .
imum reached in f i v e years.
benefits claims m a d e against
TEST
REQUIREMENTS.
ONLY 35% PASSED LAST TIME! (3,035 of 8,501 Candidates)
T h i s popular title has a salary
or
EYESIGHT
SERVICE
FIREMAN APPLICANTS
examination.
compensation
THE
CIVIL
LESS THAN 2 MONTHS TO PREPARE FOR WRITTEN
r a n g e of $4,280 to $5,250, the m a x -
tigate
FOR
a
Be Our Guest at a Class WED. or FRI. at 7 P.M.
Insurance
tion claims investigator to
FOR
PATROLMAN
FIREMAN
TRANSIT POLICE
THOROUGH PREPARATION FOR WRITTEN EXAM
compensation
investigator
OK CANDIDATKS
.t ycart recenl evperience as Construction Sn|>t. or In nia.ior luiildinK
trad«« Huch hh Mason. Carpenter, I'lasterer. Iron \>'orker. etr. or an
e«|Mivaleni <-oinl)ination of experience and (rainhiK.
w i l l have an opportunity to c o m claims
Campus,
Visual Training
Pull Civil Servictt Benel^ts including
friend
F u n d as senior clerks f o r one year,
pete in the coming
Y.;
Office
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES in CIVIL SERVICE
driver's
minimum
State
State
CONSTRUCTION INSPECTOR
$5,450 to $6,890 a Year
Candidates, w h o have been e m w i t h the
wilth
270
N.
Applications Open Dec. 1st - N.Y.C. Exam Jan. 14th!
State Seeking
Claims Investigators
ployed
examining
Smith
7,
OPENING CLASSES WED., NOV. 30 at 5:30 or 7:30 P.M.
STATE-WIDE
m o r e than 800 hours a y e a r .
vacancies
in
E.
York
Albany.
have
experience
or
N«
9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
of
of
New
THOUSANDS OF APPOINTMENTS IN NEW YORK CITY
And they are not permitted to work
workers.
graduates
applications
places:
Leading to Career Positions ot $7,500 a Year & Higher
l e a v e benefits. T h e y must be avail-
clerical
be
obtain
following
Building, and the S t a t e
title company. A n acceptable c o m -
P a r t - t i m e workers do not r e c e i v e
hundreds
years
searching
the next.t
able between
must
recognized h i g h school and
seven
clerk the salary r a n g e is $3,050 to held in eight N e w Y o r k City H i g h
work $3,810. I n all titles, there are p r o - Schools and other points t h r o u g h out the state.
m o t i o n a l titles.
week,
Alfred
Requh-ements
T h e y are not required to work starting salary of $2,290. I t rises to will be o f f e r e d positions in N e w
$3,650 a f t e r f i v e annual incre- Y o r k City and throughout the
• T h e y m a y choose the Borough ments. F o r account and statistics state. T h e written test will be
hours.
may
the
Broadway,
T o q u a l i f y f o r this position c a n -
•
• T h e y m a y request their
You
from
Y o u must be a resident of K i n g s
County to compete f o r the position w h i c h has a salary range of
$3,750 to $4,820. Vacancies now e x ist in the K i n g s County clerk's
office.
m o r e than 20 hours a week.
in which they w o r k .
ence will be acceptable.
Dec. 19, 1961 is the f i n a l day
applications will be accepted f o r
the N e w Y o r k S t a t e title e x a m i n e r
test w h i c h will be held Jan. 21.
f o r the e x a m i n a t i o n is two hours.
clerk
bination of education and e x p e r i -
A
^ f f i W ^ W ^ y
I
p
V O C A T I O N A L
DRAFTING
Munhullitu
h Juinuiia
'Jg
C O U R S E S
AUTO MECHANICS
Lung Uluiid C l l ;
Money ^ ^
TV SERVICE & REPAIR
Mmilmttun
The DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
M A N H A T T A N : 115 EAST 15 STREET
Phone GR 3.4900
J A M A I C A 89-25 MERRICK BLVD.. bet. Jamaica & Hillside A v e i .
t i r f N »ION TO I KI U ..A.M. »
I' M - C I OHKI) ON 8 \ T I K I I \ V 8
LETTERS
TO THE EDITOR
^ L e a d e r
Amertea's
iMrgent
Weekly
tor Puhlie
Member Audit Bureau of Circniationi
PuMinhed every Tuesday by
Invites Leader to
Tour Office On
Employees
Employee
Complaint
Editor, The Leader:
A recent issue of The Leader
LEADER PUBLICATIONS.
INC.
f 7 Dyodt Sfrtet, Ntw York 7. N. Y.
ii.lmioii J-4010 contained a reprint oi a letter,
addressed to you, from one of our
Jerry FinkeUlein, Conmlting
Puhlisher
Paul Kyer, Editor
Richard EvnnP, Jr., City Editor employees. It referred to a number
of discriminatory and "con-upt" acN. H. Muger, Bu$inett Manager
tivities allegedly indulged in by our
lOc per copy. Subscription Price $2.00 to member of the Civil
Service Employees Association. $4.00 to non-members
personnel office.
regret that you did not see fit
31 J to I inquire
first into the substance
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1960
Civil Service
LAW
&
YOU
H7 HAROLD L. H E R Z S T E I N
Mr. Herzstein is a member of the New York bar
He Who Gets Bumped
SEVERAL Y E A R S A G O , after a civil service meeting in Albany.
William J. Ronan and I were introduced by a mutual friend in t h «
Waldorf cafeteria and had a half hour chat over coffee. Although
our acquaintanceship was short, I was quickly Impressed with h l i
brilliance.
of those allegations, thereby enabling you to print, simultaneously
with the letter, your findings as
they related to the charges made.
SINCE THAT M E E T I N G big things have happened to Dr. Ronan.
This may well have prevented the He has become Secretary to the Governor which is perhaps the top
erroneous and misleading impres- Job In the Rockefeller "cabinet." As was the case with former secreN T H U S I A S M f o r a r e b a t e i n s t a t e I n c o m e t a x e s n e x t sions gained by many of your taries to Governors, whom I knew. Dr. Ronan collaborates with t h «
readers, with a consequent un- Governor in major policy determinations. His position in the Capitol
y e a r Is n o t q u i t e as w i d e s p r e a d as first b e l i e v e d .
favorable reflection cast upon has become s j forceful, that he is frequently referred to as "the other
W h i l e s u c h i m p o r t a n t figures as G o v . N e l s o n R o c k e f e l l e r government service as a whole.
Governor." The reference is, of course. Jocular. However, things are
As the editor of a publication wittiest when there is some underlying fact.
and Senate Majority Leader Walter Mahoney have plumped
f o r t h e r e b a t e b e c a u s e of a l l e g e d e x c e s s t a x r e v e n u e s , a n o t h e r dedicated to the advancement of
Reorganization
Author
m a j o r G O P l e a d e r , A s s m b . J o s e p h C a r o l i n o , h a s e x p r e s s e d s o m e the various components of civil
d o u b t as t o t h e w i s d o m of t h e m o v e . I n t h i s h e h a s b e e n service. Federal. State, and muniT H E D O C T O R HAS GONE further in the position of Secretary
cipal, I am sure you will agree
J o i n e d b y s o m e D e m o c r a t i c l e g i s l a t o r s as w e l l .
to the Governor than any of his predecessors. He is f a r more than
that a considerable amount of
T h o s e w h o are hesitating on t h e rebate, question w h e t h e r
a brain trustinc collaborator. In his own right, he Is the author of a
unfounded, adverse criticism aldramatic plan of reorganization of the government of the State. T h e
o r n o t t h e S t a t e c a n a s s u m e a l l i t s financial r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s
ready has been directed at the
a n d s t i l l g r a n t t h e t a x r e f u n d . T h i s is v e r y i m p o r t a n t t o t h e civil service system. The above Doctor Is so closely Identified with the proposal, that it has become
B t a t e ' s p u b l i c w o r k e r s b e c a u s e a s a l a r y i n c r e a s e f o r t h e c i v i l action, taken by you might have popularly known as " T h e Ronan Report."
T H E R E P O R T I N V O L V E S many changes in State law. A sub(Service is c e r t a i n l y o n e of t h e S t a t e ' s p r i m a r y r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s served, if only in a small way, to
I n 1961.
counteract a part of that criticism. stantial part of its Involves amendments to the State Constitution.
T o offset this unfavorable pub- For that reason, for it to become effective, it must be passed by two
W e f e e l a f u l l study of t h e w h o l e q u e s t i o n of w h e t h e r or
licity
which this incident has successive legislatures and then must be approved by the people In
n o t the State can a f l o r d an income tax rebate should be
a state-wide referendum. I t was passed by the 1960 legislature, and
I n s t i t u t e d a t o n c e . I f a r e b a t e c a n t r u l y be a f f o r d e d , w e a r e created, I am extending to you an
must now come before the recently elected legislature.
invitation
to
visit
our
office,
ina l l f o r it. I f i t m e a n s t h e S t a t e ' s w o r k e r s w i l l h a v e t o h e l p
quire Into our policies and pracTHE REPORT IS SILENT on employee dismissals or transfers.
p a y f o r i t by o b t a i n i n g o n l y a t o k e n s a l a r y I n c r e a s e , t h e n
tices as they relate to the charges The big question before our house Is: If the Ronan Report becomes
w e a r e a g a i n s t it.
made, and then draw your own law, how will It affect civil service employees?
conclusions. You will find, I think,
I HAVE T R I E D to get the answer to the question from authorithat those of our employees who ties on State government, on State civil service, on State salary
feel genuinely aggrieved have un- analyses, etc. No one seems to know the answer.
restricted recourse to the DepartP E R H A P S DR. R O N A N knows the answer. He certainly must bo
ment of the Army grievance pro- aware of the problem. He is the former dean of the New York
UniH E L O S S of t h r e e m e n i n t h e l o f t fire N o v . 18—A l i e u - cedures, without fear of reprisal. versity Graduats School of Public Administration and Social Service
tenant and two
firemen—tragically
u n d e r l i n e s t h e j u s t - These procedures are designed to and served New Y o r k University as Chairman of Its Institute of
I c e of t h e d e m a n d s of t h e U n i f o r m e d F i r e O f f i c e r s A s s o c i a - insure a fair and impartial review Labor Relations. The Doctor knows employee thinking, and knowi
t i o n a n d t h e U n i f o r m e d F i r e m e n s A s s o c i a t i o n f o r h i g h e r p a y of those grievances.
the score.
J. A. D I S A L V O
a n d better working conditions.
ON O C T O B E R 20, 1960, I wrote to the Doctor and extended an
CHIEF, P E R S O N N E L B R A N C H invitation to him to use this column for an article on the effect of
The
firefighter's
j o b c a n n o t be c o m p a r e d w i t h a t e a c h *
*
*
his reorganization plan on public employees. Among other things, I
e r ' s j o b or a m e c h a n i c ' s j o b , b e c a u s e an a v e r a g e of 10 fireHygiene
Out- wrote: " I believe that a column by you on how employees would be
m e n a y e a r die in t h e l i n e of d u t y , or 1 of e v e r y 100 m e n Mental
aflected by your plan would Interest the employees."
e v e r y y e a r . O f course t h e r e is also t h e s m o k e i n h a l a t i o n o c - Of-Title
Work Cited
Tax Rebate Should
Be Studied First
E
Tragedy Reminds Us
Of Our Fire Fighters
T
cupational hazard, the irregular hours and the frequent sudd e n e x c i t e m e n t and fast, strenuous, dangerous
New
York
City
w i t h t h e w o r k of
firefighters'
firemen
work
cannot
work.
be
compared
in other cities e i t h e r — a t least not
o n a n e q u a l basis. O n l y N e w
York
e q u a r e m i l e s of
firetraps.
100-year-old
City
has the
dozens
Only N e w Y o r k
of
City
h a s such massive traffic congestion t h a t the ride to the
fire
Is n e a r l y as b a d as t h e fire i t s e l f . O n l y N e w Y o r k s p e n d s so
many
firefighter
vention
To
m a n h o u r s o n fire p r e v e n t i o n a n d
fire
pre-
education.
pursue their
to know
their
City
hazardous
and
t r a d e , our
its people
people must keep supporting
firefighters
are backing
t h e g o a l s of
the
them.
need
The
firemen
and
o f f i c e r s — w h i c h in m a n y cases are t h e s a m e as t h o s e of
Fire
C o m m l . s s l o n e r E d w a r d F . C a v a n a g h , p a r t i c u l a r l y in t h e
field
o f w a g e s — a n d t h e C i t y m u s t be q u i c k e r t o g r a n t t h e s e goals.
Questions Answered
On Social Security
Below are questions on Social
Security problems sent in by our
readers and answered by a iexai
•Xpert in the Held. Anyone with
» question on Social Security
•hould write it out and send it
t « the Social Security Editor, Civil
•ervlce Leader, 97 Duane St., N.Y
Q. "Has there been any change
in the work requirement for eligibility under the new
law?"
A. Yes. Most people can become
insured more quickly. Also, many
older people who did not work for
the length of time required under
the old law may now be elicible
«i. "Does the new law make any for benefits.
provision for survivors of tliose
« » *
weriiers who died before 1940?"
Q. "Under
t h « new
amendA. Yes it docs. Survivors of
workers who had worlied under ments, Is It possible to receive a
benefit
eheck
even
Mi-ial security for at least a year disability
•nd a half and who had died be- thougl- I'm not 80? I've already
f « r « January 1, 1940, may now b« been awarded a disability freeze.
•ntttlcd to heneflts. Survivors InA. Yes, if yon stUl meet the
clude widows, afcd pendent par- d i s a b i l i t y requirewenU. You
•nta and disabled sons and danrh- should visit your district ofllce to
lets.
file for possiblo benellta
Editor, The Leader:
As President of the Mental Hygiene Employees Association. I
would like to commend and endorse the stand taken by Civil
S e r v i c e Employees Association
Pi-esident Joseph Felly in seeking
automatic promotions to end outof-title work for
maintenance
men.. I would like to go a step
further in regard to this practice
and set it up to encompass all noncompetitive positions in the State
Job structure.
No
Answer
Yet
I H A V E N E I T H E R R E C E I V E D A COLUMN nor an answer to my
letter. T o me the Doctor's silence can almost be heard.
I N T H I S C O L U M N ON OCTOBER 19, 1960, Comptroller Levitt,
as my guest, struck at the Ronan Report in regard to Its bad effect
on employees' retirement funds. The people have a lot of confidence
in the Comptroller's financial Judgment; and he Is a rugged opponent.
The Comptrollers opposition was based on the need for protecting
the employees' funds.
I A M G O I N G B E Y O N D T H A T and am talking about the employees thcmselve.s.
T H E R O N A N R E P O R T IS L O A D E D with violent effects on the
civil seivice. In my opinion the Doctor's silence is revealing. I will
write on this subject again. If Dr. Ronan wants to write on it, he is
Out-of-tltle work has plagued the welcome to this space.
State non-competitive
employee
for a good many years. The slogan
"some one must die or retire for procedure of this out-of-title work, the public and is no longer a
me to receive a prMnotion" has I t outlined the distinctions be- useful chairman in the Board of
been chanted for years and Justly tween Journeyman and subjour- Higher Education."
so. Many men qualified and en- neyman's work In the maintenance
W e would like you to know that
gaged in work rating a pay grade department. W e trust an all out all our members and our 28 oras many as eight steps higher are attempt now may result in fair- ganizations are wholleheartedly In
stymied by a classification angle ness to so many who have been support of the manner and condiscriminated against so long.
over which there is no redress.
duct of Dr. Rosenberg as president
JOHN O ' B R I E N of the Board of Higher Education.
As stated above, this Illegal
ARNENLA, N. Y . He is sincere, honest, and a dedipractice is not alone fostered in
• • «
cated public official who most unthe maintenance department, It Is
deservedly has had these falso
prevalent in the bakery, the gaJewish
Council
allegations thrown at him. If thero
rage and on the farms. In fact
Rosenberg
is one man that we know who l i
it is a common procedure In all Backs
free of any bias or discrimination,
departments wliere non-competi- Editor, T h e Leader:
tive help l8 utilized.
This letter was recently sent to that man Is Dr. Roeenberg.
T h « administrative machinery Mayor Robert P. Wagner from the
W e are serving notice that Dr,
as set up to remedy this Injustice Council of Jewish Organizations In Rosenberg has our complete conhas long since become outmoded. Civil Service, which represents fidence as an unbiased and unThe pattern as drawn up makes 82,000 olvll service employees in prejudiced person
well as a a
it Impossible for even a most com- New York City on all governmen- efficient and dedleated public o f petent employee to elevate himself tal levele.
ficial, particularly as president of
because of th« rigid regulations
I read a newspaper Item dated the Board of Higher Education.
adopted.
Nov. 14, 1900, wherein a document Dr. H E R M A N P. M A N T E L L , Free.
8om« years ago the Mental Hy- Asserted that Dr. Gustave O .
COUNCIL OP JEWISH
giene Department carded a sur- Rosenberg " n o longer comatnls the
OROANIZATION8 IN
vey relativo to the methods and respect of a substantial portion of
C I V I L 8EHV1CS
Disabled Yets May
Be Eligible for
Higher Compensation
As the result of a recent action
of
Congress,
severely
disabled
veterans m a y be eligible f o r an
Increased rate of compensation,
A, B, K e l l y , manager of the V e t erans
Administration
Regional
Oflflce, 252 Seventh Avenue, New
Y o r k City, has announced.
M r . K e l l y explained that the
new law provides a special rate
of monthly compensation amounting to $265 f o r veterans with
service-connected total disabilities
who also have service-connected
disabilities independently ratable
at 60 per cent or more or who
are permanently housebound because of their service-connected
disabilities.
T h e law also provides a special
monthly
compensation
rate
of
$212 in cases where the total
service-connected
disability was
incurred in peacetime service.
Neither age nor employability
are
considered In
determining
eligibility f o r the
new special
rates of compensation, M r . K e l l y
further explained.
A veteran is considered to be
"permanently housebound" if he
Is confined for the most part to
his house or immediate premises
due to his service-connected disability and if the disablement is
reasonably
certain
to
remain
throughout the veteran's life.
Federal Openings For
Accountant and Auditor
N e w examinations have been
announced by the U . S. Civil
Service Commi!5.sion f o r filling the
positions of accountants or auditor, with starting salaries ranging
f r o m $6,435 to $13,730 a year; and
cotton technologist, paying salaries f r o m $5,355 to $8,955 a year.
The accountant or auditor positions are f o r duty with various
Federal agencies In the W a s h i n g ton, D. C., area. T o qualify, applicants must have had appropriate
professional accounting or auditing experience.
Wilm Named As
Commissioiier
Pull details concerning the requirements for these positions are
given In Announcement No. 241.
Cotton
technologist
positions
are f o r duty with the Agricultural
Marketing Service of the Department of Agriculture, and are located in Washington, D. C., and
in the south and southwest. T o
qualify, applicants must have had
appropriate education or experience. N o written test is required.
Full infoi-mation is given in civil
service announcement No. 242 B.
Announcements
and
application forms may be obtained f r o m
Board of Civil Service Examiners,
271 Washington Ave. Brooklyn 1,
New Y o r k or f r o m the U . S. Civil
Service Commission, Washington
25, D. C.
Pertinent education or the possession of a C P A certificate may
be substituted for part of the
required experience. A
written
test will be required f o r applicants
f o r positions paying $6,435 to
$8,955 who have not completed a
4-year college course with pertiF R E E BOOKLET by V. S. GOTnent study in accounting, or did emment on Social Security. Mail
not
obtain
a CPA
certificate only. Leader, 97 Duane Street,
through written examination.
