ROCKEFELLER TO URGE FRINGE BENEFITS; BILL

advertisement
L i E ^ I l !
Eligible
Lists
Americans Largest Weekly for Public Employe^^
Vol. XXIII, No. 17
Tuesday, January 2, 1962
Price Ten Cents
See Page 16
CSM Intervention
ROCKEFELLER
TO
URGE
Balks Union Drive to
Represent Olean AidesFRINGE BENEFITS; BILL
FILED ON GRIEVANCES
( F r o m Leader C o r r e s p o n d e n t )
OLEAN, J a n . 1 — I n t e r v e n t i o n by t h e Civil Service E m p l o y e e s A s s o c i a t i o n — plus t h e d e t e r m i n a t i o n of CSEA m e m bers in t h i s C a t t a r a u g u s C o u n t y city — h a s balked e f f o r t s
( S p e c i a l to T h e Leader)
of Local 1312, S t a t e , C o u n t y a n d M u n i c i p a l E m p l o y e e s , to beALBANY, Jan. 1—Governor R o c k e f e l l e r will ask t h e 1962 Legislature a t Its o p e n i n
c o m e t h e sole b a r g a i n i n g a g e n t for city workers.
T h e AFL-CIO u n i o n d e m a n d e d r e c o g n i t i o n by the city. s e s s i o n t h i s week to c o n t i n u e i m p o r t a n t f r i n g e b e n e f i t s for S t a t e e m p l o y e e s , but h e will
B u t the CSEA c h a l l e n g e d u n i o n c l a i m s t h a t i t r e p r e s e n t e d d e f e r c o m m e n t o n pay raises u n t i l later in t h e session.
T h e r e will be no m e n t i o n of S t a t e pay i n e q u i t i e s in the Governor's f o u r t h a n n u a l
city e m p l o y e e s .
m.essage, it w a s learned, as discussions on this primary q u e s t i o n h a v e n o t been c o m p l e t e d
Mayor Ivers J . Norton has notified Peter J. Zanghi, Buffalo matter and see no need for any b e t w e e n t h e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n a n d r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s of t h e Civil Service E m p l o y e e s Association.
oi-ganizer for the union, t h a t 10 outside employee representation."
The outlook for the ses&ion
Mrs. Kinney said her chapter
common council members have
ahead,
hov/ever, is for some key
Up In the air, however, was with populations of 100,000 or
voted unanimously against extend- will attempt to re-recruit mast of advances in the civil service area.
22
city
workers
who
withdrew
whether the administration and more (New York, Buffalo, Roing collective bargaining rights
As the 208 lawmakers gathered the Legislature would accept the chester, Syracuse, Albany, Yonkto the union. The 11th member, from CSEA and revoked dues deAlderman Julius Darson, wa.s ill duction authorizations after sign- in Albany this week for the three- principle of a completely non- ers, Niagara Falls and Utica). Any
ing with the union.
month session, there appeared no contributory system for State other governmental unit may set
at the time of the meeting.
Mr. Zanghi's claim that the lo- question that the 5 per cent take- workers.
up such machinery on a permisThe mayor explained t h a t sencal represents a majority of the home pay raise, granted two years
Another CSEA-won benefit, the sive basis.
timent against the union, which
60 workers in the two departments ago through CSEA efforts, would doubling of death benefits to proThe bill guarantees an employee
has conducted a two-year organwas disputed by city officials.
be continued.
vide up to two years salary, is cerizing drive, was crystalized by a
tain to be continued.
clash between Mr. Zanghi and
Alderman Robert P. Ganoung dur- :
Grievance Machinery
ing the Nov. 12 Common Council
With the session opening, Senmeeting.
j
ate Majority Leader Walter J.
The mayor restored order after
Mahoney and Senator William F.
epithets including "anti-labor" and
Condon jointly announced the
•'liar" were exchanged when Al- i
filing of a bill to mandate grievderman Ganoung objected to Mr. !
ance machinery by law for State
Zanghi's tactics in Interrupting
and Municipal employees.
the meeting with an unsuccessful
The measure, as first disclosed
demand for a poll of the councilALBANY, Jan. 1 — S t a t e Comptroller Arthur Levitt said in The Leader, proposes amendm a n on the recognition issue.
t o d a y - t h a t h e would c a u s e to be i n t r o d u c e d in t h e Legislature ments to the penalty provisions of
The Council, two days later, ar- a bill to provide a f o r m of "life i n s u r a n c e " to m e m b e r s of the the Condon-Wadlin Anti-Strike
rived at the deci-sion not to recLaw for public employees-. Its efNew York S t a t e R e t i r e m e n t S y s t e m .
ognize the union.
fective date is set at Oct. 1, 1963.
The measure, a supplement to
"The aldermen agreed they
cumulation of ordinary death
A companion bill to the new
the
ordinary
death
benefit,
would
could not entertain any such
benefits.
Condon Measure has been filed
proposition in a climate of name- guarantee a lump sum payment
"The cost of this program would in the Assembly by Orin S. Wilcalling. threats and Intimida- of at least $2,000 to a widow or
children of a member who died be borne by the employer and ac- cox, chairman of the Assembly
tions," Mayor Norton explained.
after a minimum period of six cording to our estimates, will be Committee on Civil Service.
