PAY BILL TO GIVE HOURLY, PER DIEM WORKERS AHNUAL WAGE AND CLASSIFICATION

advertisement
_ Cwill S W a a .
L i B A D E T *
m m ^ m a ^ m m m m ^ ^
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America's Largest Weekly for Public Kmpioyeea
Vol.
XXII,
No.
27
Tuesday, March
Conference
14, 1961
^
Report
g a l p i n
^
DRAWER
Price Ten C« ^ ^ h ^ N Y
1
See Page 3
125
N
Y
PAY BILL TO GIVE HOURLY,
PER DIEM WORKERS AHNUAL
WAGE AND CLASSIFICATION
COUP
CSEA Wins Long Battle
Via Salary Legislation
(Special to The Leader)
ALBANY, March 13—Efforts by the Civil Service Employees Assn. to place the State's t ^ r diem and hourly e m ployees on an annual wage basis have struclc pay dirt.
This new financial status—which will affect some 4,000
employees, most of them in the Public Work and Conservation
Depts.—will be contained in the legislation providing a general pay raise for all State employees.
MAP ACTION ON OXFORD RELIEF CORPS HOME: Hopes are high that the Women's Relief Corps Home at Oxford will continue to operate and legislative action is expected on
the matter. Seen here in Albany as they discussed solutions for keeping the Home open are,
from left, Assemblymen John E. Johnson and Guy Marvin; Senator Jannet Hill Gordon and
Joseph F. Feily, president of the Civil Service Employees Assn.
Bookstein Orders Halt
Nassau County Unit
To Meet March 15
The Nassau County chapter of
the Civil Service Employees Association will hold a meeting March
15 In the Salisbury Club in Nassau County Park, East Meadow.
The Board of Directors dinner
meeting will be at 6 p.m. and the
general membership meeting will
ALBANY, March 13. — The an associate examiner of methods be at 8 p.m. President Irving
State Civil Service Department and procedures In the Department Flaumenbaum urges everyone to
last week was ordered to cease of Motor Vehicles.
attend this Important meeting.
making: appointments from a list
Results of Order
compiled from a contested InterThe
order
also:
departmental examination, and to
1. Nullifies the appointments of
reschedule the controversial oral
section of the test, In Administra- persons who are not reachable as
a result of a new eligible list; and
tive Services, Grade 18.
The order, signed by State authorizes " . . . a new appointment
Supreme Court Justice Isadore to such position from among the
Bookstein, was the result of a persons whose names are on the
decision by him In December, on revised eligible list and who are
ALBANY. March 13. — More
« petition of Alfred H. Welssbard, reachable for such appointment." than 300 persons. Including Gov2. Gives the appointing authori- ernor Rockefeller, Lt. Gov. Malty the discretion to nullify ori- colmn Wilson and 50 state senaMonroe Chapter Sets ginal appointments if, as a result tors, attended the funeral last
of a revised list, different canof John J. Sandler, 51, the
Dinner for Ruth McFee didates are available, even though week
secretaiy of the State Senate.
The Monroe chapter of the the original appointee Is still eligiMl'. Sandler was a career state
Civil Service Employees Associa- ble and on the revised list.
employee and long-term member
lloti will hold a testimonial dinner
3. Requires that the Civil Servfor Ruth McPee, president of the ice Department give notice as to
chapter on Thursday. April 6, at the subject matter on the oral
Correction
the Party House, 677 Beahan Rd., portion of an examination.
Rochester, New York, at 6; 30 P.M.
In reporting on the proposed
4. Orders that for the purpose
Reservations must be in by March of seniority credit In any future pay plan of Govn. Nelson A.
29. Tickets ar» $3.75 per person. promotional examinations, any Rockefeller, The Leader article
R s s e r v a t l o n s may be made person whose name Is added to stated that the extra longevithrough Alma Muhs (City Hall) the ellglblo list because of the ty Increment would be given after
BA 6-3200. ext. 223 or Agnes new examination "shall be deem- 15 years at the maximum step. It
Brown (City Hall) BA 5-3200. ext. ed to have been appointed on the should have read: "after 15 years
148.
In the title."
(Continued ea P a f t t )
To Appointments From
Contested Examination
That legislation Is certain of
approval, since It has the backing
of both the Administration and
the legislative leaders.
The CSEA battle to place per
diem and hourly workers on an
anual wage basis has been long
and arduous and the victory is a
significant one.
The fight Is not over, however,
as these employees must now be
classified and the Employees Association Intends to fight for a
proper salary grade.
What's Called For
A wide range of Issues will be
settled through this legislation.
Here's a rundown of what it will
provide:
1. The bill orders all of these
positions placed In the classified
Civil Service, and for the first
time all such employees, without
exception, will receive regular
vacations and paid holidays.
Under present rules only employees who have worked con-
Thruway Accident Claims
Life Of John J. Sandler.
State Senate Secretary
of the Civil Service Employees Association. He was killed Mar. 4th
In a two-car accident on the
State Thruway.
Burial was In the Sons of Israel
cemetery In New Windsor, near
Newburgh.
He was killed when the Sandler
car was struck by an on-coming
car, which Jumped the center mall
of the Thruway near Sloatsburg.
Mrs. Sandler Is in satisfactory
condition at Good Samaritan Hospital in SufTern.
Former Publisher
Funeral services paid unusual
tribute to a man who once published a weekly newspaper before
Joining state service. He served in
(Continued on Page S)
tinuous nine months in a year
receive such credits.
2, The new law provides that
all laborers will receive credit for
their years of service with the
State and accoi'dingly will receive
an Increment step that corresponds with their years of service.
They also become eligible for
the establish longetivity increments.
3. The law provides, In addition,
(Continued on Page 3)
ReformAssn.
Lauds State
Pay Raises
The Civil Service Reform Association, at Its 83rd annual meeting In New York City March 5,
expressed its support of Governor
Rockefeller's program to increase
the salaries of state employees.
This position was taken because
of the facts brought out In the
report of McKlnsey and Company.
This outside agency was employed
to establish the relationship between state government salaries
and comparable salaries in Industry and other governmental Jurisdictions.
The association agreed with the
Governor that the state's business
must be directed by persons of the
highest calibre. It has been shown
that these often cannot afford to
remain with the state at the
salaries It now pays. The trouble
Is not only that the state loses
many of Its best employees, bull
also that it needs at the top
persons with qualities of leadership who can inspire their subordinates to do their best and can
get rid of those who do not measure up to the needs of the service,
Losing on Fringe Bentflit
Although so-called "fringt bene*
fits" formerly wer« grMter In
government service. th« reverse If
(Continued on F»f • 111
C I V I L
Page Two
IN CITY CIVIL SERVICE
^
By R I C H A R D E V A N S JR.
U.5.O. Drive fo
End on March 31
mm^.^^
Commissioner Diana entered
City service in 1936 in social work
and served in posts with the Department of Correction and Welfare until 1950. In 1957 he returned to City service with the
Department of Labor as Deputy
commissioner.
Dr. Theodore H. Lang, City perfonncl director, announced this
week that the closing date for receiving contributions to the USO
drive has been extended to March
•
•
•
3]. The drive was scheduled to
end March 8.
Brown fo Atfend
Dr. Lang is serving as chairman
of the New York City Employees F.BJ. Academy
Division of the greater New York ' Deputy Inspector William P.
"USO campaign to raise funds to Brown, commanding officer of the
expand USO services for U. S. Police Academy, has been selected
Armed Forces personnel, both in to attend the next session of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation's
this country and overseas.
New York City employees are , National Academy in Washington
being asked to help meet New ; D. C.
York's quota of $1,200,000. Nation- i Deputy Inspector Brown is a
ally, the USO is seeking $11,500,- ! 23 year veteran of the Police De«00 needed to effectively keep j partment, He was promoted to
pace with the cold war needs of sergeant In 1946 and after his
the nation's 2,500,000 GIs around promotion to lieutenant in 1948
the globe.
he performed desk duty and also
Dr. Lang said city employees served with the Juvenile Aid Bucan contribute to the USO drive reau, the Analysis Unit and the
by sending their contributions to Police Academy.
Raised to the rank of captain in
their departmental USO campaign chairman, or to the person- 1057, he commanded the 106th,
nel officers of their departments. 104th and 24th precints until he
was chosen as deputy inspector
• * *
last May. He has been in comDiana fo Address
mand of the Police Academy
Management Assn,
since August, 1960.
•
•
Raymond E. Diana, deputy
Commissionp'- of the Department Sofrim Society to
of Labor of t.ie City of New York,
•will address the Municipal Asso- Install New Head
New York City's Comptroller
ciation of J'"np'-foment Analysts
on March 16. His subject will Lawrence E. Gerosa will install
be "labor relations in the public Monroe Wiess as President of the
Sofrim Society on Tuesday March
service."
S E R V I C E
Tiiemlay, Marrli 1 4 ,
L E A D E R
Bobylon Hibernian
St. Patrick's Fete
Set for March 18
The Ancient Order of Hibernains and Ladies Auxiliary, St.
Patrick's Division No. 2, Babylon,
L. I., is planning the annual St.
Patrick's Day Dance for Saturday,
March 18. John J. Farrlly, general
Namagansett Inn on Montauk
Highway in Lindenhurst for this
chairman, and his committee have
acquired the ballroom of the
affair.
The Jim Gillespie Orchestra
featuring Happy O'Brien will provide music. The event will also
feature Irish entertainment including Irish step dancing, singing, and bag-pipe playing.
Reservations should be made
promptly because of the large
crowd anticipated. Many persons
had to be turned away from last
year's affair. For reservations call
MO 7-9327, MO 9-6957 or MO 78861. There is no extra charge for
reservations.
Your Public
Relations IQ
By LEO J. M A R G O L I N
(Mr. Msrrolin is an adjunct professor of public relations in the New
York University School of Public Administration and is a vice pres^
dent of the public relations firm of Tex McCrary, Inc.)
BAD TIMING EVEN FOR communicating good public relations
is frequently worse than no public
relations. And more often, an Illtimed attempt to reflect good public relations can have exactly the
opposite effect.
RECENTLY. A civil service employees organizations made public
its demands for extra vacation
time and a bonus for doing a
"heroic job" of the very task for
which they were hired and were
being paid.
PUBLIC REACTION was unfavorable and added up to bad
public relations. There was no
doubt In the mind of any fairthinking persons that these employees deserved good public relations for a job extraordinarily
well done. But the time they chose
for their demand was so completely wrong that it was difficult to
understand how their leaders
could have made such a boo-boo.
BASICALLY, PUBLIC relations
is a fairly simple matter and is
not shrouded with the mystery
some professionals attach to the
field. The real skill in public relations is in the development of
the public relations program—the
objectives, the research that must
go with it, in the possible changing of the primary objective if
impossible to achieve, and finally
in the carrying out of the program with expert timing, strategy
and tactics.
THUS, IS IT GOOD public relations for the New York City
sanitation workers to announce to
an unprepared, snow-weary public,
in a self-serving declaration, that
they are doing a "heroic job" of
clearing the streets of snow and
therefore would like extra vacations and bonus pay?
THE ANSWER IS "NO" if the
demand is made without preparing the groundwork long in advance.
The answer is "yes" if projection of such idea to the taxpaying
public was begun last summer and
the campaign was continued in a
factual, dramatic manner for some
months.
TIMING IN public relations is
no more than doing the right
thing at the right time, rather
than the right thing at the wrong
time.
fooJ Service
Aides Needed
By Hospital
14. The organizations' membership consists of over 750 employees
of the Jewish faith in the office
of the Comptroller and the Department of Finance. Judge Hilda
Schwartz, New York City's first
woman tureasurer, will present outT h e Veterans Administration
going president Samuel Post with
an engraved gabel in appreciation Hospital in the Bronx needs food
service workers for jobs paying
of his service to the Society.
• • •
$1.57 an hour to start. The salary
is increased to $1.65 an hour after
Ettel Resigns From
six months. Men only are wanted
for these jobs.
Dept. of Hospitals
No specific length of experience
William A. Ettel, a senior administrator and assistant to the is required, but special credit will
Commissioner of Hospitals, an- be given for experience in the
nounced he would leave his pres- preparation of vegetables or other
ent post on April 1. Mr. Ettel has food stuffs for cooking, assisting
served the city for 24 years in the with cooking or baking, waiting
Health and Hospital Departments on tables or other related duties.
Before appointment applicants
in the Mayor's office.
Dr. Ray E. Trussel, who recent- must pass a literacy test which
INTERNATIONAL B R O T H E R - IRISH A M E R I C A N ASSOCIATION, Sanitation Department, ly was sworn in as Commis<5ioner will establish the ability to read,
HOOD OF TEAMSTERS. Local
open house meeting, 5:00 to of Hospital, said: "Mr. Ettel's write, speak, and understand Eng237, A.F.L., skilled crafts divi10:00 p.m., Friday, March 17, leaving will be a serious loss to lish well enough to perform the
sion, 5:30 p.m.. Wednesday,
Hotel New Yorker, 34th St. & the Department and to me. He duties of the position.
March 15, 170 Nassau Street,
Information concerning requirehas served his City with intel8th Ave., New York. N.Y.
New York, N.Y.
ments
is contained in the Examligence
and
distinction
or
more
SUPERINTENDENTS, ASSOCIA- VETERANS OF FOREIGN AVARS,
than two decades and his work ination announcement No. 2-66-1
TION, Dept. of Sanitation, 8:00
Sanitation Department, p o s t
typified the finest qualities of a (1961). Copies of the announcep.m., Wednesday, March 15, 428
6390, 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, March
ment and application forms may
career civil servant."
Broadway, New York, N.Y.
21, 168 W. 23rd St., New York.
•
*
•
be obtained at the main Post
THE HEBREW SPIRITUAL SON.Y..
Office
in Brooklyn, Par Rockaway,
CIETY, 7:30 p.m., Thursday,
Traffic Course is
Jamaica, Long Island City. New
March 16, 40 E. 7th St., New FIREMAN AND OILERS, Local
Rochelle, Staten Island and Yonk56 A.F.L.-C.I.O., I.B.F.O.M.M.. Offered at N.Y.U.
York, N.Y.
A "traffic command" course for ers. Application forms may also
Sanitation Department, 7:00
THE NEGRO BENEVOLENT SOp.m., Tuesday, March 21, 1860 police officers of supervisory level be obtained at any Post Office;
CIETY, Sanitation Department,
Broadway, Room 705, New York, in the greater New York area is from the Director, Second U.S.
8:30 p.m., Thursday, March 16,
being offered this sprin<f by the Civil Service Region, in the News
N.Y.
81 W. 115th St., New York, N.Y.
center for safety education of Building at 220 East 42nd St..
New York University's Division of New Yprk 17, N. Y.
Applications will be accepted
General Education. The courses
will meet from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on until further notice.
Wednesday, March 29 and on
April 5, 12, 19 and 26 at N.Y.U.'s
Washington Square Center.
Among the topics to be discussed are police relationships, on
Help Wanted
the job training, principle of trafic
organization and traffic administration. The subjects have been MKN
mKI.L TIIKC Ql AI.IFKH
rit E-A KK A N<il':i» A I'I'OI NTM KNTS t
chosen on the recommendations
4 to 6 HULKS UAILY
of police chiefs and others active We ai> iriK rtKD'i] in 3 nitn with »al<-«
«-X|i.
ulio
ilo mil «it'll to Haht« litiie in
in the field of • ti-affic
» * safety.
ran\ukKiut;. t^ollrilini: nutl r<jlJoHiii(( \i|i
licail Itailf. Nail. t«iti<- iiulil firm «ill
pay ill tuuiui: «ar iit-c: I'liour nuu ;
lJki.vn. IN, S -JSJ.-J: Hmx tiV. 2-';4S4.
Board of Ed, Assn,
I'AKT
TIWK uileliimnl iiirn and wonirn
To Honor Gaffney
iK^lf'd lo (<ilitiw up Itadti and ftll
mutual lumlB. Iii^h couiiuiMiicn—oliii-r
beut-tilH. luviEtoi°s I'lunniiii; Sirvut;,
At Annual Dance
KA. « ISlti.
The Federation of Associations
of Employees of the Board of
Help Wanted - Male
Education has chosen James F. GTAKDS—l';irl-Kiill Tiii.e, .Mul |ja\»- pistol
IILTUIIt. K f l l t t l (Xlltt) tittltflfc. I X t l l l T t d
Gaffney to be guest of honor at
lntjuir« Vttt^rai) IH lt-<'li\t) Uurtuu. Int- .
4197 I'wrk A\t. H* B«. 11 AM to 7 I'M
its annual dinner dance on Thursday, March 16.
SUNDEI.L CO.. INC. :i(IO Ct^ntral Avenue.
Albitiiy. N.Y Trl HK. 4 VtiUO (Juvktr
Mr. Gaffney has been a Board
.Muid Kiti'lie-iir. (iclifiricli Kitclicn*
employee for 38 years and is director of the Bureau of AdmlnisT R A I N S !
I N T E R M I S S I O N : Albert C . Killian. riqht. C S E A first vie* pr«>i. i tration in the Office of School
Tb« W«rM'» L«rfl««t B i t p l a y
d«Rt. Is S«*N during on interlude of the business session fit , Buildings. He serves as a legislaS«t« «f H u g * Di»c«iiNt».
Hie recent Employees Asso«i«tion delegotes meeting in Al- I tive consultant to the Federation.
r««r OM Tr«lRc F«r New
bany. OS ckoHed with Claude E. Powell. C S E A fifth vice City School Superintendent John
Skh TrviM
W«ll >
resident, center, ond Waiter Sxyliitka. vice president of • J. Theobald will be the principal TRAIN TOWN . 1f3 Ommmt St..
(•Mr City lUttI OI«by V-«044
pecialized Tours. Inc., opccoUts of the C S E A frovel progtam. i speaker nt the event.
itf-i
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CITY EMPLOYEE EVENTS
CALENDAR
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Turftrlay, Marcli 28, 1961
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
Page Thre«
Correction Conferenc
Plans Alliance With
Professional Society
COUNTY MENi County and local civil service problems were described to county delegates attending the recent meeting of the Civil Service Employees Assn. by these three
leaders. They are, from left, Al Burke, president of Erie County chapter; Irving Flaumenbaum, president of Nassau County chapter, and Vernon A. Tapper, CSEA third vice
president.
Per Diem, Hourly Aides Will
Be Placed on Annual Wage
(Continued from Page 1)
for a general classification survey
to be made by the Division of
Classification and Compensation.
This survey will establish the appropriate grade for laborers and
will be designed to eliminate all
out of title work.
4. Under the law, no employee
can lose any salary, and all employees will, undoubtedly, receive
substantial increases.
5. Under the proposed legislation. all employees will be graded
in the regular salary schedule.
Because of the classification
Bookstein Halts
CS Appointments
(Continued from Pace 1)
date on which the original appointment was made . . . "
No Department Appeal
Thruway Accident
Kills Sandler
(Continued from Page 1)
numerous state posts with the
State Apprenticeship Council, in
Audit and Control and Tax Department before Joining Senate
Majority Leader Walter J. Mahoney's staff as a labor consultant.
Among the many prominent
persons attending the services
were Attorney General Louis J.
Lefkowitz, Secretary of State
Caroline Simon; Harold Hanover,
head of the State AFL-CIO; Mr.
Mahoney, Speaker Joseph F. Carlino and Senate Minority Leader
Joseph Zaretzki.
Mr. Sandler lived at 51 Holmes
Dale, Albany, and was secretary
of the National Conference of
State Legislative Leaders, a new
organization which he helped
found. He was a charter member
of the State Industrial Training
Council and a member of the
American Society of Training Directors.
In addition to his wife, he Is
survived by a son, Lewis a student at Columbia University Law
School.
The Correction Conference representing all employees in New
York State Prisons met at the
Hotel Wellington in Albany recently to expedite Correction legislation and hold conferences with
Commissioner McGinnis and Deputy Commissioner Cain. Various
departmental problems were discussed and reviewed with the
Commissioners. Upon the recommendation of the Conference the
coming Correction Officer exam
listed for March 1961 was postponed until June, in order to recruit more competent personnel at
the new listed entrance pay of
$4,760 yearly.
Plans were formulated to affiliate the Correction Officers with
the Correctional Association of
New York In order to obtain a
more professional status for C.O.'s.
The salary problem of nurses In
state prisons was brought to the
Commissioners attention, and a
promise was forthcoming to continue all efforts towards securing
the new R-13 grade for these
employees. This has been accomplished in Dannemora and Mattewan State Hospitals and Sing Sing
Prison, with Westfield State Farmi
the next institution to be effected.
This program will be pushed by
the conference and the Commissioner until all nurses in Stat*
Prisons will be covered in the R 13 grade.