New York 7. N. Y .
ments and means of I m p r o v l n f
navigation,
port
facilities
and
fisheries on the Oreat Lakes.
A L B A N Y , N o v . 2 8 - D r . Harold
O.
Wilm,
State
Conservation
A U T O S , new and oaei. S e «
Commissioner and
Assembly
weekly listing in s d v e r t l s l n f
Harold H. Altro of Lockport have
columns of The Leader.
been named to the Oreat Lakes
Commission. T h e commission will
Pass your copy of The Leader
consider water resource ImproveOn to a Non-Member
•
•
•
I YOU CAN COMPLETE | •
I HIGH SCHOOL
Now—At Home—Low
Payments
All Books F u r n i s h e d — N o
I
I
I
I
Classes
Diploma or Equivalency Certificate Awarded
If you hava nof finished H I S H S C H O O L anri art 17 ytars or over
•end for free S6-pa9e BOOKLET.
FREE SAMPLE LESSON
A m e r i c a n Schooo, D e p t . 9 A P - 6 7 , 130 W 42 St.. N Y 3 6
or Phone: BRyant 9-2604 D a y or Night
j^Mifl me 70ur free 91t-pnse High School Rooklet.
Nam*
Addreu
CifY
—
—
-
Ag«
Apt
Stat.
Are You All At Sea
When It Comes To
Health Insurance?
Wearer
SPORT C O A T SALE
There Is no need to be! A few simple navigational aids will keep you off th«
rock« of unmet doctor bills.
NOW
KELLY
Before you embark on any program of medical care iunurance, ask the»e ftv«
basie questions!
CLOTHES, Inc.
1)
621 RIVER STREET
TROY
POLICE
OFFICERS
W E BUY USED G U N S !
Any quantify or
condition!
KOBKKT S. F K I E I . K ' H
se<l HrouniK St., N « w York 18.
A L 4-3045
Does the plan provide its benefits without extra
charges*
over and above the premium?
the
,
2)
Does the plan fully cover
specialist services?
3)
Does the plan assure coverage of the full cost of operations
2 blocks No. of Hoosiek St.
cost
of
today's
costly
—regardless of how rare o r costly the surgery would otherwise be?
4)
N.Y.
Is the plan concerned with the quality of care rendered to
you ?
5 ) Can you continue with full benefits if you change your j o b
or retire?
Resorts - Miami
BARLINGTON HOTEL
13au N . n . 2IHI St.
VACATION
Miami
SPECIAL
$140 Monthly
D«rt*iiiber tu Mtireli (dbit>. occpcx.)
i O % dl«(iouiit e f t fttfanoii . . .
9piti'iou« luoiiiA, private bath, in*
cluiifii. H oxel. uieali - ttfrved dally.
DiKUifitHl clo«a to hoii»d4 o( woiihip.
f i W r i i o i i d K l 8-3818
DEWITT COLONIAL
MOTEL
t>>'i'ui>au«f . , . . , . . , . I . . . ( ] . « •
Oblii Ui'viiiiaucr. .fH.SO, IIU.UU, $1-4.00
T w l n ' B r d R u u i u . . ; . . . .IIU.OO, f l C . M
b u l l Eilrit I'ersun
I'j.tIO
TV
• WALL-TO-WALL CARPET
•
TEI.KPHONB * AIK
CONDITIONED
COMtOBT • BVERY
WANTED
HOTML
SERVICE
E K I E Hl.Vtt., IC.\81'-AT UKWIl'C
MlTK t i ' U S R , N'iiW YOKE
T«l. U l (OlbMtu) « - l U l t
N o other plan that includes h o m e and oflfice visits can give the sam«
answer f o r even one of them—let alone all five.
Only one health plan —
H.I.P. —
can giv® a " y e s " answer to all of
these questions.
•Til.
oulf
Me«t>tloa
U
•
«li*r»« (m: h a m *
mU
•
f * * u « t « a iwd
O>»J«
t > e t w « o I * P.M. » u « I A M.
HEALTH INSURANCE PUN OF GREATER NEW YORK
•at MAINION AVINU% NIW YORK M, N. ^
PUm 4.1144
ARCO
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
and all tests
P L A Z A BOOK S H O F
380 Broadway
Albany, N. Y.
Mail ft Phone O r d e r s Filled
State Offers Engineering
Jobs In Public Works
A State civil service e x a m i n a - f i v e yearly Increases. M o s t of these
tion on Jan. 21, 1961 will q u a l i f y positions are w i t h the D e p a r t m e n t
candidates f o r a p p o i n t m e n t
to of Public W o r k s .
about 50 senior engineering
nician positions
throughout
techNew
perience in this
Applications
S & S BUS
SERVICE. INC.
field.
will
be
accepted
until December 19. Pull details
technicians and applications m a y be obtained
assist engineers in civil e n g i n e e r - f r o m the R e c r u i t m e n t Unit, State
Senior
RD 1, BOX 6,
R E N S S E L A E R , N. Y.
engineering
Y o r k State. Salarie-s start at $82 ing work. Appllcafcs are required to D e p a r t m e n t of Civil Service, T h e
a weelt and rise to $100 a week in have three years' training or e x - State Campu.s, A l b a n y
1, N e w
Albany HE 4-6727 — HO 2-3851
Tioy
Yorlc.
SEimrELECTIIIC
W H Y
"GOVITEH
va'ue PRICE wa
RANGE
BAKES, BOILS, ROASTS,
FRIES and BROILSAutomatkally!
PUSHBUTTON CONTROLS!
York
BROWN'S
TIMED APPLIANCE OUTLET!
REMOVABLE OVEN DOORS!
FOCUSED HEAT BROILER!
of
Mart.
Albany HE 8-8552
Schen. FR 7-3535
TRI-CITY'S LARGEST
SELECTION — SAVE
SPECIAL RATES
for Civil Service Empltiyees
Service
h T I ' ?
PETIT PARIS
RESTAURANT
W H E R E DINING IS
A DELIGHT
HOTEL
Wellington
COLD BUFFETS. S2 UP
FULL COURSE DINNERS, $2.50 UP
DRIVE-IN GARAQE
AIR CONDITIONINQ . TV
ACCOMMODATIONS FOR A L L T Y P E S
OK M E K T I N G S A N D
PARTIES.
I N C L U D I N G O U R COTII.I.ON
RdllM,
S E A T I N G 200 C O M F O R T A B L Y
No parking
problemt at
Albony'i largest
hotel . , . with
Albony'i only drive-in
garage. You'll like the comfort ond convenience, tool
Pomily ratei. Cocktail lounge.
L U N C H E O N DAILY IN T H E
O A K R O O M — 90c UP
12 TO 2:30
THE FALCON
ROOM
Daticing Fri. & S a f Nites
No Cover • No
—
FREE
PARKING
136 STATE S T R E E T
Minimum
IN R E A R
OPPOSITE JTATI CAPITOL
See your fritndly trove/
—
1060 MADISON AVE.
ALBANY
SPECIAL WEEKLY
FOK EXTENDED
Phone IV 2-7864 or IV 2-9881
mmmmmmmmm
2 AUTOMATIC OVENS!
WEEK-DAY
Easy Termsl
ogenf.
BATES
STAYS
WORSHIP
Westminster Presbyterian Church
$025
A
^ • i i WEEK
P i a n o & Oi'K.nn
176 s t a t e
12 Colvin
AlUnny
Mlmnv
H O 3-2179
IV 9-0116
Albany
420 ( V . .ood
Delmar HE 9-2212
11 Elm S t r t e t
Nassau 8-1231
NEW EASY-SET OVEN TIMER!
Of lltll*
a*
MAYFLOWER - R O I A L COURT
A P A R T M E N T S -- P u r r l s h e d , U n furnished, and Rooms. P h o n e H E .
4-1994 ( A l b a n y ) .
in Time of N«ed, Call
M. W. TebbuH's Sons
O v e r 110 Years
Distinguished
funeral
3-0680
New York C I t j . S h o p p i n x and t h e n l r *
t o u r s . Lenving Troy nt l i . l O ' A . M . nnd
Albany riR7ii nt 8 A.M.
Trnnsiinrtnllon » « . « •
Wrtt* for Selieilnic
MORE?
Six
English
Steel
Stenk Knives — H n i n
OL- P e a r l Hnmlle
—
Sheffielil
Blailcs
—
(S\n
Boxeil —
l!noonilitionally GunnMileeil —
Senil i f i . f l d ,
casll. check, M . O . to
PICKWICK PRODUCTS
P.O. Box 1245, Albany, New
2-OVlN-ALL urn m 'WJ
AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC
^
PAY
ARsenal
262 S t a t e Street, Albany, N. Y .
ALL
M O N D A Y T H R O U G H FRIDAY
8:05 — 8:20 A . M . & 12:10 — 12:25 P.M.
A R E W E L C O M E T O THESE D E V O T I O N A L S E R V I C E S
after tmoll down payment
Up to 3 YEARS TO PAY I
«-E Model
FULL YEAR
SERVICE
AT NO
EXTRA COST
^^I^GAIN!
lOOK lor lh»
STORE with
Ihit StGN on
Iha DOOR
f o r the entlrt family on our
"60fi£flECrmcJJANfE
i
G-E Model J.300
Service
Employees
• Glasses l i l t e d
• ContaLt lenses
Arthur Jacket
GOLD SHIELD OPTICAL CENTER
104 N. Poarl Street
( N e a r Strand Theatre)
•Convenient Paynientb f o r C i v i l Service
' J $ 1 3 5 A WEEK
•
E V E N I N G S BY
fo
PAvt
BUILT-INS
Custom
Units for
provide maxlmuni upacity—In minimum space I
A ( little a«
I
^
F O R M E R L Y Of WASHINGTON
AVE.
N O W S E R V I N G OUR STATE
EMPLOYEE
FRIENDS
**
jfi-
A t 130 C e n t r a l Ave., Albany, HE. 6-4426
^
,
MAKE SHOPPING FUN
in '61
WEEK
^
Employees
APPOINTMENT
after imoll down poymtnl
«p
to
Albany. N. Y.
HE 6-4361
ERNEST BEAUTY SALON
^ ""•r •moll
^ y ^ ^ L ^ S
Automotle Master
Oven witli Deluxe
Featurei. 4 Cal>
rod® Surface Unlti
Willi
Puihbulton
Contreli.
•Biuigct Pl.in
f o r Civil
• E y e « exnniineil
• Presoipitioiis Ililed
OPTOMETRIST
SaleSi
Price!
by G-E
Factory Experts
M o d e r n Glasses
YEARS
TO PAY I
AMERICAN HOME CENTER INC.
OPEN YOUIi CHRISTMAS CLl It
NOW
First Trust
O F
Coihpawy
/ t k L B A M V
616 THIRD AVENUE AT 40TH STREET. NEW YORK CITY
Call MU. 3-3616 FOR YOUR LOW, LOW PRICE
State and B r o a d w a y
252 Washington A v e .
135 S. P e a r l St.
S81 Central A v e .
403 D e l a w a r e A v e .
1230 Central A v e .
HKMBtlH
FEDERAL
DCVOSIT
INSURANCE
CORI'ORATION
Make This A White Christinas
THESE WIFE SAVERS MAKE LIVING EASIER AND BETTER
IN THE AMERICAN WAY
MANY LASTING
PRODUCTS
FOR CHRISTMAS
GIVING
The
American
symbolized
by
way
of
the vast
life
is
array
of
product-s which A m e r i c a n industry
htw produced
to mal?e l i f e
oomfortable
and
easier.
Limited Time Only!
more
In
the
f o l l o w i n g pages some of the m e r chants who have served the C i v i l
Service
Community
present
the
mailings of a " w h i t e C h r i s t m a s " —
tr 1 e a m i n g
white
refrigerators,
washing
machines and other
ap-
pliancr-s
that
Joy
provide lasting
The
parade
of
appliances
this
year includes many not shown in
these
floor
pages:
electric
Time Ever!
First
at home.
hairdryers,
polishers, blanlcets, vaccumm
cleaners,
radios,
color
television,
radiant
heaters,
cloclc
fans
air
purifiers, broiler.';, irons, s h a r p e n ers, can
openers, skillets,
fryers,
barbecuers, even pencil sharpeners.
$5,796 Offered To
Welfare Workers
To
fill numerous vacancies
as
w e l f a r e representatives and public
assistance
and
child
welfare
workers. N e w Y o r k State has o r dered
continuous
filing
and
does
not require state residence.
B o t h titles pay f r o m
$5,796 to
$7,026 a year, and there are
va-
cancies throughout the S t a t e
for
both.
The
given
at
written
test
convenient
will
be
locations
In
MOW.
MW » » «
various parts of the U n i t e d States.
Welfare
representative,
assistance
'No.
147),
bachelor's
degree
public
requires
fiom
a
COMPA/i^^
a
recog-
m z c d college or university and one
years
of
experience,
t w o more years of
s^jj;
plus
i.«
either
"
experience or
T V
*
V
•
Electric TV has
a
Yo<H
both.
picture
ftiat
rt^^olhing t o b e d e s i r e d i n s i r e , » ^ n > n e $ $ , c o n t r a s t .
demonstrate o n e of thete
years of graduate study, or a c o m bination of
^^^ PiCTOiWEi ^
teovW
U t
us
^E^ets.
a g r e e • ^ S s t h e p r o o f I s j n J h e picturel'^1-;
t
Child W e l f a r e
Welfare
representative,
child
welfare
( N o . 152), requires
pletion
of
study
a
and
year
two
of
years
com-
graduate
of
experi-
ence, plus either a second year of
graduate
study
or
an
additional
year of experience or a
combina-
Amazing Low Price!
tion.
Application
forms may
be
ob-
tained by mail or In person f r o m
the
State
Scrvice,
bany;
Department
The
State
of
Civil
Campus,
Al-
or R o o m 2301, 270 B r o a d -
way,
Now
York
City:
or
from
local offices of the N . Y . S . E m p l o y ment
Service.
Planning
••Mod.1
M602VG((_
" • " 1 . our.)/
«i»eonal tubt,
in.
Picturg.
Commission
Ch'f'-nein
Honored
Prp-'i^'^nts
and
directors
of
$175 A
23
leaflMi" civic and w e l f a r e agencies
throu"'inut
New
York
City
cently 'lonored James Pelt, chairman
of the City
mission,
for
achievinT
zoniiif
Planning
his
the
Com-
"dedication
goals
of
to
modern
scroll
by
tiie
ofHcials
of
these a«i>ncips at a reception held
In his 'lonor.
tlie
L'ltlier
IiisHMite
tration
fl'id
Cori'initipe
Gulick, president of
of
Public
For
menciptl
of
Modern
NU;. Felt
and his f e l l o w
Work in drn't.lng a modern zoning
t'lp
clti'"Mis
and
future
city and
it would
welfare
f o r generations
contribute
•rawth
try."
eZ^,
chassis with fuTpowert
circuitry, width „ n , o, ,
and
to
V ~
« 6"
-nany more!
""Xlels and p o r u f i '
iiiia«i@iiiei«ic
O"
Ub?.'
AUIHORIZEO D(AIEII
TEUVISION
RECflVtflS
,
the
Zoning,
coiM'ni'-'iiniisrs and staff f o r tiieir
l*.s(>!i>Hn>,, H e said
TO P A * I
Adminis-
co-chairman
ftddn'.==-prt tlie gatiiering and cotn-
iurt'
I-O'ded With exciting new G
console
was presented with a
si'rncd
Smoll
Down Poym.n,
J'Ans
f i r the C i t y . "
M r . F'-lt
Dr
WEEK
re-
IS
of
to
the
development
Its busmess and
B r o o k s
RADIOS - TELEVISION - AIR CONDITIONc;»S
our
come
of
the
Indus-
B R O A D W A Y , INC
WEST SIDE'S LARGEST TV DISCOUNT HOUSE
'Vn-
orderly
ON
2271 B R O A D W A Y
New York 24, N. Y.
Sales and Servi'o
Since 1918
TRafalgar 3-3232
idii.
moHd mte/
A
M
E
R
I
Specially Priced!
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
High-Speed Adjustable-Controi
DRYER
T
E
R
A
Easy
Terms!
All These General Electric Features:
•
Convenient timer dialt
•
Removabie Hnt trapl
Adjustable lempero- •
•
ture controll
Synthetic de-wrinl(lerl
High-ipeed drying
systemi
10-lb. capacityl
CLOTHES-CONDITIONING
^
AUTOMATIC CONTROL
HIGH-SPEED DRYER
" ^
'of Santas
pack when you^
Automatic Control dries any washable perfectly! No guessing—iust set dial once to
fabric typel High-speed drying conditions
the clothesi Other deluxe features too,
including choice of colors!
H
0
M
E
A
WEEK
Alter Small D«wn Payment
"i: 3
TO
YEARS
PAY!
Mod*l DA S33T
FULL-YEAR SERVICE at NO EXTRA COST
'
ANOTHER FAMOUS BELL & HOWELL
ELECTRIC EYE MOVIE CAMERA
AT A LOW, LOW PRICE
•
•
•
•
Takes color movies automatically
Light sets all f/2.3 lenses
Shoot action the second you see it
Totally automatic
COMPLETE LINE OF
BELL & HOWELL
PRODUCTS
Watoh
Get these terrific values today at..
o n lit* A B O T V
CITY CAMERA EXCHANGE
11 JOHN STREET
Dl 9-2956
"Olosa-Up"
th« n « w ••II A Howall
NEW YORK
••rl«*
Natwortt
&
Limited Time Only!
f BENERAL ElECTRie
Sensational
Value!
Cu. Ft. REFRIGERATOR
with Full-Width FREEZER
I
W
FULL-WIDTH FREEZER SECTION
H o l d s up to 4 8 p a c k a g e s . A l u m i n u m door h i n g e d a t
t i d e prevents possible d a m a g e to freezer door If m a i n
door is closed CKcidentally.
MAGNETIC SAFETY DOOR
o p e n s e a s i l y . Closes a u t o m a t i c a l l y , silently, securely.
P o w e r f u l G-E A I n i c o M a g n e t s last indefinitely. Helps
protect children f r o m d a n g e r of b e i n g locked inslcie.
DIAL-DEFROST Convenience
Retains p a r t i a l refrigeration protection w h e n defrosting.
Does not turn off refrigerator c o m p l e t e l y , like m o d e l s
w i t h ordinary
FULL-WIDTH Adjustable Shelves
M a d e of steel w i r e , they c a n be r e m o v e d for c l e a n i n g .
V e g e t a b l e d r a w e r covers serve a s third s h e l f .
5-YEAR PROTECTION PLAN
C o v e r i n g s e a l e d - i n r e f r i g e r a t i n g system, including
, .
Full Year Service at No Extra Cost
by General Electric Factory Service Experts
Buy at
DELIVERED RIGHT HOW-MAKE
New GMtral Electric 'iVcteeted Purchase" Ptan no down myment-with
Slf
with Ihit Sign en the Door
FIRST PAYMEHT IH JULY!
tradci no myments fox 3 MONmsi postpone payments-if unable to worki (based on 6.e.(.c. terms)
SPECIAL PRICES TO CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES
1 V 1t
« E R V Ij:
L E A D E R
T»ct<l*7i November 2 9 , I 9 6 0
I960 I B S I KFRIOERHTOR
The SIZE! The FEATURES!
The LOW PRICE You Want!
BiliM
• • tT'"'
An Unbelievably LOW P r i c e for So BIG a
R e f r i g e r a t o r with So Many WAHTED Features!
• STRAIGHT-LINE DESIGN! Only 28" wide!