Feily's Telegram
months in service;. This is achieved slight," Levitt said.
A two-state basic grievance m a - SEN. WALTER J. M A H O N E Y
At an earlier meeting, a tele- by adding to the ordinnrv death
The act would take effect July chinery and appeals procedure is
the ri-rht to present a grievance
gr?tn frcp-i c ' E A President Jo- benefit payment the difference
1, and would apply in cases where made mandatory for all employees
"free from interference, coercion,
seph F . Feily helped ease the between the amount of such payof the State and the Eight cities
death occurs after that date.
restraint, discrimination or repressure on the administration. ment and $2,000. If a member's
prisal."
Mr, Feily explained t h a t union widow or children receive more
recognition was optional and re- that $2,000 under the ordinary
I n announcing the introduction
quested an audience before ex- death benefit, there would be no
of the bill, Senator Mahoney said:
clusive bargaining rights were additional payment.
"Just a year ago Republican
granted.
Senators pledged to work for fair
OrdinaiT death benefits are calOver Mr. Zanghi's objections,
and realistic revisions of the Conthe mayor ruled that the union culated on the basis of one
don-Wadlin
Law, wliile acknowlp.'litio7 would' be' deferred until
salary for every year of
edging t h a t public employees, bea meeting could be arranged! emplo.vment up to 12 years atid
cause of their statu.^. cannot be
among representatives of all sidets. thereafter one month's salary for
permitted to strike. We intend to
every two years of employment up
CSEA officials attending two
honor that pledge."
to 36 years. Thus, the maximum
Common Council meetings as obdeath benefit would be two year's
servers did not enter the discussalary. The new legislation would
ALBANY, Jan. 1 — An u p s t a t e union's a t t e m p t s to col- Erie Probation
sion.
provide a benefit pending the ac- lect $1 m i l l i o n In d a m a g e s f r o m t h e Civil Service E m p l o y e e s
Tixe mayor praised the adminOfficers Finish
istration's relationship with the
A s s o c i a t i o n b e c a u s e of alleged losses in m e m b e r s h i p to t h e
Training Course
CSEA and its Cattaraugus County
CSEA received a n o t h e r setback i n t h e courts l a s t week.
BUFFALO, Jan. 1—An in-servChapter headed by Mrs. Gordon McAlea Appointed
The latest dent in the suit
ice tmining course conducted bf
Kinney, account clerk-stenogra- Finance Officer
brought by Council 50 of the
claimed a New York City trial. the State Division of ProbaMoa
pher in the City Auditor's office.
American Federation of State,
AliBANY,
Jan.
1
—
Edward
P.
However, the State Supreme Court has been completed by 10 Brit
"We are happy with CSEA and
County and Municipal employees,
we are certain our employees are McAlea has been appointed pro- AFL-CIO, was made by the State upheld the CSEA contention that County probation officers.
visionally
as
administrative
finthe vehue rightfully belonged in
They are Frank B. Albro. Antoo." the mayor observed. "We
Court of Appeals.
Albany County, headquarters for drew M. Bolognese, Thoma« J .
have never found any issue too ance officer for the State Depai'tThe Appeals Court unanimously both organizations.
Campiere, W. Hooper Council,
difficult to solve in a very friendly ment of Motor Vehicles. Mr. McAlea succeeds Willis Proctor, who affirmed a lower court ruling,
Last summer. CSEA counsel Tlieodore D. Duke, Daniel J. Oolrecently joined the State Cou- which agreed with CSEA that the successfully contended before the ul>ski, Leonard H. King, Victor J .
suit should be tried in . Albany Supreme Court that the union Marsehiello, John L. Mayer and
l l e a l i l i ITiik Sv^t U p servortion Department staff.
rather than at a New York City should furnish the names of any Daniel B. McOlynn.
Mr.
McAlea
Is
a
career
state
ALBANY, Jan. 1 — Dr. Herman
site,
for which the union was members it allegedly lost because
The course was conducted by
E Hilleboe, state health conunis- employee, and until recently was pressing.
of. CSEA efforts to get tliem to Dr. Jane Ives and William Grand*
administrative
assistant
in
the
de•ioner, has announced the estabThe suit was brought early In resign.
on, probation examinei-s, on methlishment of a new county health partment's New York City office.
More preliminary skirmishes are ods of social study and social
department for Cayuga County. His New York post will be filled 1961 in the name of Council 50
It is the 21st to be set up in the by Lawrence Epstein, also a career treasurer Robert Payne, of the expected before the suit reaches treatment in proibation intake, incivil servant.
Bronx.
The
union
therefore tlie trial stage.
vesiigation and supervision.
•tale.
A
Levitt Announces:
Change in Death
Benefits Planned
Court Backs CSEA
In SI Million Suit
Brought by Union
CIVIL
Two
The
Veteran's
Counselor
By FRANK Y. VOTTO
Dir., N.Y.S. Div. Vefs Affairs
Questions on veterans' and servicemens' rights will be answered
la tbit column or by mail by the State Division of Veterans' Affairs.