Hit Rating System
The present efficiency r a t l n j
system was denounced by the
Conference. Commissioner McGinn's asked the conference to bring
in new recommendations for a
rating system more equitable to
all employees.
The Correction Conference delegates met with legislative leaders,
including Lt. Gov. Malcolm Wilson, Assemblyman Fred Preller,
Chairman of the Ways and Means
Committee, Senator Hatfield, Budget Director Hurd, Senator Willard. Senator Bush, Assemblyman
Mintz, Assemblyman Femberg, Assemblyman Gordon and Assemblyman Michaels.
The present officers were reelected for the coming year: Ed.
O'Leary, President; Jack Solod,
Vice President and Charlie Lamb,
Secretary.
Nassau Chapter Opens
Bookings For Two-Week
Trip to Europe July 2 2
survey, the program cannot be Implemented by April 1, 196L However, any salary changes will be
effective on April 1, and the entire reclassification process must
be completed no later than the
Italy—Going through beautiful
A low-cost, two-week tour to
pay roll commencing July 27, 1961.
Europe being sponsored by Nas- Austrian alps to Venice and then
At the time, the new salaries will
sau County chapter of the Civil Rome.
be paid retroactive in a lump sum
Switzerland—The highly popuService Employees Assn. can now
as of April 1. 1961.
be applied for, Irving Flaumen- lar and quaint Alpine village of
"Landmark', Says Feily
baum, chapter president. Informed Lucerne and a stop in Basle.
Joseph P. Feily, CSEA, presiFrance—^Three days In Paris,
The Leader.
dent called the legislation, "a
For less than $550, chapter considered by many travelers as
land mark in State wage hismembers and members of their the world's most beautiful city,
tory".
families can purchase round trip and then home.
"Every other administration,"
Space is restricted and applicaair transportation, all hotel rooms,
Mr. Feily said, "has swept this
all transportation abroad, most tions should be sent at once In
problem under the carpet and
meals, all sightseeing, tips and order to assure a place on th«
acted as if it never existed. I beother services, Mr. Flaumenbaum tour, Mr. Flaumenbaum said.
lieve the classification survey
Brochures describing the tour
said.
which we asked for will show that
The flight will leave Idlewlld and application blanks may b t
many laborers are in fact workAirport July 22 and return there had by writing to Irving Flaumening out of title, many of whom
baum, Nassau Chapter Travel
August 6.
deserve higher wages. We are parHere Is the leisurely route the Club, P. O. Box 91, Hempstead,
ticularly pleased that any emtour members will take In Europe: N. Y. The below-market price to
ployees who are reclassified into
In Germany — Beautiful old the tour has already induced
a grade other than laborer, which
Heidelberg, the completely Intact many members to make applicais in the competitive class, will
medieval town of Rothenburg and tion. A limited amount of air
Pass Your copy of The Leader
receive permanent competitive
travel space is available.
gay Munich.
on to a Non-member
status without examination. Our
Association has asked for an opportunity to be heard before J.
Earl Kelly, classification director,
establishes the grade. We intend
to fight for a fair «alary classification. In addition, wa want Job
security and are pressing Association-sponsored bills which would
give the protection of a hearing
to Civil Service employees In a
non competitive and laboring
class.
Employees must apply to the
Director of Classification and
Compensation for a review and
change of such allocation or classification any time prior to October 1, 1961, and may appeal the
Director of Classification and
Compensation's d e t e r m i n a t i o n
under the regular appeal process,
of course, subject to the approval
of the Budget. Any changes after
the initial determination will still
be effective, retroactlva to April CORRECTION CONFERENCE: Salary and legislative matters affecting employees In th«
1, 1961 if appealed before October. State Correction Dept. were the topic of meetings held with legislators and department
The Leader has learned that the
Civil Service Department does not
plan an appeal of the order. At
tha time of Judge Bookstein's
decision in December, a department spokesman Informed The
Leader the ruling would be appealed. It is believed a decision
not to appeal was made because
the formal order more clearly
spells out the effects of the decision.
Mr. Weissbard was represented
In the court action by Harry W.
Albright Jr., of the Albany law
firm of DeGrafT, Foy. Conroy and
Holt-Harris.
Only tlie oral section of the examination was contested. Mr.
Weissbard challenged it on the
grounds tiie factors to be tested
were not specified In the examination notice. He questioned also
the objectivity of the rating factors in tiie oral test.
Approximately half of the persons wlio passed the five-day
written examination were eliminated by tiie oral examination,
which lasted about 30 minutes.
Tiie number of persons allected
FREE BOOKLET by U. S. Govby tiie order will not be known ernment on Social Security. Mail
until a new eligible list is com- only. Leader, 97 Duaii* Street,
piled after the re-examination.
New York 7, N. Y.
heods at the recent meeting of the State Correction Conference in Albany, Seen here, ot
one of the many sessions, are, from left, Paul D. McGinnis, Correction commissioner;
Charles E. Lamb, Conference secretary-treasurer; Edward O'Leary. Conference president:
Lieut. Gov. Malcolm Wilson; Jack Solod. Conference vice president, ond John R. Cain,
Correction Dept. deputy commissioner.
!*«§« F<*iir
Where to Apply
For Public Jobs
CIVIL
STATE — First floor at 270
Broadway, New York 7, N. Y.
corner of Chambers St., telephone
BAclay 7-1616; Governor Alfred
E. Smith State Office Building and
The State Campus, Albany; State
Office Building, Buffalo; Room
400 at 155 West Main Street,
Rochester (Wednesdays o n ly );
and 141 James St., Syracuse (first
and third Tuesdays of each
month.
Any of these addresses may be
used for jobs with the State. The
State's New York City Office is
two blocks south of Broadway
fjom 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
•Dffices of the New York State
Employment Service.
laundry and dry cleaning plant
manager, writer and editor, industrial specialist, mathematical statistician, clothing deKigntr, electric accounting machine project
planner. The guide for classification of interdisciplinaiy professional positions is also new.
The remaining 11 are levisions
of previously existing standards
covering 39,537 employees in the
following occupations: agronomist,
appraiser and assefior, cartographic aid, plant quarantine inspector, bookkeeping machine operator, engineering technician, calculating machine epeiatcr, statistician, patent advisei, accountant, and customs inspector.
• • «
John Muey Sworn
man John W. Macy, Jr., said:
"Frank Barley has by his efforts
and those of his stafT established
this function as an indispensable
part of the administration of the
Government's personnel system.
The function under the leadership
of Seymour Berlin will constitute
an important feature in the Commission's drive to give maximum
support to agency personnel programs and to strengthen the
career service. Inspections and
classification audits are our principal means of evaluating the effectiveness of our personnel programs, providing assistance to
agencies in improving them, and
determining need for changes in
personnel policy."
•
•
•
Labor^s Wa§(e-Hour
Field Office Moves.
The Departments of Labor's
Wage-Hour and Public Contracts
Division has moved its downtown
Manhattan field office to 290
Broadway. New York City. The
office is one of the nine field offices in New York and New Jersey
set up to aid employers and employees affected by the Federal
Wage-Hour Law.
Investigation Supervisor Raymond Stone is in charge of the
Manhattan Downtown Field Office which covers the Division's
activities in the area south of
34th Street in Manhattan. "Our
new field office is now more centrally located to serve the public
in this area," Mr. Stone said. The
offices were formerly located at
Tueiclay, March
139 Centre Street, New York, New
York.
•
•
•
Pregler Retires From
iV.y. Housing Office
Anton Pregler, chief of operations engineering for the New
York regional office of the Public
Housing Administration left his
post last month at the mandatory
retirement age of 70.
A career official in the federal
service most of his professional
life, he was tendered a testimonial
luncheon by his colleagues and
presented with a gold wTist watch
and other gifts. Messages of tribute were read from many housing authorities throughout the
region and from the National
Association of Housing and Redevelopment Officials.
•
•
•
Fino Irges
Benefits
For Disabled W^idoivs
Congressman Paul Fino introduced a bill last week to allow a
widow who is under disability to
receive social security benefits at
age 50. Under the present law, a
widow must either be 62 or the
mother of a disabled child or one
under 18 to be eligible for benefits.
In pressing for the bill. Congressman Fino said, "While recent
amendments to the Social Security Act have provide for payment
of benefits to disabled workers
and to disabled children over 18,
no action has been taken in the
interest of disabled widows who
find themselves in equally distressing circumstances.
1961
Federal employees who retired
before June 30, 1960 and are eligible for coverage under the Retired
Federal Employees Health Benefits Act will receive a kit containing necessary material and information on how to enroll in the
plan.
The Civil Service Commission
is planning to complete the mailings by the middle of this month.
The Commission has previously
informed the retired employees
whether or not they were eligible
for the plan, Eligibles can take
the uniform plan or receive a government contribution toward a
private health insurance plan.
White Plains Job
For Supervisor of
Maintenance Open
The White Plains Department
of Recreation is seeking someone
to fill the title of supervisor of
maintenance. This job pays between $7,000 and $3,900 a year
and consists of supervising a force
of 12 men in the maintenance of
all White Plains parks, playgrounds and recreation facilities.
The requirements are college
graduation and three years' experience in the field of high school
graduation and seven years' experience. Candidates should have
a knowledge of construction and
carpentry, turf management and
general soil chemistry. Knowledge
of personnel and supervision techniques is also required.
For further information and
FREE BOOKLET by U. S. Govfrnment on Social Security. Mail application forms, contact John
only. Leader, 97 Duane Street, Gapco, Personnel Director, City
Hall. White Plains, New York.
New York 7, N. T.
In
Internal Revenue Slated
For 4 , 5 7 5 j^lore Aides
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 accidcnt to stay
out of work. Fortunately, this
period is usually short. . . But,
you can't always count on this.
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.
You owe it to yourself and your family to investigate the C.S.E.A. Accidcnt
and Sickness insurance plan.
Berlin Suvceds Barley
; 4s Head of C,S.C, Bureau
Frank Barky, diiector of the
Applications are also obtain- U.S. Civil Service Commi^£ion•s
classification
fible at main post offices, except inspections a n d
the New York, N. Y., Post Office. audits program tince its inception
Boards of examiners at the par- : as a single bureau in 1953 will
ticular in.stallutions offering the leave Government employment on
tests also may be applied to for April 30 to enter piivtvte business.
further information anu applica- I Succeeding Mr. Barley will bt Seytion forms. No return envelopes ' mour Berlin.
lire required with named requests
Commenting on the jx)speclions
lur iipplication form^
1 and classificutiua i^iouiv^ui, Omii-
1i,
Federal Retirees Will
Get Health Benefits Kit
Last week John Macy waj finally officially made chaiiman of the
Civil Service Commission. His official status puts him on a payroll,
after six weeks ef working with no
financial reimbuisemcnt.
One of the items in Piesjdents
Kennedy's budget provides for
4,575 additional employees in the
Department of Internal Revenue.
More than 2,500 of these employees would be added tc audit; more
than 600 to collection and more
than 250 to intelligence. The rest
of the additional employees would
go into supporting peisonel such
F E D E R A L — Second U.S. Civil
Service Region Office, News Build- as clerical workers.
Eisenhower had lecommended
ing 220 East 42d Street (at 2d
Ave.), New York 17, N. Y., just 3,810 new employees lor the Dewest of the United Nations build- partment and Kennedy has added
ing. Take the IRT Lexington Ave. I $7 million more dollars to the
line to Grand Central and walk budget for the additional aides.
two blocks east, or take the shuttle The increase feet for audit and
from Times Square to Grand intelligence means than tax reCentral or the IRT Queens-Flush- turns will be checked more careing train from any point on the fully.
•
•
•
line to the Grand Central stop.
Hours are 8:30 A.M. to 5 P.M.
Monday through Friday. Telephone number is YU 6-2626.
LEADER
U.S. Service News Items
The following directions tell Clnssificalion
Standards
where te apply for public jobs
Cover 72% of Fields
• nd hon' to reach destinations in
The Civil Service Commission
New York City on the transit reports that with the production
system.
of 23 new or revised position clasNEW YORK CITY—The Appli- sification standards, 72 percent of
occupations under the classificacations Section of the New Yorlc
tion Act are now covered by
City Department, of Personnel Is standards. Out ef 4R7 under the
locat^ed at 96 Duane St., New York act occupations, 349 are now
7, N.Y. (Manhattan). It is two covered by standards.
The present level ef coverage
bloeks north of City Hall, just
west of Broadway, across from contrasts with 58 percent in 1957.
Since that time, 207 occupations
The Leader Office.
have been covered by 185 new or
Hours are 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. revised standards. The number of
closed Saturdays except to answer employees in occupatipns covered
inquiries from 9 to 12 A.M. Tele- I by standards is now nearly 800,: 000, 84 percent of the 950,630 emphone COrtland 7-8880.
! ployees under the Classification
Mailed requests for application Act. Occupational studies currentblanks must include a stamped I ly under way for series not now
self-addressea Dusiness-size enve- I covered by standards will increase
lope. Mailed application forms employee coverage by about 30,must be sent to the Personnel , 000, to bring total coverage to apDepartment, including the speci- proximately 87 percent within the
lied filing fee in the form of a next 12 month?.
Twelve of the iccently comcheck or money-order, at least
five days before the closing date pleted standards aie for positions
far filing applications. This is not previously covered. Covering
to allow time for h a r ^ m g and 18,509 employees, they include:
hospital housekeeping manager,
fer the Department to contact
agricultural m a r k e t reporter,
the applicant in case his applica1 mathematics technician, travel
tion is incomplete.
clerk, passenger a ate specialist,
The Applications Section of
the Personnel Department is near
the Chambers Street stop of the
main s u o w a y lines that go
through the area. These are the
IRT 7th Avenue Line and the
3ND 8th Avenue Line. The IRT
Lexington Avenue Line stop to
use is the Brooklyn Bridge stop
«nd the BMT Brighton Local's
fctop is City Hall. All these are
but a few blocks from the Personnel Department.
SERVICE
forJull vi/ormation call ur write
T E R
B O S H J A
P O W E L L ,
INC.
MAIN
14S Clinton St., Schcntctody 1, N.Y. • Franklin 4-7751 • Albany 5-2032
NMalbtUis* BWg., BvHol* 3, N.Y. • Modiion 1353
S42 MsdHsii Av«., N«w York 17. N.Y. • Murray Hill 2-7I9S
Tiirsflay, Maroli 14, 1961
X I V I L
S E R V I C E
L E A D E R
26 Tesfs Are Scheduled
By State; Apply Before
March 27 for 13 Exams
Below Is a list of 26 New York
State examinations which will be
open for filing within the next
three weeks. Thirteen of these
tests will close on March 27. Each
of the 26 tests is listed below
alon^ with the test number and
the salary range.
Closing March 27
Applications for the following
tests will be accepted up to March
27. For the titles of assistant sanitary engineer, senior occupational
therapist (phychiatric), associate
curator (interpretation), and curator (history). New York State
residence is not required.
• Assistant librarian, Supreme
Court, Kings County, No. 6079,
approx. $5,200 « year.
• Assistant sanitary engineer,
No. 6059, $6,410 to $7,760 a year.
• Associate chemist. No. 6073,
$7,818 to $9,408 a year.
• Associate mechanical estimator, No. 604, $9,586 to $11,46 a
year.
• Construction wage rate investigator, No. 607, $4,280 to $5,250
a year.
• Curator (history), N. 6071,
$4,740 to $5,790 a year.
• Film production aide. No.
6080, $3,500 to $4,350 a year.
• Junior forest suruveyor. No.
6075, $3,680 to $4,560 a year.
• Junior photographer. No.
6071, $3,680 to $4,560 a year.
• Machinist foreman. No. 6076,
$4,740 to $5,790 a year.
• Senior construction wage rate
investigator. No. 6078, $5,248 to
$6,376 a year.
• Senior occupational therapist
(phychiatric). No. 6061. $5,516 to
$6,696 a year.
• Supervision of medical Illustration and photography, No. 6082,
$6,098 to $7,388 a year.
Closing April 10
The following four tests will be
open up to April 10.
• Consultant p u b l i c health
nurse (epidemiology). No. 6083.
$6,410 to $7,760 a year.
• Farm products Inspector. No.
6084, $4,502 to $5,512 a year.
• Horticultural specialist. No.
6085, horticultural inspector, $4,740 to $5,790 a year and horticulturists $4,280 to $5,250 a year.
• Market reporter. No. 6086,
$4,988 to $6,078 a year.
School Crossing Guards
Urgently Needed by City
$165 with No ExperienceVisual
School crossing guards are
wanted by New York City for Jobs
paying $1.65 an hour to start.
Both men and women are wanted
for these jobs which are parttime and located near the employee's home. No experience is
r e q u i r e d for these positions.
Guards are most urgently needed
at this time in Manhattan.
Applicants for these examinations must be United States citizens and between the ages of 25
and 50 on the date of filing. Females must be not less than five
feet one inch in height and
males not less than five feet five
inches. Weight must not be abnormally out of proportion to
height. Applicants must have satisfactory hearing and 20/30 vision
with or without glasses. Good
character is prerequisite for this
job. Applicants must have been
New York City residents for three
years and must live in the
borough in which they seek employment. Applicants must have
completed grammar school.
School crossing guards are responsible for protecting children
at designated school crossings.
They will work part-time, five
days a week, throughout the
school term. The hours are approximately one hour In the
morning, two hours at noon and
one hour in the afternoon. Because of the work schedule it is
desirable that school crossing
guards live fairly close to home
so they can walk to work and
back.
To qualify for this Job, applicants must take a written exami-
4 Visitors Named To
Highland Schcol
ALBANY, March 13. — Governor Rockefeller has made four
appointments to the board of
visitors of the Highland State
Training School for Boys. Tliey
are:
Ronald F. Dutcher Jr. of Newbur^h, supervising: principal of
tlie Balmville School District; Dr.
Herbert P. Schwartz, Kingston, a
uiember of the Kingston Hospital
staff: Richard Waring Lent, New
P»lt« attoriiey, and C. Red Close,
Puunshkeepsie. a former assent-
nation. A medical examination, a
character Investigation, and an
oral Interview are also required.
The written test is expected to be
held In June of this year. Candidates will be notified as to the
exact time and place of the examination.
Applications are available In all
police station houses in the City.
The deadline for filing application
is April 30.
Training
OF CANDIDATES
Opening March 24
The following five tests are
scheduled to open about March 24.
Application.? fer these tests will be
acceptell up to April 24. For senior
civil engineer (traffic) and supervisor of hospital volunteer services
New York State residence Is not
required.
• Forest suveyor. No. 6092, $5,796 to $7,026- a year. Appointments
will be made at $6,534.
• Senior civil engineer (traflfic),
No. 6089, $7,gl8 to $9,408 a year,
• Senior civil engineer (physical research). No. 6091, $7,818 to
$9,408 a year.
• Senior Mechanical s t o r e s
clerk. No. 6096, $3,680 to $4,560
a yesu-.
Did
•
•r
A p p t , Only
.
»-6»l»
• Assistant building structural
engineer, No. 6097. $6,419 te $7,760 a year.
• Construction safety Inspector.
No. 6100, $4,740 to $5,790 a year.
• Senior civil engineer (design). No. 6099. $7,818 to $9,40t a
year.
• Stockroom worker. No. 8101.
To All positions of clothing derk,
mechanical stores clerk, Sc store!)
clerk — $3,050 to $3,810 a ye^v.
Also to All the position of mail
and supply clerk $2,920 to $3,650
a year.
CANDIDATES
TIkww wIi«»
t h o W r U t e n n r * O N I . T H A T , F - W A V t o 4li« Koal . . . your
P h r M « « l KntiiiK N O W D K T E R M I N K S HUC'CKSS O R K A I L t R K ! A
HIOH
l>HY!4irAI, M A R K
WIIX fKRTAINLY
IMPKOVK
YOUR
J'HANC'K*
OT
RARI.Y A P P O I N T M E N T . Don't delay . . . S t a r t Xralnlnn N O W !
A t t M d 3 C i a s s e i W e e k l y a t C o n v e n l . n t H o u r i — DAY OR EVENING
In O u r Spacially Equipped GymnatiMmt in M a n h a t t a n & J a m a i c a
DON'T TAKE C H A N C E S WITH YOUR CAREER . . . START N O W !
Fff* ApiMicatloni B e f o r e M a r . 2 1 s t - W r i t t e n Exam In J u n *
MEN & WOMEN OF ALL AGES ELIGIBLE FOR
HUNDREDS OF PERMANENT CIVIL SERVICE JOBS AS
RAILROAD CLERK (STATION AGENT)
$92.40 After 1 Year - $87.20 to Starf
O p p o r t u f l i t y t o A d v a n c e t o ASST. STATION SUPERVISOR
a n d ASST. TRAIN DISPATCHER a t $5,484 t o $4,509 a Y e a r
NO EDUCATIONAL OR EXPERIENCE REQUIREMENTS
NEW YORK CITY RESIDENCE IS NOT NECESSARY
O a r C a u r s e P r e p a r e s Thoroughly f e r Official Exam
BE OUR GUEST AT A CLASS SESSION IN MANHATTAN
Closses Meet TUESDAYS at 5:30 or 7:30 P.M.