• DIAL-DEFROST C O N V E N I E N C E !
Retains partial refrigeration protection when
defrosting I
• FULL-WIDTH F O O D
FREEZER!
1.8 cu. ft. capacity I Side-hinged aluminum
freezer door!
• ADJUSTABLE STEEL SHELVES!
Plus vegetable pan cover as a third shelf I
• M A G N E T I C SAFETY
DOOR!
With Magic Corner Hinges—no door
clearance needed at side I
Modal
BA-11T
• 5-YEAR WRITTEN
WARRANTY
. . . on «ealed-in refrigerating system I
These Extra ConveniencM:
Generol Electric "Prolected Purchase" Mon
• CNtllEI T«AY
• 2 FUSTIC CmD ICE
TRAYS
• t AlUMINUM DOOl
SHELVES
• t l i t SHELVES
• FULl-VTIDTH
POUCEUIN
VEtETAIlE DIAWEI
(NoMi t/\t luilifl)
FULL YEAR SERVICE
AT NO EXTRA COST
brG.n.-ollU.tn.Fo.f'y S""*"* '
SPECIAL PRICES TO CIVIL SERVICE
EMPLOYEES
AMERICAN HOME CENTER, INC
CAUL MO. 3 - 3 6 1 6 FOR YOUR UOW. LOW PRICE
-rr«
A
M
E
R
I
C
A
N
FROM
H
GOLDEN VALUE SALE/ 0
GENERAL ELECTRIC Filter-Flo Washers!
Important Reductions in Recommended List Prices
Alake Possible these Wonderful Washer Savings!
AMERICAN HOME CENTER, Inc,
•
rMCEUIN m i . WAWMSKEr,
CAVEL «NI I I * .
616 THIRD AVENUE A T 40th STREET, NEW YORK C I T Y
CALL
MU 3-3616 FOR YOUR LOW, LOW
nn¥¥9¥9rvrrvpr
PRICE!
,)
Take Your Choiie!
Leader Value!
1960 3 0 "
ELECTRIC RANGE
with 2 3 " Master O v e n —
Amazingly Low-Pricedl
A< LIttU A i
Cook Automatically on Top of this
Pushbutton, Automatic
SENSI-TEMP^ RANGE
2-OVEN RANGE
Controls Any Temperature You DialMakes ALL Pans Automatic I
85
At
llItU
Ai
$203
Up 10 3
Y e a r s
to
P a y !
Newest "Spacemaker" r a n g e — b i g matter
oven with removable door, 4 Calrod® »urfoce units. Fingertip pushbutton controls,
no-drip cooktop, focused-heot broiler ond
other features. Mix-or-motch colors.
Full-Year Service At No Extra Cost
m
by G-E Factory Experts
upt. 3 Y e a r t t o P a y l
A WEEK
Automatic
Sensi-Temp Unit ends potwatching! Other features Include 2 3 "
master oven with big window, removable
oven door, automatic oven timer, focusedheat broiler, pushbutton controls, no-drip
cooktop, Mlx-or-match c o l o n .
Nnr Gentral Electric "Protectid Pvrchasi" Plan
NO DOWN P A Y M E N T - W I T H TRAOEI NO P A Y M E N T S - F O R THREE MONTHS!
nKT1>0NE P A Y M E N T S - I F UNABLE TO WORK! (BASED ON G . E . C . C TERMS)
with Oven Timer
and Focused-Heat Broiler!
Only
Z99
95
Up to 3 Y e a r s to P a y l
$225
A i litti*
Aft.r Small
Down Poymerrt
A deluxe range with loads of automatic
features — Including pushbutton control*
and timed appliance outlet. The two automatic ovens have removable doors. Big
window In master oven.
Mlx-or-match
colon.
Buy
ai thi
Hon
wHh Ihli Sign on t(i« D O M
SPECIAL PRICES TO CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES
At
SIxlemi
C I V I L
S E R V I O I
L B A D I R
Tumdrnff N o v a n b e r 29,
BEHERAiaimW
Golden Value
SPECm!
Pme
2-OVEN-ALL NEW for '60!
SPECIAL PRICES TO CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES
AMERICAN HOME CENTER, INC
«16 THIRD AVENUE AT 40TH STREET. NEW YORK Cl i Y
CALL MU. 3-3616 FOR YOUR LOW, LOW PRSCc
1969'
Where to Apply
tor Publit
the
f(>!Iowlnc
wl^ere
Jobs
directions
to apply
for
tell
public
jobs
City Department of Personnel Is
This Is to be followed by qualiIt is expected that a formal a n - fying medical and physical exams.
All candidates are required to
nouncement of continuous Filing
have at least 70% on the physifor the patrolman's examination
cal. It is stressed however, the
will be made by the City's Depart- written mark will determine the
ment of Personnel at any time.
candidates position on the eligible
Many observers believe this is list.
located at 96 Duane St., New York
one way in which Police Commis-
and how to reach destinations in
NCw
York
City
on
the
transit
•ystem.
N E W Y O R K c i t y — T h e Applications Section of the New York
7, N.Y.
blocks
west
(Manhattan).
north
of
of
It
Is
two sioner Stephen Kennedy can have
City Hall,
Broadway,
just
across
Hours are
consider the best the City has to
9 A.M.
to 4 P.M.
Closed Saturdays except to answer
Inquiries from 9 to 12 A.M. Telephone COrtland 7-8880.
Mailed requests for application
blanks
must
Include
a
stamped,
self-addressed business-size
enve-
lope.
Mailed
forms
must
be
sent
application
tha
Personnel
Department, Includmg
the specl-
to
fled filing fee In the form of
check
or
money-order,
at
a
least
five days before the closing date
for filipg of applications. This Is
to ».llow
time for handling
for
Department
the
to
and
contact
the applicant in case his application is Incomplete.
The
Applications
Section
of
the Personnel Department Is near
the Chambers Street stop of the
main
subway
lines
that
go
through the area. These are the
IRT
7th
and
the
IND
8th Avenue IJne. The
IRT
Lexington
Avenue
Line
Avenue
Line
atop
ui^e is the Brooklyn Bridge
and
the
BMT
his pick of the lists as they are
from released and obtain what he may
The Leader office.
^
Continuous Filing
For Police Will
'Appease' Kennedy
number have filed an examination 20/30 vision in each eye separ- school diploma or an equivalency
would be held.
ately without glasses and have certificate at the time of appointment.
The written examination will normal hearing.
Exceptions to the maximum age
As yet the filing date and officount 100%. It will be designed to
cial requirements have not been
test the general intelligence of rule are made for veterans.
Candidates must have a high released.
the applicants.
Brighton
to
stop
ijocal's
|^stop is City Hall. All these
but a few blocks from the
are
Per-
sonnel Department.
S T A T E — First floor at 270
Broadway, New York 7, N.Y.,
corner of Chambers St., telephone
BAiclay 7-1616; Governor Alfred
E. Smith State Office Building and
The State Campus, Albany; Room
400 at 155 West Main Street.
Rochester (Wednesdays only); and
141 James St., Syracuse (first and
third Tuesdays of each month).
Any of these addresses may be
used in applying for county jobs
or for jobs with the State. The
State's New York City office is a
block south on Broadway from
the City Personnel Department's
Broadway entrance, so the same
transportation Instructions apply.
Mailed applications need not include return envelopes.
Candidates may obtain applications for State jobs from local
offices of the New York State
Employment Service.
F E D E R A L - Second U.S. Civil
Service Region Office, News Building, 220 East 42d Street (at 2d
Ave.), New York 17, N. Y., just
west of the United Nations building. Take the I R T Lexington Ave.
line to Grand Central and walk
two blocks east, or take the shuttle
from Times Square to Grand
Central or the I R T Queens-Plushing train from any point on the
line to the Grand Central stop.
Hours are 8:30 A.M. to 5 P.M.
Monday through Friday. Telephone number Is Y U 6-2626.
Applications are also abtainalple at main post offices, except
the New York, .N. Y., Post Office.
Bpai'ds of exainiuers at' the particular installations offering the
tests also may be applied to foi
further information and application forms. No return envelopes
,aire required with named requests
for aplicatlon forms.
offer.
As of Jan. 1, 1961 patrolman
salary will be $5,200 to $6,581.
There is, in addition, at present,
a $125 annual uniform allowance.
The salary is based on a 42-hour
work week.
Candidates must be not less
This means applications would than 20 nor more than 29 on the
then be issued over a period of day they file. They must be at
months and when a sufficient least 5 feet 8 inches tall, have
Headquarters for Gift Giving
FREE GIFT CERTIFICATE
M . & M . N(N.Y.
O VState
E L TBIdq.)
Y SC OH. O7-5262
P
84 CHAMBERS ST.
G I F T S
IMPORTED
G I F T S
n i N N E R W A R K . C l j T I . K R I . OL.ASSW.^RE
P I C T t R E FRA.MINO,
WMINATING,
PRINTING
Brltlff This Coupon For A
1 0 %
DUcoiint On Fnrchases Over f s
Former Leader Staff Member Now An Author
Technologists
Needed
By U. S. In New Jersey
A former Leader staff member,
History, writes M r . Styles, might
Herman Styler, has Just published have been difterent except for
his first book: "Plague Fighters,"
Atabrlne, the antl-malarlal drug
an account of civilization's war on
the Allies used so effectively In
disease. M r . Styler is now a public health educator in the City the Pacific during W o r l d W a r I I .
An examination for career-con- at any post ofRce or from the E x appointment at techno- ecutive Secretary. Board of U.S.
ditional
Service
at the entrance salary of Civil
$5,335 per annum was announced Naval Supply
recently by the Executive Secre- N e w Jersey.
Examiners.
logist
Applications
tary. Board of U.S. Civil Service
Examiners.
U.S.
The
positions
to
Jersey.
be
filled
Sc Development Facility. Bayonne.
N e w Jersey.
T o qualify applicants must have
completed
course
in
a
college
bachelor's
engineering,
full
4-year
leading
degree
In
to
The
a
technology,
chemistry,
physics,
technical
a
experience
Aurellus, the plague that all but
devastated
a
at
a
salary
of
must have
experience
the
In
to
four years
of
gram,
and
having
knowledge
of
as tape recorders, 16mm motion
Persons appointed from this list picture
projectors,
and
public
will be given special in-service address systems.
training
which
if
successfully
Successful completion of a full
for
four year course
grade G S - 7 , $6,345 per annum in
high
six
supplemented
months.
Further
school
of study
level,
by
above
Including
or
at
24
leaat
Information
concern- semester
hours
of
appropriate
In courses, may be substituted for 3
Announcement years of experience.
ing requirements Is contained
the
examination
No.
2-8-3
(1960).
scale.
that
by
a
F R E E B O O K L E T by U . S . O o t that Napoleon's G r a n d Army that ernment on Social Security. Mali
invaded Russia failed and was only. Leader, 91 Duane Street,
decimated by a typhus epidemic. N e w York 7, N . Y .
HERMAN STYLES
and
— AT —
FORT GEORGE RADIO CO
Limited Time Oi^l
of the
For further Information, teleapplication phone Mrs. P. Baron or Miss E.
forms or information where they Mlntzer at TErrace 8-6600, E x announcement
condi-
vaccines,
group
recreation sound equipment, such
T o Be T r a i n e d
evidence
severe yellow fever epidemic
directing a diversified radio pro-
at the professional level.
completed, will qualify them
shows
games and patient talent shows,
applicant to perform successfully
Rome.
were wiped out as a race
va-
$5,355
conducting
sanitary
T h e book, published by Chilton
the Book Division, costs $3.50.
highly-civilized M a y a n s of Mexico
It
cancy for a male recreation leader,
You
of
nature as to enable
has
Improving
Is the bubonic plague that drove antl-toxlns and now the "wonder
the glorious city of Tthens to de- drugs," he writes, m a n is c o n feat at the hands of Sparta, and quering diseases "that formerly
later, in the reign of Marcus killed and maimed on a grand
Administration
in Brooklyn
By
A m o n g tales related In the book tions and by developing
accepted
be
$6,345 per year.
h a d four years of successful, prosuch
Veterans
Hospital
OS-7,
or other physical science; or have
gre.sslve,
Health Department.
Recreation
Leader Jobs
Open With V.A.
are
at the U.S. Naval Supply Research
either
will
U.S.
Bayonne,
Supply until further notice.
Naval
Center. Bayonne, New
Center,
Copies
and
can be secured may be obtained
fiAn9S
tension 339.
U.S. Needs Poultry
Inspectors Now
At $4,345 a Year
Higher Paying
Jobs Set By
Government
first Time Ever!
Poultry Inspectors are urgently
needed by the U . 3. Department
of Agriculture lor work in poultry
eviscerating plants in the twelve
Tlie United States Civil Service northeastern states. These
Commission has announced ex- tions pay $4,345 a year.
aminations for filling the following positions:
posi-
ONLYi
*T
In addition to passing a written
test,
applicants
must
have
had
to • Y I A H S T O
P W l
Geologist, with starting salaries three years of experience handling
of $1,335 and $6,345 a year, pri- meat or poultry, or they must have
marily in the Geological Survey had college courses In appropriate
In the Department of the Interior subjects. Appllot.tlons will be acIn Washington, D. C.. and through- cepted until further notice.
Full information and application
applicants must pass a written test forms may be obtained from the
a n d have completed pertinent col- Civil Service Representative at the
out the country. To qualify,
lege study
or
such study
of local Post Office, or from the E x ex- ecutive Secretary, Board of U.S.
Civil Service Examiners. U. S. D e -
a combination
and professional
perience.
Details on the requirements to partment of
be met are given in civil service
announcement 243 B. Closing date
for acceptance of
applications
U
Immigration
Patrol
—
TV
by
FURS
355 a year, with the Immigration
Department
of
Justice.
appointed to these
Persons
positions
will
patrol areas to which they are assigned
along
the
to detect » n d
Mads fo
R*<dy
Mads
Repairing
•
Ordtr
Rtmodsling
243 W . 30th St., N. Y. O,
WUcBiKin 7-144S
^maiirn Low Price!
international
bout\daries of the
United
prevent
PICTURE!
pakali^
Inspector,
paying a beginning salary of $5.and Naturalization Service of the
TW^
GenoTol Elcctric TV hos d e v e l o p e d o p i C u ' c ihor 'oaves
nothing
h»! d e s i r e d m s u e , s b c r p n e s i . contfa^i, let
dcmonslro<( o n e of
ncv, G - E sell.
You'll ag'c-f: — "The procf is
fr'c picture'"
p .
Oeorge
December 1. 1960.
COMPARE/
Agriculture.
I
States
smuggling
and illegal entry of aliens.
Applicants must be in excellent
phv.sical condition and at least 20
year.5 of age. They must pass a
written
test
to
qualify.
Itifarmation
Is contained
nouncement
244 B.
PROM
Further
in
Closing
andate
for acceptance of applications
OftOANIZATIONI TAKI
Is
40%
December 18, 1960.
Engineer, paying from $5,333 to
UP
o n
»
LtST
" w n i umftSl'^"?'' cfreuitoTup:
pltlM t
fcatortjf
Reclamation in 17 western States
^fti
•
Hinii*
t party loo^t t
IJtmt
•
IJtm • noluffl|k«r| t foyt
ilrthiiiii Nawli, Silloiini, itc.
A I M ilrthJii
and Alaska. T o qualify, applicants
LAflM PARTY OOODI LINl
$7,560 a year, with the Bureau of
mu.st have appropriate college education
or
pertinent
further
Information
•nmouncement
«atlo!u
will
experience,
Is
given
10-1-2(80).
be
accepted
until
further notice.
Civil
In
Appll.
Service
announcements
ai\d application forms may be obtained
from Executive
Board of U S.
•dilndrs.
Secretary,
Civil Service
General
Post
Ex<
Office.
Room 413, 271 Washtagton Street,
Biaoklyii 1. New
York.
•
Oupt •
Plittl
•
Nipklni «
ite.
HiaH DISeOUNTI
ln(ii«lilu<l|
lnvlt«4
•
famoui War«kout« Outlet
(farm^if M Jtmilgt)
10i»0T
ViHn
t.
TO
NOTI
BirriR
«eH<««
C
Md'ijJJJ,
MRWIUil N M a
miVKHW
MCtntM
FORT GEORGE RADIO CD.
1569 St. Nicholas Av«., New York
k
( • • f . 188tli & 189th Stt.)
LO 1-S040
UlM* IMlIf • t « » P.M.
lUI » : ) < • til • r . M .
flomnoto
SW 5-2677
SW 8-315S
ESTATE
REAL
HOMES
BE 3-6010
LONG ISLAND
4
m
INTEGRATED
T T T T T T T T T ^ W a l k
OFFICES READY TO
SERVE
YOU!
Call For
Appoinfmeni
$7,500
S A V E
17 SOUTH FRANKLIN ST.
AVE.
UNIONDALE
$12,000
S p o c t o e u l o r , Ranch >tyio homo,
foaturot S moitor iiiod rooms,
m o d o r a b o t h , h o m o m o k o r ' i hitc h o n p<ii« ffnUbod b o i o m o n t w i t h
bar, g a r o q o , o i t r a throHghont.
O r o b thlt o n e with only $400
down.
$54.17 A
MO.
PAYS
3
rile No. P 3fl07. l f l « 0
CITATTON. The People of fhe Slate of
New YorU. B.v Ihe G i a « of God Free and
Independent
T o any and all iinknown peifone whone
names or Piirts of whope names, and whose
plaee or platen of residence are \inknown,
and eannot, after diligent Inquiry, be » « oertained, who are di»lrihiitefs, heira at
law and next of kin of VIOf.A H. GAR
L A N D , det^eased, and if any of the said
distributees, heirs at law or next of kin
of deceased, be dea<l. their lefral representatives, their husbands or wives. If
any. distributees and siifcessors In Inte^-est
whose names and/or placet of i-eaidence
and post offlce addresses are unknown.
YOU ARK H E R R B Y CITED TO SHOW
CAI7SE before the Surrorates Tourt, New
York Count.T, at Room 51)4 in the Hall
of Recordx in the County of New York,
New York, on December 2fl, IDfin, at
lOi.SO A.M., why a certain wiitinif dated
Mar<'h Ist, ItlS.*! whii-h has been offered
for prorbaie by B A R B A R A W A L T E R S residinRT at 14t)I University Aveinie, New
York, N. Y.. should not be probated as
the Inst Will and Testament, ielntinr to
real and tiersonai pi-operty, of V I O L A H.
G A R L A N D , Deceased, who WHS at tha
time of her death a resident of fiP West
7l8t Street, in liie County of New York.
New York.
Dated, .^ttesied and Sealed Novemt>er
17. IflfiO. HON. S SAMUEL DiFALCO.
Surrocate. New York County. P H I L I P A
DONAHUE, Clerk. ( L . S.)
C I T A T I O N , The People nf The Slate of
New York, By the Grace of Gad Free and
Independent
TO H E L E N KASCHARAS Ireferretl to
In ihe Will IIS Helen Alhaaaslou
a/k/a
Helen
Athanusien,
KOSTAS
ATHANAS i o r , a/U/a Kosias Athenaslon. NICHOLAS
ATHANASlor.
a/k/ft
Nicholas
Athanaaion. VARA RERA
KASCHARAN
beiPK the persons Interested as creditors,
leKatees, devisees, beneficiaries, distributees, or olherwiBc in the estate of CHRIS.
TUS
ATHANASlOIl,
also
known
as
Charles Chrlslos Alhanasiou and Chrisias
Athanat^iou. deceased, who at the time of
his death was a resident of
East l l l t h
sti-eet. New York, N, Y.