Address questions to Military Editor. The Leader, 87 Duane Street,
New York 7, N. Y.
The New York State Division of ceive compensation. This applies
Veterans' Affairs has published r to veterans, widows and children.
lanall brochure "tentitled "Pacts for Dependent parents who are re•Members of the Aimed Forces". ceiving VA compensation i>ayTbis timely Division publication ments do have to submit reports
contains in summary form infor- of income in some Instances. These
mation of interest for Reservists, reports will be requested of them.
National Guardsmen and others
Questions about tne rights and
who are ordered into active feder- benefit* of veterans, servicemen
al service. Copies of this new or their dependents may be subbrochure may be obtained free-of
mitted for Individual attention to
Cfharge from any New York State i
lelling office or Veterans' Service the NYS Division of Veterans'
Division of Veterans' Affairs coun- Affairs.
Agency.
SERVICE
LEADER
COIR Assn.
Gives Pockages
For Christmas
A holiday gift basket containing
food, toys and games was presented to a needy family la.$t week
by. the Civil Service Staff Assocla^
tlon of the Commission on Intergroup Relations. Also included was
a Christmas tree, complete with
decorations and stand.
All Items were donated by staff
members during a drive jiponsored
by the Association.
Thi.s was the first activity of Its
kind for the Association, organized
in 1961. According to the announcement the group plans to
conduct the drive each year at
Christmas time.
Tiie§<Tay, January 2, 1962
IN CITY Civil SERVICE
Hondinft A u t h o r i t y , N o w
ITsinjH
Computer
The New York City Housing
Authority has become the first
housing authority In the United
States to utilize an IBM 1401 electronic computer to provide a complete, Independent accounting system, William Reid, chairman, announced today.
The Authority has just completed the planning and installation of the new computing equipment, Mr. Reid said. The installation, at the Authority headquarters
at 299 Broadway, was completed in
10 months as compared to the
two to three years normally required.
Authority employees have seen
the f i r s r results of the new computer when receiving their recent
paychecks. In processing
the
agency's payroll, the 1401 Is
printing Its more than 8,000 paychecks in about three hours. The
operation i-equired seven hours
on equipment used previously.
The 1401 is cai>able of reading
800 IBM punch cards a minute
and printing 600
• • lines
• a minute.
with present and possible proposed improvements of the F i f t h
Avenue station on the IND System.
A special section of the display
Includes "information by automation" In which more t h a n 100
questions concerning travel Information and other subjects concerning the world's largest and
safest passenger railroad can be
answered by a push-button devicc.
• • •
W i n t e r Course.*!
. S e t hy \ Mi \
Brooklyn Central YMCA Winter Series of Informal Educational
fiver I,500 Apply
courses will open January 8th. ITje
F€»r A u t o M e c h a n i c
courses will range from hobbdes to
The NcC^r York City Department
the business world.
of Personnel has announced that
' Learning how to "Bid Ytew
l,7'i9 applications were received
Slam and Make I t " — two classcs
during the November filing period
In contract bridge will be offered
for the open competitive examinafor beginners and intermediates.
tion for auto mechanic.
"Conversational Spanish" for beginners will be a "^art of the diversified offerings for the first
BONUS
time. The "Bulls and Bears" of the
New&paper articles concerning
i Stock Market will be thoroughly
a New York State Korean vetercovered in a basic course - "Does
Rorvs' bonus are appearing with inYour Money Work For You?" Two
creased frequency. These newscourses In Ballroom Dancing, and
paper articles refer to proposals
»l»nu»ry X a m e d for
two Photography courses - Black
for a NYS Korean veterans' bon<»f I l i m e M
& White Advanced Techniques
ne. as no NYS Korean veterans'
"NEW MARCH OF DIMES and Color Photography round cut
•bonus legislation has been enacted
By LEO J. MARGOLIN
MONTH" in New York City was the program.
by the New York State Legislaproclaimed by Mayor Robert F.
ture to date. A coastltutional
Registrations are now being
Wagner for the month of Januamenrimrnt is required In New
(Mr. Marcoliii is Adjunct Professor of Public Relations in the ary, and the proclamation pre- accepted for all courses which
York State for a Korean veterans'
New York University School of Public Administration and is a vice- sented by him to a group of March will begin in January. Detailed
bonus. This constitutional amendinformation may be obtained by
president of the public relations firm of Martial & Company, Inc.)
cf Dimes children, in his office contacting the Program Depart^ j r ^ n t must be approved by two
' successive State Legislatures and
ment of the Brooklyn Central
PUBLIC RELATIONS object friends and Influence people as at City Hall recently.
nubmitted to the voters for their lessons rarely hit the world's front part of a program of achieving
With this ceremony, the annual Y.M.C.A., 55 Hanson Place, Brookapproval. Due to the procedure pages. But India recently unwit- good publdc relations.