Candidates for COURT OFFICER
OrthopUt
WA.
Opening April 3
y M «cor* 7 0 % o r m o r * In t h e W r i t t e n E*om7 If l o yon
should s t a r t Ptiy*ieai Training a t o n e * . . . REMEMBER . . .
DR. J O H N T. F L Y N N
OptometrUt
• Supervisor of hospital volunteer service. No. 6888, $4,918 to
$6,078 a year.
YOUR P H Y S I C A L R A T I N G C O U N T S S 0 % !
FOR T H I EYESIGHT TEST OP
CIVIL SERVICE REQUIREMENTS.
300 W * i t 2 3 r d St., N. Y. C .
f
FIREMAN
IMPORTANT!
FOR
PATROLMAH
FIREMAN
TRANSIT POLICE
Pag« Five
D v l f i h a n t r p r n f M r a t l o n m a y iwsMy m a k e a d l f f w e n M of 1« p ^ r r e n t a g a p o i n t *
o r m « r « in y o u r ««aiii r a t i n g ! T h i s rouirt m e a n m n t - h e a r l i e r • i i p n i n t m n n t m A
prumi>tion«l «pv«»rtiinltini. F o r • m o d e r a t e f e e y o u m»jr a t t e n d t w « rla»»e« •
w e e k n n t l l (li»t« »f nx»iu a n d r e e e l v e l u i n d r e d a of i>«se« of vftliiabia m a t e r i a l f o r
l i n m a atutly an w e l l . V U l t a via** seKHion a s o u r Rueat a n d Jtidca f o r y » u r « e i f !
CLASSES IN MANHATTAN. MON. & THURS. a t 1:15. 5:30 & 7:30 P.M.
Limited
Time
Offer
Applications Re-Opened! File Before Mar. 23 for
OfiportHnities f o r Men & W o m e n of All A g e s !
CLERKS - Salary $60 to $75 a Week
Laadi«f t o C a r e e r Position a t $7,190 a Y e a r It H i g h e r
THOUSANDS OF ATTRACTIVE PERMANENT POSITIONS.
Nrt
Kivwrlem^a
Required—Pennlon
&
All
Civil
Hervlee
BeneHta
CLASSES IN MANHATTAN ON WED. & PRI. a t 5:30 and 7:30 P.M.
Preparation for Written & Physical Exams for
PATROLMAN —
N.
Y. P O L I C E
DEPT.
Lectures & Gym Classes in Manhattan & Jamaica
at Convenient Hours - Day & Evening
"The School
That
Hat
Prepared
90% of Present
Police O f f i c e r s "
HICH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
Naedart
6-Wo«k
b y N o a - G r a d u a t e s of H i f h S c h o o l f o r M a n y Civil S e r v i o s
Coursa. P r e p s r e t f o r E X A M S conducted by N.Y. S l a t a Dept.
Ex:irHi
of E d .
ENROLL N O W / START CLASSES WITHOUT DELAY!
In JAMAICA (90-01 Merrick Blvd.) THURS.. MAR. U a t 7 P.M.
In MANHATTAN: WED.. MAR 22 o t 5:30 or 7:30 P.M.
NEW CLASSES NOW
FORMING
N e w Yorit City Exam H a s Been O r d e r e d
for
CORRECTION OFFICER (Men) • $5,117 to $6,503
Buy 3 t^poons — let one FREE
TcaspooQ — S4.75 cacU
Buy 3 table spoons - - get one FREB
Table spooa $ 11.00 e«cti
Buy 3 place jettingt — get one FREE';
4-pc. place setting — $26.:>0 eai;li
AND MANY MORE
LOVELY PIECES TO CHOOSE FROMI
To get people acquainted with this truly
beautiful, new pattern we niake this special offer
on both complete place settings and open
stock pieces. Come in — see Grandeurt Ezgoy
one of the nicest traditiooi ia living ft
traditioa worth keeping.
*Tr»d«-mark« of Oiieidt Ltd*
A. J O M P O L E
391 E I G H T H AVENUE
N E W YORK. N. Y.
LA 4-1828 - f
(Tb« S a l a r i e t Qtioted Include Annual A l l o w a n c e f o r Unuiformsl
AGES: 21 t h r o u g h 29 Y e a r s
OLDER FOR VERTERANS — MIN. HEIGHT: 5 Ft. 7Vi In.
Classes Start April 3 in Preparation for
EXAMINATIONS FOR PROMOTION TO
SENIOR & SUPERVISING CLERK
IN VlrtMally All D e p a r t m e n t s of t h e C i t y of New York
•tu<laal4 havD avlileved oulntaiidlns rerord* for nucreMi in tlieaa e i a i t u
over a litnc pariiMl of year*. Competition will he exlieniely keen anii earlf
r e c U t r a t l o n U a d v U e d . Iiiiiuire for roinpiete detail*.
Our
POST OFFICE CLERK-CARRIER
G«t Our Home Study Book for POST OFFICE EXAMS
O a t a U a t o a r offices or by mail. Ne C.O.D.'s. Refand C i
la S d a y s if « e t s a t i s f i e d . Send c h e c k o r money a r d e r .
V O C A T I O N A L
BRAPTING
MMbatten
A
COURSES
AUTO MECHANICS
Jaotaloa
Laof
Island
TC
I il
TV SIRVICI ft R i P A I I
City
MaabatUd
The DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
M A N H A T T A N : 111 E A S T 11 S T R U T
PheM
J A M A I C A tf-li M I R R I C K ILVB., bat. J«m«I«« ft
urCN
MHN T i l > « l •
Jk.M. •
r J l --4M4MW9 » N
S-4tN
HiN«ld« Avm.
aATUMAVS
CIVIL
Page Six
» ! L e a p e r .
SERVICE
LETTERS
TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the editor must be
signed, and names will be withheld
from publication upon request.
AmerUaU LargeU Weekln tor Public Emptoffees Ther should be no longer than
300 words and we reserve the right
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
to edit published letters as seems
Published every Tuesday by
appropriate. Address all letters to:
LEADER PUBLICATIONS. INC.
The Editor, Civil Service Leader,
17 DHflRO S t r t e t . New Yorli 7. N. Y.
BEekmoii 3-4010
97 Duane St., New York 7, N.Y.
Jerry Finkelstein, Consulting Publisher
pMul Kyer, Editor
Ricliard Evane, Jr., City Editor Workers Must Back
N. H. Mager, Business
Manager
10c per copy. Subscription Price $2.00 to member of the Civil
Service Employees Association. $4.00 to non-members.
Tiiesaay, Marcfi 14, 1961
LEADER
Pay Raise
Demands
Civil Service
LAW & YOU
llT HAROLD L. HERZSTEIN
Mr. Herzstein is a member of the New York bar
(The views expressed in this column are those of the writer and
do not necessarily constitute the views of this newspaper or of any
organisation).
Editor, The Leader:
In evaluating Mr. Meschino's
TUESDAY, MARCH 14, 1961 < ^ > 3 1
remarks in your "Letters to the
Editor" column in the edition of
AS I WROTE LAST WEEK, under Section 75 of the Civil ServFeb. 21, he brings out some very
pertinent facts concerning our ice Law (the old Section 22) an employee of the State government
present dilemma with pay scale or the various local governments within the State can be removed
inadequacies. Many points that he from his Job for inefficiency or missconduct only. There is only one
raises I find myself in complete legal way In which a department or agency of government can acaccord with, however it is obvious complish such a removal and that is by serving written charges and
that he la losing his proper per- giving the employee a hearing, which all the safeguards prescribed
significant victory has been won in behalf of some spective into this matter when he In Section 75. There Is nothing in Section 75 to the effect that an
4,000 State employees who work on an hourly or per begins to look for a scapegoat to employee can be bullied out of his Job.
rectify the Injustice being brought
diem basis.
SEVERAL YEARS AGO many situations came to my attention
The legislation which will provide a general salary In- about to State workers.
where employees had resigned on demand of their department heads,
Certainly
we
are
disappointed
at
crease for all State employees will contain provisions to place
without a hearing. They complained about the situation too late
these 4,000 employees on an annual salary basis, establish the sudden turn of events that has because they were out. According to them, had they had a hearing,
suddenly
come
about,
but
let
us
longevity Increment rights and give them credit for leave
honestly evaluate this situation. they could have proved this and could have proved that; but the
and vacation, to name but a few of the benefits.
way things worked out they did not prove anything.
Where does the real fault lie?
The 90,000-member Civil Service Employees Association
According to Mr. Meschino, our
THE "SEVERAL YEARS ago" was long before I started to write
deserves the highest praise for winning the battle for proper downfall can be directly associthis column. I walked over to the "Leader" and apprised Mr. Herman
working conditions for these employees. And we know that ated with the inadequacies of the
Bernard, then the Associate Editor about the situation. He knew all
they will not drop the cause until the converted wage the job Mr. Felly and The Leader are about it; and asked me if I would write an editorial for his approval.
employees are to receive Is a decent one.
doing in their representation of I did and he published It. He then told me that he had received
These workers—mainly in the State Public Works and the 90,000 State workers they rep- some nasty letters from executive personnel. I remember one from a
Conservation Departments—have taken a long step forward resent. This false impression can large department particularly. I knew that that department was
In gaining a career service. It speaks well for the State as easily be corrected if one has only one of the worst offenders of those who demanded and got resigan employer and the Employees Association as a civil service read The Leader for the past six nations.
months or so. Almost every major
organization that this has been accomplished.
THINGS ARE NO better now. Many department heads are still
article was connected in some way
with either direct pay increases or demanding and getting resignations without any attempt to comply
additional benefits t h a t have been with Section 75 of the Civil Service Law. The way these men interwarranted for a long time. Their pret the Law (and I have spoken to a considerable number of them)
tireless crusade and vigorous un- Is that you use Section 75 only if an employee does not want to
dertakings to put the State pay resign on demand. I do not read anything like t h a t In the law. The
scale on a parity with private in- law seems to me to prescribe the methods of removing an employee;
dustry cannot be denied or mini- and it does not read that a resignation bully does not have to
unions
in
the
fire,
health,
and
S T . L O U I S c o u n t y , MO.—The
comply with It.
County's Civil Service Commission police departments. They argued mized.
If anyone is to blame It is ourChairman, Fied M. Karches, was that the action violated constituI HOPE THAT NO one gets the idea that I am making a brief
given a four-column spread in the tional rights and the state's selves. Our own laxity and lack of for Inefficient or bad employees. They have no place in the civil
"right-to-work" law.
initiative can be the deciding service. Not only are they a detriment to department executives but
March 9 issue of the St. Louis
factors on whether we receive the they are also a detriment to other civil service employees. I have no
Globe-Democrat to explain its
MANITOBA, Canada — The proposed raises or not.
synpathy for them whatsoever. But anyone who wants to get rid of
Civil service program. Mr. Karches province has adopted a group life
The C.S.E.A. leaders can only do
•tressed the county's civil service insurance plan for its employees, so much on our behalf, but with- them, should do so legally. I did not make the law, nor did the deprovision which leaves the deci- which became effective on May 1. out our public support the cause partment heads. The legislature and the governor made it. Everyone
•ion of upholding or reversing dis- The province pays one-third of will be a hopeless effort. I t is we, should keep It. That includes resignation bullies.
IN ALL CASES WHERE an employee complains about a resignamissal actions on which there have the cost, the employee the balance. the members who must exert ourbeen appeals to the department Casual employees—those regularly selves by doing our part in bring- tion having been obtained by duress, a check with the department
head, as a method of avoiding long employed on an hourly, daily, or ing such needed programs about. head would seem to indicate t h a t the department head left the matter
monthly basis on construction,
We must take more positive ac- up to the employee in the kindest terms. In these cases, someone is
drawn out hearings. Employees are
maintenance, ctc.—are also elition
by writing to our individual always lying—either the employee or the department head. So many
protected, he pointed out, by the gible.
State legislators and make them department heads obtained the resignations on such a sweet and
fact that department heads, too,
understand with full realization of friendly basis, t h a t you begin to wonder.
are covered by civil service.
how important these objectives
A LOT OF DEPARTMENT heads who engage in this practice are
Jewish State Aides
are. If everyone would cooperate Innocent of wrongdoing. One of them, an excellent administrator, a
SAGINAW, Mich.—The city re- Assn. Meets March 22 in such a project then I am sure
man who la genuinely considerate of his employees and a dear friend
cently tested for and filled the
The next regular meeting of the the full Impact of our demands
position of probation officer in Jewish State Employees Associa- would be met in a much different of mine remarked to me several weeks ago: "Harold, is your method
better? What do you want me to do, hold a hearing in every case
three days time. Each applicant
tion of New York will be held in light and possibly we could attain with all the mess?" He was quite surprised when I told him that I
proceeded immediately to an oral
Room 659 of the State Building, the very goals that we had first was aware of his good faith; but that the law required the hearing.
examination after the written test,
80 Centre St., Manhattan, at 5:15 set forth. This entails a maximum He smiled faintly, as if to say: "What nonsense!"
held on Saturday. Papers were
of effort on the part o! everyone
P.M. on Wednesday, March 22.
icored over the weekend and an
NOT ALL EXECUTIVES are Imbued with kind motives. One of
Nathan Rogers, president, re- concerned. The few who are preseligible list was established by
ports six new members have join- ently engaged in this fight des- the civil service representatives from a large institution informed me
Monday afternoon. The man at
perately need our support. If this several years ago t h a t the head demanded a resignation and warned
the top of the list was contacted ed and the membership drive Is
support can be met with enthus- the employee that if she did not resign, he would expose her with
plclclng
up
momentum.
by phone, and he started on his
Sylvia Miller, Milton Chasin and iasm, then perhaps the end results a hearing. T h a t man was subverting the purpose of Section 75. Instead
Job Tuesday morning.
Louis Berkower, the committee for will be most favorable for every- of it being an employee's protection to him it was a weapon against
an employee.
the Purlm Party to be held one concerned.
EDWARD LANCET
NEW ORLEANS, La.—Louisiana Wednesday, March 2, at Club 100,
THERE IS NO such thing as a department head asking for a
PUBLIC WORKS DEPT. resignation and leaving a free and fair decision on the subject to
and Kentucky became the first two 100 Norfolk Street, Manhattan,
BUFFALO, N. Y. the employee. By virtue of the difference In positions, there is pres•tates to sign the Southern Inter- report good demand for tickets
state Nuclear Compact to foster and there are still several tables
sure upon the employee, moral pressure, in all such Instances.
cooperation a m o n g
Southern to be filled.
Guard
Commander
I HAVE KNOWN OF CASES where after a hearing, when an
•tates in using nuclear energy for
Plans for the week end vacation
ALBANY, March 13. — Brig. employee would not be removed, and would be either found not guilty
Industrial, medical, agricultural for June 16, 17 and 18 at the
and other uses. The agreement Harmony Country Club, near Gen. W. Reynolds Carr of Al- or found guilty and slightly punished, the department head would
Vas drafted by the Southern Re- Montlcello are completed and tic- bany is the new commanding gen- admit that before the hearing began he was intent on firing the employee. A department head has a great deal of power. He should not
gional Advisory Council on Nu- kets are available. The new date eral of the New York Guard.
shoot from the hip. Section 75 was intended for him, too.
tlear Energy last year, according for the Shakespearean Festival
to the Council of State Govern- and Picnic has been changed to
New Putnam Judge
I THINK THAT A request for a resignation by a department
menta.
May 20.
ALBANY, Mar. 13-Piederick A head and avoidance of a Section 78 proceeding Is a violation of the
Some of the members had been Dickinson is the new county judge Civil Service Law, and is therefore a crime. Some legislators have
SIOUX FALLS, S. Dakota—The Invited to visit Night Court, and of Putnam County, succeeding picked up Itemi from this column and converted them into bills.
f i r e r i g h t e r i and the State, they enjoyed an Interesting ob- Judge John P. Donohoe, who re- I wish t h a i some of them would add a sentence to Section 75 stating
jpounty, and Municipal Employees servation and talks with the signed. Judge Dickinson formerly that no department head may request or demand a resignation; and
fxav« challenged, in stato circuit Judge, who explained the Court's was district attorney for the that If they d o . , . . ; well, if they do, I would let the legislators fix
iourt, the clty'a attempt to outlaw activities.
the punishment.
county.
Resignation
Significant Victory
For State's Per Diem
And Hourly Employees
A
CIVIL SERVICE NOTES
FROM ALL OVER
Bullies
r i V I L
Tnrs.Tay, Marcli 14, 1961
S E R V I C E
LEADER
City Ass t
New Fight On To LowerAcc't Test
Closes Soon
Case Worker Standards
In Local Wellare Work
Assistant accountants are wanted by New York City for jobs paying between $4,250 and $5,330 a
year. The deadline for filing apALBANY, March 13—Legislation lowering standards for plications for this test is March 30.
case workers in local welfare work has been introduced on
Requirements
Capitol Hill.
The bill, sponsored by the Albany County Welfare DeCandidates for this exam should
partment, is stirring new controversy over an issue which was have a B. A. including or suppleone of the hotly debated questions at the 1960 session.
mented by 16 credits in college
According to terms of the bill.
introduced by Senator Julian B.
Erway, "no person shall be denied
appointment or employment as a
esse worked in any local welfare
department because of lack of
formal or academic education
above the hi<Th school level or its
equivalent or because of his lack
of prior experience or training in
social welfare."
C'SE.\ Fought Similar Measure
A similar measure drew the fire
of many civil service and professional organizations at the 1960
session, and a sharp protest from
the Civil Service Employees Association.
At the present time, the State
Department of Social Welfare requires case worlters to be college
graduates.
Both houses of the Legislature
passed a bill last year to lower
welfare job standards, but the
measure was recalled in tlie Senate after statewide opposition developed to it.
In a compromise, a second bill
was approved to create a Welfare
Personnel Classification Commission. Final appointments to the
board were announced by Governor Rockefeller in December, just
before start of the session. The
commission is headed by former
Piittsburgh Assemblyman James
Fit? Patrick.
The commission is not expected
to report until the 1962 session of
tiie Legislature.
accounting courses or a senior
high school diploma and four
years of satisfactory experience.
A satisfactory equivalent of educrtion and experience will also
meet the requirements. Candidates must meet the minimum requirements by the time of appointment.
Under direct supervision, employees in this title perform proHe added: "Recruitment con- fessional accounting work. They
tinues to be very difficult."
assist in maintaining accounting
cause it was understood and
agreed that the commission would
make inquiry into the personnel
problem of local welfare agencies
and explore the possibility of
revising p e r s o n n e l standards,
reasonably, to e n h a n c e the
chances of local agencies in recruiting staff."
records for City departments or
agencies. In making field investigations and in the auditing of
business firms.
Tiie written test will count for
all of the grade and will probably be held April 15. The questions on the test will be objective
and will evaluate the candidate's
knowledge of general accounting
and auditing principles. The test
may Include problems on such
topics as adjusting and closing
entries, financial statements, and
partnership and corporation capital accounts.
Up until March 30, applications
can be obtained at the Applications Section of the Department
of Personnel. 96 Duane St., New
York 7. N. Y. The number of this
test is 8984.
Pajn^e Seven
M r s . Cavanaugh
WCB
^^ember
ALBANY, March 13. — Mrs
Gertrude A. Cavanaugh of East
Meadow and a former employee of
the State Workmen';, Compensai ^ion Board has been named a
the board,
board.
i member off the
At the same time, Governor
Rockefeller announced the reappointment of Haskell Schwartz of
New York City to the board.
Members received $15,438 a year.
Mrs. Cavanaugh served from
1949 to 1955 as a senior administrative assistant to the board andlater was a consultant to the
Joint Legislative Committee on
Industrial and Labor Conditiong.
Renamed as Visitor
On Port Authorify
ALBANY, March 13. — Morris
T. Johnson of Matavia has been
reappointed to the board of visitors for the State School for the
Blind at Batavia. His term will
end in 1968.
ALBANY, March 13. — Earl D.
Brown of Oswego has been appointed a member of the Port Of
Oswego Authority, filling a vacancy caused by the resignation of
F. Hosmer Culkin.
You don't
iJ
lues-
to be a lawyer
or an accountant
- to use H J.P.
As a prepaid group practice plan, H.I.P. prorides medical servnol cash payments toward doctor bills.
County View
In reviving the issue, Senator
Eiway released a letter from Albany County Welfare Commissioner Marsh W. Breslin. which
stated, in part:
"I am continually concerned
with the problem of recruitment
in the area of case workers, and
the rate of turn-over continues to
be high. The difficulty is increased
by tlie requirement that case
workers must have college degrees
In order to be eligible for appointment."