SEND G R E E T I N G :
Upon Ihe petilion of THOMAS A. VAFIDES. SMAHO ANTON and DIONISIOS
SPILIOS residinir at •!nfl-n4 2tllh Boail,
Baysidc, New York, 2ins Second Ave.,
New Yoi'k. N. Y . and IKOB East ISTIh
Street, Bronx, New York, respectively.
You and each of vou are hereby clte-l
to show cHUKe before the MurroRale'i
Coiirrt of New York County, held »t tho
Hall of Records in the County of New
York, on the .'lOth day of December. ItXtO,
at lialf-past ten o'clo<'k in the forenoon
of that dav. why the account of proctedInitB of THOMAS A. VAFIDES
SMARO
A N T O N and DIONISIOS SPILIOS as Executors shoulil not be iudiciallv •etUed.
and why THOMAS A. VAKIDES. as Executor and sttorney lor the executore,
•hoidil not lie allowed and ni<4(1 the lum
of FOUR THOIiSAND F l V r
HUNDRED
( M . B l m n O ) DOLLARS a . and for his
f e n for leeal sei vices reml»ied to the said
Executors of the rstale herein, and why
M.OOOnn should not W rewined to eovtr
tax uontinKenciee.
( L , S.)
the e t h day of November in
the year of our Lord one
thousand nine htindretl and
•ix,
P H n . l P A, DONAHUE,
Clerk of the Surrofate'e Court
C I T A T I O N — T h e People of the State of
New York. BY T H E GRACE OF GOD.
FREE AND I N D E P E N D E N T , TO Attorney General of the Stale of New York;
and to "Mary Doe" the name
"Miiry
Doe" beiur fictltioui. the alleteil widow
of Matthew Connolly, deceased, it livinic
and it dead, to the executoia. administrators. diitributees and aasisns of "Mary
Doe" deceased, whose names and post
office addresses are unknown and cannot
after dill»ent innuiry be ascertained by
the petitioner herein;
and to the distributees of Matthew
Connolly, deceased, whose names and ptisl
offlce addresses are unknown and cannot
after dilisent inquiry be aacertained by
the petitioner herein;
bentr the persons interested as creditors,
distributees or otlierwiee in the estate tjf
Matthew Connolly deceased, who at the
time of his death was a resident of flOti
West 180th Street, New York, N Y.
Send G R E E T I N G :
Upon Ihe petition of The Public Administrator of the County ot Mew York,
having his office at Hall of Keciuds,
Koom SUU, Soroush ol Manhattan. City
and County of New York
as adiuinistrator of the Koods, chattels and credits
of said deceased:
I.
XMAS SPECIALS!
N e i t door to Hears-Koelinik,
Inrt. " E " or " F " train to
169 St. 6t«,
St. Albans
4 Bedrmc.
7 ROOM INSUL
BRICK,
f i n i s h e d b a s e m e n t , oil h e a t ,
g a r a g e , ,10x100.
OFFICES AT
YOUR SERVICE
STOP PAYING RENT!
L O W PRICE FOR
I
You and each ot you are hereby cited
to show cause before the Surroitate's
Court ot New York County, held at ihe
Hall ot Records, in the County ot New
York, on the » t h liay ot December ItiOd.
at half-past ten o'clock in the forenoon
of that day. why the account of pro'
ceedinga of Tlie Public -Administrator of
the County of New York, as adipinistrator of the Koods, chattels and cretlii
of said decetieed, should not b « judicially
•el I led.
ID Testimony Whereof. We have causei]
the seal of Ihe Surrosate's Court
ol the said County ot New York
to be hereunto affixed. Witness.
Honorable JOSEPH A. COX,
tSeal)
Surrocate ot our said County,
at the County ot New York, the
^4th day of October
in the
year ot our Lord one thousand
nine huiuired and sixty.
P H I L I P A. DONAHUE
Clerk ot the Surrorate s Court
IDEAL FAMILY HOME
JUST REDUCED
COLONIAL
$ rooms, enclosed
parch, Anlshed b a s e m e n t . 4 b e d rooms, f e n c e d plot, g a r a g e , oil
heat. 9 u l e t
residential
area.
$4S0 In c o n t r a c t .
(
R O O M HOUSE, S bedrooms,
all brick, f e n c e d y a r d , b a r b e c u e ,
only
10 y e a r s
old,
beoutlfnl
a r e a , nr. e v e r y t h i n g . i 4 f 0 In e o n tract.
H E M P S T E A D
F R E E P O R T
W e h a v e a s e l e c t i o n of s o m e of t h e finest h o m e s In H e m p s t e a d
a n d v i c i n i t y In 1 a n d 2 f a m i l y . R a n c h e s , C a p e C o d s , C o l o n i a l s
f r o m $350 u p
$10 Deposit
Holdt Any
FHA or Gl
House
LIST REALTY CORP.
OPEN
t OAVN
A
13S-30
ROCKAWAY
JA
UO-13
OL
BLVD.,
I
ST. ALBANS
1 family, detached, 1 car
garage,
oil h e a t .
Terms
arranged.
$13,500
192-OS L I N D E N I L V D .
ST. A L I A N S
Fieldstone 1-1950
2 GOOD BUYS
H O L L I S
•RICKI
SO.
OZONE
AVE.,
B«ulCTtr4
b u n g a l o w on
70x100
gas
plot,
garage
heat
huge
with
2
$13,200
1 &
2
Family
Home*
168-33 LIBERTY AVE.
JAMAICA
JAMAICA
7-1034
AX 1-5858 • 9
^^
44
'4
THANKSGIVING SPECIAL
"LET'S TALK TURKEY"
No Cash C.I. 4
t]2,M)0
B-226
»14,50«
4
4
4
4
4
S U P P L E M E N T A L C I T A T I O N — File No.
P 33.t«. lUBI) — THE PEOPLE OF T H E
D e t a c h e d r a n c h , g a r a g e , 50x100 plot
B-210
S T A T E OF NEW YORK, By the Grace o l
BAISLEY PARK
»]6,500
God Free and Independent, T o E L F K I E D E
de BLAISE; EDWARD A, B. HECHTLE9 r o o m s , g a r a g e , 40x100 p l o t , g a s h e a t
B-218
BEN, as EXECUTOR OF T H E ESTATE
ST. A L B A N S
tie,SCO
OF KHIBDKICH
JAKOSY;
ODETTE
FRANK;
KREDKHH'K
F,
KOEKSLEH,
D«tached, 7 rooms, g a r a g e , gas heat
B'219
a/k/a FRED KOESSLEH; MICHAEL. F.
KENNARD;
IWO
JAROSY.
MIRIAM
• A S L I T T L I A S $300 D O W N A L L O T H E R S
RAAM.
YOU ARE HEREBY CITED TO SHOW
143-01 HILLSIDE AVE.
CAUSE before the Surrogate's Court, Ne
York County, at Room 804 in the Hall
of Records in the County ot New York,
JAMAICA
New York, on December 18, met) at
X0;30 A M , why a i w l a i n writius daletl
October 14. 1967 which lias lieen oHeretl
for probate by SALOMEA T E I T rtsidiuK
York. N e * York. New Tork.
In testimony whereof, we have caused at 118 West 76th Street. New
Houses • SullivM County
the seal of the Surroeates Court of the New York should not be probated as Dated, Atteeted aud Sealed, Noreinber
•lid County of New York to be hereunto the Last Will and Testament, rtlaliuc
l-'l-M beilru) all rr. i'an<'h twwta. Lake
to
real
and
personal
property,
•
!
M
A
H
I
affixed.
HON. S. t A M U K L DirAI.t'U
•ite, lilt. view, retiieioeiit or THcutioa
A N N E BLIIMEN, De.»ased, wbe was at i L . t . )
I
Wilncu
Honiiratde «
KAMI'EL
Di
Surrofate, New York Oouiilj
frow«4.UH6 N.Y. tjue t « «U>«(. 8|irlii(
f TAIX^O a fltliroicate vf « u r l^«id liinnty, the time of her death a resitieut ef Sid
(ileii Lake Ettatee. Cfriu* t ^ M . N Y
l>kiti» A. Uooahue.
at the Ceunty of N«-h York,
ttiVEHSIUlC
DMIVE. ia lbs Counlf at
fta.
Klleiiville 4U4.
Clerk
AX7-7900
DETACHED,
HAZEL B. GRAY
PARK
OL
8. O Z O N E P A R K
D e t a c h e d . 5 r o o m s , oil, g a r a g e
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
BRICKI!
$20,900
Otk«r
7-3l3«
. E-S-S-E-X
SPECIAL
car
PenlntuU
$22,990
ST. ALBANS
f-SlOOO
HILLSIDE
Asking
ENGLISH
TUDOR,
6
rooiM,
solid b r i c k , finished r o o m in a t t i c
g a s heat. M a n y e x t r a s . A good
buy at . . .
IV 9-8814 - 8815
18,
Subway
iBeiford D. Harfy J r .
14 SOUTH FRANKLIN STREET
HEMPSTEAD, L. I.
INTEGRATED
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
I
Walk
6 LARGE ROOMS DOWN.
6 up,
flnUhed
basement,
oil h e a t , m o d e r n t h r o u g h out.
WEEK
Dlrectloni: Take Southern State P a r k w a ; Exit
under the bridge to South Franklio Street.
$14,990
Hollit
^
HEMPSTEAD
& VICINITY J
CONVENIENT
OUTSTANDING VALUE
NOTICE:
JA.MAICA
WHY PAY RENT?
9 U I C K SALE!
•UNG4L0W,
7
roomi,
extra
l a r q * p l o t , f e n c e d , f r H l t t r e e s , CAPE,
7 rooms with
fiRishcd
b e a M t l f e l i h r e b b e r y o e d f l o w e r s , b a s e m e n t , b a r , e x t r a k i t c h e n , Imf o r o q e , n e w oil unit, l e w t a x e s . m e n s e
plot.
SpocloMs
attic.
$ 2 f O In e e n t r o c t .
W o n ' t l a s t . $4S0 In c o n t r a c t .
W E S T I U R Y
U N I O N D A L I
jM
NOTICE)
AVE.,
AX 7-2111
REALTY
HOMES TO FIT YOUR POCKET"
P.M.
LKGAli
HII.I.SinK
OPEN 7 D A Y S A W E E K
INTEGRATED
ALL
ALL 4 O F F I C E S OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
8:30
DAVID
Asking
BETTER REALTY
TO
J .
REALTY
18(»-ll
AX 1-5262
MA 3-3800
A.M.
E .
FREE PARKING :
ROOSEVELT
JA 9-4400
9:30
Ave..
L.
$6,990
277 NASSAU ROAD
PARK
FROM
HiUside
Jamaica,
Two story. Colonial, large woode d p l o t , n e e d s s e m e fixing a n d
p a i n t . S e p a r a t e c o t t a g e In r e a r ,
con be rented. Elderly
widow
m u s t sell i m m e d i a t e l y .
135-19 R O C K A W A Y BLVD.
OZONE
170-03
Decerotlng
Open 7 days a week
Till 8 P.M.
JEMCOL
$290 C A S H
BUNGALOW
MOVE RIGHT IN
NO C A S H DOWN G.l.'s
IV 9-5800
JA 3-3377
Own
C h o i c e , 3 b e d r o o m house in m o s t
d e s i r a b l e s e c t i o n of St. A l b a n s H o l l i s , w i l l b e v a c a n t i n 30 d a y s .
B y buying now, you can invc
$1„500. F u l l y d e t a c h e d , g a s h e a t ,
garage, extras. Full down paym e n t , $700.
4-BEDROOMS
HOME.
D e t a c h e d 60
Ft.
Frontage.
1 car
g a r a g e , finished basement, near transportation, refrigerator,
screens and storms,
also
many
extras.
Take over
small
G.I. Mortgage.
C A L L FOR APPT.
Yoyr
Do
OPTION TO BUY or RENT
HEMPSTEAD
JAMAICA
FAMILY
VACANT —
6th * 8th A v r . S u b T i j t « Paraonl
Blvd. Ws are rl(ht ogtulde Snhwaj.
$1,500
S u b W O y I ' T T T T T T T T T l
2 A P T S . — 6 & 5 L A R G E R O O M S , oil h e a t , m a n y e x t r a s , d e t a c h e d . N e a r .sho^plnff, b i g d e p t . s t o r e s , a l l
conveniences.
S A L E P R I C E $15.000. O N L Y $.550 D O W N . . .
$10,990
T h r t o b o d r o o m h o m e in i d e a l l y
situated area, near everything.
O w n e r has r e d u c e d p r i c e f o r
quick l a l e . H « r r y > — S m a l l d e p o s i t
h o l d It.
159-12 HILLSIDE
t O
TWO
COLONIAL
Datociitd,
4
room
baiiqalew,
Idaal f o r M w l y w * d , ar retired
coepla. O.i. R e f e r r e d , l u y of a
l l f o t t m o . O n l y $ 3 0 0 d o w n . $4V.53
a month.
• R I N G DEPOSIT
LBGAL
LONG ISLAND
LONG ISLAND
INTEGRATED
s o . O Z O N E PARK
so.
VALUES
aiVBUSIDE DHIVB, I H
apartoieDU IntarradaL
taKar 7-4116
*
pneate
rurai.htd TBar
MO CANH 0.1.
U t W f A N H TO A L L
lOO'e of 1 & ti-lamily homer to
fhooRe liom. Choict^ttt locittione.
NATIONAL
]tlH-'{U HllUlile Ave., Jainulia
01. 7-UUOO
Unfurnished Apts- - Brooklyn
NOSTRAND AVENUE, 488
8TH AVENUE SUBWAY
Beautiful newly-renioUelcd Hiita.
Tiled bath. Kitchenette. Mstlern
bulldinK. All tranaportallon. Short
walk
from
NoetranU
Ave.
I N D Subwa.v.
FREE G A S AND
ELECTRICITY
Furnished Apts.
Brooklyn
S7 H e r k i m e r S t r e e t , b e t w e e a
•oxf o r d ft N o i t r a n d A v e . , b a a a t l f i i l l y
faralihed one aad t w o r e e n a y t i .
hltckeaett*.
electrlo
fr««.
Ilovoter.
Near Itk
A d a H * . Saea
daily.
Ave.
Sabway.
Farms - UUtor County
Aiti'ui-iivt> tf loom hoube, harO
iHipvu
'jott ft. on live tN'Ut
I'ieldetoiu
Are
place.
Mi.ttm.
Martba i.vwn, Shamlaken, N. T.
tlv«ia.
ftueaw.
Teraw
Tax Agents
Needed For
Local Areas
"Master Builder" Becomes
Senior Commissioner
New
W o r k s ment of Public Works Is not reZ u r - quired to provide facilities, beCollege men with a background
muhlen, whose department was cause they have their own design in accounting can still file for I n labeled
the
Country's
"Master and
construction
supervisory
ternal Revenue positions in local
Wide Selection of Used Cors Builder" in a Leader Personality
forces, are the Departments of
areas. The government is offering
profile several months ago, has Parks and Marine and Aviation,
these agents $5,355 to start.
just completed 13 years as head the Boards
of
Education
and
Aiilh. I'lirlory Dpnlcr SInre in:tO
Application forms and a copy
of the Public W o r k s Department. Higher Education, and the various
Jerom* Ave.. Bx. (172 St.) CY 4-1200
of
Recruiting
Circular
No.
1
authorities,
such
as
the
Transit
This
makes him the senior
(1960) or information as to where
and
the
Triborough
member, in years of service, of Authority
they may be obtained can be seMayor Wagner's official cabinet Bridge and Tunnel Authority.
cured in any post office in New
of heads of departments and City
York State except N e w York, N . Y .
ETHICS BOARD DECIDES
agencies.
Y.; Second U.S. Civil Service R e Yon HI fill DrlvrrH—Time PAymrnt!!
H e was appointed by former A G A I N S T A T T O R N E Y
gion, The News Building. 242 East
J O H N E. C U F F
VI 5-6648
Opinion number 16 has been
Mayor William O'Dwyer, r e - a p 107-10 ll.'llh .<<1., Richinnnil Hill, N. Y.
42nd Street, New York 17, N.Y.;
pointed by Mayor Impellltteri and handed down by the New York
and the Board of U . S. Civil S e r Hardware Mutuals
twice re-appointed by Mayor W a g - City Board of Ethics, which a d vice Examiners, Internal Revenue
ministers the City's tough Ethics
ner.
Service, Room 1107. 90 Church
The
Department
of
Public Code.
St., New York 7, N . Y .
SMASHING
A n attorney. It says, who Is emWorks, organized under the C h a r -
TRUCKS-TAXIS-SIMGA
York
City
Commissioner
Publics
Frederick
H.
SniDGS MOTORS
For Low Cost
AUTO INSURANCE
SALE
revision of 1938, Is charged ployed by the Department of W e l with the design or the supervision fare should not, in his private
of design and the supervision of capacity, appear in dispossess pro-
FACTORY-FRESH
CHEVS
LOW
AS
1789
Basic
responsibilities
control
RdW
OPEN EVES
AMBLER
Low Prices
High Trade Ins
EMPIRE
RAMBLER
Autlioiizeel Dealer
Ave.
Pres.
C a r s Wanted
«.000 C A R W A N T E D — BUlyn'a Irjtesl
A t i i o Jiiiyer will pay you the most &
•iioi CASH on yr. lale mod oar —
Coniol — D R I V E In NOW — BROOKLYN
AUTO
SALES,
GE.
5-f)S(IO.
181U Ave., Cor. 48 St. & Dahill Kd.
Biookiyn.
AUTOMOBILE
I SHOPPING CENTER I
1961
CHEVROLET
IMPALAS
Sale . . , Factory Fresh '60
«2197
ln<'l. I'rriKlit Si
t'fihTul
DELIVERY
IMMEOMTf
with
constrction;
and
public similar body."
55
of
other
City
departments
and agencies provide facilities for
the
Departments
Fire,
Health,
Police,
of
Correction,
Hospitals,
•I l«il
Al
a
free
is having its annual Bazaar, sponsored by the New York
League,
on
December
Women'.s
14th
and
15th, 1960 at P a l m Gardens, 52nd
St, Between 8th & 9th Ave,, N Y C .
Judge
Benjamine
Shalleck
president of the organization. Mrs.
Jules
and
Pein, Mrs.
Mrs,
Samuel
Irving
Mayers
Dorfman
are
chairmen of the Bazaar.
Camp
Sussex
Is recognized
the Greater New York Fund
has
been
in
operation
for
by
and
over
35 years. It has no paid solicitors.
4-0700
lldinirty ||. (uk. StI.
St. George Installs
Officers
Nov.
appear
as
17.
at
110
Livingston
an It featured a buffet supper.
St. ecutive members—Gertrude H a n sen,
Johanna
A.
Dobrovolny,
installing
Timmins,
officer
treasurer
was
of
Sanitation,
Traffic,
Wel-
fare, and W a t e r Supply, Gas and
Electricity, and others. Municipal
agencies
for
which
the
Depart-
NOTICE
C I T A T I O N — T H E PEOPI-E OF TH K
S T A T K Ol'' N K W Y O R K , By the finic/e ot
God. Ercp and Indrpctulfnt — T o Attorney
Grncrat of tiic Stale of New Y o r k ; And
to the distribiilef's of Mirona B. Sniith.
also known as M. Beatrix Sniith, deceased,
whose n.-inies and post offlce adiliesses are
nnknuwn and '-annot after tiilifrenl inquiry bo aseer'lained by the petilioner
herein; beitiK the persons interested as
ci-editors, distrilnilees or otherwise in the
estate ot Mirona B. Sniith, also known
as M. Beatrix Sniilii. deceased, who at
the time of her dealh was a resident of
2i> East :;»lli street, New Y o r k , N. Y .