'Item: March of Dimes Fund Raising lyn.
involved to enact veterans' bonus tingly gave all students of public Years of holier-than-thou inter- Campaign was launched In New
«
•
•
legislation, the earliest a veterans' relations, particularly those In national declarations by India York City to heJp in fighting T o u r t l l e p o r t e r . < 9
Ixjnus would most likely be paid government, a bagful of public were cancelled out, probably per- crippling diseases, birth defects,
Meet J a n . 12
to Korean veterans In this etate, relations "don'ts."
manently, by one swoop on Goa.) arthritis, and polio.
The Association • of Official
•
•
*
jtf enacted, would be 1964.
EVERY CIVIL servant should
3. DON'T LOSE your temper
Court
Reporters of the City of
study carefully t<he public relations when a newspapennan asks a K n i i ^ r a i i t l n « i u $ $ t r i a l
FREE LICENSES
New York will meet on Fiiday,
X a n i e M K<»i»ert f » a y
Certain seriously disabled vet- aspects of India's speedy conquest | pointed question about some unJan. 12, from 6-6:30 p.m., at 154
John T. Madden, chairman of Nassau St., room 1902.
of
Goa.
Begin
with
India's
self!
pleasantness,
because
that's
evierans who received money from
IJie federal government with which serving declarations prior to the dence oi "something hidden under the board of Emigrant Industrial
U) purchase motor vehicles do not conquest t h a t administration In the rug." Refusal to face the facts- Savings Bank, has announced the
appointment of Robert A. Gay as
have to pay a New York State li- Goa was collapsing. Examine care- in a public Issue is elementary bad
administrative vice-president.
fully
the
words
leading
to
the
public
relations.
(Item:
Bellgerent
cense registration fee. Free liThis is the first time the Bank
cense plates are available to ser- fight between India's UN dele- Krishna Menon, India's UN delehas had an administrative vicegate
and
probably
the
worst
public
gate
and
a
newspapennan.
In
the
khusly disable World War n and
Korean veterans if they receive j end, read the unfavorable world relations representative of apy president in its Ill-year history.
Mr. Gay became associated with
a grant of up to $1600 from the reaction to the conquest of Goa. nation, took as a personal in.sult
(federal government because they
THERE IS something to be the question by an American re- the bank in 1939. In 1947 he beExamination filing; dates for
lost or permanently lost the u.se learned In each step of the shame- porter, who asked Menon what came personnel officer, in 1949
cf one or both feet, one or both ; ful process of swallowing up Goa. was India's conquest of Goa was If assistant vice-president and vice- 1962 and the first six months ol
president in 1952.
1963 have been announced by the
hands, or they completely lost tihe Here are some of tihe key "don'ts" It wasn't aggression.)
Mr. Gay is a member of the New York City Department c l
Bight of both eyes, or have a per- to memorize:
4. DON'T MAKE an Important
Boenent impairment of vision In
1. DON'T MAKE a mistake, even move before following sound pub- board of trustees of the American Personnel. The dates as set by the
both eyes to a degree as to con- a small one, which erases many lic relations practice by carefully Institute of Banking and a mem- department are:
19G2
Btitute virtual blindness.
| years of building up good public researching the probable public ber of its educational review comJanuary
3-23
relations, based on good perform- reaction to such action. (Item: mittee.
PENSIONS
February
1-21
He
is
also
a
member
of
the
ance and good behavior. (Item: Many Indians are still In a state
Veterans of WW I, WW U or The conquest of Goa wiped out in
1-21
March
of shock from tihe violent^ almost Savings Banks Officers- Forum and
the Korean conflict need to sub- minutes the image of India, la4-24
Pace
College
Alumni
Association.
April
unanimous world reaction to their
mit annual questionnaires In con- boriously self-built for nearly 15
3-23
May
takeover of Goa.)
nection with their non-service con- years, as a nation dedicated to
6-2€
June
Kep. teller Honored
ADDING UP the 'minuses" and
nected veteran disability pensions. non-violence and spiritual lead6-25
July
B
y
A
l
m
a
w
i
n
t
e
r
the "pluses" is leading many InLikewise widows and children of ership.)
5-25
September
Rep.
Emanuel
Celler
(D.
Bkn.)
dians to the conclusion that, in•uch veterans In receipt of non3-23
October
2. DON'T TALK from both sides stead of going to Goa, they has been selected by the Alumni
fervice connected death pensions
1-2.1
November
Association
of
Boys
High
School
of
your
mouth
if
you
want
to
win
"shoulda stood In bed."
need to submit annual Income
3-21
December
as the "Alumnus of tiie Year." He
(juestlonnaires. Persons who recive
1963
was honored at the organi2ation'5
•veterans compensation for serviceJanuary
3-Sl
annual meeting in the auditorium
connected disabilities or compenFebruary
1-21
of
the
school,
Marcy
and
Putnam
sation for service - connected
6-26
March
Avenues, Brooklyn, recently.
<Je>aths, do not need to submit an
April
5-23
Rep. Celler is a graduate of the
iiiinual Income questionnaire be1-ai
May
class of 1906.
cause they do not have any llmlta6-25
June
«
•
«
Idon placed on the amount of inT A ^etii U i t t p i a y of
(ctne they may have and still re% A Clinic X e e d s
l*a«t P r e s e n t & F u t u r e
A pictorial display by the New U e e u p a t i o n a i T l i e r a p l s i
CIVIL SEKVICK LEADEB
York City Transit Authority enThe Outpatient Clinic cf the
Amt^i'ick'* Leading: NewiiiuaKailiD*
f u r P u b l i c Employeea
titled "Past-Present-Puture," can Veterans Administration, 35 RyerL S A U E B r i B M C A T I O N S , INC.
be seen in the loUiv «iC the Trans- son St., Brooklyn, has a vacancy
»7 IIUKII* St., New York 7, N.