Mr. Breslin then referred to the
second bill, which created the
classification board, saying:
"It is my recollection the first
bill was permitted to lapse be-
In H.I.P. there is no need to study your policy line by line to see
\yhal is and what is not covered..,. There are no fee schedules and no claim
forms. . . . There is no need to worry over insutHcient cash allowances. . . .
There is no need to "share" additional charges through deductibles and
c4>-insurance. . . . There is no need to accumulate and total up medical bills
in order to prove you have exceeded a deductible. . . . There is no need to
<liscuss your family income with the doctor.... You don't have to watch for
limitations on number of services and on kinds of services (such as specialist care).
IT'S A L W A Y S TEA
TIME
1 Uf
llift ('oHiioiHi'iir. larefiilly Si-leiteJ,
CHOICE
TEAS
So wi'll iipiiiviMiilcd f o r t h e i r
l l U l i m U v u liavor aiiil b o i m u e t .
I'll- I.b I'ei 'j r.l>
l»^«ij«.-rniic
(eyimi
OufiKn IVkor
'i.O.I
I<:IIKIMI llrMkf;ist .... F.M .T
l,:i|iHiliiK Honrliuiis .... 'i.7H
r<irii<>'<:t (li)loil;;
JmMhiB
li.U.**
riiiiifMit (iuii|)o«Mit'r ....
Yi»iiii( llysou
S.'JS
I'liii I' irotl Juiiiiii
I .tt.^
IU«k<-l Kirrd Juiiuii .... 1
Kon .Miiii
'.i.'M
1:411 <ir.'y
At'iliiii
a.tut
Ku^tiiiii (NiHvmi
;M>0
.\I.I. OKIIKKS
«
J .(>.1
'
1 OH
l.l.'l
I.IM
i.i:t
.UM
-MK
l.i:t
l.»;i
And in H.I.P. you also have the satittfactiou of knowiug that each
medical group physician provides only the services for which he has been
speciidly trained.
1.1 A
1*1*11—Clifck or Moiirjr
OrUer
Fronco-Amtrican Import &
Trading Co.
i:t«i I'ront St., NY .5. \V \VU •l-HI.'»7
FKKE BOOKLET by U. S. (ioTeriuiifiit on Social Security. Mali
•uly. Leader, ii7 Duane Street,
New York 7. N. Y.
New
HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN OF GREATER NEW YORK
625 M A D I S O N AVENUE. NEW YORK 22. N. T.
t>Uu 4-1144
CIVIL
Page Fourteen
PETIT PARIS
RESTAURANT
WHERE DINING IS
A DELIGHT
COLD BUFFETS. $2 UP
FULL COURSE DINNERS. $2.50 UP
ACCOMMODATIONS FOR ALL
TYPES OF MEETINGS AND
PARTIES. INCLUDING OUR
COTILLON ROOM. SEATING
200 COMFORTABLY.
LUNCHEON DAILY IN THE
OAK ROOM - 90e UP
12 TO 2:30
— F R E E P A R K I N G IN R E A R
—
1060 MADISON AYE.
ALBANY
Pheii* IV 2.7164 or lY 2 - f l l 1
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
ORd all tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 Broadway
Albany. N. Y.
Mall & Phone Orders Filled
SPECIAL
RATES
for Civil S e r v i c e E m p l o y e e s
The filing deadline for 27 New
York City exams listed below Is
March 21. For the promotional
test to captain (sludge boat) the
filing deadline Is March 15. Ten
of these City tests are open-competitive and 17 are promotional.
All of the exams are listed below
with the test number and the
salary range.
The ten open-competitive tests
follow:
• Assistant hospital administrator, No. 9057, $9,000 to $11,100
a year.
• Electrical engineering darftsman, No. 9832, $5,150 to $6,590 a
year.
• Junior chemical engineer. No.
89.35, $5,150 to $6,590 a year.
• Junior mechanical engineer,
No. 8939, $5,150 to $6,50 a year.
T E P
MODERN
FLAT
CONVENIENT TO STATE OFFICES
HAMILTON near SWAN—2nd FLOOR.
F O I ' B L A R G E ROOMS. P R I V A T E
BATH —
$60.00 P E R MONTH
—
UN H E A T E D — M U S T B E S E E N T O
BE APPRECIATED
CAIX ALBANY H E 8-4611
HOTEL
Wellington
DRIVE.IN QARAQB
AIR CONDITIONINQ • TV
N o parking
problemi of
Albony'i largest
hotel . . . with
A l b o n y ' i only drive-In
Qorage. You'll lil<e the com'
fort a n d convenience, tool
Family rwtes. Cocktail lounge.
^^iJVillinfftojL,
IS CONVENIENT FOR
B U S I N E S S OR PLEASURE
Close to the
glamorous
theatre-andnightlife, shops
find landmarks.
1 3 6 STATE S T R E E T
O r P O S I T i STATE CAPITOL i ^ j j f ^
See /our frUndly travl
SPECIAL WEEKLY
FOR EXTEP^DEU
ogenf.
RATES
STAYS
S & S BUS
SERVICE. INC.
RD 1. BOX 6.
RENSSELAER. N. Y.
Albany HE 4-6727 — HO ^ 5 1
Troy ARsenal 3-0680
N e w T o r k City. S h o p p i n g a n d t l i r a t r e
t o u r s . L e a v i n g T r o y ut 7 : 3 0 A . M . a n d
Albany IMaza a t 8 A.M.
Transportation
f6.6*
Write for 8cheduie
Albany
Tuesday, March 7, 1961
• Railroad clerk, No. 8821, $2.14
to $2.26 an hour.
• Senior accountant. No. 9093,
$6,400 to $8,200 a year.
• Laboratory Aide, No. 9096,
$3,250 to $4,330 a year.
• Paver, No. 9076, $7,220 a
year.
•Supervisor of radio operation.
No. 8081. $6,400 to $8,200 a year.
• School equipment mainter,
No. 8267, $4,000 to $5,080 a year.
Promotion
Below are the 17 promotional
tests:
• Accountant, all City departments, No. 9085, $5,150 to $6,590
a year.
• Assistant architect, all City
departments. No. 8952, $6,400 to
$8,200 a year.
• Assistant civil engineer, all
City departments, No. 8935, $6,400
to $8,200 a year.
• Assistant mechanical engineer, all City departments, No.
8954, $6,400 to $8,200 a year.
• Civil engineering draftsman,
all City departments, No. 8947,
$5,150 to $6,590 a year.
• District foreman (Dept. of
Water Supply, Gas and Electricity), No. 7858, $5,750 to $7,190 a
• Court clerk. City Magistrates'
Courts, No. 9064, $6,750 to $8,550
a year.
• Captain (sludge boat). Department of Public Works, No,
8730, $8,168 a year Closes March
15.
• Supervising personnel examiner (classification), Department
of Personnel, No. 9235, $8,600 to
$10,700 a year.
• Laborer, Dept. of Parks, No.
9200, $4,440 a year.
year.
• Junior chemical engineer
(Fire Dept.), No. 8945, $5,150 to
$6,590 a year.
• Railroad clerk (NYC Transit
Auth,), No. 8843, $2.14 to $2.26 an
hour.
• Senior accountant, all City
departments. No. 9095, $6,400 to
$8,200 a year.
• Supervising photostat operator (Tax and City Register), No.
9133, $4,500 to $5,990 a year.
• Supervisor of radio operations
(Office of Civil Defense & Municipal Defense & Municipal Broadcasting Company), No. 8098, $6,400 to $8,200 a year.
• Personnel examiner, Bd. of
Ed., Department of Labor, Housing Authority, & Department of
Personnel. No. 9090, $6,750 to
$8,550 a year.
• Chief mate. Department of
Public Works, No. 9063, $7,147 a
year.
Metro, Armory
Chapter
Honors 30'Year Retiree
The Metropolitan Armory Chapter of the Civil Service Employees'
Association recently h o n o r e d
Marty Ambrose on his retirement
after more than 30 years of service. Mr. Ambrose was presented
with a gold watch with an inscription from his employees and
friends. Colonel John A. Kelly
made the presentation. Other
oflflcers In attendance were: Colonel Rich, Colonel A. A. Goodrich,
Major Walter Cencora, and Major
Herman Plotnick.
Federal and State employees
present were: Henry C. Nach, A.
Valez, Sgt. A. Berman, R. Drojeskl, Joseph S. Casey, John J.
Bannon, Archie W. Johnson, John
A. Crawford, LeRoy L. Sampson,
Joseph E. Otto, Charles E. Fach,
and Thomas Necomb.
CET YOUR
$35-HIGH-935
SCHOOL
DIPLOMA
INS WEEKS
E a r n y o u r N e w Y o r k Sl.ite T l i t h
School
Eauivalency
Diploma.
Tliih
c o u r s e t a k e s o n l y a l e w we<Ufl hiiil
yoii a r e p r e p a r e d f o r a H i p h S<)io<il
d i p l o m a t h a t Is t b e leiral e t i n i v n k n t
of 4 y e a r s of Hig-h S c h o o l r e u i i i r t d f o r
Civil S e r v i c e e x a m s .
R O B E R T S SCHOOL
517 W. 57th St., New York 19
PLaza 7-0300
Please send me F R E E information.
HSL
Name _
Address
:ity _ _
J»h.
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LEADER
March City Tesfs Close
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Including Railroad Clerk
Open-competitive
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SERVICE
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THE ACE CINEPHONIC SOUND PROJECTOR
WITH MICROPHONE AND SPEAKER
New sound-movie projector lets you hear and see your own sound movies
• . . provides 3-way mode selector for record-and-erose, overlay, adding
sound track to silent films.
Precision-geared
no flicker, no flutter. Pre-focused high-lumen lamp, W
film
transport,
f/1.6 lens. Two
speeds, to show sound or silent films. With separate speaker and extension cable, microphone, 400' reel.
United Camera Exchange
265 M A D I S O N
AYE.
1140 Avenue of the Americas
MU. 2-8574
LE.
2-6822
1122 Avenue of the Americas
YU. 6-4538
C I V I L
Papfp Ten
ritu
ljilr»t
I(» ciMlifUMl
Kfli. '.'o
A<-<-(Miitl.i:il, 'U ci'ilitiMil Krl). 'lH
A<'-(»mi!:iril. irrn. DKini. ||>.|. '> iril i lli'il Kch.
A'tiiiiMHinilIvp iis«i«l!i'it.
iiiom. li^<t, l!t vcilifli-l Ki-I>. 17
Ailrniir<lr':ilivB
t. list i Hoi n of yiifein),
cTI. Ki'l». I?
Air itolliltion iifiipilor. 1 c-rl. Keb. S
AH|tl»»n «i)rl<fr, iirom. liKl I Bfiro of Qi|pcn«(. 15 i-f'rl. Ki'U II
As|»lrtli wd.Ui'i-. oiiini. li"! I Horo of Hirhnionil). S c-r.id Ml M tn >i 7
A-"iMliMt l>.i'l('rioloai«t. tfii. |irom li-l. 7 rprlirtfil K(''>. 17
A^^l^l'int tiiii'li'rioto!ti«t. prom, li-l (Dfpt. of Ho'Im), ;i c-rl. H'cfi 17 .
Aihh' ml Imildiiisr iiiHloii.in. prom, list ( l)i>pt of Fl":illlil, • OimI. MI
hiiililinir fll>l i)ill;ni, p'om. li«l ID'pl. nf \V f.t'-c », (•(••(. ff if"
form,in. prom. li«t iDi'Fit. of Sanilnlioii), •;() cert, p'l'l)
...
A«i'<ti'i' K^rilctii'r. 1 iprtifipil Nov 4
...
.
rftiiliTil, blilsr. mippr.. prom, list (HOIHIiu Aiitli ), l.T ceit. t'clf. 1
A-Mi-<l.>it' re-'. Iiiiililimrs super., prom. li«l,
(NVC) Hoii«infr Antli ) II .prtineil Dpo. 19
Anliltiil MlO''l<m;m, 10 cprliflpd Fi'h. 17
A»»n1inl siiO'M'visor. .M iprtifipd Nov. 'Ml
t wMiiPriiili'tKlfiil of cons'i'ip tioi), .i opi lillpd K-li. 'M
As^i'l uniii-rviHor. prom. Ii<t in<'pt. of Wolfa'Pi, :tli I'p-f. M.IM'i I . .
A«iil ml mioi'r\isor. prom. Ii-t iTrnri"!! .\iilliori ly >,
p • t. ^l.tc'i ;
Ai*'l train d'<»>:il.lipr. prcmi. li.-t iTr.msjt Aniliority), ,'> pert. l''c!>.
Atli-nlmt. ."fi^ pprlifipd O^ t H
Alti»Mdinl fi-malp. .">0 cHrtHipil .Ian .TO
Alli"ndiMl. mal».
p'-rtKipd K°ti.
AlliMiditit I women), 1 cerlified Oct 3
- I Ball^ilion flijpf. prom. l)«t (Fire B pl.), '.Ml pi-rliflpl
irrn ;
BridJ' Sc Tiinn I ma'iilainp-. '.>.=1 cHrlitipd HVl). 1."»
Biidi' .t; TII'IM"! Idli.nr. '.'O fprtiOpd Kcli. (t
Bliildin.; iii Indian, piom li-t il)pp(. f t WpUarei. :! frliricl M ir^'lt
Roildin- (Mn'odi.Tn. piom. Ii«t illnnt. of Piil). Yiir!;-ii, »
Pt:ii-,>it •
Bni m'Mil'ii'i-r, trionp A. prrmi. l>"t iTrpiisil .\iill> irit», .'"i cfrliMi' I M i
Bui 111 tiiit-i iipr. troiip B. p^om. li^t iTr.i" t Anlliori(y), U <.'^rt. M:irci
2SM
,S
T.tltiil.i'nr o p r e - i l o r , 1 perlifled F e b .
T e l e p h o n e o i i e r i l o r , 5.'t i-!Mtili(f. ( J . l
7
r e l c p h o p r t o p e r a t o r ( HoiMitis A u i b u r i t y ) .1 ccrtitl»d S e p t . 14
TicUcl
;en1. 5-< p " r l i f i ' i l N o v . 7
'I'racUm.in. 10 c c r l i l i c i .la'i. '15
'I'r.-iin d i - o a t -he-, p 'otii. list ( T •.nisit .\nlliMr ily >, 5 i r r l i H i M M i r c h
T r a n s p o r i a l i o n i n s p c lor. 7 c . - r t i i i - l M trcli 7
Ti'.ii s,.|.jl)jii.r typ-xl, 'lO c e r ified .Ian. 0
'P.-:.ns ril) M' tvpi t, e n p ' i
111 i v r r i l » . l Fe!). ll»
T r a n s i t p a t r o l m a n . Inst n i i n i b T c e r t i f i e d
raf*'" sulirPi'. 10 pertifipil FpIi, 10 ..
f'.i'd- milicM-'s h('ln»r. I pMiMilpi I'Vl). 10
('•uMiiii. piiim. li-l (Kiip Dei)!.). '^O cPrliflPil M ir li
{'iri»*nl-r. " t cp'lifipil Kph. it
('MitiPr. prorn. li^t I'rv'.Klt A III ho'ity). 5'J pplifli».| I'VIv 7 ..
riMpf n<iiiMil Imicli man.'ispr prom )is|, (T?d. of Kd.). « i-Mf. Mnn'li 1
Cn-il <••«.; ivpi . iiroin. li^t lOppI, of Tralli''). V
I i'<»r|i?l»d Mn<
'»
' « I ....
('ivil
inr ^^rafl^n^an. ri cp-litipd Min-li 1
flvin-r. m-ip. 114 .-plifip.!
1). t
rio.tn"! Mvrimi'n). 1 rprtifipil Sppt. .'tO
n-rU, 10.-. r-liftP,! KPh. It
3 prrl.
BI5
A0!»
10
r:u 5
too
1
45
1 ro
I !!5
1 •..'t
177
r.:!5
r;o
1 5!t
iiii
its
ria
Uniformed
K.
nt tiller,
1
civlitled
Miirch
. D -
in
P'MHily 'ilipri.'l, 10 cprtlTiPd T'Pb. 'Jl
iMiiric't mip rinlPiidPlil. pioio. lisi in-p'. <•' S inil»ti<«» •, 3 le' l. Kcl» H
- E 0
B'irenrm. I
cpiliOpii Krh
Fi«!»iiiaii, hi liv.ay & «pwpr m a i n l . . p r o m list ilV
Fi»iviiiiii c i c v . i l o r mccliaiiic, p r o m . , lisi. i H - ' i s i i i f
5
SO'.Vt
ti
>•,> l- t I, 1 c r l . "
.Viilboii v ) , 7 i f v i f ^ t ili
- H .
Hixii" p c o n o n i i s t . 0 cp lifipd Fcli. 2S
HiUHiriif as-iisl.Mit. Oil cerlified .Ian. 10
H'»H'<iiir I ' . i r c l ' U e r , 10 c e ' l i t i e d ^ p h . 14
H'»iitiir.;' Kiiard, m a l e . l.'iO i-eititicd F e b . 0
Hj>lHin'.r o'licer. 1 certifipil O. t 'JO
I n i o ' c l n r Ma UptJ, w c i ^ l i t s & i i ' p n . i i r p j . no list, new I ••^t pen
IiffC-ii i.;.ilor. Dept. nf F i n a i c p . ;i c p r l i f i r d Fct).
1
I n V ' ^ i l i i . i l o i , 4 cM tified Dec.
Inve-ili'.;alor i W p I f a r e i . 4 ppitifipil De.c, 7
J u n i o r a l t o r n e y . '.J certified Oct 5
.Tiinior b.i .|priolosi>it. I
J u n i o r m e i l i o d s Knalyst.
15'
loif!
S!t:i
'j.
«lo
4 00
401
:iio
IflO 5
pcrlified Kelt
"il
.ertified Fpb.
IS
4
• L -
•outvif «Uurlliaiia repotter, 3c«ri,illea MaroU I
conri
offii-er, .f eertifie.l F e b .
4th Ave.
REALTY
Open 7 Dayf a Weeii
219 So. F.-anl<i;n St..
HEMPSTEAD. N. Y.
IV 5-2477
17 I
I .s .
2 GOOD BUYS
1
t; :! i
i:i I
14 •
rrsi i
470 j
ST. ALBANS
• 2 FAMILY
• DET.^CIIED
• 8 ROOMS
L O V E L Y 2 f a m i l y with sK^am
h e a t and g a r a g e , fmLshed b a s e m e n t . High C m o r ' g a g e .
$20,200
50
IS
FLORAL PARK. SO.
SOLID BRICK, ranch. 3 b2<J
rooms, la'-ge p'ot. finished basement and garage.
N,Y,L Needs Statisticians
N e w York City's test for a s sistant
statistician
will
close
M a r c h 30, T i i e s e .jobs pay b e t w e e n
54,2:0 a n d $5,330 a y e a r .
e n c s in t h i s field for e d u c a t i o n
o n a y e a r f o r y e a r basis. T h e s e i
m i n i m u m r e q u i r e m e n t s m u s t be !
m e t by t h e t i m e of a p p o i n t m e n t , i
E m p l o y e e s in t h e title of a s - ,
Candidates for this exam should
h a v e a BA w i t h at least 12 c r e d i t s s i s t a n t s t a t i s t i c i a h are a c c o r d e d i
in m a t h e m a t i c s a n d , or s t a t i s t i c s . p r o m o t i o n a l o p p o r t u n i t i e s t o t h e i
C a n d i d a t e s c a n s u b s t i t u t e e x p e r i - title of s t a t i s t i c i a n w i t h a s a l a r y
r a n g e of $5,150 o $8,590 a y e a r .
l^nondaga Reports
On CSEA Meeting
1075
.
4lh Ave. Reiilly proudly e.tlend® %
i%
i
opportunity to those who desire (lift
better home, in one of Nass.iii'j Hoeil
residential areas. 'I'his 7-rooni lionin
contains four spacious b-droonis. cxtrii
large livinir ro im, combined with »
formal sizp<l dIninK' room. In addition,
a ipwl.v decorated kitiheii. tlio t.vpe
found in Ihe most expensive liomen,
with more than siifHiient closen ;ni(i
cabinpi-. .^n oversized f.ir.i^e, with
an enclosed palio. .Many exir.m, .such
as storms, screens, Venetian blind»,
wall-to-wall cariiptine, sas ratise, rcfrlRerator. We as-iire you—that it i.s well
worth .voiir time t.i fi'n th s beiiitifiil
house. Picas" visit our ottlcp jmnipdi'
alcly, or i'hH us Xor an appointnieiit.
;;!