Send ( I K K K T I N G :
Upon the peliiion of Tlie Pnblie Adminislr.-ilor of the Connty of New York,
havitiw his otlice at Hall of Records, Room
;(0U. BoroLltfii of Manhattan, City and
Connty ot New Y'ork, as Temporary Ailniinisli-atiir and Adtninistrator ('.T..\. of
(he Hoods, chattels and credits ot said
deceased:
Y(ni and each of you are hereby cited
to »how caiise before the Surrogate s Court
of New York County, held at tlu' Hall of
Hec(nds. in Ihe Couiity of New York, (ni
the Jillh day of December, lllllO, at halfpasl ten o c lock in the forenoon of that
day, wliy Ihe account of proeeedinBs of
'riiB Public Administrator of the t'ounly
of New Y'ork, as Temporary Administrator
and Administrator (.'.T.A. of the sooils,
chattels and orcdits of
said
deceased,
should not be judicially settled.
I N T E S T I M O N Y W H E R E O F . We have
caused Ihe seal of tile Surrosate s I'olirt
of the said County ot New York to be
hereunto .-iHlxcd,
W I T N E S S , H O N O R A B L E .lOSEI'H
A. COX. a Slirroifate ot our said
(.Seal)
Cimniy, at the County ot New
York, the ."trd d.ay of November,
in Ihe year ot our I.ord one
thousand nine hundreit and sixly.
Philip A . Donahue
Clerk ot Ihe SurroBale's Coul't
TERRIFIC SAYINGS
CITY EMPLOYEES
BIG DISCOUNTS
• FORDS
• FALCONS
- THUNDERBIRDS
LIIERTY AVE. ft USth ST.
JAMAICA
R l . 9-2300
Reuben
the
Per Nilsen, treasurer; Phyllis E m - tional St. George Association.
"Look, dear, this is an
excellent tkiie to buy
that sterling silver we've been
talking about for so long."
Markets,
SCHILDKRAUT
FORD
}«.,
Education
56 miles of
sewers and a thirteenth (Newtown he prepare papers for submission ing: Robert Acger, vice president;
Creek) In the process of design to the Rent Commission, or any Marguerite D. Haenig, secretary;
A-1 USED CARS
ALL YEARS & MAKES
t . I. C .
children
Beside.s electing Albert Ciancag- George E. Higgins, Murdoch M a c pollution attorney of record even though he
operating is not physically in court," was lini as president, the Association Farquhar, Edward J. Norton and
Intercepting the Board's opinion. " N o r should elected and Installed the follow- Gordon M . Lee.
LGUAL
IMiiway
deserving
plants, 12 now
Design and construction on be-
Aiilli. I iu lor.v ('IIK\ KOI.KT l ) « i l e r
MoKenzie,
which
courthouses in all boroughs.
GRAND CONCOURSE at 144 ST.
John
and
three week vacation at Its camp,
there are 49 at present;
half
SY 2-5544
Sales: 2250 E. Tremont
(In Parkehester)
the ings are brought.
" H e should not
are
Citv's toll-free bridges, of
in each borough and the various
BATES
.VliTO D I S t O l ' N T
philanthropio
municipal buildings, borough halls
EXSY TERMS
Its
a
buildings such as City Hall, the
EQUIPPED
BRONX
Sussex,
T h e annual business meeting erson, financial secretary; Alfred
construction of facilities for which ceedings on behalf of a client who
allocations are provided in the owns real property In which reci- and election of the City Education Burkert, delegate to the National
City's capital construction b u d - pients of public assistance reside Board's St. George Association, Association; Rev. Gardner C, T a y and against whom such proceed- Chapter 58, was held Monday, lor, spiritual advisor, and six e x get.
and
$
ACTORY
Camp
organization that gives 1300 needy
ter
BRAND NEW 60
AS
Camp Sussex
To Have Bazaar
December 14-15
YES, IT'S TRUE..
If you buy today
you save on
place settings
B u y n o w and save - prices advance September 1 on H E I R L O O M S T E R L I N G place settings and s o m e o | » n stock pieces. If you're
•onsidering a service for 4, 8 or 12 persons,
• o m e in and let ut show you how much you
can really save.
Na-
Laundry Workers At
Brooklyn Army Center
Win Higher V/age Scale
.
The U. S. Army Transportation
Teiminal Command Atlantic has
announced approval by the Secretary of the Army and the Air
Force of revision in the Wage Plan
for laundry employees of these
departments.
The new plan will become effective at the Brooklyn Army Terminal following the next locality
wage survey in this area. This survey
to be made in January 1961.
Approximately 74 laundry employees at the Terminal will be
effected.
Major features of the new plan
nre:
• Wage schedules for laundry
employees will continue to be
based on laundry and dry cleaning
wage rates prevailing in the locality.
• The number of pay levels for
laundry and dry cleaning Jobs will
be reduced from 20 to 10 by conBClidation
of
current
laundry
•lade.s
The following table shows geneially the relationship between
current and revi.sed grades, although a few jobs have been
le-evaluated.
FRESENT
APPROVED
GRADES
GRADES
1
1
2-3
2
4-5
6-7
8-9
10-11
12-13
14-15
16-17
18-19-20
8
Air Force consistent with
4
of
8
e
7
8
e
10
most
other
39 New City Tests Are Ordered
those
Government
agencies.
No employee will suffer a reduction in pay because of installation of the new laundry wage
plan and many employees will
receive an increase in pay.
The new consolidated
grade
structure has been designed to
improve job rate alignment and to
facilitate the evaluation of jobs
to grades.
Drop One Step
Nine new open competitive and visor (signals, structures, struc30 promotion tests were ordered tures Group C, telephones, track
last week by the New York City and ventilation and drainage),
Civil Service Commission. The bus maintainer, collecting agent,
foreman (elevators and escalators,
open competitives are; senior acsignals, structures Group C and
countant, maintainers
helper
telephones), maintainers helper
iGroups A, B. C and D ) , mechan(Groups A, H, C and D ) , mechanical maintainer (Group B ) , track- ical maintainer (Group B ) , motorman, assistant electrical engineer man, power distribution mainand laboratory aide.
tainer, road car inspector, strucThe promotionals are assistant tures maintainer (Groups C and
electrical engineer (all depart- E ) , supervisor (structures, turnments) and 29 Transit Authority stiles), telephone cable maintainer
ventilation
and
drainage
promotionals—assistant
foreman and
(structures, Groups B and C), assistant superintendent
(surface
"Say Ton Saw It In
transportation), assistant superThe Leader"
X
The number of .«tep rates for
each grade will be reduced from
four to three. Five percent increments between steps will continue
to be used.
As in the past, new employees
will normally be hired at the first
step and will advance to the
second step after 26 weeks of
satisfactory service and conduct.
Advancement to step three will
require 78 weeks of satisfactory
service and conduct in step two.
The merit advancement provisions
contained in the current four-step
plan will be discontinued.
The approved
revisions
will
make minimum rates, the number
of step rates and the within-grade
advancement rules of Army and
WORLD'S MOST BRILLIANT MOVIE PROJECTOR
NEW
Bell & Howell
L U M I N A 1.2
• Twice a s bright - Twice the detail
•
Threads
•
N e w f/1.7
Wateh
the n « w
in jvst 3 Mconda
Itself Automatically
lens
• Brilliant
new lamp
design
"Olos«-Up"
Ball A Howell
on the A B C T V
Series
Network
Now Bell & Howell breoki lh« wottog* borrier to give you «
radically new projection tyilem—nnore than Iwlce Oi bright at
ordinary projector* to bring out every detail In your movie*.
Show* >tillt 4 time* brighter than ordinary projector*.
COMPARE
THlSi
FEATURES:
• New f/1.2 lent
• Splicer included
• Automatic threading
• Variable tpeed
• Reverte, still projection • Room lamp cut oR
• Automatic cord reel
• Gear-driven reelt
WORLD'S MOST BRILLIANT
MOVIE
WITH THIl
HON ON
1HI DOOR
PROJECTOR
CHARLES APPLIANCES
P
36 UNION SQUARE. EAST
New York.
GR. 5-6050
FULL YEAR SERVICE
AT NO EXTRA COST
• y ft-l
Servlf*
roctoiy
iiBeitil
ClAZER BROS
200 REMSEN AVENUE. BROOKLYN. N. Y.
PResident 4-5300
Fags
Twenly-two
C I V I L
S E R V I C E
L E A D E R
Tin'gday,
Novemher
29,
I 9 6 0
Correction Officer Eligible List
,700 211 Clor. treena. Batavia . . ,
840 358. Webber. Oodlri sy NYO
Vaugha 1, Thaddeus, Bklyn
800
117. Bnil »(|ll(^l. Edit r. Plallnbiir
,790 3(1. Seheve, Roberta. Watervilli
840 3:'^9. Rose. Robe
.«(((»
Myers, Warren, Jeffersonville
YORK HTATK n F . P A R T M K N T
890
Cairo
118. Kan nt')((Hpr. Lo ii». LviiKHln
.7110
810
r,
Francis,
Corning
.,
Bierwili
(»K « IVII. HI';KVU K
890
.800
Wells,
Ollv<
300.
Plattsbni'g
,
.
110. Van look. KIcb ird, Mi.nllfO
.700 31. Farrier, Helen, Mtddlelowi
810
John. AKamont
. .,
Dooley.
K I R H W T I " N OKKK KK ( M A I . K )
etio
..
I'Ml. Von lonliuil.K-n, Bklyn
.891*
84 0 361. A r l d j , August, Otiville
.700 32. Blisi, Margaret, Whitesbr
Wnodw irtb. Dale, Hornell
().('. 40(11
80(1
•n.
Robert,
Alihurn
.
.
121.
Spccn
1000
840 3H2. Tamb rrl, ,Iohi
7011 33. Anialonc, Wilma. Newbni
Auburn . .
.8ni»
Slaten Isi
890
Thomp! on. Charles. Saratoga
I . Blllf 10. Anlhc
Body, Floyd,
i;
lOllll
840
mil,
Morinh
CI
790
800
Phillip, NYC
Wagner
S. /.elit nkl, Willi
.890
34. Shields. Rita, BuHalo . .
Wesley EIn
iisey. Robe t. Atlica . . . ,
Howe
1.011(1
84 0 3H3. Ranisi
.700
.800
,
Cudilebackvl
.
.
Stwp ll.iit(!r. I. •luml. Niirwich
Keblenbei
k.
H
•
,
Liberty
.,
Ho ell
Biopr p. Kdw
.88A
. mm 1'
..
840 364. Bl nell, Jami
.700 35. Beaeh. Carol, Albion
,890
...
Hailey. Will m, Bklyn
4. Miir 'ixiii. Jai ncH. Hlirinla .
Richard. Forealvl
Waller
Sippl
840
.11X11 I'
.7911 36. Palmore. M., Pkeepsie . .
.«8»
Hany. Hnb.vlon
,890
Harold, Flushing
...
Ha
5. Mol
365. Bawk(
Hurley V1
Willlar
mes. Batavia
....
I!
Cllilc
840
0
8
1
1
en.
Plallslilir*
790
,890
Bu rridge, Sidney. Allbnm . . .
H. Till) ii«y. .laii
.880
I. .lolin Riibmon d HI
3 7. Banks Barbar », Ml. Vernon
840 3(1H. Citflli, JaClaude. Cad.vvllle
, .imn I'
,7110
.80(1
lith,
Robert.
Newburgh
.
Sn
7. 'I'lir' :n. Lolli" Lan'liiiiont
Siimiiel Hem on
Mildred E Elmhnrsl
840 367. Cromi' Nathaniel. BItlyn .,
, .1170 1'
lis.
DlllH. Bronx
.880
,790 38. Jonei.
Mi inrav, Len Anienia
H.
,
CarmiMiilir
.'168.
i:
Helen.
830
, .1)70
F.niene, Wlllard .
Ha.vi
880
,790 39. Miller,
.870
Pe arles. Carlton, BulTalo . . .
Elmira
» . Hlllll mall 1, Koberl. Cnliii'n .
al
NV(
I
. .Hid i:iii. Hnxa
,880
,1-lelon. Ci.blPsUill .
8:10 300. Carr•nsill Richard. Warsaw .,
.870
Hr ad. Harvey, Allic!i
.7fi0 4(1. Miller Yvonne . Bronx
1(). Kinl
Hi;
I'i
i : i l . (lala?. i. T'i
3 ; o . Rl willlger. Neil. Slormvill
Lorrail le. Elmira . . . ,
.
.iiro
.880
iiWnlor.
Holmi.'f
.
!430
.870
Di
.780
Nimtz
ileria.
.Inscph,
Hawthorne
41.
11.
Eh
Haikt . Cli
. .o-,ii
.88(1
830 371. T( ion. Riehard. Willsboro
.870
Gi' at, Edward, Yonker
.7811 42. Doenng. Joan. Flushing . . . .
Pai il, I'kefiiMie
12. M d
ilbany
. .llVd i:i:i. Allhii • r .
.880
,830 372. M It, William F., Aiibui
.870
Til bnne, Cbarlea, Anbiirn . . .
Mahoney.
Mar
ion.
Olean
.
.
.
.
780
.IHIII . M iirk, Sprins- Vly .
4:1.
. Allab
Ell
. .117(1 IHI. Kolaii
.88(1
PI
.830
.870
Ni ibile Charles. Garrison . . .
NYC
Cli iirlca, ClmpklowKa
, .78(1 44. Bryant. Arcathi
14 Jdmi
rme.
Anthony.
Queei
I.
Piatt!
iburg
Norri
I!
.
.(170
.880
Ducha
Vig
,830
. 8(l(t
alo
Bl
WHllam,
Buf(
Keo
.78(1
15. Oil, Estelle, Beacon
15.
nice, York, RUlyn
Cleophlis. Morrisi
y. Bklyi
. .0 70 i:m. Ci rl. Anlli
.8I»>
Kelly,
, 830
'1
,860
Duvicl, Albany
,
.780
Pettit,
Ruth.
Alhio
411.
IH. Hui
A
l
l
•n,
James.
Pern
Newburg
n^ger. Kdward. Broi
Kei
C
.
.11
Hambel
,830
.800
.
Pnill.
Kuvcnn
Mpi
NVC
,
.
.,780
17.
.MeCii •Ihv. Joseph. Elmira . . .
M Idox. Virnini
NVC
.81-0
. .1111(1 i:!s. ({ W . Neh
Conwayy, Paul. Hancock
,830
. 800
Bi^rnnrd. Bnffiil
Fishkill
idford,
Barba
Ion,
Donahl,
Waldi
n
.
.
.78(1
4
8'.
Sa
18. BiM
Belle
1.
Dannei
.SSO
, .Hllll I.'111. N ewlo I, .la
.830
. 8(t»
8. Dawson , R O B I
Bl
.lohii. Mont .•llo
Jon
Be
19. Am
Peler i, Carllnn, Eagle Hridga
. .78(1 49. Navi
f i n e I'lai
,8S|i
Kar
. .011(1 1(0. H I
. 830 ;i79. OBoyle , Janif
.860
Brot
Ra.vmond, Elmiii
Be a
« 0 . Weill
Vilel. , Sliphen. Be
Ar
. .78(1 50. Onei
, Elmira
.88(1
Hiiwen. Clia
H
I
.
.
.0(1(1
Slory.
.
830
.
. !»I10
3S0.
Be
III
William.
Blltralt
Dougla
nd
Co
21. Enclr-i'S.
ek. Yvonne. NYC
Wll-i
Ro
. .78(1 51. Fred
Troy .
.88(1
Kowe, (iler
. .0(10
.830 381, Goodro,, Robei
, .8110
Hndi
oche
9,'i. BiKldii;. VilKTnl, Moilln
Free
Barbara.
C
.
Lee
At
52.
I'd.
Elmii
.
.78(1
,«S0
Hriiwii, nil
!HiO
11:1,
Brown
.830
.
.860
3S2.
n
Mailin.
Milll
John,
Ehi
. Be icon .
•M. .Mnllllm
Ruth. Buffalo
T( iipkinis. Jai
Liberty
. .7HII 5:1. Law
.880
0(10 114 Co:;?!-. (leiii
. 8.'I0 383. Croswel11, Joli
, . 80(1
NYC
24. Ki-eniin . ' Kdwiivd. Bp.'u
May. NYC . .
. I'inebu
Rl idall. J a ICS. Glci IS FIs
.8S(I
. . 7 8 0 54 Hogi
.830 354. Baggett a, Josi •pli Herkii
. .8fl«
lici-svl .11(1(1 I in Wippel . Kn
B
ahl. Pei ikill .
Marlene. ITIica
25. Rivpiilillireb, EviiPdl. V(
aid.
Hrol
55.
T(
1.
Re
,8SII
.
.7811
.
.0(1(1
I Id Sell
.830 355. Fry, G ordon, New
. . S50
ny.
I'lallsbiirg
Williams.
Audrey,
Bkl
2fl. Loriiis. (leiald. Ml. K:
er'.
Albai
llei
50.
Nev
.88(1
. .78(1
.
.illid
Farrell,
lie;
.830
. . 850
11;
John,
Lyoi
Ilopewl
.Id.
Ml.
380.
Troy
Namias, Shirley, Bronx
27. iMoniii, .lanicH.
I'lallsbll
Eve
John
.880
; . 780
.(I 1-18, Bo:
. 8.'1(1 3S7. Walte. Normal>n. (
. . 850
Remington.
Faye,
Sloil
28. Slill'kw allipi'. A. T.. Od.
m.
Owas
Ft.
Edward
.
.
.8S0
Hen
Paul.
. .780 ss'.
Till
Utf.ler,
830
Hu
o.-.n
I
I
1
1
1
Willian
Morrisi.
388.
2I». Ku«i.vn Willi! .m Auburi
, Liberty
. . 8ri((
. 880
Ree
Slcph en. Sbcrbn
I
. .78(1 50. Stewart, Hildred. Atbai
der
. 830 3S9. Phillips , Raym ind. Beac
No
.0.^0
i
1
Mnliini•rt'.
Allhlir
•.
Rohi
Reed,
Ellzabelli,
Albio
Illilyn
.
Clayton.
Lyon
Ml.
. .850
30.
.8S0
Del:
. .770 (10.
Bntton, John, I'awling
. 8.'I0
Oi ly.t. eri, Hon
151 Ho
.III
.'too.
Bongiovanni, D., Albio
on.
Donald.
Middlcbiir
.
.850
31. J.oi-iisli I, Jam ts. Aubun
.88(1
Thn
(11.
.
.7711
Brimmr r. Gen Be, Elnii
Hob
dieads
.830
Spi
or.ti
ilm, Kllel
. .850
S-i. Rii'hliii II. I.i( •nel. HUlyi
.880
John Liberty
Bog
. . 770 62. Lynch. Mary. Bklyn
.830 .ill I. Chapmain. Rich ird. Penn
ll.-itl
Wr Kill Malii
Tcilcsit . Karl. Di pew . .
Brown. Irene. Ossining
W. Chi
..850
^
.87(1
Riciiard. Plallsbui-g
Job
. . 7 7 0 (13.
.830 .'1!12. Basseit. Lvale, Skanatel
!ir>ll
Cliauv
(Ircene,
!.
N.
Uoi'li
Bnrnell
lone.
Box
.'Id
.
Montao
G.-OI'Bi
. . 850
*
.14,
.870
d. WiUred. Elmira
Bar
.830 .•t03. Bell B: uce. CI rning . .
. . 770 61
il.'id
Urame r, John, les. Well
rst, Sara, Beacon , .