Telepboiiei BEekuma 8-6<tlt
It Authority BuUcRng, 370 Jay
for an occupational therapist. T h e
Su»rc<1 M lecond-claM mattar Octobcr
Street, Brooklyn.
«,
at Ui« post offlc* at New
THE W I N N E R - ^ E l s i e Knight, left, vice pres. of XeTminal The dlsiplay has, a£ Its major starting E«lary is $5,355 per a n li;rk,
y . ftud Brldftport, Conn..
iiiitit<r t t e Act of March k. 187U
Employees Local 832, shares the fctage with Santa Claus during the theme, pictures q1 the past dating num. For detailed information,
I f m i U r of AuOit Bureau of C l r e u l a t i o m
Mubtrrii'tiou f r l c c
I'M l t « r
iucars annual ihriotmas Farty during Christmas ueek.
Knight c«{k to the feUbway i^iening in contact personnel office at MAin
liitllvUiual copiea, Itic
ikrrvdd a« (hairoMia of the affair and drew the lucky sujubcn lor 3fi04, the p j t s t n i with both old 5-7400, extension 214, between 8:00
•iBAl> Tbe I.eadcr t \ t t j « c « | |
t*r Jul» U|i|>u(tuulli««
door priaea.
ttnd ntw t<iuii4Bent and tht,future a.m. and 4:330 p m.
Your Public
Relations IQ
City Sets
f962-63
Filing Dates
CIVIL
Tue«flny, January 2, 1962
THE PUBLIC
EMPLOYEE
By JOSEPH F. FEILY
President,
Civil Service Employees Association
Rule 30 Explained
BECAUSE OF THE MANY requests to the Association for an explanation of Rule 30 of the Rules of Civil Service, which "creates contingent permanent status for State employees filling temporary vacancies, I undertook this column after consultation with CSEA counsel
Frank Lasch and other Association staff members,
PRIOR TO THE ENACTMENT of Rule 30, an employee would
pass a competitive examination and be eligible and reachable for a
promotion. Often, he would be promoted to a temporary vacancy and
would fill that vacancy for a considerable period of time. When the
position became permanent, however, and was ready to be filled on
a permanent basis, the temporary employee would no longer be eligible
because the list from which he was appointed had expired. Consequently, a new examination had to be given and if this particular employee
did not fall within the top three on the new list, he would not be
eligible for permanent employment.
AS A RESULT OF ACTION by the 1960 Legislature, the Civil
Service Commission enacted Rule 30, which pi-ovides that when a
permanent employee Is appointed or promoted to a position in a
higher grade, which Is left temporarily vacant, and is eligible for
permanent promotion to the position, he shall acquire contingent
permanent status after completion of six months of service.
THE APPOINTMENT OR PROMOTION must have been made
from an eligible list containing the names of at least three people
willing to accept the appointment, and the appointing authority must
file with the Civil Service Department written notice designating the
employee as holding the position on a contingent permanent basis.
IT SHOULD BE NOTED that at the time of the appointment to
the vacant position, the employee must be eligible and reachable for
permanent appointment to the higher grade. As long as the list is in
existence at the time of a canvass, it is immaterial whether the list
expires prior to the completion of the six-month period. If a person
becomes p 1 i ? i b l p for permanent status subsequent to his appointment,
the six-month period commences on the date he becomes eligible.
IT IS POSSIBLE FOR A PERSON to obtain contingent permanent status while the list from which he was appointed is still in effect.
Once this status is achieved, an entry is made in his record, and it is
no longer necessary for him to take an examination for the position
In which he has obtained this status. He may be appointed to the
position at any time at the discretion of the appointing officer.
IN ORDER TO OBTAIN CONTINGENT permanent status, the
list from which an individual is appointed must have been in existence
as of the effective date of the rule, Jan. 17, 1961,
IT SHOULD ALSO BE NOTED that if a person meets all requirements and h"s been appointed from a list containing the names of at
least three people willing to accept the appointment, the employee obtains the permanent contingent status automatically. If the employee is
appointed from a list from which less than three people are willing to
accept appointment, It is required that the appointing officer file
with the Civil Service Department written notice that the employee
has contingent permanent status.
THE CONCLUSIONS and interpretations I state above are the
Informal opinions of the Association and reflect discussions and determinations vvilh various State agencies, including the office of the
Attorney General and the Civil Service Department.
SERVICE
LEADER
Page Threa
Poll Shows Albany Civil
Service Dept. Bmployees
Against Move to Downtown
(Special to The Leader)
ALBANY, Jan. 1 — The overwhelming s e n t i m e n t of employees of the S t a t e Civil S e r vice Department, housed on the S t a t e Campus Site here, is against m o v i n g d e p a r t m e n t o f fices to the downtown section of t h e city.