10' :
! S
T h e f o l l o w i n g m e m b e r s of t h e
O n o n d a s a c h a p t e r of t h e Civil
10
IS
n' i> 5Service E m p l o y e e s A s s o c i a t i o n a t .(-o
t e n d e d t h e a n n u a l c o n v e n t i o n of
HP I Mtn h S
ai-: t h e S t a t e Civil S e r v i c e E m p l o y e e s
M
M . < i n ' p i n n c p m a n . 5 7 cprllfied J a n
I'i
....
A s s o c i a t i o n r e c e n t l y in A l b a n y :
M . l i n l a i i i ' r m.in. 0;i c e r u f i e d J a n . TJ
r'ts
li.'
iS L e o n a Appel, Mrs. J e a n W i c k h a m ,
M linliliiPi' s h e l p e r . ."17 c e r l i p e d Dcc. 14 . .
""II
M;iiiU liiiiM'^ h " l p c r . R i o u p A. 'J'i certified J 'O. '!
M iinl iin r's liclocr, t - o i i p B, 4.", c c r i i n p l Fc
11
1 10Mrs. Hilda Y o u n g , Robert Clift,
M tinl.iin MS Iclnci', c r o i i n T). 14 r e r l i n c d J , i n .
::
15 D r v e R o s c r s , a n d A r t h u r D a r r o w .
M <iiitiiiiPr .s h e l n e r , trroup K. p i e f p i r e i l li-t. S
!•'-b X . . . .
'!(!; S e v e r a l m e m b e r s of t h e O n o n M iinl.»in(M s iiplppr. riroup fS (T-ansit Aiilhnrily) 20 ceilid'il S-pt. <»
I!"' d a g a c h a p t e r a t t e n d e d a n d e n Mii"l'iri'i
'I'Mi. i n s . f r t ' l i e d . '>ct. ;.'5
M >nn.» oil -r. 7 c e r ' i l i e d Fpb. 17
5 5
M . n l c r plii'iibi'i". '.'lilt I'alled l o t c . l ,I;)n. '.'S
joyed the 2 l t h annual
dinner
M i l ' . ori-M li<t i D c p i . of M a r i n e A A v i a t i o n ) , .1 c - r t F e b
It
,,
n d a n c e of t h e S y r a c u s e C h a p t e r of
M e i t Ciiilcr.
(P-tiMpd M,?rch 7
05
Jl.«th ..I- .-nl' -il. 1.-, certified F e b '.'7
.'.'.,
IH t h e S t a t e Civil S e r v i c e E m p l o y e e s
> t M ' i " n r e r , Iiiale. 11!" ccrlitipd Kh1i. it
','....,',','.
80!I
>1'.rtiii -v c.M'•l.-ilc r. 1 c 'l iiMed ? l a r c h 7
o;i A s s o c i a t i o n at t h e O n o n d a g a H o t e l
H t t o r c i in, .'l.-l c - r l i n p . l >I.ircli 1
1 ..'..'.".".!
205 last m o n t h .
M o t o r i n III. pi'om. h^t l.NV(J Tr.'ins, .Aiilh.) 1 i .5 certilipil ,lan 0
1
75
i l o r xchiclp il s p . i i c l i c r . i n o m . li-t i Bklyii I l o i o P r . - s . ) , f c e r l . F e b . -'i
4
l l i t M i ' v e h i c l e o p e r a t o r , .><1 c c r l i l i c d M a r 'i 0
i5!'5 J a c k B a c h m a n , p r e s i d e n t of our
Chapter
is
convalescing
from
. O
m i n o r s u r g e r y . Mrs. D o r i s R y a n ,
O O l o a u i d i a n c e o p e r a l o r . 10 p-'rlified Fr
soiin
Oder,
5"> ccrlilipd
Nov.
30
H e a l t h D e p a r t m e n t , is r e c u p e r a t ing a f t e r a h e a r t a t t a c k .
Ptikiii;? metpr attendant, women, !:7 cerlified Fi'b 1
'!ft5 Mrs, Ella R , C u m m i n g s , B u r e a u
JV-ilri.liM.iti, 1.1 certified Feb '.'
3S-7
I'arl; Ciiicnian, )irc.iii. list i O pt. of I'aiUsl. •;() ccrtiti.Vl KdV 7
55 of W a t e r , City of S y r a c u s e , retired
P.iiUiti.: meter coll.cmr 7S ceiiificd. Od. is
!!'"!!'
tO:tS F e b r u a r y 1st. S h e w a s a c h a r t e r
Pilol, proic. ll>t iFiiP netit.i. (i ccriifpMl March i
.
'
M
Plister-i, :!(> c"rlilied .Ian '.'7
1 1 5 m e m b e r of t h e C.S.E.A. A party
Polii'.'\vom;in, 0 cilifipl J a n . 1 ,'t
......''....'.'.'.'..'.
177
Power nnintainpr, ciopu B prori li<t ('I'lansil AlithoiilvV 5 ceil M uch 1
7!l w a s g i v e n in h e r h o n o r at t h e
J'robili.in ofliier, PI ceiificd Manli 7
!Il!!)
I'lolniion oOlcpr, 'H .eriifled Nov
,,",,!,',!!!!.!',
1 fi Y a t e s H o t e l .
Pnibjlion ollicer. 5 cerlified D c '?;t ..!!'.!'.'. i , 1 i , , . ' ' ,
H e n r y C. Appel retired D e c e m S'lvcr, nirde
1 .prlified Fell, (i
| i[|
|
305.5
Public hcalfh ass i. Iill . prlilipd Jan
...'..'.'.'.".'.'..".".'''.'
ber 1, 1960 a f t e r 32 y e a r s of s e r v I'iibli.> hc.illh nurse, t-mip '.>, s cerlified Feb."'•> | ' ' ' ] ]
10 ice in t h e B o a r d of E d u c a t i o n .
I'libli," h.Mllh nurse. Kiiiup ,'t. 1 .'l cerliOpd M.iivh'l ! ! ! ! ! ! ' , ' "
IS
riiblii- h'Mlil, niiri.e. croup 5, 1 cerlified Feb. 'M '. '. '. '. '. ", ^ ] " 1 , , y . , ' .
5 M a i n t e n a n c e D e p a r t m e n t . Mr. A p Uailmid Cl>rl;, ;f.>(| cerlififd F'b 10
200 0
Raili.Mi clerk, prom, list iNVr Ti.ins. Aulh.). ;> i'ccVl i'llivl" jVn!'5 '.''" '
;»s ( pel w a s p r e s e n t e d w i t h a g i f t u p o n
Kiilroi.l poller, I ;M cerlified Feb 10
1(55
his retirement.
H.iminci, prom, li-i 1 Bronx 1. 4 cpniflcd Feb." 10 , ' . . , ' , . . . ' ,
4
Ite.il cHl.ilc inaiiHK r, 4 • rijfif.i Kcb. 'J4 . . . , , ' , . . . " . ' , ' . '
31 C o - w o r k e r s a n d f r i e n d s h o n o r e d
Ki'.'r.Mtioii leader. 11 rf.pufipil Kcb. '.'li .'.
17
G e o r g e S c h o b e r l e i n o n h i s retireKecrcalioii leader, k oiip
called to I'st Jan. SH
m e n t a t a l u n c h e o n at B o b Casey's
- s S i n l l . i f i o n m a n . 100 eernfled F e b ?
Restaurant, George h a s been an
S e i t o n . i l p a r U m a n , 1 l e r t i f l e d J u l y I'i !
HHt)
Sern'iiil, 150 certified. Oc|
«0S e m p l o y e e of O n o n d a g a C o u n t y for
Seirf.Miil, prom. liNt l I ' D ) . l(i,^ cert 1 He'd I.in'' ft
iir-i m a n y years. H i s last 15 y e a r s h a v e
S.-ni.M buddinr ui-todian, prom lift 1 Public Work's i." l" iv.'i" Jl'Vi'ch •
0
SeiiMc buddiii'.' ciisiodiHii. U-eriilie.1 March ••
Senior c l e i k , '.".' c r i i t i e i l N;iv. ','.•>
ai;.-> been in S u p r e m e Court, s e r v i n g a s
Senior ..l.'rk, prom, litt 1 Hd. of Kd.), l.V cl-i't. "Feb/l"
under Hon. W m . E,
100 A t t e n d e n t
Sem.ir cl,.iU, Ken. prom. liKt, 'i4 cert. Feb. "ID .
47!l
SiHMi viiin* clerk, gen. prom, list, •.'() .ertilicd Feii' l'« '
McClusky and Hon. Donald P.
0
0
S..11101 clcrk, ecu. prom liKt, males. 17 ccriilled Feb m
1>0
o:t i G o r m a n . He h a s also b e e n t r e a s Sent . ' clerk, prom, list 1 Dept. of Welfare), '>>J certified Jim
26.S
iieijior cuuipuler prinraninii i-. i cerlified Feb t)
5 urer a n d a c t i v e m e m b e r of t h e
»eui.jr^d.ntiily sheriff, prom, lift (Cily Sheriff Hall of K e c o i d , l i
t.
local Court R i d e s A s s o c i a t i o n . W e
81
5
Bmti'M- electrical engiiu.el-• 'p'r'on'.." 'li'«'l' '(Ti iniit' Aii'ihl,,'i't/i'.'i ccr't"'M ircb '•'•
:< all e x t e n d
our best w i s h e s f o r a
ir el.-ctrieal n»p«clor, prom
(l)epl. .,f I'ublic Woriii^), ;t ceil Feb U
4
w«ch,u.ic,il einjine.r, prom. li,t I Coin roller s 0,Mc«), ;; cerl Much I
long a n d a c t i v e r e t i r e m e n t to b o t h
Trn*'*',"
1"" '""I'I
Heal
i|
F-b
ai
l i i b n r e r , 10 c e r l i l e d Feb. R
I. i b n r M , r.ro i.r. '.'.S cerlified J a n . 10
I.,tb'ii.M', I'iciiiiiond. 10 oM'iitiPil J : n,
Libor.M', M a n ' i a t l n n .
cpiiifin,) j.!,,
I. tlliiilry WO'I 1-, 1 ciMl'l'pd. O. t 'Mi
I . i e u l c n m l , p r o m , list ( F i l e D e p t . ) . ,'10
This lovrly linine is priced risht
for quicl( sale, at only $19,990
I
I
W a t c h m a n , m i l e , 1 1 7 eerlitied F b. 0
W a t e r pliiit o p c r . i l o r , I c c r t i H - d . I n t . ;{0
W o r k m a n , p r o m , list ( D e p t . of S t n i l ilirtii i , 5 certitVsl F e b .
T>»'nilv i l r': ofilialrii t. orom li-t (^t nnii-n.il rimrlt, .t P m I. H irpi.
Fd^^\f^lo^ o'l'-ralor, 1 pprtifipil Feb. 3
7 ROOM H O U S E . . .
4 - B e d r o o n i s — 60x123
!il
I i
1 !
I j
II 5
15
(I 'ic'M. malp. .'1 I'PrtifiPd KPI>. •!7
""i 'pr. u f i n i p n . S i-p'llfied
4
Cimlodi in p isinppr. 7:! cprlinpcl iVb
REAL ESTATE
fi.!4
::.-.(i I
T.vpis!, g r o i i o 1. 5 cei-til'^1 M a r c l i 7
Ty|i!-it. groii'i '!. 4 i-erll1;>d 'M^irch 7
Vypi.'it, x i o i i p .'t, H certirted M a r c h 7
("(•Hdiicldr. « 'ifa..e Ihip iippiator. i:!7 i-crtifli'd .Inn.
('iri't'Lii,iT\
(•'* r'''lii»fi
70
205
5;to
0
Typewriter i>niiil liifr, *: crTlirtcl Much 'J
Tiirns'll
( I tU of d t l r i r i , pioMt. list I Mniiicipal r o n r l ) . ."t pTtiOfl Mi'c'i 7
('l 'rl< iivflii i' of I'lp prp«'ilpnt ) '!.'! I'crlifind Nov 4
ri-rk. M'|p<-tivp pert nf male* only) 17 •••rtifipH Ah» ?(»
| -M •. '.'O I ' c i i i f l p l H>l>. s
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ithnrlliiind r e p o r t e r , p r o m , list i B d . of K d . ) , m p e r t . Pel>. 2
u l i o r l l i a n d r e p o r t e ' . icen. p r o m . h-»t, 10 i r r l . Ki'l>, tj
H l p n o i r a p l i e r , in-oni. list ( M n y o r n ()llli<« of f ' l v i l r ) f f i ' n s e ) , 1 c e t t . I""i'l>.
nliMioxraplicr, SiMi, p r o m , list, 15 <rrti!lp.l Kelt.
Klir)rtli!ind re!>orler. 1 5 p e r l i d e d Kel». li(
s t a l i o n a i y e n j i n - e r , ;(rnm,
( n i ' p f . of MoHtiital),
c e r t . BV1>. 7 .
»teno. p r o m . (PrT»i>nn«l). 1"! r ^ r l l f l e d Jul.? 1 0
» l e n o , p m n i . ( W a t e r Siippl.*, etc.).
l."! c e r t i f i e d .(iily 2 0
u t e n o i r r a p l t e r . 4 i i - r t i f l e l Nov
II
t i v h n l i l o r o i i e r a t o r ( I B M ) . II'J Perlifled Keti.
I
t a b u l a i o r o i e r ^ l t o r , g e n . p r o m . li<l. 10 i-ertidPti Kelt.
t a b n i a t i i r o o e r i l o r , p r o m , li-tt (Fl iiminy . ^ n t l i o r i t y ) . ;! pert
t a b i i l a ' o r o p . ' r a ! f ) r , t>ron» Tst
i ("fcnpi rolU'r O t f l c e ) , .1 c e r t . Ki't>.
n l . p r o m , li^l l l ' o l i r s (>p|it.), !•<• rc>rlil1(>il F e b . 10
Sewa'-'e t r . ' a l m e n t w o r U c r , '!'.) c ' l tilled J iti, 1 .S
Ship rarppnler,
eerlifli'd .I.in. 1 !1
• pert i tied F e b . »
S o . ' l i l n i V f * t i » a l o r , i f r o n p 1, H : ( n ' r l i l i - l
Social i n v p n t i s a l o r , r r o i i p 2 , '! c e r t . F e b . 'J7
Social i n v e s t i ^ . i t o r , (froiip 4 , 1 c e r l i f i e d F e b . ' i r
Social investiif i t o r , i f r m t p 0 . 1 ( " r l i f i e d Fcti.
r
S o c i i l invt>nlis d o r , c r o u p 7 , .'t certified F e b . 'IT
S o i i a l invi">li','.ilf)r, * r o n p 9, i s certiOed Kcb.
S p e c i a l inJijPctor. !» r p r l i l l c d .t.in. ;I7
Sp •<•1,11 ollicer,
certilled F e b . 0
Social i n v c . s t i . ' a l o r , irroilp !». 4.S certiflpil .I.in. !>
S t a l i o n a r y f i r p m a i i , 5 c e r t i f i e d .I:in. I.'!
S t a t i o n a r y t i i e m a n , old liJl l O t ci-rliCicd F)-c. r ;
Stalion.-iry tir^Moan. n " w list, 1 0 0 ccrtiflcrl P e c . 1'J
Stpiiouraplip , (rriiiiii I'l.S, 1 c e r l . F e b . 10
S l p n o s r . i p ' i p r , x r o i i n S I . 1 cerliM-d F e b . 10
StPiio ;r,:plip;', irroiri I ' M . 1 cr^rlified F e b . 10
S t p n o s r a t j l i e r . jfroiip .'tl, 1 cerlifleil F e b . 10
St no'.'raplier, liroiip ;!S, 1 c e r l i f i e d F e b . 10
S l e n o T r a p l i c r . kihiui .'»•;. 1 c e r t i t i ' d F e b . I r>
S i i p c i - ' n t c n r l c i t of crin-<t., n r o m . li^l I Hon^ioi; \ i i ( b o - i t y ) , 1 <.>ert. Keb. 1 ">
SiipPiiiiteiident of ci)n.!lrlictlon.
c e r l i n - d T f ^ r c b ;t
S i i p e r v i - s i n j b o i s i n r K r o t i n d s m i n . rt i - e r t i t \ » | ?l.ircli
Siipprvi.Hin'.' p r o b a t i o n olIic!>i-, p : o m . lilt ( C i l y . ' t i t . r « u r l « ) , ^ c e r t . KcU. "
S u p e r v i s i n g .ilPiiorraplier p o m . li'it ( n . ' o t . of P u t t . W i i r k » ) ,
c e r t . F e b . 17
Siipi'rvi-iinii- Ml'vi ' T r a p l i c r , s e n . p i o m . list '!7 c e r l . .f.in 'iO
'
Siioer-visiiiT l.abiilator o ! ) e r a t o r ( I B M ) , pr.iin. lisi (Hd. (if K r t . l . .1 c e r t . ''",•!>. •'
Siipei'V s i ' i ? I n b i ' l i t o r fi i e i a t o r ( I B * t l , u r i t m . li<t CI'.st I > e p t . ) . 1 c ' r l . F. b.
' i n -v H n ' t.-i'mliliir o i t e r a l o r ( I B M ) , g - n . pr»tm. li«l. 17 c e r t . F e b . ','7
S u r f a c e line o p e i a l o r
- T -
-c -
('iiniiiiiH>iiry m.in,i!;pr. i> p"rlifif'l K "'7
CotKliicIo:, MO i-prliTiPil .Nov I ti
Tuesday, :\TarcIi I I. 1961
I. R A H R R
Senior
,'^pnior
Seinor
Senior
.Hpnior
Senior
Senior
Senior
Senior
Senior
Senior
Senior
Senior
I'rogrrM
Ac»H>inl flcrk, 15 rprflfiptl Ian fl
A"-i»iii|>mitt.
S E R V i r E
Mr, and Mrs. Schobeileia.
Written Tesi
T h e w r i t t e n t e s t is e x p e c t e d t o
be h e l d -April 15. T h e test will
c o n s i s t of o b j e c t i v e t y p e q u e s t i o n s
designed to evaluate the candidate's k n o w l e d g e of m a t h e m a t i c s
a n d s t a t i s t i c s . T h e test m a y i n clude problems o n such subjects
as a l g e b r a , m a t h e m a t i c a l r e a s o n ing. probability, a n a l y t i c g e o m e try, s t a t i s t i c s , g r a p h i c a n d t a b u l a r
r e p r e s e n t a t i o n a n d r e l a t e d topics.
All c a n d i d a t e s w h o file a p p l i c a t i o n will be s u m m o n e d f o r t h e
w r i t t e n t e s t . A p p l i c a t i o n s will n o t
be r e v i e w e d for m i n i m u m r e q u i r e ments unless the candidate has
passed the written test.
U n t i l M a r c h 30. a p p l i c a t i o n s c a n
be o b t a i n e d at t h e A p p l i c a t i o n s
S e c t i o n of t h e D e p a r t m e n t
of
P e r s o n n e l . 98 D u a n e St., N e w York
7, N. Y . A p p l i c a t i o n s will be
m a i l e d p r o v i d e d t h e request is a c companied by a stamped, s e l f addressed envelope. Mail requests
for applications should reach the
A p p l i c a t i o n s S e c t i o n at least five
d a y s b e f o r e t h e c l o s i n g d a t e of
t h e test.
LAKEWOOD. N. J.
NF.ATl.Y luiiiiiheil, 4 nioiu l.if cabin.
oni> ai-n-. healeil. ^tai ;uil el-ciric included. $0,500. 1(1 New Yoric Cill Wl.
:J-5.»55 or Foxcroft J-(iS?7 111 New
Jerse.v,
Bronx
Unfurnished A p h
NKW—1 rm aikt« (Integ) (J.ir. Hl.lOOO mo
nr all cunveiiieniv.-t. .'lO':-; (iiiiilli'-r .Kv.
Kiuii Hill UJ Bun—N13 to l.Mt «lup).
TU
Bronx
voir QUAMFY — $1,950 dn. 1 F.'.m
bricU • 4 tMlrn\>i. 2 batlM. tin plivrm,
g,ii. KlNtjJ D.WII) HOMIS. ( asl.'l Hill
Av, il l.acombe, Ui, TA, :ni051.
^FbT~SALE
JAMAir.\ PAKK. l.F.t.AI, J FVMH.Y, IIIO'rA( HF.U. A (JOOn MONKY W VKI'i: ( \N
l!SK FUK 3 FAMU.lKSi. AUUAN(JK 11 I.
MoinCAUK.
HKAIIV
J\ » iti|,-|t»
l.eFever FalU Riiiiemlale. 4 room biioi.ilow.
cell.ir, {iilly fuiiii.^ind, ini|ivti, be^•l
view ill Town, ^ii.SUO.
iuliu UulUy iiwiit«r. Kiuteiidalo, N T.,
Xul UL. » U 7 i l
$19,000
Offc«r ) & 2 Family
HAZEL
Hones
B. G R A Y
U8-33 LIBERTY AVE.