Howi ,r(l. Consli
.
.
8511
. 87(1
sn. Duiniis
Howard. Bedlord
.
394.
Car
H
65.
Miller, Robert
, 830
. . 77(1
ley,
Jan
il60
7.
Ncwburifl'
MelCiii
Ossining
nncll.
Mary.
Beaco
1.
Jelfe
Ralpli
.
.
810
870
8K.
Joseph. Buffalo . . .
Zar
. 830 305. B
. .770 (1(1.
nno i . i ; . Calkin . Fentol
John. Albany
die. Sara. Ml. Vern
T son ille
. .84 0
. .870
» T . Miirdoek. Robe >1. Aubii
1, Donald, Irving.lon
:78. Moi
.830 30(1.
. .770 (17. Crii terman, C.. I'tica .
O.-iO I.I.S, MaUsli;y. Will
lice. Dann
. .810
. 870
8S, Opie. Fred. Ossinir
1, Andrew. Hopewl Jo
.'197. Douglas, La
!79. Cri!
.820
. .77(1 (iS. Wa •y. Olga Newburgh
O.'id
15(1. Maloniny AI I. All (able Cha«l
NYC . .
Gantt,
Robi
rl.
. .810
, . 87(1 180. Cla;
Sl>. Crisdeld. ,lanie». Oi
308.
Glens I'll
'alrlck
Lui
(10.
820
.
.770
010
1(1(1.
li'loyd
Wbil
•
I'Ins
Bland.
John.
Lewi
Wnodit
Bruee
Newbiii
. 810
, . 870 : s i . Nas
4(1,
Mil
Brenda , Bklyn
.820 399.
,!M(I I (11 . De
. .77(1 70. Bethel, Ellen. NYC . . .
till in. (
Dahlia
Roberl
,
Carriioi
. .84 0
. .870 ;S2.
41. Sabalb, John, B
400.
•I,
Hiidsoi
;
1.
1
.
Robi
Biirialo
Cowie
Lillian
.820
I FIs
,
»
I
0
Roberts.
.
.711(1
Id'.'.
Williai
^
L
k
Corrad
,
Richa
•d,
Hopev
. .840
III. Al
, .870 :s:i.
4'3. B
Hiird g. Bkl.vn
W ell h
N. Ball more
•. Join
Garnt
Emmi .. Box 3
.820 401.
. .70(1
mil
Hi:!. Ueyea
Cai lo^I. M ddletown
Spieer,
Floyd,
Hornell
. .810
. .870 ;s4. Wallaic. HOW! •d, EMenv
4H. Hnveri IB. Jumes , Kineh St.
402.
Brcw.slci
Herlihy,
M
820
•T.'i:
ry.
lie
.
Oslroll.
.
.7110
.010
IIU.
Carl.
Clark,
Max,
E
•Ivilli
. .830
. .870
44. Noelz( I, Alfred , Ellenville
Colbei
leaun Vly
Beacon
Fasillo, Al na
. 820 4 03.
;85. McCartV V. James Ctrl Islip
. . 70(1 74.
,1110 1(15 Millei
Riili;
Shabui
. . 8.'10
. .870
45 Ample . .loseph. Bklyn . . .
Allica
..
14.
ewich.
John.
Coxs
Elmira
Rice,
Eilcf
.820
75.
;so. Dclaney Richard. Union Spga
.
.7(10
,0111
I'bilin.
Gray,
Edward,
..8:10
. . 87(1
4tt. .lohnsi Ill, Rayni onil, Bklyn
((1(1. l.aiib,
Glenbam
EIn
Rawlins M
820 4(15.
, Mnnnel. Bronx
. . 76(1
.01(1 HIS. l.awy, •. Gary
Nestler,
Raynu
. , 870 :87. Ramirez
(i.
ind.
Forest
47. Horg. Stephen. Hol-Hiheads
Emight,
. . 820
. .1(30
Fr!inces Sehtdy
Ri.yal, Ki ;escville
77.
;88.
Brunk.
.01(1
.
.700
Is.
Cu
Malln,
Thomas
. .870
, Glens FIs
Ids. I'^dwa
Nyaek
48. Zorieli . (leorBc, KIniira HI
Mallory Mildred PeckvUil
. ,820 407.
. .820
•on, Ralph, Hadlcy
.n4(i I (ill. Newell
Gei
. .7(10 78. Luther,
. 87(1 ;8ii. PidBcon
Sa
4 » , (irillin , Melvin, Whitehall
. .820 408. Elllnghani, Roinald, Balav
. .S'MI
Blanche Elmira .
79.
Bklyn
ion,
Patrick,
Hi
;oo.
.IClll
HOH
Bulehino,
Robi
. .
. .870
. .76(1
srl, Dannei
17(1. l.yon».
4(19.
a-n. Gle IS FIs
fiO (jateg, ,Tosepb. NYC . .
Slcment
.
.820
a.
Malone
. .8';0
.
Genevr
8
0
.
Walden
hither
N
IKIO 17 1 SihulK , Williai
. . 870 '.'111. Sle
. .7(10
abaiiis
51 Abi iHold, Robeirt, Dunkirk
. 820 4 10. Williams, Regi)nald, Ossini
. .8-:o
,SI . See, Th •Ima, Mlt. Kisio
2112.
,
Dovir
PI
Wli
Jol
.0^10
nev.
Iloi
Tompkins,
Roi
. .870
jer. Wawai
. . 7(1(1 82. Goodric . Franc•CK. C.cnev
laid. Aubii
92 Kelminll, Lyndor11. Elniira . .
172 Meouei
411.
.
.820
. .820
,o:io
. .870 ';»;t. Onorat , Ray Dlid, Middle
Sliles. Lininln. Altd
Bklyn . .
. 76(1 M3.
Linadner, Albert Beaeon . .
. . 820 412. Kimble
Newblirgl
. .820
). Mar
Magliauo.
id.
Elmira
Hewill
Ben
201.
o:i(i
k.
Willi!
Vanzile
Murdoi
Alpini
. .760 S4.
Li ,wlor, Fred, U l Ci irniel . .
Pine C ly . .870
413
Bert
54.
.
.
820
. .820
Gaenier.
. ..
. !i:i(i
. . 870 2!I5. Mooeji Ir, 1 ibiirn
Sorrel 1 Robert, Wingdale
. .7110 85 Carey. Y
Ni •well, Kunsell. W. Nyaek
414 Lawllss
Clarence W Ch:
6 5 .
..8:
. .820
BllKalo
BranI
Lk
Wood.
Waltc
.
o.'iu
2!l(i.
Lawreu
. .870
Kirkmi n. Ralpli . Slaten 1st
. . .70(1 Sll, Whil field.
H I lod, David. Medi
Alfred
5B.
415
.
.8:
. .620
Anni . NYC .
Roehesli
Roberl
;o
.0:10
. ,8(111 297. McGee
Wright , Fred
'obleskill
. . .700 87 Ziacearia. Mari
» 7 . Ll pinto, Anthony, Mal'ioiia
. .8: ;o 416 Townse Id. Do Id, Fairhv
.810
Hope«
J
el
Glens
F
Taylor
Ronald
.0:10
298.
Bugar,
. . 8ti0
Adams
. . .70(1 SS WesU i-elt. Lo s. Horsel •ads
UH. Di xon, Aldolph, .Ml
•ille
Buffii
417
John,
Plallsbiirg
. .810
;o
.!i:io
•hard. Aiibuni
. .800 290 Ray,
Ryan. H : I
Jil. Bl irbicri. George, Bi
. . . 7 6 0 80 Mathi . Alice Albion .
mac .
418 Schiltz
Thoii as, Attica
. .81(1
Johnsc
10
,'100.
Arquett
. .8(10
m, William. Walden
...
. il.'UI ISO. Je^sup
«0. M
.John. Syraeu
Kin
Mol
•is,
Whiteh
...70(1
S.
. 810
419
80
Math
. Alice, Albion .
8 « 0 .'10 1. Boyd. Frederick G. Peru . . . . < 10
61. I'arrai (1. Robert, Dovi
Alb::
0 Slia. Waller. Elmira . . .
. . .750 !I0. Walk. , Diana1. NYC
.o:!(i i s i . l.iburd
Marl
It
:o
:i(12.
8(10
1. Jerry. Chlirubusco
. i . .8
B'!. Durke •. Alton, ('bur ibUMO
Murphy,
Cliffard.
Elmira
ensburs
0:!ii 1S2. Mail;.
421.
.
.
.750
II
.
Wols(
, Ada, N. Rochr
...810
SfiO .•102. Seitz. Robert, Auburn
. .a: !0
Ul-iKRS Floyd. Sehtdy
Bassett. Vilah, Rome
.0^0 IS.'i. Vaekei I Fran
Richm
HI
. . . 7 5 0 02 Rudz ski, B.. Beacon
...810
8(10 .'1114. Weiss. John. Ossining
. .8: :o
64. Egan. Riihard. D
.020 i s i . Dm-.ill
•i.'l Bashta, Nicholas, Ant rn
Cliflo
. . . 7 5 0 93. Davis Cecelia. Peekskill
Reilly, Edwin, Spgtld Odn . . . 820
. . .810
••105.
8(10
Tvler,
Chajie
Riehard
Hor.seheuilf
.9:;(i
IN.-I.
24. Paddock. Garlh. Bre. ispi
65.
niiin Spgs
.
750
O'Ncl
Sehtdy
.
Olivia,
Morris
820
94.
...810
;10(I.
8(10
iscy. Gerald, Glens FU .
.020 1S«. Veno,
)lean . . .
25. Wodienski. James. K
6k. Mulla ky Thoni ;». I'lallsbui
. . .75(1 05. Po.vers, Laura,. St. Albi
Clark. Lawrence. Bklyn
810
,..810
:i(i7.
800
Longli
Isdell,
Robert, Whitehall
Yonng, Albert, NYC
. 020 IS7.
I'liittsbu
26.
67.
Brown,
.
.750
•y.
NYC
Mat
Ad,am
I
810
96.
,..810
.•i08.
800
i, Lyie. Pkeepsie
as, I'latlsbi
.020 IKS. C.reen,
ben, Horseheai
98. Andi ion. Thorn 1
27. Ermold, Waller. Elmii > HIS . . ,75(1 97. Barlow . An
Be,
Quash ie, John. Bklyn
810
..810
no9.
800
Hennige, Richard, Wli te Pins . .75(1
.»;(i
ISO.
611. (ilenxon, Charles,, Auburn
Adai 1. Woodbij
28.
Ahraha
ims.
Ogarr:
810
. .810
310.
98.
860
Pkeeps
cite
1 James. NYC
. 02(1 100. llorri
TO. Nunnally. Williaim, Co nwall
20. Defayette, Q
in. Hoi •sehe!
Plattsbrgli . .750 90. Christ Ele
Brady Engene. Hawthorne . . . 810
. .810
.'111.
,800
S.
Oz
lonnelly. Rlchan•d. Ehi ira .
Waget r, Robert, Vestal . . . . 7511
.020 101 , Dene
7 1 .
J, Kerb oksoi
430.
.
Adami
Pratt.
810
,
. .8110
•w.
Ger
.212.
100
,800
Helen Ell
Joseph. Olean
10;. Setie rnierlio . Fred. Glei
72. Woodard. David, Glens Els .
Raymond. Plattsbiiig I .750 101.. Wistni r. Jane.. Balav
Allen, Robert. Plattsburg
810 431. Caron
.
. .800
31,1.
Fla
,
8(10
Riehftid
Curry, Kenneth, arahamsvl
.020 10.'!. Meyii-r. i:ar
7;). fillptill,
Melese
.
Satnuc
432.
Hethe
810
.
.
.8(10
.114
102.
,8(i0
, Renniie. Broi
rton, Donald, Elmira . . .
.920 Mil. SIraiUI.S. n aid. Sai alo
74. Engcl. Harvey. Ellen
. Papuli . Franc•es. Chi
Benianiin, Horsehoiidi
Nolan,
810 433.
...8110
;il5,
lO.'l.
.8fl0
Isea
.
Bruce.
Auburn
George, .Jair
020 I 05. Eliaclies. Til idore, Bri
76. Boyli
.
Ward.
Hildeb
810
.
.
.800
.SIH
.800
Roi
NYC .
104.
i-and. Ernest, Plattsbui'g
, .920 Illfi. Quinin. Rol •I. Buffali
78. Ward Gene, I'eru .
Smith Florencce. Bkl,
o. c. imm
810
...800
.860 .217 Eddy William, Ca.vuga
105.
, .910 1!I7. Mori:an. Ji lei, Anbi
11. Gttlipi Russell, NYC
Allen
CORRF-CTION
O
l
F
i
C
K
K
(
I
F
.
M
A
I
K
)
M
ane
(<I0
.
.
.
7
00
. 850 318.
Dorothy Medi
106.
ly. Howard. Malone
...
. .010 Ills. Grie r, Davi
78. I'lleei li, Ed
Taber, Agnes, W terpi.rl
.1, Eastihest
.070 107. Fauldi . Jtlli
8UI
...7110
M
.850 319.
Fishk 11
Elmir
V. .Tohn. Yonkers
.910 100. Plaee. Roll
7 » . Wells Edward, .7
Tierney.
M
Hansen,
Dorothy
Balav
.9110
810
.
.
.
7
90
~
.850 320.
1, Hop ewl Jet
108.
•jorie. Pk(
;•. Jernnie. Babylon
. . . . . 810
. .01 0 2(10. Sea. Willia
80. Hickey
Dayton, Kathryn, Danne
.960 109. Schaller, E
Richard. Aubui
. . .790
.850 32 I.
iini,
Crolor
Lagi
vl
n^ney. Jam 8. Kcfscville . . .
81. Hamlin Roy, Gil 19 FIs
Marcantonii
Hampton,
Kosa,
Bronx
.950
010 2(11. He!j ll. Donnald. Alii
810
79(1
.850 .'ri';.
110, Surino
Lois. Wnpi! gr Fl
!mann, Du aid. Hlirleyvl . . .810
82. Wynkoop, Robert, W. H I pslead .010 202.
.04 0
Z Iibrelli, Elvira Bklvn
790
.850 323.
Ry:i n. Quiiinn. Philh lurg
111, Brady
Vincee. Elmira
pnyea. Jol I. Mnrrisonville
Bklyn
.04(1
,810
H. iry. Oharlott
Thompson, WiHis 111, L; lenia . . 9 1 0 20:1. Ball er. Tilliimas, Gra ville
780
83.
.850 324.
112, Fragm Joan. Stoiniville
talo,
Petei
2(11.
Pine
Bush
.810
Ki (loski. Loll NYC
Brown
William. Monroe
780
OKI
84.
.850
.
04
0
srael,
Dov
r
Pin
Diibray,
I
13
I.
Evelyn,
Granville
325. Dow, Donald Ctrl Isllp
Gallia
sidy,
V:
ne,
Fi
.810
C(
Laplants, Everette,, Wassalie
780
. . . 9 1 0 2(15. Co.stello, IMul. Coxs ekle
.850
ihklll
. 9;io 114
320. Bro
Nnlan, Glonbam
Allen. Dorothy, Beacon . . .
, Mai
.810
reenville
Di
010 20«. Bir.ando Nicholas, Bl
.850
Rnth,
I S : Seholz, James, Ore
.930
115
Earlinc. NYC
Seyi our , Rodney. Plattaburg
780
'
327.
Wilus,
n.
Bron
.810
1(1,
Flalt
D
I
Duquette,
Raymond
910
iburg
.850
le. Joann.
.030 116
87.
207. Jaikson noiiald, Konkonk
Arvator, Bklyn
..
780
ieia, Nf
.8)0
A
910 208. Rathbnia. Virsil Granville
.850 328. Soiccre, Leo, Bklyn
le. Patric
.030 117 Willia 119. Willie. Buffalo .
88. Neylan, Joseph, Coi ikhn .
780
I
329.
Jurnak,
Paul.
Granville
Madden
a.
Peek,
.810
OI
Kiatht,
Paul.
Waldi
OHO
.850
8M.
)rdo . Manha.
Itill
. o;i(i 18
2(10. Miillei Frederiik, Htldson
Sandi-a, NYC
780
Rll
9(10 210. Pellas Theodore. NYC . ,
850 330. Knipes, Terrenee, Granville . . .810
Ethel, Fi hkill
90. Btissey, Courtland
. HKI 1 1 0 . Lapay. Helen. Auburn . . .
.78(1
. . .810
Bopp Janet, Bi
000 211. Wilkii
.850 331. Reinhaii ;ll, David. Buftalo
Lachvlta, Anthony, Auburn
.020 I'
8 1 .
J,
CI
Johnso
Eilee
1,
Bron*
.
.
.
780
Sorrell,
Kenneth,
Plattsbnrg
,
.
332.
.800
OdO
.850
Palmer, Nelson, Blasdell . . .
Maywalt, Donna, Auburn .
.920 I '
!12. Wild. R iinald, Aubnrn
Bodick Cathe •ine. Meadow
,7T0
9(10
.850 333. Stapleto n, Tliomas, Elmira . . . 800
Goldan. John, Kenniore
...
Stoner. Ann, GIdna Bnur .
.910 1 ;
il.'l. Gilteii
Davii. Barbari
Leslie NYC
Bronx . . ,
,770
.800
0110
. 850 .•1,'14. Drake, James, Elmira
» 4 Holf. Elmer, Oyaseo
Sehellas,
Juallna.
Bklvn
.
.
.
.010 1!
;I4. Remb I, Will •, Nev*«iu rgh .
Thomas Shayn
Newburgh
,770
Nastro,
335.
Saverio,
Mongaup
Vly
.800
000
.850
9 5
Curran. Alice, Horseheada .
.010
Lambert, James, Ehnira . . .
;i5, Bomfi I. GGec •se. S. Fi illsbrg
,770
Bubniali
Carey,
Cecelia,
di
sining
.
Alfred, Amsterdam . .800
900
.850 336.
H« Laniiry. Nornian, Plattsburg
Murray, Jndith, Albion
...
9 I (I If
!l(l, Simmons. He •y, Bron:
,770
Tazard,
Jacqueline
.
Bronx
Weber,
Ralph,
Narrow,
33-,.
ibnrj
.8(10
000
.85(1
B7 Lunt, John, Walden
Dealy. Janice. Danneniora .
.900 1'
;i7, Yonker, A liew. Ellenl
.760
McClendon,
Jnlia,
Pkeep.'
.800
.000
. 850 338. Cobb, Michael. Elmiri
.9110 1'
» 8 . Donnelly, Peter, Cold Spg .
Egan. Mary, N Y C
i l K Myers, Gilli III, Red (Old
.76(V
Keels,
Mary,
Mt.
Vernon
Robinson.
Chailes,
Elmira
.
.
.
339.
.800
.
0(10
.850
00(1 1 2 8 . Bent. Rosalie. At
Fieser, John, Pkeepsie , . .
;i9
Peteroe. Mary, Carniel
EIn
tburn .
.9(10 i2(l Stoll, L I
.850 .'140. DeCarlo, Roberl. Pawling . . . . .800
.9110 1 2 0 . Scoby. Josephine,
Walter, Ehnira .
1 0 0 . . Bowers,
McNamara. Joann. Elmira .
Cox. Join
NYC
Salamai
.750 '
.800
.9(10
.850 341. Dolan, Bernard, Bronx
9(10
U w i » . Hoiaehea.U .
1 0 1 . . Cook.
Greene,
Doris.
Bklyn
Huffman,
Minnie,
Bigelow,
130.
Bklyn
Danne
.750
.800
.900
850 .242. Rich, Fred, Athens
, . 900
102., Twomey. John, Woree.ster .