This is shown in a survey conducted by the Civil Service De- Leader immediately after the news
partment Chapter of the Civil first broke that the state was conService Employees Association. Its sidering relocating state offices in
findings are being turned over to Albany.
Results of the chapter survey,
Joseph P. Peily, CSEA president, in
his capacity as a member of the which was conducted early in
Albany Commis-sion, which re- December, were reported in tha
monthly news bulletin. Minute-by
portedly recommended the shift.
Minute, which is published for
Of 358 questionnaires which
ALBANY, Jan. 1 — Comptroller
chapter members.
Arthur Levitt has handed out a wer6 filled out and returned to
Reasons given for each choic®
pension clieck to the 50,000th the chapter, 83 percent prefered
were "many and varied," accordperson to retire from the State to keep the department at the
ing to the chapter. Samples of
Campus Site, which is located on
E m - ' --'s Retirement System.
the reasons cited by those preIn ceremonies here, John J, the western outskirts of the city.
ferring Campus life were given as
Flamery, 10 South Clinton Ave.,
In addition to the 296 employ- follows:
Kingston, a career employee of ees who want to remain at the
"Adequate parking facilities;
the State Correction Department, Campus, the survey showed only
easy access to Thruway, Northway
was the man-of-the-hour. He is 56 would like to return to downand major highways; conveniencs
the 50,000th state retiree.
town Albany and only six persons of travel to those living outsids
Mr. Flannery, age 65, has been expressed no preiferencef
Albany; the Increased efficiency
in State Service for more than
The chapter findings reverse resulting from locating the entira
36 years. He served as a correction
results of an earlier telephone department In a single building
officer at the Eastern Correctional
sampling of employee sentiment especially designed for its needs;
Institution at Napanoch.
at the Campus made by The healthful atmosphere and imChoosin-T Option No. 1, he will
proved working conditions.
receive a monthly retirement addition to Comptroller Levitt and
For the most part, the chapter
check of $212.82 which am.ounts to Mr. Plannery were Paul D. Mc- said those expressing a preference
a lilWe over half his final salary. Ginnis, Commissioner of Correc- for downtown Albany did so for
Mr. Plannery thus Joins some 20,- tion, Leon Braun, Deputy Comp- personal reasons such as shopping
000 other surviving retirees who troller in charge of the Retirs- convenience, proximity to banks
each month receive a total of $3,- ment System, and Joseph P. Peily, and restaurants and nearness to
437.000 from the System.
president of the Civil Service Em- home.
On hand for the ceremony in ployees Association.
50,000th
State Aide
Gets Pension
Rochester
Chapter
Adds ISO
By W I L L I A M ROSSITER
CSEA Mental Hygiene Representative
ROCHESTER, Jan. 1 — l^Tore
than 180 new m^m'^srs hive b2en
bv
"
• •n^y
(The views expressed in this column are those ot the writer and
do not necessarily constitute the views of this newspaper or of any Chapter of the Civil Service Em. . lliL' last
orsranization).
three months.
EMPLOYEES IN THE Department of Mental Hygiene wiio have
A n u n i j . r s h i p ca'n-p.i^n which
recently received Merit Awards consist of the following; Mrs. Joseph op-^ned in Senirm':er is continrConiglio, Craig Colony and Ho-spital; Mrs. Margaret Holden, Middle- in?, according to the rhairman,
town State Hospital; Pilemon Vargas, Pilgrim State Haspital; C. Roy Agnes Brown of the city compBergen, Marcy State Hospital; Robert Burns, Kings Park State Hospi- troller's office.
tal; Mrs. Lois B. Rockefeller, Newark State School; Robert Corni.sh,
Rome State School'; and Karl McCormick, Rome State School. Our an ordinance permitting associasincere congratulations!
tion 111. m , ..J V .
J ijy
CSEA REPRESENTATIVES and members have begun to meet payroll deduction, and thio is regarded as a recruiting aid, said
OGDENSBURG, Jan. 1 — Senator Robert C. McEwen said with legislators in their own bailiwicks to present our legislative Miss Brown. The ordinance is to
program
for
1962.
Experience
has
shown
that
these
meetings
are
very
today he hopes a new retirement bill he h a s presented to
go into effect Peb. 1.
effective. We urge all members to participate in this legislative action.
the legislature for 1962 action will pass.
The ordinance could be reThis is a vital role for all civil servants to follow.
vpr
bv f>n inom'na; n^r^T-ri^'C
The measure provides retirement at 50 for the state's
APATHY AND SUCCESS do not mix. Remember the old axiom, administration which took over
Institutional employees. Under its requirements workers
"Only when you reach the mountain top, will you begin to climb".
Jan. 1, but til. r e ha.s u.. n no
would pay a flat six per cent of their salaries into retireSENATOR DUTTON PETERSON, attending the legislative dinner move in that direction. Demoment. The measure, if approved, would permit 50-year-old
meeting sponsored by the Newark State School Chapter on December crats are still smarting from a
retirement after 25 years of service.