JAMAXA
A X 1-5858 - 9
INTEGRATED
AMITYVILLE
(and nearby
SUFFOLK)
G.L's
Bring
DISCHARGE
$9,990 to $15,990
"THESE H O M E S
MUST G O THIS
WEEK-END"
Come ready to
do business
MY 1-8082
TU 4-8210
(CALL COLLECT)
1197 Sunrise H ' w y
Copiague
(Jutt off Amilyvillo'i
Farmers Harlietl
Farms - Ulster County
l.urKe i.i.'.t 111 Culliiliy l'ui|).
AcieaKM ik Hld^, lot* (roiii
i.uvku, kUauiiakeu, M.Y.
Tuesday, March 14, 1961
CIVIL
' REAL
HOMES
S E R V I C E
LEADER
Page Eleven
E S T A T E VALIJES
CALL
BE 3-6010
LONG ISLAND
LONG ISLAND
LONG ISLAND
THE ADVERTISERS IN THIS S E C T I O N HAVE ALL PLEDGED TO THE SHARKEY-BROWN LAW O N H O U S I N G
4
I
INTEGRATED
SOLID
INTEGRATED
OFFICES READY TO
SERVE YOU!
Call For Appointmenf
e i APPROVED
EXCLUSIVE
So.Oz. Pk.
$1,000 Dn.
1 Family
V/i Rooms
BRICK a n d i t o n e C a p e C o d ,
d e t a c h e d on oversized plot. 5
tremendoHf
r o o m s and
t i l e d DETACHED, full b o t e m e n t , 2 c a r
g a r a g e , 40x100. O w n e r ' s s a c r i b a t h , plHs expansion a t t i c f o r
f i c e a t $16,000.
3 m o r e r o o m s . Full p r i c e only
HURRY!
SI 5,490.
BUY or RENT
2 FAMILY — VACANT—HOLLIS
8 YEAR OLD, solid brick, 2 family house, all modern,
including garage, automatic heat, near schools, shopping,
transportation and many extras. GET HERE FIRST. A REAL
BUY.
SOLID
BRICK
2 FAMILY
135-19 ROCKAWAY BLVD.
HEMPSTEAD
SO. OZONE PARK
lY 9-5800
JA 9-4400
R A N C H
$590 CASH
JAMAICA
$10,500
51/2 ROOMS, 3V2 rooms, 2 car garage, refrigerator, Hollywood
bath, oil heated, storms and screens. Very low price of $16,000.
No Cash Gl
DETACHED, 7 l a r g e r o o m s a n d
CHARMING, 3 b e d r o o m h o m e tiled b a t h , f e a t u r e s 3 m a s t e r
f e a t u r e s m o d e r n b o t h and kitch- b e d r o o m s , full b a s e m e n t , oil
en, c o m f o r t a b l e living r o o m , h e a t , c e n t r a l l y l o c a t e d , e x t r a s
included. — H u r r y !
b a s e m e n t , finished a t t i c , l a r g e
BRING SMALL DEPOSIT
c o r n e r p l o t . All e x t r a s included.
SPECIAL DEAL FOR Gl
277 NASSAU ROAD
ROOSEVELT
CALL FOR APPT.
0p«n 7 days a w r r k
Till K P . M .
JEMCOL
170-03 Hillside Ave.,
Jamaica, L. I.
fith A « t h Ave. Bubyajr t o P a m o n t
B l v d . M'e a r e r i g h t uutRide K u b w a y .
REALTY
N p i t d o o r t o Sears-Ko<'BD<k,
InU. " E " o r " F " t r a i n t o
16U Bt. 8 t a .
- : F R E E r A R K I X f i i.
AX 1-5262
159-12 HILLSIDE AVE.
JAMAICA
MA 3-3800
BRICK
JA 3-3377
INTEGRATED
BETTER REALTY
ALL 4 OFFICES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
FROM ? : 3 0 A.M. TO 1:30 P.M.
3
HEMPSTEAD
& VICINITY
CONVENIENT
OFFICES AT
YOUR SERVICE
STOP PAYING RENT!
•HOMES T O FIT Y O U R P O C K E T '
•
BAISLEY PARK
•
•
•
•
>
\
$9,200
NO CASH Gl
•
•
GOOD FOR
PROFESSIONAL
A BEAUTIFUL
HOUSE
CAPE, 7 rooms, 4 b e d r o o m , full
b a s e m e n f , oil h e a t , c o r n e r plot,
110x125, a t t r a c t i v e a r e a , s a c r i .
fice. Must sell. W o n ' t
last.
HEMPSTEAD. $500 on c o n t r a c t .
6 ROOMS ond p o r c h ,
aHic
s p o c e , g o r o g e , 40x150 plot, full
b a s e m e n t , oil h e o t . wall-to-wall,
p o l i o , A1
condition.
HEMPSTEAD vicinity S500 on contract.
INTEGRATED
GOOD AREA
NEAR EVERYTHING
V A APPRAISED
• • • • 5 ROOMS
• • • • GAS H E A T
• • • •
T FAMILY, 6 rooms, 2 c a r gor a g e , 50x100 plot, a t t i c s p a c e ,
full b a s e m e n t , snack b a r , oil
h e a t , w a l l - t o - w a l l . A g o o d buy!
FREEPORT. $500 on c o n t r a c t .
• . . • GARAGE
. . . .
Kur.L HASEMENT
PER MONTH PAYS MORTGAGE
ASK F O K U-!J«»
* * Plus Many Other Homes From $9,000 & Up
E-s-m
^
^
j
^
A
143-01 HILLSIDE AVE.
JAMAICA
A X 7-7900 ^
BEAUTIFUL 8 R O O M
DREAM HOUSE —2 Full
Baths—Large 50x125 Plot.
Situated
in
most
desireuble
yret>oi't-Henipgt('ud
area,
this
•pai'ioiis h o m e , afford* ample
r o o m Xop Ki'acious livinert 7 V j
U u u m s , 'i l)ath8, lai'iiro k i t c h e n .
In u l t r a m o d e r n s t y l e 1 W i t h
a d d i l i o n u l cunneclinir b r e n k f u B t
nook, with convenient full width
front
pori'h 1 B e a u t i f u l
rear
j i a t i o f F o r m a l d i n i n g r o o m ! Oil
i l c a t i n i ; U n i t I L o a d i of vVtras,
include,
aluminum
screen
&
storm
windows, slorm
doorn,
lovely
refrigerator I
Spacious
roomy 2 car parage. Gracious
^Vall t o W a l l c a r p e t i n g 1 UadiRtor coveiB. M a n y o t h e r s . If
y o u ' r e f o r t u n a t e to contact u s
h e r o in t i m e . T h i s is tiie b u y of
t h e year I T h e blessed showplace
oil t h e s t r e e t w i t h a g e n u i n e
"blue stone" driveway. And for
t h e m a n w h o w a n t s to expand,
o r a M o t h e r & D a u g h t e r set u p ,
• <>r o n e a l r e a d y " a r r i v e d " — t h i s
h o m e i s ideal, w i t h 6 b e a u f i f u l
bi'droonis, including an exquisite
b a b y ' s o w n n u r s e r y . Specially
l o w p r i c e d , retluced " w a y - d o w n "
l o r l u i n i e d i a t e «ale f Only $ 1 7 , 600. Lowest tlowa
paynienll
Cull DUW 1
4th Ave.
REALTY
O p e n 7 Days a W e e k
219 So. Franklin St.,
HEMPSTIAD. L. I.
IV 1.2477
A. A.
WALK TO
EVERYTHING
6 ROOMS ond poch. full b a s e ,
ment, oil h e o t , 50x150 plot, low
fox, n e a r church ond schools.
Must s e c . ROOSEVELT $500 on
controct.
We have a selection of some of the finest homes in Hempstead
and vicinity in 1 and 2 family. Ranches. Cape Cods, Colonials
from $.3.'>0 up.
$10 Deposit
Holds Any
House
FHA or e i
A.
LIST REALTY CORP.
INTEGRATED
OPEN 7 D.WS A WEEK
BRONX TKfiUWAY
VILLAGE
A BIVONA BUY
IS A BETTER BUY
14 SOUTH FRANKLIN STREET
HEMPSTEAD. L. I.
IV 9-8814 - 8815
•
•
135-30 ROCKAWAY BLVD.. SO. OZONE PARK
J A 9-51000
160-13 HILLSIDE AVE.. J A M A I C A
OL 7-3838
01
2 CAR GARAGE
BASEMENT
Gl 30 Yr. Mtge.
Low Down Payment
Cheaper Than Rent
MODEL!
3022 GUNTHER AVE.
OFF ADEE AVE., BX.
O p e n e v e r y d o y including
Sat.-Sun., Noon t o Dutk
D l K t BV C A K i E A S T O N G I N H I L L Kl). XII A K N O W A V E .
( I UI.OtK I'AST K A s x r u K s r .
KR
KD.
TKAFHO
LIGHT)
l . K F T AX A K N O W A V E . (I'OISX
O F I I C E ) TO GUNXHEK AVE.,
l.KKT
ON
GINXUEU
TO
MOUBL. UT KllBWAVt
IXH
A V E . DYKE AVE. L I N E TO
g i ; n h i l l ud., m a l k
TO AUKE
AUCB
TO
MODEL.
hicut
AVE., L E F T
ON
GlNTULtt
AND
19.
Ptnlnsula
Boulevard
7-1034
BRICK
OZONE
SO.
NO CLOSING FEES
PARK
114.500
$15,990
$550
« ROOMS, Including l a r g * living
r o o m , full dining r o o m , m o d e r n
kitchen, H o l l y w o o d
b a t h , full
b a s e m e n t , new oil unit, g a r a g e .
Tall* o v e r p r e s e n t m o r t g a g e .
4th Ave.
REALTY
Open 7 Days a Week
219 So. Franklin St..
HEMPSTEAD, N. Y.
IV 5-2477
DKSIR.-VBT.K c o r n e r l o t . ^(itixl 5 0 x 3 3 7 a t
N o r d P a r k , IJ.I., r e a s o n a b l e ,
adjaMnt
t o G o r d o n H e i g h t s . J ' a v e d r o a t i t . HO.
tJ-8.'JTl. E e v n i n g s , w e e k e n d s .
Long Island Home
H E M P S T E A D . 3 bedroom r a i u h ; l a k e cv«r
G.T. m o r t g a g e ; n o c r e d i t c h u k o r flcislng
c o s t s ; KOxlOO p l o t , il-car g a r a g e . S^l.OdO
d o w n . S a c r i f i c e sale. A g e n t
IV 8 6 3 3 7
Brooklyn
INTEGRATED
SOLID
I n h e a u t i u f l a r e a , nentlpU s n u g l y c n
a porg'eous lanclscapeil eettingr. •with
c'liliivated s h r u b b e r y o n a (lulet-looking
spiicioiis l a w n . T h i s lovely
room
h o m e b o a s i s 3 b e d r o o m s , l a r g o living
r o o m , s p a c i o u s f o r m a l Oining r o o m ,
l a b u l o u s k i t c h e n w i t h nil m o d e r n wojid
cabinets, a sc|)arat« b r e a k f a s t nook,
& all of t h e n e w e r c o n v e n i e n c e s f o u n d
in only t h e m o s t m o d e r n h o m e s . In
a d d i t i o n , t h e r e is a screened e n c l o s e d
s u n p o r c h , ( f o r w a r m s u m m e r eveiiiiif-'s) a n e x t r a , l a r g e t w o - c a r g a r a g e ,
& many other extras. Convenient to
shopping", t r a n s p o i t a t i o n , «choolH, t h i h
finp lionie is offered f o r (luick s a l e , a t
$15,4!l(). F H A $ 0 4 0 C a s h . D o n ' t d e l a y .
Call u s n o w .
Land For Sale
2 FAMILY BRICK
Directions: T a k e Southern State P a r k w a y Exit
t h e briclg:e t o S o u t h F r a n k l i n S t r e e t .
uuder
A DE LUXE COLONIAL
ON A LARGE PLOT
DOWN
COLONIAL, d c t o c h e d
rooms,
2 cor g o r e g e , excellent location,
convenient t o thopping, schools
ond t r o n t p o r t o t i o n . $85.98 m o n t h ,
ly m o r t g o g * p a y m e n t s .
COTE
118-09 SUTPHIN ILVD.. JAMAICA
J A 9-5003
FURNISHED APTS.
57 Herkimer Street, between Bedford & Nostrand Ave., beautifully
furnished one and two room apts.
kitchenette, gas, electric free.
Elevator. Near 8th Ave. Bubway.
Adults. Se€n dally.
BIVEUSIDB
DKIVB.
IH
*
SVfc
pnvBU
spartmenU. interracial. rumiabMl Tfi*
falw 7-4115
Upftato
UNTY — N(
SULLIVAN COUNl'Y — New York State.
Dairy-Poultry f a r m t , taverns, Bcartlln*
H o u s e s . H o t e l a , D w e l l i n g s . HuntluK
*
Buildinf A o r e a f e . Ttie Tenelcr
Inc., Jefltraouvllle, K t w
Ycik.
C I V I L
Adirondack
Gets First
i,r.«AT. NOTirr
n \ i u i v . ' 1U»S\ [ . t l D V K i H . MAV S N Y D K R .
IVf|M,l<
ADMINISTHA'IOR
OK
THK
(•((IINTV 0|.- NKW YOKK A N D TO T)IK
(iTHCr.
HKIK'<.
DISTRtBlTKKS
AND
NKKT OI'- KIN WHO AND WHOrsK NAMKS
AND I'LVCKS (»K KKSIDF.NCK AUK I NKNKWN AND C A N N O T AKTKR DIT.IfJENT
INt^lURY HK AS( K R T A I N K D BY T H K
I-KTITIONKR
HKRRIN.
VOt' AUK HKRKRY r i T K D TO SHOW
CAKHIO Itcfore HIP S u n o t i a l t » f o u r l . New
VrtrU iDiMily, at Room 504 in ilie Hall of
R-.<«r.U in tlif Cminly ol > > w York, >>w
Y.mU, ..II Ai.iil :», 1»«1. Hf 10:.<O A.M .
wUv » ••Miliiiii wiilinif <lHlP(l J u l y 14.
whi.'^i l i n bocn olTcifil for p i o b a t P by
K \ T H R Y N J . M ' f i O U d H . rMiidine 8t. 1510
An U'i- Kd.i I, Uroiix, N.Y.. flioiiM n o t bo
|4IHI..|'MI
THE l«»L Will and TpKlanient.
rpliliiiv III re;il and wpifonal pio()Pity iif
LOtiKTTA V. McKACHRAN D" ea-pd. w h o
wrt« il llip limp of h e r dPHlh a ri-iiilpnt
of I'll! K m IStli SIrppt, in t h e C o u n l y of
Ki-w Vi.ilc. N-w Y o r k .
D i i p ' l . Atli'»lpd and Sfalpd, yebniai-y
«<». I!'-;I.
HON. J O C F P H A. COX.
Stirriiiriitp. N f w York ( o i i n t y
P H I I - I P A. D O N A H U K .
Clprk
College
President
ALBANY. March 13. — Dr.
Charles R. Eiaenhart. former dean
of Defiance CoUese. which Is part
of the State University.
Dr. Eisenhart was named to the
$15.000-a-year position by college's
board of trustees and approved by
the University trustees.
The new college has yet to select a site for Its campus, which
will serve students in the WarrenWashington county area.
S E R V I C E
Tiiesilay, March 1 4 , 1 9 6 1
L E A D E R
City Test for CORRECTION CORNER
Ass't Actuary
To Close Soon
l y JACK SOLOD
(Tli« views expressed in this column are those of the writer and
do not necessarily constitute the views of this newspaper or of any
orffaniiation).
March 30 is the deadline for
Side Lights of Dinner-Meeting
filing applications for New York
City's exam for assistant actuary.
STATE POLICE WILL GET 25 years at half pay retirement this
These jobs have a starting salary year for uniformed personnel. Any chance of a similar law for Cerof $4,250 a year and reach a max- rectlou was killed by a resolution calling for »1I correction employees
imum of $5,330 a year.
pushed by a few prisons. . . . Entrance pay for Correction Officer will
Candidates for this position now become $4,760, from $4,280. Qualifications for future examinaKVVNS H K N R Y — P 'iO'ir..
C I T A - should have a B.A. from a four tions will be upped. . , . Commissioner McGinnis Is prepared to back
tion-THK
OK T H K STATK college with at least 12 credits in an appeal for C.O.'s to the new R-13 grade which Is equivalent ta the
(»K NKW YORK
tUe O r . i f ^ a t «0'1. > W
and I n d e p e n d e n t . T O :
f ^ H O N mathematics. A satisfactory equiv- old R-15. . . . 15 new officers approved by the budget to help with
i n . n i p d ill Slid will a . A. N. M a h o n ) ,
lOHN K K N N K l l T ROBKRT.H. *« a n Kxec-u- alent of education and experience personal leave time. . . . 17 new lieutenants In the budget plus 1 1 | |
"lor of tIm will .»r IViirl K, R o b e r t . , de- will also be acceptable. ExE>erience sergeants jobs reclassified to lieutenants will mean 28 new offlceri
,.paVd- WKLI.S B'ARfiO BANK. «» K x e . n lor o f ' ni« will f t R«bp.t K.
«Ie- may be substituted for education with double gold bars.
VHK I'KOIM.K OK T H K STATK OK NKW
WKI.I.H KAR(il) B \ N K . a s T r u n l o e
YORK — Ry ttie G r a t e of God Free and u n d e r ' t h e will .•f R o b - r t 1''on a year for year basis.
lfiil"|t>n'lcnl
THE NEW C.O.'s In our department will now have equal pay with
.•ea^Hd, f.>r W i n i f i r a A. Leon i r d i n i ; W IN ITi.
M\X
MICHKr.. absPHlee. SOPH IK KRKD A. L K O N A R D I N I ; NOKL D.KVI;An assistant actuary helps In the old timers. I hope they will show a greater interest In their emM K H K r , . npc MKNDKf.. fiifc wife, P I B - VKVHKM.V S C H W K R I N L I K B :
FANNY
I.IC Ar>.M(NI<<TR>TOR O F NKW YORK SKIKKI.S: HKTTIK BAIIKR: A(iNKS HOP- calculating annuity and pension
ployee organizations. Civil Service Employees Association and the
C H f i N T V , ."iTATK T A X COMMISSION OK
allowances for persons retiring
NKW i ' O R K ,
Correction Conference. . . . Senator Willard playing a mean piano
?pnd Greet I n s :
from City service. Computation of
liMoii 111.' pplilion of SIMON J . XCSat Correction Conference party. . . . Gov. Rockefeller looked a little
RAUM, w h o ri-oidps at
Madi^dn Avemortality and service experiences
peaked at C.S.EJV. dinner. Went home early, papers said he had virus.
nni-. N.'w York (Nly, you and f-ai^h of
you
liprpb.v citrd to n h o w f.nise b e f o r e \MKRICAN NATIONAL RKD CROSS: of employees covered by the variThen came the fire at Executive Mansion. What a night.
llin Hu •ii»;r,iip * Coiii t of New Y'ork ('ouii- 'K\THKR KI.ANAWANS BOYS' HOMK; ous pension funds Is also included
1.9, IIPI.I ,it thR Hall of Rppoidt. in Ihp 'iiui'^Tr.KS OK HAMPTON INSTITUTK:
TI-sKK(iKK
INSTITHTK;
THK
PINKY
Comily (»t New Y'ork on Hie
•'lb il.iy
in the duties of persons employed
SOME NEWSPAPERS playing up raise for state workers don't
of M i r c l i . liMtl, at h a l f - p a o t It n o c l o . k WcioDS COUNTRY l.IKK SCHOOL: HENExpfiitor of the will in this title.
know
that many C.O.'s working 11 to 15 years will get a S90 yearly
in tim fDrcnoon of t h a t day, wb.v thp RY E (;R\Y,
.SMrrKi;:itP s h o u l d not inquire into tlip of Kdward W. T. Gmy; CORA L. GRAY,
an Kxiu-iitor of Hi« wilt of Kdward W.
raise. . , . Lt. Gov. Wilson seeing me at a cocktail party started to do
The
written
test
is
tentatively
f a c i t m d l i n u n i s t a n c ' P * con'-priiiiKf
thp
iillcap.I dp.illi
of
MAX
MK.HKL
and T <irav; ROSA URAT CiARRETT COLset for April 15 and will consist a take-off by reading from card, making believe It was our uniformed
SOPHIK M I I U K I . , nee MKNDKL, h s w i f e , lIns :h EKPcutrix of the will of William
and m i k e a dpcree dciprniininK ilie fa<l K (irav NKL.SON C. MCNtiKR. a.* Exeeu- of objective questions on mathe- allowance bill. Nice guy.
|
tor
of'
llm
will
of
BUn.'
b
e
G.