Bryce. Maryann, Jacksn H l »
Hayward.
Lucille,
131.
NYC
.
Saiu. John. Eh
;i43.
.750
.800
Jamalknwski,
I.,eo,
Varys%urg
.0(10
.850
. .890
103., Taylor. Nathaniel, Roeester
Brady, Helen. Seneoa FIs . . .
132. Builihartll, Mary, Albion
Marlin, James, 0«s
.750
.900
.840 .344. Cummings, Melvin, Horseheads .800
.
.800
KM., Sehrom, Koberl, Elmira .
Rasmus, Ruth, Beacon . . .
133. Curlis, Dorothy. Beaco
Harding, Hobart , Oil sville
.7S0
.800
.9oa
. .840 ;t45. Daney, Jesse, NYC
. .890
Collina, Joanue, Newburgh .
105., Buriik, Arlhnr. BulTalo . . .
Murphy, James Hi dson FIs , .840 340. Vanvalkenburg, E. Rensselaer
134. K n i g h t , L e n n i e . G l e n h a o i
.759
.800
. 890
. Evans. William, Horseheai
106.
Blancliard. Willi lam. Whitehall , . 840 347. Sneyd, Williair
.800
.890
Wapp
igr
F
l
. Callahan, William, Mahopae
107.
Seantlebi
lyd, Bklyn
.800
.800
t, Albany , . .
..840 348. Conley, Felix,
Caldwell, Elwyn, Auburn ,
108.
Gublo, Ja.li
.800
Imira
.8011
011(1. Auburn
. .8'10 .149. W )d. Raymoii
Lacolla, Janiua, Beaeon
1 0 » .
Hoskins, E
.800
Ft. Edward . . . .840 350. Bl
, Leo, Auaable Fk .
.800
110.
Roberts, G
McCftbe, Riehard, Jaeks
..800
Hth
Cadyvilla
. . . . 8 4 0 351. Hohm inn, J >hn. New P a l l i
.8110
Bacon Jan
11.
McClllie, Robert, Elmii
.800
Hannibal
.800
..84 0 352. Caro Keilh, Ellenvlllo . . .
McCabe, J oh I
12. Butler. John, Dannemo
..800
M •hael. Highland
.800
. .840 353. Marrii
Elliott, Thonia I. Elmira
13.
Kelly, Milton, S. Ojionf Pk
. . 800
.890
. . . . . .8-10 3.54, Burnell, Robert , Plattsburg
Rector, Ronald Plattsbuig . ,
14.
(Won, lemael, Plattsbu
,790
.890
355 Terwillegar, R, Pkcepi
Dileo, VineenI, Ossining
1 5
Mitehell, Jamen. Mailisi
. .700
.800
. .,
.'1511. Champagne, Dor aid, Plattabui
Badnian, Keilh, Lk George . ,
IB Anderson, A., Bronx .
357. Fesette, d e v i c e Flattaburg
\KW
GOWANDA OFFICERS
INSTALLS
25 YEARS OF STATE SERVICE
G o w a n d a S t a t e Hospital C h a p t e r of the C i v i l S e r v i c e Employees Association held its 16th annual dinner for the installation of officers a t the American Legion Hall, Goviranda, recently. Newly elected officers a r e : Victor Neu, President:
Joseph Pauuccl, vice president; Kathleen Lynch, s e c r e t a r y j
Beatrice Wehling, t r e a s u r e r ; Vito J . Ferro and Victor Neu.
delegates. In the above photo a r e some of the members who
attended the affair. From left to right they a r e : Victor J .
Ferro, toastmaster; C l a u d e Rowell, fifth vice president; CunEmployees a t Utica State Hospital who have completed t w e n t y f i v e years of servico with
N«lson. chairman of the social committee; Bernice Wehlthe New York State Department of Mental Hygiene w e r e honored a t a reception and dance
treasurer• Victor Neu, President of the G o w a n d a Chapheld a t Hutchings Hall recently. L a w r e n c e H. House, President of the Board of Visitors of t e n Robert Colburn, business officer of the G o w a n d a S t a t e
Utica S t a t e Hospital, presented pins and buttons to the employees in recognition of their Hospital; A l b e r t Kiilian, President of the New York Western
^ • P " * ' " * " ^ ^ Mental Hygiene. Seated left to right a r e F r a « c . , A . VVol- J Conference and first Vice President of the C S E A ; William Ros«ott, Mary O Gurok, Anna L. Moore. Helen B. Brnewein and G l a d y s Galllher. Standing left |
«.. w«.*»r..<1
to right a r e Stonley C . Butnoris, Mary Warmuth. Stanley P. Ochab, Genevieve M. Self., 1 •
Western Conference and
M a r y A. Gasek, Kathryn I. Truax, Leo J . Cole, Delia R. Kellmurray, Prancit Mangan. Also i
H/Qlen* Representative; Joseph Pauluccl, vice preslhonored for their^twenty-five ^ears of service but not shown In the picture w e r e G e o r g e |dent of the G o w a n d a C h a p t e r ; G e o r g e Oelong. second v i c « | | |
C . Brown, Edna C a r e y , Stanley Olelni and O s w a l d J . Williams.
president of the W e s t e r n Conference.
[
TiiCM^ny,
November
29,
n V T L
1960
Standing
S E R V I C E
of Higibles
Pnpe
L E A D E R
on A-A
General
Tweuty-tliree
List
zewskB, Mary W . Sheehy, William Harris, Thomas A. Hughes. G l a d - Roseline Lissak, Plorincc M Tes- rossi. Ida R. Peitelberg, Jose|)hine
vs M. Laroch, Ida Goldstein. M i r - ser, Nathan Greenspan, Margaret Short. Celia A. Levine, James E.
iam Mitchell, Louis T . Evers, Es- D. McGoldrick, Melvin Marcus, Hardy, Helen R. Lyons, Mildred
I ' l I n J.^n
ther P. Valentine, Franklin H. Annabelle Danzig. Helen A Dee- Maher. Alphonsus Casamassima
A.
Ursula M . Murphy, Thomas J. Senior, Edward Atkinson, Fred W . huee. Ruth Spiegel, Anna Lucas Margaret Brossman, Arthur
McGee, Johh J. Bahre, John J. Herron, Robert Lipeles.
Hedwig C. Zielinski, Cecile M. Vidockler, Gertrude F. Moses, S i d Reynolds, Margaret L. Rodriguez,
Sheppard, Elsie B. Dockrray, W i l - ney Rosenquitt, Daniel V. Scanlon.
2 7 1 to .too
Clara Richter, Erwin E. Bayer,
liam H. Williams, Harry S. R a b 511 to 540
Rhoda L. Sidrer, Margaret M . inowitz, Ruth Hoechner
Harold Glantz, Ida P. Lipschitz,
Evelyn Miller, Lloyd G, Davi.son,
Morris Wish. William J. Votapka, Donnelly. Michael J. Larosa. SelLouise
Spiegel, Estelle
Bishofl.
481 to 51»
d i a r i e s R. Poy Jr., Frank Petruzzi, ma Iger. Mary L. Smith, Raymond
Peter C. Bellaflore. Madeline M. John Panelli, Randolph Eversley,
Waldman.
Sylvia
Brenner
Rosalyn L. Spitzer, Louis A. B a l - I.
do, Jacob Gilberg, Rose P. Doll- James J. Wilson. Helen M. D o s - j Nolan, Edwin D. Beer, James R Lea Treshansky, Thomas E. M a r InK, E ' w a r d J. Brady, Emma C well. Priscilla Goldfleld. Gladys McCarthy, Anna Taravella. Vera tin, Thomas F. Roche, Michael T .
Schmidt,
Robert
J.
M c G r a t h M. Burke, Rhoda Hoffman. Bessie Wasserman, Oscar Goldman, P h i l - Beglin, Edna Starr, Anna I,rkArthur
M. ofsky, Daniel Gluck, Morris N r s Helen M. Butler, John A. F e n t o n , I Rabinowitz,
Charles
Guarnieri, ip F. Mcl.aughlin,
Kleinwald, Adelle Schratter, W i l - ofl, Katherine Arth, Stella CrrlRhJosephine Mittleman. M a x Sclar, jy^.j^j^^ Rosen, ' Peter J. B a r b a i ' Joseph Kopelman. Frances M. Ca
William
T
Scott,
George
A. Lj,u,etta G. Dougherty, Blanche vanna,
Catherine
McGuinness. liam Glickman, Lucia A. Conycrs, ton. Jessie F. Richter, Sally M a r k man, Anthony P. Romano, Viiicrnt
Roach, Robf-rt Block
L. Borchert, Florence
Salzman, Muriel E. Steinberg, B : r n a r d J. Sara I. Lalor, Deborah S. Jaffc,
Dunigan, Samuel S. Syken, D o r - Clare R. O'Connor, Julhis Partes, Byrnes, M a r y M. O'Hare, Celia H.
Michael
J.
Crisham,
Ignatius
C.
31 to 60
Kathleen
N.
Svoboda,
othy A. Adams, Helen B. Fenton, Theresa M. Archer, Esther G. l a - Negrin,
Giovinco, Benjamin Gottlieb.
Anna Jolan. Joseph D. M a s t Hedda Levinson, Carl A. Schmilt,
John B. Cincotta. Nathan K r u p Bella Stanet, Geraldine
Coney,
ia,rriR0. John M. Tuohy, John F.
151 t o IHO
nick, Harry C. Horowitz, Victor
Marbre Stephenson, Harry Jenner,
^JcClellan, Edward C. McCormick,
Elena A. Dagostino, Robert P. R . Morovek. Pearl D. Cohen, Jo
Mabel T. Davis.
P j a l e L. Allyn, Nora N. Rios, Is- Casoria, Helen Dlouhy, Edward seph
A
Truglio,
Mollie
B
F7ael Siperstein, Gerald P. Honan, j
Mallon, Saveria R. Pacineo, Schwartz Dorothy Brinker.
541 to 5G4
Jfta Weinman. Harry Karetzky, j o h n
S.
Kopunek,
Alexander
Gertrude D. Berman, Louis C o :!0i to :i:to
A f i n a r d Lei.senhaut, MiWred R u - Danza, Arthur E. Hyland, Ida
,n. Raymond Morley, Julius C o - I whiteman,
Aaron
P.
Ha'lpern,| Rose Moravec, Jacob P. W e i n p-^jing jo,. sm\ov biologist ' c a n - i ^ l ^ " '
Wasserman. Anna P o - - >
__ , « < ( « . _ '
^
wT-?-I
^
n A11 James
To ftY^ A.
A
lit 1 ^ 1
X_T A1 n w L.
T
dell.
Dudley,
Helen
'len. Randolph E. Rothstein, J a n - , T l i e l m a J. Mill. Cornelius Traber, rib, Ada Levine, Sarah Weiner cer research)
with
the
City's Conte. Dorothy W . Kapell, Nedda
]ce Jacobs, Phyllis M. Bond, Jo-|Aibert Greenburg, Ida Y. K a u f - Irving Rossnick, Albert Walker
Dept. of Per.sonnel, will begin Dec. Stutman, Teresa M. Cerrito, Elsie
sejph Coltelli. Lilly Miller, Joseph nian, Catherine Hayes, Mary M. Noel
W.
Greenidge.
Mortimer
A. Knight. Esther Shaph-o, EleaV Mehler. G r n n a r o Resta. Frank Brennan, Thomas J. Dowling. Jo- Wahrmon, Thomas C. Worthley, 1.
- This
.po.sltion has a salary range
nor M. Theone, John M c N a m n r a ,
Saiilevis, Richard M . Broorner, seph G. Chupek Jr.. Doryce R. Margaret
M . Sullivan, Eleanor of $7,450 to $9,250
,
...
Paul N. Prishivalko, Elizabeth M c Harry Shapiro. Harry Mann, Jean ' Lustig, Dorothy R. Joseph, Frank Kurtz. Milton Kir.stein. William
T o qualify for the position e a n - } E v o y , John F. Krulewski, A n n a C Wallace. Gertrude A. Corcoran, Haus, Joseph J. Matera. S t e p h a n | H . Cliftord, Gene F. Caka, Siegdidates mu.st have a bachelor's belle Shannon, Viola V. Estes.
Jnlin J. Zimmerlich, Thomas P. j . Vas. Ellen N. Brosnan, Stanley i fried Roth, Dennis J. Conroy, M a Erady.
Adelman. Jeremiah J. Clifford, ria A. Fields. Harold Senack, Syl- degree in biology, a masters de- Daniel M. Courtney, Anna Klein,
Kl to «o
Alice T. Damrau. Sylvia R. Pod- via Fox, Sylvia Sinchok. Harold free in the same or related fields Rubye J. Hunt. Anna E. Proctor,
Morris H. Sacks and Miirv M .
James W . Oakes, William W . ser, Leo Hartman. Paula Hart.
Dichter, F i a n k M. Montemarano, and eight years of professional
Tietz.
Kiediger. Frank V. Kelly, Isaac
,
t Sarah Rosenberg, Lillian Todes expsrience in research—preferably
Cohen, Zelda Handelsman, Muriel
,
^
V
r
•
i M a x Whitman. Harry J. Narmatz
cancer.
Peter J. Penta, Alex Levme, o i g a Landau. Flora K . Harris
E. Strong. Peter J. Fardella, I r v CIVIL SERVICE C O A C H I N G
Functions
Philip
Zuckerbrod.
Alex
A.
D
a
l
e
Irving
Levy.
Edith
S.
Mattson
ing Mellon. Margaret M. D u n r
ir'-t'CtlHi-al & I'idni !•: ;|M•^
dowich, William M. Hayes, A n - '
.h i
1 Civil. Much. Klcr.
. h Kini
It is the primary duty of the
Xil to .'160
SI l;r.\< K I.INK OI'KKATOIt
POST OI KH K <1 K.KKS-CAKKIKKS
Theresa H. Day.son, Thomas J. senior biologist to conduct exKne^.er. John P. Finnegan Jr
^ouis Gleckstem. Mary M. Costa
HU;il St HOOL K(|l n . IIII'DIM.^
John
W^
Anti^llo,
.j^p^t,
j^e intere.st of cancer
Frank P. Schiano. Jo.seph P. M c - Harding
I .S. KNTK.VM'K KX.VMS
Wary
A. Lynch. Lillian Weiss,
v. , ,
.
•
-j ,
Carthy, Saul Fuchs, Abraham J. Charles A. Peterson. Herman T h a Itniltlintr Ilis|i.
Infi-rvifw.-r
I d w a r d V. McAuliffe, Bernard E.
Stiitionai'.v Kngr.
Slitle riMit
Edelman, William J. Renda, G i t - ler, Gertrude E. Schlissel, Sclma research. He is given a wide latiHogan, Joseph Hubner, Shirley
KHSCII'PM'
Tcoh
n
SteHtiihUrr
ti Needleman, Harry W . Bernstein, Wohl, Evelyn Ratner, Helen L tude in performance of his tasks.
l.U KNSKS — Statiimar.v. Hrrr'n. K i n Kirsner, Edwin J. Grady, Julius
Nathan Moro. Mae D. Curley, Gregg. Peter F. Berlinghoff. F a n Candidates will be given a techiFt«-(Hii.
Pliiilibpr,
I'ortalilr.
Htiilrr.
Klein. Mildred Pfeffer, Raymond
M X'ri|. Vr linivrli). .MnobrH »;f«iiir. Tri,.
W a r r e n W . Buchholtz, Margaret nie Fine, Margaret L. Metzger, nical test which may be either
D Maikow.ski. Shirley T. Ugelow
t U^'
"viil. I'mtr.
VI'.SMI
Hyman Appel, Robert Fishbein
written or oral and counts 50%
R,nh Zelnick. Edmund J. Olszew-•
M O N D E L L INSTITUTE
Mildred F. Breuer, Ste))hen G . ,
J i . Salvatore Colangelo, Florence ^ a ^ . Sebastian Ma.scolo. Helen
•J.Mt \ 11 SI
( ; . « .\n.»)
« l ;-J«mi
Damato, Raymond E. Schwinn, o ' ^he mark. In addition to this
CoHn, Martin J. Nicholas.
Derevan,
Martin
A.
Conwisar,
George Gildersleeve, Ethel Y . M a - they wil be rated on the ba-sis
Benjamin M. Tanowitz.
Lillian
Sl to 120
Seinfeld, Alice Novom. M a r y C . '
Millie J. Pietz, Juanita S. of training and experience This
Hickman, Josephine Licause. Rose
will weigh 50% of the mark. C a n ^Aa,-on
Gartman.
Edmund
D. Wukovitz, Harry F. McGrath
IBM MACHINES
.^pplebaum.
Philip
Ni.ssenblntt,
KKKK I)K.V(INSTR.\TlON l.KSSON
Jp.Dllin. Catherine Smith, Annie
211 to 240
i Beatrice
Dorney, Joyce
Albert didates must score a 70% in each
1 t « .10
;iu)ius
Holtz,
Harry
Sonnes,
R ^ j n o n J Communiello, William
V,,,,piodi'r, Matthew B. Hughes,
Israel, A b r a h a m J. Gold.
Alps H. Eisenberg. Helen Breuner,
JivwB Segal, Joseph S. Powers,
Rose Palmer. Irving Zimmerman,
Joseph P. Mulcahy, Jean Glaser,
I h o m a s J. Mullaney, Rubin Steinbo'iR. Harry C. Weil, Thomas J.
Mulcahy Jr.. Erne.st W . Mendler,
Robert Mallet, H y m a n A. H a m mer, Sylvia E. Fredericks, Martin
Weinbern.
Samuel
Mittleman,
L. Britt, James F. Hackelt.
Senior Biolooists
Start at $7,450
l^'^m^"^urSSle?'^;;: -tt. ^
i
^
n
^
n
'
^ Sylvia Schwartz: Ruth U. Shenk- part of the test.
A tentative test date has been
schaefer, Rita O'Meara. David Fiderer.
set for Feb. of 1961. Applications
j o „ a s , Ivins E. Cornelius. William
: ! « ] to :i<)f)
fill be available after Dec. 1st
j . Ryan, Alice K. Granger, John
Joseuh Auslander. Mary Leven ,
p. gyrne, Vivian E. Douglas. W i l - berg, Thomas J. Keating, Edith at N. V. C. Dept. of Personnel
nam G. Simmen, Martin Benedict, E. Sims. Shirley D. Jacoby. S a m - 96 Duane St., N. Y. C.
juHus a . Shaw, Mario M. Grasso, uel L. Greene. Paul J. Kors, T i m Harriet L. Schwartz, Glad.vs L. othy E'lickley, Madeline G. Hinson.
Bailey. William F. Schultz, Daniel Muriel K. Small. Samuel Perchick,
J. Wallace. M a r y E. Doyle. Dora Helen Nadler, Bernard Kessel. L u Fuhrman. Han-j' Artenberg, Jo- cille E. Alexander, Claire Reich,
c. r. A.
seph V. Bianco, Walter P. M c - Harry
Polakoff,
Susie
Parnes.
Carthy, Fannie N. Manber. Edythe Juanita E. Canegata, Mary L. B e Offering a
Coaching
E. Elder, Alfred R. Kiihn. Mollie lofsky, Tibor A. Garda, Helen V.
C o u r s e For The
Glickman. Lillian Rudomin, C a - O'Brien. Jack S. Climan, Gertrude
therine Kosachunis.
R. Higgin.s, Ruth E. Loebbell,
Hugh J. Reilly, William R. M c '
U ?
i ' , Kilcommons,
William Fishman. Thomas P. K e e nan, Peter J. Soroko, Anthony J.