4th, said that he was very interested in the Constructive Retirement city-county merger of the Civil
"Durins? past .sessions of the leg- }
measure, said Senator McService
Conimi''-.sion
forced
Islaturo I h'M'" been privileged to
^^^ support of the Resolution. This la the one that is being called the Death Gamble through by the present RepubliRe-solution. Senator Peterson stated that he would be very glad to
work with the Civil Service Em- cSEA.
co-sponsor this bill along with Assemblyman Day from Seneca County. can administration.
ployeeis Ass:ociiilion in accomplisi»
Similar legislation is now in ef-1
Miss Brown said no cutoff date
SENATOR AUSTIN IRVVIN, Livingston County, Chairman of has been set for the membership
Ing many worthwhile objective-s," feet for state police and others |
Senator McEwen^ a Republican, performing haiiardous work for, State Pinance Committee, promised his support for a salary Increase. campaign and the chapter may
His remarks were encouraging to Western Conference civil servants at make the drive a continuing afsaid.
the state.
a legislative dinner meeting held in LeRoy, New York, on December fair as it is among county Civil
sincerely hope that this bill
will prevail and that it will be I l i i l l i 3 l a i i i i i l l l l o . s p i i a l 6 th.
Service employees.
THE SALARIES of the lower paid employees in the Mental
further evidence of the state's
UTICA, Jan. 1 — Mrs. Ruth
Hygiene and other Departments are a considerable concern to many T r u i ' x X I I I I K M I
continuing interest In the faithMann, president of Oneida CounLegislators. On the spot experience shows adverse feelings by Legisful and dedicated employes of
ty Chapter, Civil Service Employlators to our No. 1 Resolution that calls for a ten percent salary inthese important state institutions.
ALBANY, Jan. 1 — James B.
ees Association, was hospitalized
crease for all state employees. Some legislators feel that this is unfair Truex, fonner public relationa
"The bill, if enacted into law, recently at the Leahy Clinic in
because a percent increase does not sufficiently improve salary status director for the State Departshould aid in attracting to state Boston for treatment of an eye
service the type of employes who ailment. At the Welfare Etepart- of Grades 3, 4 and 6. They would rather lean to a round figure. This ment of Public Works, has been
have, in the past, made the mental ment where Mrs. Mann Is an as- is good news as our attendants, clerical, kitchen and laundry workers, named'press secretary to Nassau
County Executive-elect Eugene H,
hospitals of New York models of sistant case supervisor, friends etc. are underpaid.
Sen. McEwen Presses
Passage of Retirement
Bill for Institution Aides
efficiency and leaders in the na- said they expected her to be away
IF TOP-HEAVINESS exists, the underdog will continue to be Nickerson. His salary will be $17,«
250 a year.*
,
tion."
for her job for six week(s.
hurt. We shall i»eel
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
Where to Apply
For Public Jobs
State C o m m e r c e
nrKten.
NEW YORK CITY—The Appll•catlens Section of the New York
CMty Department of Personnel Is
located at 96 Duane S t . New York
7, N.Y. ( M a n h a t t a n ) . It is two
Weeks north of City Hall, just
west of Broadway, across from
T h e Leader Office.
•
Terranova
Head of
Officers
Hours are 9 A.M. to 4 P.M
elosed Saturdays except to answer
Inquiries from 9 to 12 A.M. Telep h o n e COrtland 7-8880
Mailed requests for application
l^lanks must Include a stamped
•elf-atldressea Dusmess-size envelope. Mailed application forms
m u s t be sent to the Personnel
D e p a r t m e n t , including the speciI f k d filing lee in the form of a
cheek or money-order, at least
live days before the closing d a t e
Jer filing applications. This is
t e allow time for handling and
th« Department to. contact
t h e applicant in case his applica- PHOTO
W I N N E R — T h e photographs he is shown holding
tion is incomplete.
won top prizes for Anthony Fulco in the civilian photography contest
T h e Applications Section of held recently a t t h e Brooklyn Army Terminal. Mr. Fulco, a d j u t a n t
t h e Personnel Department Is near in the General Forms a n d Pubfications B r a n c h of t h e U.S. Army
t h e Chambers Street stop of the Transport a tittn Terminal Command, Atlantic, h a s only been seriously
mail) s u J w a y lines t h a t go interested in phoicgraphy for a year. He received $15 gift certificates
t h i e u g h the area. These are the
I R T 7 th Avenue Line and the
HJD 8th Avenue Line. The I R T
Lexington Avenue Line stop to
use is the Brooklyn Bridge stop
a n d the BMT Brighton Local's
Btep is City. Hall. All these are ''Union
Fosiale^^ is
but a few blocks from the P e r Internatiomd
Group^s
•oanel Department.
Monthly
Hours are 8:30 A.M. to 5 P.M.
Moiiday t h r o u s h Friday
Telephone n u m U r is YU 6-2626.
•
•
Elected
Procurement
Association
Fi-ank Terranova of East N o r t h port, N. Y., h a s been elected P r e s ident of t h e Federal Procurement
Officers Association of G r e a t e r
New York, succeeding Joseph D.
S t u r g i s of the Public H e a l t h Service.