Munjer:
of dp'ilh of Maid alleeed dp<p<|pnis. an<i
wlir «iii'ill:«iy Ipltprs of adniinli-tration on HOnSTON BANK Sc TRUST COMPANY, matics, algebra, probability, and
AL FALK, CIVIL SERVICE Commissioner at the dinner after
t h ^ PHt;ilf r.f MAX M H ' H K I , >.liould not as Trintec- umler r» Deel'intion of Trust
IWri**. "mdn by Blanche analytic geometry. Actuarial pracIII* .K^iipd to SIMON J . N r S B A l ' . M of dited M;ir<-h
(;. Muiuer: NKLSON C. MUNOER: ROSA- tices, graphic and tabular repre- long Illness, welcomed back by deafening applause. Elliot Kaplan,
N f w York-. Ni-w Y o r k .
IN T K S T I M O N Y WHKRKOK, we h a v e LIK M. (iRANT: CARL W. .SCHUMACHER,
Adiuini-itralor with llirt will annexed of sentation, and related mathema- President of Civil Service Commission and Mary Krone on dais. . . ,
caiisPd tliB Bcal of the, Surro- as
Albany, the State Capitol, does not have one hotel that can adequately
SatcK Court af Ihe ' a i d County the Ksliil") of .lohn B. S.-hiiniaeher, de- tical topics will also be tested.
of New Y'ork to be h e r e u n t o eettMPd: HENRIETTA M. ADLOR: CHARLES
B, AOLOR: KLORENCE H. RAKEl'., as an Up until March 30, applications handle a 600 to 700 dinner. . . . Democratic leaders were conspicuous
II 111 ted.
(S.>»I»
W I T N K S S . HONOR AlSLK J O S E P H Kxeeutor of the will o,t Siegfried J. NItson
by their absence. Controller Levitt; Senator Zaretski; Assemblyman
A. COX, a S u r r o v a i f of
o u r I named in decedent's will a.s Dr. S. J. Nil- can be obtained at the ApplicaTravla; minority leaders were elsewhere.
»aid c o u n t y , at t h e County of i;on» : CARIN Nll.SON: KLORENCE H. RANi'w York. Ihe Wth day of Keh- KKR: ELIZABETH MORNER (iLRISTElN. tions Section of the Department of
also
known
as
(ileystein:
DR.
EDWARD
ni:«ry. in thp y e a r ol <iur I.ord
Personnel, 96 Duane St., New York
ASSEMBLYMAN PRELLER, Chairman of the important Ways
cni* t h o u s a n d nine h i i n d . e d and SHORTMAN. also known as Sehortnian;
WARRKN R\KER: WKNDV JANK RAKER,
»ixly-onp.
and Means Committee thinks that a percentage Increase of 5 to 10%
an
infint
nniler
this
H
S
B
of
1
4
yeaia:
P H I l . I P A. D O N A H C K .
CARYN ELIZABETH RAKER, «n infant
will be In order next year. . . . New manager at Wellington Hotel
Clerk of the SurroKaie'i! C o u r t
tinder the
of 1 4 y-a.4; KLORENCE H. Barge Canal Unit
R.\KER,
siiardi 1 of the person and
giving our Correction Delegates a hard time. 10 delegates packed up
W K i H A M , R K O I N ^ L D K. — I n p u r s u a n c p property of Wendy
ni R iker. an infant
of an Order of Hon. J o s e p h A. Cox. Sur- under thft ai» of U years: KLORKNCK Holds Convention
and checked in elsewhere. Legislature winds up this month and then
ntxaf-^ of t h e Counly of
New
Yorli. H. RAKER,
suii-di.in
of th« person and
N0TI< K
hereby Kiven to all p e r s o n s properly of Caryn Eli/.:ibetU Riiker, an inThe Barge Canal chapter of the they will be looking for our delegates this summer. . . . Buffalo goins
liairiiii 1 l:»inM airainot KPttinald K. Wi*. fant under the «ae of 14 yejirn: HINDhum, lile- of the County of New York, MAN SETTLEMENT SCHOOL. INCORPO- Civil Service Employees Associa- all out to bring C.S.E.A. convention to that city in 1962.
d r i i - u ' d . to present t h e s a m e witii v o u f h - R.VTKI); bein* l»er<»in intwesied as beneheld Its annual convention at
m a t l i - r e o f , lo the s i i b s ' . ' n b t r a t h j plai-e ficiari,'.-<: rinnainderiii-n or otherwiiie in tion
the
SAM EMMETT, winner of the Brotherhood Award In N. Y. City
of I r . i i n i . ' t i n ? bitrtinpsH at the otlice of tru-ils for tin ben.-^fit of I*r:irl K. Roberts the Hotel Wellington, Albany, N.
H^<riy Krie««r and P h i l i p K r e p e r , Ksgs
and Sol Bendet of the Metropolitan Conference wearing tuxedos.
and
.Xiue*
N.
Miliou.
under
the
will
of
Y.
recently.
liM ;Htciriiey.i, at 20 K a f t Kirst Street. Henry Evans, di'<-eaaed. whi» at the time
Tliey must pay mor" money in New York City. Two grand guysIlouiit Vernon. New Y o r k , on or b e f o r e of his death w.w it resident of the County
Conferences were held at the
t b " r : i l i day of J u l y I P t i l .
Maxwell Lehman, Mayor Wagners right hand In N. Y. City at the
and Slate of New York. SEND UREETING:
D i l i i l . Mount Vernon, N. Y. t h e 2Tlh (lay
1'p.m the petition ot THK HANOVER State Office Building with Mr.
ot I V i v n i b e r litHO.
BANK, .i diimpstic bankin* (Corporation Hudowalskl, assistant superinten- banquet greeting old friends. . . . Once again the Civil Service EmRerinald Eastman Wifhani, liaviiu iti prinfipal
and place ot
ployees Association through negotiations and six different meetings
K.x.'''Ut(ir
mt No. 7l> Broailway, New Y'ork, dent of canal operation, Joseph with the Administration has come up with more money for all state
flARRV KRIKGKR and P H I L I P KKIKCER. busineis
New Y'ork. i* surviviirf Trustee under the
Altorn-y* for Kxe<'Ulor,
last will tuid leat.ioi'nt ot Henry Evans, Stalitto,, c a n a l engineer and workers.
N« •!(» Mast Klmt S t r e e t .
dei'.-a.sed and WATSON WASHBURN, re- Joseph Ronan, administrative deM o u n t Vernon, N'. Y.
sidiiii
N.v i;»l East .5lit Street, New
Yoik, New York, and THK CHASE MAN- puty to the Superintendent of
HATTAN BANK. donie»lii; conioration •p.-ui:- WnrVc
hiviiu il« principal ..tlice and place of
WUlKi..
vice president. Capital District
business at No. Irt PiuB Street. New York,
Jesse McParland, administrative Albany Thruway
New York, is Exei-ulirs of the last will
Conference and Joseph Lochner,
assistant
to
the
President
of
C.
S.
and testiiiipnt of Ctrl J. Schniiillapp, deHolds Dinner-Dance
executive director of CSEA.
cea.sed co-Tru-dee under saiti will.
E. A. spoke to the delegates on
You and eitcli of you a r e h e r e b y oiled
CITY EMPLOYEES
The Albany Division Thruway
Music for dancing and listening
lo «h..w cansfl before the suriosate i Court, jjills before the legislature, rctlreof the I'Duitly o t New Y'orU to be hear>l at
i
1.1
» chapter. Civil Service Employees pleasure was furnished by The
t h e Hall of KecoriU in Ihe Counly o t New Hient and general problems of
Association, held their annual New Sounds led by Vince BelleYork on lh.» ; t U t d.iy of .March, 1 !J(U, at
10::iO o'clock in t h e f o r e n o o n of t h a t day, canal employees.
why t i n accounlit of p r o c f e i l i i u s of 8aid
Wednesday noon a luncheon dinner dance and Installation of ville, a Thruway employee. Memofficers on Feb. 11, at Center Inn, bers of his band who also are
T H E H.VNOVICB B.VNK an s u r v i v i n g T r u s - was held at the Hotel Wellington
t.-e ind WATSON W.VSHBUKN and T H K
Route 9-W.
state employees are Ronnie Blake,
for
all
delegates
and
guests
from
CH.VSE M.VNHVTTAN BANK as E.xeoutoi-s
Special guests who addressed John McLean and Frank Manof tli> l i s t will and teiflanient ot Curl. J , the Canal Dept.
Schniidl i p p . dcc.-ased c o - T r u s l c e of
the
trust, f o r th:> ben-til of P e a r l K. K o b e r t s
Delegates to the convention the group were Dolores Fussell, stren.
TERRIFIC SAVINGS
BIG DISGOUfPTS
• FORDS
• FALCONS
• THUNDERBIRDS
A-1 USED CARS
ALL YEARS & MAKES
SCHILDKRAUT
FORD
LIIERTY AVE. I USth ST.
JAMAICA
RE. 9-2300
and A s n e s N. M.ihoii. sh;iU n o t be jiulicially iietlled and a l l i w e i l .
IN' W I T N E S S
WHEKKOF,
wa
have
(MUS-.I l l n ileal of the S u r i o s a t e ' o
Ciiiirl o t n.mt C o u n t y of New
York tn bi> h e r e u u l o
»lli.\ei|.
W I T N E S S H O N O B A H L E S. SAMU E L 1)1 KAI.Ci), a S i i i r o s a t o af
(Seal)
o u r s.iid C o u n t y at thu County
of New Y'ork tliH Jird day of
Eeluu.ir.y in t h e y e a r of
our
I.ord, On» T h o i u a n d Nina H u n dred and Sixly-une.
«./ I ' H i r . l l ' A D O N A H U E ,
Cleric of t i n S u r r o i a t o n C o u r t .
were: Evan D. Evans and Myron
Saltsman, Eastern Unit; Edward
Ahern and John Matt, E. Central
Unit; Joseph Grieve and Donald
Spink, Central Unit; and George
Smith and Frank DiChiara, W.
Central Unit.
Officers of the unit attending
were: Harry LaVere, Wendell
French and Edwin L. Ritter OfAU'rO I N S I I K A N C E — I ' l a t e i
at
oncel
E / . E E F I N A N C I N G — J E K K Y B U O D S K Y — ficers elected for the coming year
t o p e n 10 AM !l t'AI) r.iir» W, l ljth St..
are: President, George Smith,
R£ a 8l)»l)
Hilton, N. Y.; vice president,
Wendell French, Utica, N. Y.:
sec.-treas. Richard Walters, East
Rochester, N. Y.
Delegates elected to attend the
annual fall convention of the
C.S.E.A. are: Wendell French,
Utlca, N. Y.; George Smith, Hilton, N, Y. Alternate delegates are:
troin
Myron Saltsman, Fort Plain, N.
Y; Edward Ahern, Mohawk, N. Y.
The convention for 1962 was
IHANO NEW • Factory Eqaippcd
set for the first week In March at
UP TO 3 YEARS TO FAY
H o ^ Wellington, Albany, N. Y.
T<le objective of the convention
this year was the passage of the
40 hours week bill for canal emCHiVROLIT CORP.
pU»yees.
GRAND C0NC.at144ST.
NONX • OPEN EVES.
INMIilCVNCK
Ml IIOWN IV\VM«NT
T.kVl.Ult — ItL ft SMt
#>'OUR ONCE-A-YEAR
SALE of LEFTOVERS
BATES
A
if you want to know what's liappening
to you
to your chances of promotion
to your job
to your next raise
and similar matters!
FOLLOW THE LEADER REGULARLY!
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the lob you want.
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i
CIVIL
Tn«"«!ay, March 14, 1961
Albany Parking
Plan Succeeds;
CiteOtherNeeds
SERVICE
LEADER
Delegates Hear of Progress
On Public Works Problems
ALBANY, Mar. 13—The Special
ALBANY, Mar. 13—The Special
Capital District Parking Commit- Public Works Committee of The
tee of the Civil Service Employees Civil Service Employees Assn. reAssn. reported this year, with a ported progress on many fronts
great deal of satisfaction, that the in the past six months.
'purpose for its existence is being
Frank Tucker, chairman of the
l^accomplished. Three years ago, the Committee told delegates to the
^parking problems in the capital 51st annual CSEA dinner meeting
district for State employees were that:
jntolerable. The complaints and
"Based on discussions at the
protests of the State employees, meeting of our Public Works
the Albany merchants and the j chapter Delegates in October, the
general public were being voiced. As.sociation appealed to State
I Raymond Hunter, chairman of Superintendent of Public Works,
'the Committee on Parking, told J. Burch McMorran, for the
delegates attending the 51st an- various improvements in work
nuel CSEA Dinner here that: "a arrangements desired by our Pubpioneer legislator — Assemblyman lic Works members. At the same
Eatriale from New York City — time we urged a joint meeting of
•who recognized the condition, in- the Public Works Department and
troduced a bill to solve the prob- Budget officials with the hope that
lem. The Civil Service Employees this would encourage the State to
Association named a special com- make funds available to put the
mittee to study the conditions and improved work arrangements desuggest solutions. The State Ad- sired into effect.
ministration consulted a firm of
"Your Special Public Works
traffic experts and the results of Committee, accompanied by Assoall three efforts can now be re- ciation staff members met with
poited with some gratification.
representatives of the State De"During the intervening time, partment of Public Works to disthe special committee worked con- cuss in detail our various requests.
stantly. Not only did it meet with Since that date, these requests
legularity, but its chairmen and have been discussed in whole or
members were in continuous con- in part by Association represenBultation with Legislators, the tatives with the Director of the
Budget and Public Works officials. Budget, Dr. T. Norman Hurd, and
The committee enlisted the aid of other representatives of the BudSenator Mahoney, and his efforts get Division, as well as with the
bieught a b i l l appropriating State Industrial Commissioner,
money for the State to purchase Dr. Martin P. Catherwood, and
pjoperty for parking purposes and other State officials. We have
a)!50 giving the State authority to great hope for substantial progress
operate a facility.
this year relative to a number of
our requests, which will favorably
Need in Other Cities
affect our members employed in
"As of April 1st. as a result of the State Department of Public
these efforts, the State will oper- Works.
iite a parking lot on Sheridan
Conversion Ruling
Avenue, which it recently acquired
"We secured a new ruling reJrem the City of Albany, through lative to the conversion of laborers
purchase. The State will also start from an hourly rate to an annual
eonstruction on an added facility pay basis. Under this ruling, the
Tvhich will be located on a site hourly rate is multiplied by 208$
Ddjacent to the parking lot. This hours instead of 2000 hours, to
liite was also purchased by the arrive at annual salary, and this
State during this period. The new ruling was effective retroactively
lacilities will furnish parking to August 14, 1958. We appreciate
fiyace for a b o u t 1100 cars. the support of Superintendent
Whether this will be adequate for McMoran and the action taken by
present or future needs, it is im- Comptroller Atthw Levitt to make
possible to say at this moment thiarlSossible.
because of the contemplated shift
"We secured an increase in the
cf State Departments to the
livery allowance covering employcampus site. However, the Parkin
ees assigned to inspecting conCommittee will continue toI keep
i\.ci;P
struction projects under contracts
fibreast of the problem and
nd
from a maximum of $3.20 to $4.80
iilert to growing needs, if any
ny.
\ per day.
"Parking for State employees Is
"We eliminated, by securior an
not localized to Albany. It exists appropriation in the curreiVt Bud3n other areas of the State. get, the 10 free miles which emPuffalo is an example. At the last ployees have to travel without remeeting of the Parking Commit- imbursement each day when
tee, two Civil Service Employee assigned to construction projects
Association members from Buffalo under contracts. This chan{;e will
presented the parking problems take effect April 1, 1&61.
which will exist in that area with
"The foregoing two rulings were
the building of a new State office obtained through the cooperative
building. The Committee gave ad- effort of CSEA and the Highway
vice and guidance from tlieir ex- Engineers Association. These imPfrience in Albany, and the parent provements were made possible by
body of the Association is taking favorable decisions of the Ftatc
Meps to procure adequate facilities Department of Public Works and
lor Buffalo by intervening in their the Division of the Budget. Our
behalf with the Director of the Association appreciates these imBudget."
provements.
"CSEA appealed to all officials
Named
fo
Commission of the State Administration inALBANY, March 13. — Chester volved for better salaries for
Fchwjinmer of Jamaica has suc- laborers of the Public Works Detetded Samuel J. Lefrak of For- partment. We are confident that
f.«-t Hills as a member of the In- these employees will be converted
itrstate Sanitation Commi.ssion from a )3er diem to an annual pay
basis this year. We urged confur a term tnding Jan. 1, 19(35.
' version to at least salary riad^ 8,
$3,680 - $4,5eo by Apnl 1st and for
FKEE IM)OKLET by V. S. Gov- conversion to this j'rade based
•Tiiiut-nt on StM'ial Security. Mail upon years of stivice of each
is v.rit•uly. Lradcr, i)7 Uuaiie Slret't, employee. As t'^ls
Jteu, our Assoc/.tl-n riprtstijtaNew Yurk 7. N. Y.
help our Jew paid Public Works
employees.
"We are also veiy hopeful that
the $6.00 per day flat lodging and
meal allowance limitation which
applies to certain employees of
our Department will be adjusted
upward. Our Committee and our
CSEA representatives have worked
on this strenuously and we hope
that Improvement in this area will
be announced shortly.
"If we attempted to cover all
requests made by CSEA on behalf
of Public Works employees this
report would become too lengthy.
"Our Committ€« wishes to express its thanks te Bill Mahaney,
District 4 Chapter, Rochester, and
tives are discussing thi.? request
with Budget Division representatives frequently to get the best
possible pay adjustment and an
annual pay basis for these laborers. The annual pay basis, plus
an adjustment on conversion
thereto, plus the regular salary
adjustment accorded all employees
on April 1st, should help these
employees materially. We hope for
very substantial progress in this
matter. We also seek classification
of the positions of these laborers
based on the work they are performing so that they are compensated if they are performing
duties higher than those of a
laborer.
"We are very hopeful that a
meal allowance will be accorded
laborers and road maintenance
employees who are working overtime. The payment of such allowance has been urged by CSEA and
we feel confident that within the
next few weeks a favorable decision will be made to establish
this overtime meal allowance arrangement, which again would
SAVE
IN
Page Hiirtern
•
I
I
I•
I
I
Bill Greenauer, District 10 Chapter, Babylon, for their fine a.-sirtance in securing the beneficial
ruling relative to use of 2088 hours
in connection with conversion
from per diem to annual pay.
"Our Committee, with the efficient and expert assistance of
' cSEA Headquarters staff, made
many additional requests on behalf of our members not detailed
in this report. As developments
occur relative to matters coverer^
by this report and other matter?
on w'hich we have acted, we will
make subsequent reports to our
Public Works Chapters by leller
and to our members through The
Leader."
M A K E '61 Y O U R B^G Y E A R ! •
O
FINISH
I
AT H O M E IN SPARE TIME
i
I
HIGH SCHOOL
If yew a r e 17 or aver ond have dropped out of school,
write f a r PRFE Lessen and FREE Booklet. Tell how
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Send m e >cor f r e e 55-pag Hijfii School Boooklet.
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Offer available on open stock pieces too! I furry in to enjoy
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Suite 200
B A 7-8044
^
H
Pag«'Fourteen
€IVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
Tiiesdfay, Marcfi 14, 1961
News from
Manhattan
State Hospital Chapter
The Manhattan State Hospital
chapter o! the Civil Service Employees Association Is starting a
drive for blood donors. The credit
of the Chapter Is at a low stage,
and It Is the duty of all our members to keep this vital program
strong and active. Any member
of the Chapter, or member of his
family may call upon the Blood
Bank for assistance. In time of
need. There have been many
Instances when the necessary
blood was provided upon request.
However, we must have blood
donors to provide the blood before we can for Its use. Please
contact your blood bank chairman. John Wallace, Ext. 408;
make your appointment and give
your donation of a pint of blood.
The Chapter delegates have returned from Albany, where they
attended the Annual Delegates
Meeting of the Civil Service Employees Ass'n. A full report of
their activities In Albany will be
PARTY NOTES: Seen here looking over the table setting dinner partner arrangements for presented to the members at the
the recent dinner meeting in Albany of the Civil Service Employees Association are, from regular meeting of the Chapter
left. Mrs. Samuel Emmett, James MacdufF, rear, new member of the State Tax Commission,
Samuel Emmett, president of the New York City chapter, CSEA, and Charles E. Lamb, CSEA
fourth vice president.
AT THE DINNER: Mrs. John F. Powers, center. If flanked by her husband John F. Powers,
right, and Jesse McFarland, left, boih former presidents of the Civil Service Employees Association. The scene is the annual dinner of the CSEA, held recently in Albany.