Sijllo. Emanuel R. Gras.so, Jerome
F Finn. Eve Chippin, Leonard J.
>1«zio. Zita M. Mooney, Harry
Rosenthal. John J. Brady, Mar
j-nret M. McMahon. Yetta Zechoiiowitz. Shirley Golden. John W .
Weliler. Flank A. Pacifico, Jeanel te E Caren., Sophie T. Kielc-
"Technicfans
Needed By
Wectther Bureau
E. ^bni
'
'
W
.
Prof. IRVING CHAYKIN
241 t o 270
D
At
i„„„i
I Court,
Exum, Sylvia R. Grannell, Prank
I
Meteorological technicians are
' :aov>F being recruited by the Federal
,
' ,
,
^ Government for weather work,
with the Weather Bureau a n d ,
ether agencies located throughout
-he country
Sylvia
L. Dutchen.
Cath-
Fuetiman
A. Deperna, William J. Kelly
R-uth Buchbinder. Shirley Simonson. Flora R. Friedman, Eva E h r sylvia Davis. John G a b o w sky, Olga Bruskin, Eleanor M,
Kane, Anthony P. Grech, John
W a r d , Stephen Cumberbatch,
timount of general or specialized
L
E x p e r i e n c e . In many Instances,
:i91 to 420
Stanley D. Kir.shberg. Harold
Moisoff. Stanley M. Stiller, Dora
Berkman. Elizabeth Ru.ssett. Sylvia Moses, Marion Maselow. S a m uel Midwood, Sol Rose, Belle M y r owitz, Mary P. Broderick. Mary
Kathryn B. McGuire, Rachel E. Berman. Ethel Grosswirch. Emil
B. Martire, Ada Soletsky, David S.
Berger, Bernice Witt, Jacob S t « d ~
ler, I.eonard Hurwita, Frances J.
J o b S
O'Reilly, Patrick V. Izzo, Daniel
J. Berkery, William J. Dennehy,
M a r y A. Martin, Walter L. H u e b ner, Hermina Forman, Rose Q.
,.
|| *
^
,
Golden.
Joseph
Beiian
MiUon
TtItII
Serebrenick, Agnes M. W a r d .
Writing and editing positions,
^ducation
$6,435 to $8,955 a year, for duty I
'
,
^ , .
,
Meteorological technicians have
u salary rangf of $4,040 to $6,435
jj^lepending
[ducation.
To
upon
ijuklify
applicants
experience
for
must
the
have
and
Now Open
positions,
a
certain
U<*>*
may be substituted for
l ^ e n e r a l experience. All candidates
ijuKt be high school graduates.
• xfent
I
and
quality
of
their
ex-
r n i e n c e and training relavent to
ihf
duiie.v of the position.
Applicants
ihe
Unit»d
must
be citizens of
States.
There
is
no
Applicants must have had writ-
Jorin.s from the
Executive
H-CHtary, Board of Civil
Service
I ^ a m i i u r s . United States Weather
lueau.
oik
Federal
Building,
Jnti'inational
maica SC, N
y.
Airport,
f^^H^
j^eanetlrBrmnXl'
ing or editing experience in such Evelyn
Nadel, Daisy
Gattento,
fields as publications, press, radio, George
Rosenthal.
Winona
L.
television, and motion pictures; Jones, Joseph P. Curione, Ruth
experience in writing for or edit- J. Wilson, Robert Rogers, Enid
Daly. H a n n a P. Rauschkols, Ruth
ing technical manuals; or experiEpstein, William F. Baker, B e a ^ enje in writing or editing tech- trice Cohen, Philip Miller, M a r y
B. Yorowsky, John A. Conroy, Isinical specifications.
dore Baron, Ruth Sherman. C a No Written 'Vest
jriaximum at e limit, but applicants
J must be 18 at the time of appoiutPertiitent college study n w be
[ Jjient.
t substituted for part of the re,,TJi«rt' is as yet no closing date quired experience. No written test
• •
Jor iJuse applications. You may is required.
cbtaiii
421 to 450
in various Federal agencies In t h e '
Saul B. Miller, Daniel J. Healy
Evelyn M. Samuels, Leah PiiedWashington, D. C.. area.
Competitors will not be required
0 take a written test. They will
be rated on a .scale of 100 on the
^OVt*
New
Ja-
^
^
^
paniel F. Rtid. Gerald
S
i
KorufelU
SR. ACCOUNTANT
EXAM
Two
sepaic>.«,
buf
avail-
a b l e o n either S a t u r d a y
morn-
ings,
beginning
ning
Dec.
Dec.
10th,
evenings,
.\ssi)n.\TKn m ; s i N K s s
.M.^t•lU^•E SCHOOL
•TIH I.ciii.x vr.
lal
12.')th
KXi'iliI U'S^Otl
TELETYPE
or
begin-
14th.
Teletype School
•;ai
si.,
N.
V.
LO 3-3239
High School
Equivalency
Diploma
in six weeks
InfcrmmfloM
for civil serviee
for
Call r i o i a 7.f23e
personal
liau
Tum. *
satisfaetiou
'riiuis. Kl «:.'<•
W'l'itf or Pbonc fur Itiroruialitin
IBM U.S. TESTS
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY)
r « Fill Opciiln9i In All Igrouqhi
)• N.V.C. — No Clotlnq Dot*.
Intensive Keypunch and T a b
Courses for Men & W o m e s
Many Openings • Good
Call or wrIU
for Spefhl
Salaries
iylhth
Monroe School of Business
K. Tr«iiiuul A l t .
Hiuik no. N.Y.
Jl; Kii>luu Hil.
Kl j'.'iVltO
SCHOOL
Eostern
School
AL 4 . S « 2 f
V^l llr(iml%«ti.v.
Y. 3 (ut
Fk.iir write me fi-fi» ubuiU
Kquivaleuoy
St. ^
Hiirh
Nam®
Hwo
yz
L4
rVl'lsT—luci-fui>« .voul* (rMiuiiiK
<HU now l(*aiii HhuiOund i»i
I ' t N Sf^-'UiiK. N«'W rul* mriliutl
liitfi.v Kiiurun(«i-il—or Moii^y K K t - T M i t l ) W K I T K : h. NViltt«iiiJ4t>ii, UOo W « » i
IHJlli St., Suite 114. N.Y.C.
DIRECTORY
431 la 480
HI
M UIIOI.H
U'tt S K l w n » Claire P , O CH »Hy
applications Mary A. Quayliano
Esther
R. M O N R O E
s c H o o u - i B M
COURSES
may be obtained from many post Mehlman, Elaine M. Burgess. Rose
. ttl lul v«ui:iiii.l
avLthuaiil, \>^tu|{.
HoMull Kua.l Hiih
Kl
Ijr>llt)
offices throughout the country or K. Golen. Irving L. Smith, Miriam rikiiiuiii A.
from the U'. S. Civil Service Com- Leib.son. Clemens Moks, Bennie S.
Lufaro, Marjorie K Neakiii, Eleamission's Information Unit. 800 nor E Pollack, Celia Yelin, H a r E. St. N W . . WashniBton 25, D. C- old
Wall, f r a u c t s M . Palmeio,
Information
—
Teieiype Setter
L»-ani 'rekl.vii*-. IHM kc.viiun'-h. Suatl.v
PKiMIi(Mij.. I'. S. (iov., L'it.v, Slalf.' Iinxale
imliislr.v.
Man.v
oppnriimilio
Orii-n II-!I:1III I'.M. nail.v & Satiiiilajf.
a t 247 W e s t 4Ath St., N.Y.C.
for
St.)
Barn Your
id«nVic«l
l e r i e s of 2 2 l e c f u r e s a r e
Wednesday
K\>r,v Suuu'da.v Ul a.m. U) 4
ui.
Kc.viHliich - Tahlllalins- - Kail.- Wii-mt:. .\ilvaiu* Wirins - Tjimnf - Sluiilliantl - Kle.-ti'it> T.vpint. Prepare ft.!*
".ivil S'rvire Clcricttl Kxamm.itinui.
and
iJay
uuU
SHOPPING FOR LAND OR HOMES
LOOK A T P A G E 1 1 F O R L I S T I N G S
iufl
Dutchess Chapter
Hears Report By
CSEA Field Rep.
DRIVIKG NEAR THE GOAL
A
meeting
County
of
Civil
the
Service
Dutchess
Employees
Association was held recently at
the Raymond Avenue School with
Patrick Roger.s, Field Representative of the State Civil Service Employees Association, attending
to
assist in ironing out problems.
Mr.
Rogers
spoke
of
the
in-
creasing importance to the Public
Employee of the work done by the
Employees
Association
at
tha
State and local levels.
Joseph Feily, President of the Civil Service Employees Association (left) and State Conservation Commissioner Harold
G . Wilm get together in the Commissioner's office at the State
Campus Site to discuss State worker's participation in the Albany Community Chest Campaign. At Leader press time State
Employees had raised 84.1% of their goal or $55,515.38. The
figure set for them is $66,000.
The community theater production is directed by Harlan Wilbert,
a member of a research unit In
the Division of the Budget, Executive Department.
A L B A N Y , Nov. 28—The State Personnel Services Division of bh9
State Department of Civil Service has issued a handy guide to legal
holidays and religious holy days for 1961.
Di.stributed to state agencies, the calendar notes that New Year'a
Day, Jan. 1, and Lincoln'.s Birthday, Feb. 12, both fall on Sundays,
but will be observed as holidays by state employees on the following
Mondays.
Veterans' Day, which falls on a Saturday, will not be includel
as a holiday for 1961. This is under Attendance Rule II, subdivision
1, which .states that a legal hiliday which falls on a Saturday shall
not be observed as a holiday.
He stressed that In the years
ahead it will be even more important that a strong organizational stand be made to Increase
the take home pay of these employees, and to better general
working conditions.
State Employees
Take To The Stage
hr "Separate Tables
Eleven members of the cast and
production crev/ of the Albany
Civic
Theater
production
of
"Separate Tables" are Employee's
of New York State or afniiated
with the State University College
or Education at Albany.
State Issues Calendar
Of 1961 Legal Holidays
And Religious Holy Days
the investment division of the
Department of Teachers' Retirement.
Lending Roles
Lorraine
Brundage,
a
motion picture script writer for the
Commerce Department, and Miss
Martha Downey, secretary to the
chairman of the Board of Trustees,
State Union of New Yoi-k, also
have leading roles In the production of the Terrance Rattigan
drama.
His wife, who uses the stage
Jeri A n n
Bombard,
a key
name of Tobey Thayer, has a
major role in the play, which will punch operator in the Department
be presented Dec. 2-4 at the of Motor Vehicles, has a smaller
Albany Institute of History and role.
Main roles also are played by
Art.
Neal Edgar, assistant librarian at
Mrs. Wilbert is a boolciceeper in
the
teaclvers'
college,
and
Norma Kutzer, a student at the
college.
The production staff includes
Bud Coffee, a stock boy at the
New York State Liibrary; Mrs.
Sarah Sohen, administrative assistant in the Department of
Taxation and Finance; Miss Mary
Scudari, a senior stenographer In
A "Hospital Appreciation D a y " the Division of the Budget; and
for Mrs. Ronald Reamer, former students John Lucas, Judy Insel
Chairman of the American Red and George Cavanaugh.
Mrs. R. Reamer
Is Honored By
Rochester State
The division said, in a memorandum accompanying Its calendar:
"Information on religious observance days has been obtained
from official religious sources and includes the ob-servance days of
only the most populous religious faiths, and to our knowledge 1«
complete and accurate.
'
However, there is always the possibility that special or local
conditions will cause variations from "official" practice in a religious
The public employee i.s always faith. Therefore, we want to emphasize that the attached calendar
the last to ever get any considera- is intended only as a guide. Questions concerning ob.servances of
tion towards bettering his eco- religions not represented herein may be directed to this office."
nomic status Mr. Rogers stated,
RrllKlous Holy Days
due to fixed budgets, and delays Mill. Dills
I.HKdl HolillM.LH
Gregurinn Ciilpndtir
Jiillaii I'Kleiidat
in the official mechanisms of the
Jan.
1
Sun.
New Ve.ir's Day
Feast of tlie
public financial structure.
_
CiiTumoision*
n
Fri.
7
Sat.
Easlf'rn
O
r
l
b
o
d
oi
Elect New Officers
A new year begin.s soon Mr.
Rogers said and the business of
getting ready a new slate of officers by the Nominating Committee
should be the first order of
business.
J&seph Plynn of the Poughkeepsle School System was appointed Chairman of the 1960
Nominating Committee, and will
be assisted by Ed. Costine of
Arlington Schools, Anthony Cuchelo
of
Wappingers
Central
School, and Richard Ostrander of
the Hyde Park Central Schools.
Mr. F1 y n n had been
the
Dutchess County Civil Service E m ployees Association Chapter President for many years and is still
active in all phases of its work.
The Chapter sent its regards to
the family of Earl Kimbark of
48 Howland Avenue. Beacon, who
died and was a charter member
of the Chapter.
Mr. Rogers said work is being
done now to get a Civil Service
Employee.s Association Unit formed
in Northern Dutchess County, and
that the Harlem Valley Schools will
soon have a Unit.
Comm. Gaynor
Tells Plans of
Rochester H.A.
Feb.
PSC Names Logan
The Civil Service Employees many of the group's previous
Association took an active role in performances.
Mr. Coflee is production cordinoontributlng to the auocess o( the
ator and lighting superviser tor
dinner,
Mrs. Reamer has been TKe Sepaiate Tables, while Mr. Lucas
ahalrman of the Oray Lady-Oray Is set designer. Mist Insel Is in
M a n ServiM at the Rochester charge of properties for th« play.
sylvania and New Jersey.
Hun.
Sut.
1.1
19
Sun.
TImri.
\-i
Hun.
11
15
Tuef.
Wed.
IT
Frl.
80
Moil.
OS)
Wc-d.
28
Tliura.
Sal.
Mar.
ao
Annuncialion*
Palm Sunday'
Holy (Maundy
TliUi'sday*
Good F r i d a y '
Holy Salurday
Passover (O.C.H.)*
Suiiday*
Tliuri.
T
Fri.
Passover ( 0 . C . ) «
Salt.
Piiasover ( O . C . R . ) *
Sun.
Mon.
Thura.
IS
Tliur».
XI
Sun.
Mun.
Sun.
TUAI.
Mi^ntoria! Day
i
Tu.'i.
IndepL'iidence Day
Tucj.
Mail.
11
Mnn.
Moil.
li
Tu»i.
u
Tliurj.
AU
W;'d.
25
Mon.
Tum.
1
»
s
I
7
11
•ts
it
Sua.
s
Frt.
LII
Mnu.
Pentecost*
Labor Day
Ro.sli Hasliana*
(O.O.H.)
Rosh Hashanu*
(O.C.)
Findintf of tfto
Precious Crotis*
Y o m Kippur
(O.C.R.)*
Sukltolh ( O C R ) *
Suklloth ( O . C . ) *
TU.M.
TU'M.
Sal.
Thuri.
The Asf-ension of
Onr Lord*
FinsI of the
of tlie Bltased V i r j i n
Mary*
Mon.
Wni.
PenleooBl*
ShabouUi* (O.C.R.)
Shaboulh" ( 0 . 0 . )
Trinity Sunday
Feast of tha
Assumption*
Sun.
Tliui-i.
Eastern Orlliodo*
Holy Thursday
Eastern Orthudoc
Holy Friday
Eastern OrlhodoK
Holy Saturday
Eastern Orthodox
Eastern Sunday*
Easter Monday*
The Asi'ensiun
of Our Lord*
as
3«
'iii
Easlcril Ortliodoi
Palm Sunday*
Passover ( 0 . C . ) «
It
Sup.
Ueu.
•i
Piirini*
Etnier
11
Eastern OrlltodoK
Feasi of Iho PrciOfl.
tallon of Our Lord
in the Temple*
T h e Great Fast*
(Easletn Orthodox
besiiiniiir of L e n t )
W.n.ihln^ton'i
Birllirta.v
Sun.
Aug.
Nuv,
World Day of
Prayer
t
Zl
0(1.
Slirove Tuesday
Asli WedncBiluy*
Fri.
10
Cbrislnias Day*
I.lnroiii'i
Birlliday
Sal.
8
July
Tliun.
Sunday
Eaalern Oi-lhodoi
New Year's Day*
Epiphany Sunday
Eastern OrlhodoK
Feast of Epiphany*
1
»
M.iy
SUM.
Epiiihany
31
Apr.
Cross Gray Lady-Gray Man Service at the Rochester State Hospital, tooic place recently.
State
Housing
Commissioner
In Summer Stock
James Wm. Gaynor held a press
Mr. Wilbert long has been a distinconference recently in his ofguished member of Albany Civic
An afternoon inception was held Theater and previoasly had ap- fice, 270 Broadway, New York City.
He announced plans of the
in the iiospital's club rooms where peared in summer stock, o f f Rochester
Housing Authority to
patients, volunteers and hospital Broadway
productions and on
develop the first housing project
staff paid personal tribute to Mrs. television.
In the country for the purpose
Reamer.
Mrs. Wilbert also has played
More than 170 employees, staff summer stock, off-Broadway and of training problem families.
and volunteers took part in this on television.
affair.
Miss Brundage, president of the
A highlight of the afternoon was theater group. Is appearing on
the presentation of an electric stage for the first time. She par(Continued from Page I)
organ to Mns. Reamer who in ticipated In the back-stage ar- Pittsburgh as a civil engineer In
turn presented It to the hospital rangements for other productions 1930. Since then, he has been
In her name. This was purchased by the group.
employed continuously in engiwith the many generous contriMiss Downy, current president neering and admini,8tratlve posibutions mad« by staff employees of the New York State Commu- tions by Erie Railroad at various
and volunteers.
nity Theater Association, directed points in New York, Ohio, Penn-
8
14
Colunibuii Day
f^lcflion Day
Veleratm' Day
TltaulM^iving Day
Otiri4tuid4 Day
World-Wide
Communion Sunday
Slleniini AtseitjiU
(O.C.R.)*
Sinilialh Torah
(O.C.)*
A l l Salnis' D a y *
First Sunday of
Advent
First Day of
Hanukkah
(O.C.R.)*
Feast of the
Iinmaeulttte
Conception*
Feast of tilt
Kallvlly*
Chrislniai Day*
(tireek & Syrlui«>
•Please note the following;
From 1BS2 until 1955, he was
• The Roman Cathololo Religion requires its members to attend
Division Sui>erintendent at ScranMass every Sunday during the year.
ton, Pa., and for the past five
• The Orthodox Jewish Faith requires Its members to observ*
years was Superintendent of Erie's
each Sabbath Day (Saturday) in the year, and they must not b*
Allegany Division, with headquarabroad after sundown on the preceding Fiiday.
lers at Salamanca.
• Holy Days indicated by tb* asterisk ( * ) aia those days ot
M r . Cavanaugh is technical chaira t a t t Hospital alnoe it was organrequired
religious observance for most religions. The initials following
man
of
the
production.
ised in 19M. Her personality,
F K E K BOOKLET by V. I . 0 « r the Jewish Holy Days indicate observance as follows: O—Oonservatlvi
M i « i Sohen Is playbill « h « i » i n « n
energy and devotion to duty are
i«
«a«ting •rameol m Social Security. M»U R—Reformed, O—Orthodox. All Jtwlsh Holidays be«in at sundowa
a source of Inspiration to all who and Miss Soudail
• • I r . Laader. M DmsM StoMt, on kba ayoalnt iNfora tha data glvaa.
oliairmaa.
oouM i a o o n t « o t with her.
Download