ALBANY THRUWAY: Problems affecting Thruwoy Authority employees were the topic of
conversation among these delegates from the Albany Thruway Division chapter. Civil Service Employees Assn., as they attended the business session of the recent CSEA delegates
meeting in Albany. They are, Fronk Couse and Don Mills, delegates; Clem O'Cloir, chapter
president, second from right, and Carmine Rusco.
I
The delegates visited with Senator MacNell Mitchell, who introduced our free toll for non
resident employees bill. We asked
If there was anything the Chapter might further offer In assistance In relieving our members of
this toll paying problem. We extended our sincere thanks to the
Senator, for his Interest in this
vexing problem, and we left In
the hope that this year we may
see the end of toll payments by
our car owner non resident employees.
Deepest sympathy Is extended
to the family of t^ie., Jalje ,Joe
Bogle, one of our most popular
safety officers, who recently died
after many years of devoted service to the State of New York. A
fine man whose presence is missed around the grounds of the
Hospital.
Get well wishes are extended
to Steve Durr, Mary Campbell,
Lulu Atkins, William Franklin,
Mabel Reese, Joseph Ansbro,
George Delgrado, Steve Murphy
CONFERENCE PRESIDENTS: Shown ot the recent annuol
dinner meeting of the Civil Service Employees Association,
held in Albany, are, from left. Hazel Abrams, president of
Hie Capitol District Conference: James O. Anderson, president of the Southern Conference, and Mrs. Florence Drew,
president of the Central Conference.
REUNION: Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, chief guest at the
Nassau County chapter, CSEA annual dinner last fall, wat ^
welcomed by Irving Flaumenbaum, Nassau Chapter president. M
when they met ogoin ot the annuol dinner meeting of the ^
Employees Associotion In Albony recently.
C I V I L
Marcli 1 i , 1961^
S E R V I C E
Pane Fifteen
L E A D E R
Otisville Unit Wins
CIVIL SERVICE TEST Mare Flexibility On
Personal
Leave
Use
PASS HIGH
the EASY
ARCO WAY
•wammmama
YOUR
$4.00
O Asi't DcpNty CUrk
$4.00 • • L i b r o r i r a
• Arfmialitrativ* Ai«t. _ S 4 . 0 0 U M a i H t o M c * Maa . . . . $ 3 . 0 0
n A c c s M t a i i t It AudiUr .$4.00 n M«chaRic«l Ea«r.
$4.00
• A p p r M t i c * 4th ClflM
• h<o;: HM4l«r
$3.00
M«cli«iiic
$3.00
$3.00
n A « U iiiqiiicmaa
$4.00 • M«t«r Attcarfant
• M«t«r V»h. Op«r.
$4.00
• A««« Machiiiiit
$4.00
• M e t e r Vehicle U c e u *
• Aiite M*cli«iiic
$4.00
Examiner
$4.00
• A i t ' t FeremoH
• Notary Public . .
$2.S0
(Sonifoti*!!)
$4.00 • Nerse Proctical A Pablic
Health
$4.00
• AttMdMt
. . . .
$3.00
• ••9{iiiiiii« Offic* W«rlitr $3.00 n Oil •iirner Installer
$4.00
a ••ekk««p*r
$3.00 a O f f i c e Machine OpM-. _ $ 4 . 0 0
• I r i d ^ * & Tunntt Officcr $4.00
n Copt.lii (P.O.)
$4.00 a Parking Meter Attendant $4.00
$3.00
• Chemist
$4.00 • Park kanger
$4.00
• C. S. Arith ft V»e.
$2.00 • Parole Officer
• Civil Enqinctr
$4.00 • Patrolman
$4.00
• Civil Scrvic* Handbook $1.00 • Patretmon Test* la All
• Uncmpleymcnt liisiiraiie*
States
$4.00
Claims Clark
$4.00 • Personnel Examiner
$S.OO
• Claims Examintr (Uaam.
• Pioygrownd Director _ $ 4 . 0 t
ploymant Insurance)
$4.00 • Plumber
$4.00
O Clark. G$ 1.4
. . $3.00 • Policewoman
$4.00
O Clark, NYC
$3.00 • Postal Clerk C a r r i e r
$3.00
n Completa Guldt t o C$ $1.50 • Postal Clerk in Charge
Foremen
$4.00
• CerractioH Officer
$4.00
n Dietitian
$4.00 • Postmaster, 1st, 2nd
• Electrical Engineer
$4.00
& 3rd Closs
$4.00
• Electrician
$4.00 n Postraoster. 4th Class _$4.00
n Elevator O p e r a t o r
$3.00 • Practice for Army Tests $3.00
n Employment Interviewer $4.00 • Principal Clerk
$4.00
• Federal Service Entrance
• Prison Guard
....
$3.00
Eiams
$3 00
$4.00
n Fireman (F.D.)
$4.00 • Probotion Officer
• Fire C a p t .
$4.00 • Public Manogement A
Admin.
O Fire Lieutenant
-$4.00
$3.00
• Fireman Tests in all
• Railroad Clerk
$4.00 • Railroad Porter
$3.00
States
_$4.00 •
• Foreman
Reel Estate Eroker
..$3.50
_$4.00 • Refrigerntion License -$3.50
•
Foreman-SanHation
$3.00 • Rurol Moil Corrier
• Gardener Assistant
$3.00
.
$4.00 • S a f e t y Officer
•_ ...
H. S. Diploma
Tests
$3.00
• Heme Training Physical $1.00 • School Clerk
$4.00
• Hospital Attendant . .$3.00 n Police Sergeant
$4.00
l e t l d e n t luiiding
• Social Investigator
$4.00
Saperintendent
$4.00 • Sociol Supervisor
$4.00
• HoMsing C a r e t a k e r . . $3.00 • Sociol Worker
$4.00
• HoMsing Officer
$4.00 • Senior Clerk MY$
$4.00
• Honsing Asst.
$4.00 a Sr. Cik.. Superviiiaf
• H«w to Pass College
_$4.00
Clerk NYC
Eatrance Tests
$2.00 • S t a t e Trooper
_$4.00
• Hew to Stndy Post
•
Stationary Engineer li
OfHce Schemes
$2.00
-$4.00
Fireman
• Home Study Course for
• Steno-Typlst (NYSl
$3.00
Civfl Service Jobs
$4.f5 • Steno Typist (GS 1-7) $3.00
O H«w to Pass West Point
n Stenographer. Gr. 3-4 $4.00
aod Annapolis Enti ance
a $1eno.Typist (Practical) $1.50
Exams
$3 50 n $tock Assistant
..
$3.00
• InMiraace Agent A
• Storekeeper GS 1-7
$4.00
•roker . .
. . . . $ ^ 0 0 • Structure Maintainor _ $ 4 . 0 0
•
Investigator
• Substitute Postal
ICritlnol and Low
Transportation Clerk
$3.00
• Investigator Inspector _$4.00 n Surface Line Op.
$4.00
Eaforcement
$4.00 • Tax Collector
$4.00
a lavestigator's Handbook $3.00 • Technical ft Profassfonal
Asst. ( S t o t e )
$4.00
• J r . Acceantant
$4.00
n J r . Attorney
$4.00 n Telephone O p e r a t o r . $3.00
n Jr. Governmeat As»t. . .$3.00 n Thruwoy Toll Collector $4.00
$4.00
n Janitor Custodian
$3.00 n Title Exominer
n Transit Potrolmaa
$4.00
• Laborer • Physical Test
Preparation .
. ..$1.00 n TreoJury Eaforceaient
.$4.00
Agent
O Laborer Written Test
$2.00
• Voc, Spell ond
n l o w Enforcement Posi-$1.50
Grommer
tions
$400
n
War
Service
Scholar^
• Law Court Steno
$4.00
ships
$3.00
G Lieutenant (P.D.)
$4.00
• Uniformed Court
• license No. 1—Teaching
OfTicer
$4.®®
Common I r a n c h e s
$4.00
FREE!
ORf>FR
You Will Receive an invaluable
New Arco "Outline Chart of
New York City Government."
With Every N.Y.C Arco Book—
COUPON
\
45c for 24 hour tp«ci«l deliv«iy
C.O.D.'i 30c e«1f«
LEADER BOOK STORE
97 Duane St., New York 7. N. Y.
Pi««te wnd m*
copie» cl booU chccked ebcve,
I «ncloi« cKtcIt or monty ord«r for (
Name
Membership Report
Edward Miller, who is chairman
of the membership committee,
too, was able to ref>ort another
five percent gain in membership
over last month, bringing the
total to 164, or eighty percent of
all employees. Mrs. Ryan followed
this by appointing Frank Vignola,
L e s t e r •'Jim" Wilbur, a n d
LOW
PBX
l-ITM.\.N
310
Be sure to include 3% S«l««
St.)
INTENSIVE COURSE
COMPLETE PREPARATION
Wriie or p h o n e for iiiformiilion
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AL 4-5029
HronduH), N.Y. 3 (ii<ar « SI.)
wiili- Mie free HIMIUI tlif KAILKOAI) CI-KKK ciiiM..
Name
A<Ulre«»
Bimo
IV.... IX
Earn Your
in six weeks
for civil service
for personal satisfaeiion
C'lHiit TurK.. A Thnns. nt «:.•'.«
Mritc or I'hiiiie fur litforHiNlion
Eastern School
AL 4-5029
KnmilvvH.v. X. Y. (HI Klh M.I
f'leusp wriK* nip free Rhoiit the Hikh
School Kqiiivalrni-jr clata.
Name
FREE BOOKLET by U. S. Gov' ernment on Social St-curity. Mail
I only. Leader, 97 Duanc Street,
New York 7, N. Y.
SWITCHBOARD
OK
IBM
SPECIAL 7.WEEKS COURSE
$35.00
B«ki*tiiiii«Mt «&.«• — 8«|i|>llr« «5.0«
IIM ELECTRIC SORTIN6 o r ^
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4-I.AMsKN HMilN AI'KII. 1
KM> MAY IS
w. ivKik • r . . IK
ENROLL
NOW
$87.20 • $92.40 a week
Applications open March 1 - 21
AddrfKs
•USINESS SCHOOL
State
ASSOCIATKP BUSINESS
MACHINE SCHOOL
Lenox v«i«t
1261h
KNrKlit it-A;oM
NAriKUAlN t l« A r..M.
..
(SUBWAY
CHANGEMAKER)
High School
Equivalency
Diploma
IBM M A C H I N E S
MTKNO. rVI'IMti. RUOkkKKriNU,
COM I'TOMKTKV. I'I.KKICAL
DAY: AKTER BUSINESS: EVENING
154 Nassao St. (opp. NYC Hall)
lEehmen 3-4t40
SCHOOLS IN ALL lOROUGHS
RAILROAD CLERK
— Hi —
CLASSROOM
RATES
F K E B DE.MONSTHATION LKSS<»N
Every S a l u n l a y 141 t i n to 4 p m .
Ke.v|Mini-h - Taht)lHtin*r - H«»iic Wiring-, A(lvnii<-c Wirinic Tjiiiin: - Shorthand • Elerlric T j p i n c . I'rriiai-c for
Civil Sprvii« Clerioul EIHIIIinntioos.
AIm» KruiniM-r aiirf Kcvtrw t'lamu'I In
mmsm^
City Exam Coming June 24 for
UK .H-IMH
GRADED DICTATION
r.KMili
The float which Ray Brook
Chapter of the C.S.E.A. entered
in the Saranac Lake Winter Carnival Parade, was awarded second
prize in the "Class A for Beauty '
category. A beautiful trophy is on
display in the lobby of the hospital and will be put in the cabinet
with other trophies that have been
won in the past. The success of
the float was due to the efforts
and cooperation of the groundsmen, maintenance group, nurses
and people from the various departments who assisted w i t h
either manual labor or helpfu!
suggestions.
Louis "Lou" Wagner, who wa5
with the Dietary Department at
the Ray Brook Hosr)ital for thirtyone year, retired recently. A
farewell party which was held
in the Enpioyees' Dining Room,
was attended by approximately 45
of his fellow workers. He was
presented with a transistor radio
from the department.
Mrs. Rose Johnson, Vice-President; Mrs. Helen Martin, Secret- " of the P.?" Brock ''•''rr>ter.
C.S.E.A.; and Mr. Emmett Durr,
Health Dfoartment Renresentative attended the Annual Conference in Albany on March 1st and
2nd.
Free limt Irraiui
Frie ••oiiKiiltatiiin
COMBINATION
Addresj
City
George Ryan, president of the j Carmela Monfi ia to the commitOtisvllle Training School chapter,; tee, in addition to Mal-olm MacC. S. E. A., announced important j Gregor who had served us so well,
gains in the battle to liberate ! to intensify the drive.
personal leave from the maze of ! Mr. Ryan and Mrs. Mary Meres.
i-ed tape in which it had too long secreUry, attended the meeting of
been buried. At last month's the New Hampton chapter and
m-i.inR of the Ciinpter, he r^ jcii- gave an interesting report. Both
pd that as a result of the series of chapters gain by «uch inter-attenmeetings with Dr. Benjamin J. dance. New Hampton hopes to
Hill, superintendent of this train- ' emulate us in publishing a monthly
ing school for boys, and Mr. Fred bulletin like our.
Alen, director of cottage program, | A Program and Planning Comhis committee had won some im- mittee was appointed, with Carportant concessions, including re- mella Monfria, chairman, and
duction of the minimum advance Anthony Umina to do the work.
notice heretofore requii-ed, and Aside to Tony: We're not becomeven elimination of it in cases of ing formal. The Leader wants
emergency.
proper names.
Another Important gain was
Meeling March
elimination of the provision forInterest
and altendance at
bidding the use of Personal Leave
credits immediately preceding or meetings has impjoved tince the
following pass days or vacations. new slate of officers took over
Perhaps the most significant gain in January, despite the fact that
made by the committee was a re- our meeting place was changed as
newed interest on both sides of ; a result of the impending demolithe conference table in each tion of the old staff lounge to
make room for additional coatother's problems.
tages soon tq be built. Our March
L'rges Judiciousness
15 meeting will be held in our
In addition to Mr. Ryan, who new staff lounge in Darlington.
served ex-cfTicio, George Kozy- We shouldn't be hard to find if
kowski, the chapter treasurer, was you remember the date and folchairman, and the remainder of low the crows, Wednesday, March
the committee consisted of Ed- 15, at 8:00 p.m.
ward Miller, chapter vice-presidcnt. and Warren L. Gardner, a
delegate. Mr. Ryan urged all C I V I L S E R V I C E C O A C H I N G
«i<.v-.*«;H f-l Miirul A 1 ><,111 l.xHitis
members of the Chapter to be
Jr A .\<st <
.M.-<li, KIK. ^icli Knitr
<•!»•' '•«-<••, »•' •• •,1,1 '•• -ftr,i'Hn
judicious in taking personal leave,
N
A
V
Y
A
P
P
R
E
N
T
I
C
E
J
O
B
S
so as to retain the good will of
HIGH SCHOOL
DIPLOMA
the administration.
r.<t. ( lk-< iiriirr, I
«'lk. KK l lrrk
Fwlrnil Kii«r KiHiii. Mnint Kiil,w HH|ir
Speaking of good will, It was
I.I<'K\SKS-S(nti4iui.T R^frij: KIrrfr'ii
proposed at the meeting that a
M \TH-< .S. ,\ri(li Alif
Trir I'li't.
I>RAKTI\n-Kle-.<riN- .4r«-li
S(rii,t
fund be established to provide
»"Ih«> a L""vt«l. !• ( .
•-•
tokens of it to members who are i
MONDELL INSTITUrE
ill or suffer other mishaps, or
154 V/ 14 17 Ave) Wi 7-2084
ft I yr Krioril rr«-|iHiiii|: TlHiiifHiiilK
even to help celeb'-ate their good !
(Mil
Trrliniml A Ki>»;r KikHnis
fortune on blessed events or the
like. Further study of the proposal is to be made and the idea
INDIVIDUAL
will be presented to the entire
INSTRUCTION
membership for approval at a
— ill —
future meeting.
MACHINE SHORTHAND
Ray Brook Floaf
Takes Beauty Prize
• er •
(I
KOK \tMK K»>»:k.« ATI(»\
rtuir. NtMlKm r. ItttAt'll. frUK-iiml
.10
Horo
Pass your copy of The Leader
On to a Non-Member
SCHOOL DIRECTORY
until NBMM 8CH(MMJI
C A R E E R S FOR L E G A L SECRETARIES
''
(Uaj-Kvrt) l>c .MAKS TKAIMNd « KNTICK, 40<l H AKIh M., I'l «-<;:t.'t4l. Krr« bru<b«i«.
MONROE SCHOOL
I B M C O U R S E S K^yi"'"'''.
wim.s sfe< IAL
i b m w w w n s c a i>kei'aration kor c i v i l •'EK-
VICB IBM TCS'rS. 4A(i(ii<ivtMl lui Vtl« I, »Hitchl»OHi<d, typinr. Day •nd Ev« Cl^iMM.
Euit Tmnoiil A»c. Vooutn Kuw:. K.'unx. K1
ADELPHI.EYECUTIVEV IUM—Kfj Hunch. Sorter. Tab*. Collator. Kriirotlui'rl'.
)„«r«tiou. Winn* S K C K E T A R ! A I ^ M w l i . « l . L»«lil.
Exec.. Klec. T>ptiir. S«itvt)U1, CoaiplMiictry. AHC Steuo. Uiatai>hone STENO TYHT
<Ma(liiii« ShorlhaiMl). f K t l f A li A ; K>N for CIVIL SKKVICE. CO«n1. U a j K»t UlltlC
I'latuinl Sv<«.
kincM H«t>, ktklyn. Next to Avalou T h e a t i e . DK
l E A n ^ TCI CTVBE
uMiJorliiiiillrs in Citv. Slate. MutI., Aiillar*
•.CAKH I CLE l i r e
««ii,i.iiiiii.atio«H. TKLKnVFK SCHOOLS. V»I
WKST ••iii.l STKKtT, iNK*V YOKK CITY. LO 3 a-;3«.
S H O P P I N G FOR LAND OR H O M E S
LOOK AT P A G E 11 FOR LISTINGS
Page Sixteen
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
Tuesday, March I t,
loi^
Reform Association Backs State Pay Raise
(Continued from Fare 1)
due today. Therefore the association believes It is essential to Increase salaries In the lower, as
well as the highest brackets.
The Governor's plan constitutes
the first substantial reversal of
the great trend in government for
equal treatment, regardless of relative competence and responsibility. Under this plan the citizens,
including the public employees
themselves, will get more for their
tax dollars.
The association will be watching
the action of the legislature on
these important developments, it
announced.
STAFF TALK: John Corcoran, left, CSEA field representative,
and Joseph D. Lochner, CSEA executive dirctor, are shown
as they chatted during the business session of the annual
dinner meeting of the Employees Association, held recently
In the Sheraton Ten Eyck Hotel, Albany.
MENTAL HYGIENE DELEGATION: This group of delegates from Brooklyn State Hospital are
seen as they discussed Mental Hygiene Dept. problems for presentation at the business session of the recent meeting of delegates of the Civil Service Employees Association, held in
Albany. They are, from left. Al Traynor, Gus Posa, Ronnie Tushinski, Arnold Moses, Andy
Prainito and Mary Bussing.
HERE'S THE PITCH: Charles E. Monroe, of Farmingdale chapter. Civil Service Employees Association, tells some interested
listeners of his publicity efforts in behalf of public workers
in Long Island. The scene is the recent annual CSEA dinner
meeting, held at the Sheraton Ten Eyck Hotel in Albany.
I
i
i
RECEPTION: Ivan Flood of Westchester, member of the Civil
Service Employees Social Committee, was among those who
NASSAU COUNTY DELEGATES: This delegation from Nassau County chapter. Civil Service welcomed Governor Rockefeller, right, to the recent an«
nual meeting of the Employees Association In Albany
Employees Association, are seen as they discussed local problems during the business session
of the recent Employees Association meeting In Albany. They are, from left, Frank OIkuski,
Charles Samanski, James Keating, Sidney Poriss and Charles Kirsner.
1
CORRECTION CONFERENCE: Correction Commission Paul
SCEK 100,000 MEMBERSHIP: These members of the Membership Committee of the Civil Ser- McGinnls. left, ond James Adams, Correction Dept. repre<
vice Employees Assn. are seen as they met recently to map the progrom for boosting theiivnTaTive
t o the
mv Civil
vivii Service
service smpioyev*
s t o c i a T i o n , were
wvrv ^
sentative to
Employees M
Association,
membership of the Employees Association to 100,000. Committee chairmen are Mrs. Nellie dinner companions ot the recent meeting of the Employees M
Davis, fourth from left at table, ond Jomes Treuchllnger, who heads the County division.
Aifociotion In Albany.
^
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