T h e Association h a s 265 m e m bers f r o m 40 Federal Agencies and
was formed to provide a f o r u m
for free discussion and development ot Ideas relating to problem
a n d procedures in t h e procurem e n t a n d supply fields.
MAKE
'62
I t h a s oondticted m o n t h l y m e e t ings for more t h a n ten years. I t s
membership is restiicted to F e d eral personnel engaged in F e d e r a l
Procurement a n d Supply In t h e
New York area. Mr. Terranova la
the first A n n y representative to
[ become president. He will hold
I office for a year.
I
• « *
1
Labor
Appoints
Apprenticeship
Rep,
For Netvark
Area
R a y m o n d F. Schnabel h a s been
appointed
apprenticeship
and
training representative in the D e p a r t m e n t of Labor's Newark a r e a
office, according to a n a n n o u n c e m e n t by H u g h C. Murphy, region• al director of the Bureau of A p , prenticeship a n d Training,
j As
an
Apprenticeship
and
Training
Representative,
Mr.
Schnabel will work in close c o n tact with industry and labor t o
stimulate,
assist
and
develop
training programs,
j Mr. Schnabel was formerly e m ployed by 'the E r i e - L a c k a w a n n a
Railroad a f t e r serving his a p prenticeship on t h e railroad as a
carman.
YOUR
FINISH
BIG
YEAR!
SCHOOL
AT H O M E IN SPARE TIME
H y o a a r e 1 7 o r e ^ c r a n d h a v e d r o p p e d o u t of
f o r FREE L c i s o n e n d FREE B o o k l e t . T e l l s h o w .
school,
Postmaster Robeit K. Christenberry h a s called atlenlion to the
"Union Pof-iale", a monthly postal
review with jJlu^tiations, publisihed by t h e I n t u n a t i o n a l Bureau, Bern, Switzerland. This
magazine is the olficdal organ of
the Universal F o f t a l Union and
contains useful jniormation concerning inteinalional postal service.?, internalion«l postal events,
technical innovations in the postal
sei'vices, «nd a n n c u n c e m e n t s of
new stamps L«>»ucd in all countries.
The Union Fee tale is printed in
seven langua^ies (Fiench, G e n n a n ,
English, Arabic, Chinese, Spanish,
and Rue.sian). The subscription
price i."! y.OO £wi.«s francs, (about
$2.10 U.S.) per year or 4.50 f r a n c s
per half year. £ubseriptions s t a r t
the 1st of J a n u a r y or tihe 1st of
July. I t is available from I n t e r n a tional Bureau, Universal Pa^-^l
Union, Postal Box, E t r n 15, Switzerland.
<*
*
Federal
Housing
Aide Retires
After
38 Years^
Service
After 38 yeare of federal government service, Donald M. Rippey h a s retired, a t 65. f r o m the
New York Region Office of the
Public Houwng Administration,
according t€ a n a n n c u n c e m e n t by
Regional Director H e r m a n D. Hillman.
As a land adviser for the PHA,
Mr. Roppey a p p i a l t t d development
sites throughout the n o r t h e a s t e r n
states during the pae^t eleven years.
Prevloutly be h a d been employed
for a quarter c t n t u r y -with the
Bureau of Valuation e i t h e I n t e r -
Applications are also obtainable at main post offices, except
t h e New York N. Y.. Post Office
Boaids of examiners a t the p a r ticular Installations offering the
tests also may be applied to for
f u r t h e r Information a n a applicaFREE BOOHLET by U. 8 . G o t .
t l M feiwei. No return envelopes erniuent
8««ial BMHuriiy. M a i l j
•lY r«ijuued with named requests only. Leiiik>r.
Uuaaa Btraet,'
ap»^iii-aiion forms.
New Y«rk 7. N. Y.
|
writ*
AMERICAN SCHOOL, Dept. 9AP-25
l a o M. 4'.iiMl .St., New York 3«), A.V. Cull B R j a n t 9-2604 Dny or Night
Name
.\ddresa
City
-Age.
-Apt-
-Zone-
Stale.
Maj^azine
*
FfiDERAL — Second U.S. Civil
Service Region Office, News Building 220 East 42d Street (at 2d
Ave.). New York 17, N. Y., just
west of the United Nations building. Take the I R T Lexington Ave.
line to G r a n d Central and walk
two blocks east, or take the shuttle
f r o m Times Square to G r a n d
Central or t h e I F T . Q u e e n s - F l u s h ing train from any point on the
3int fco the G r a n d Central stop
Commission.
Among t h e propertlee h e officially appraised are sites, of some
of the largest public housing developments in t h e country. G r a n d
Central
Station,
Pennsylvania
Railroad Yards in Sunnyside, a n d
railway properties in Albany, B u f falo, and other u p s ^ t e c o m m u n i ties. He also par4^icip«ited in the
PHA's war housing disposition
pi-ogram
when
a
substantial
a m o u n t of property was sold in
the Region.
T h e followinc directions tell
where to apply for public Jobs
• n d how to reach destinations In
New York City on the transit
STATE — First floor at 270
Broadway. New York 7. N. Y
coiner of Chambers St., telephone
BAclay 7-1616; Governor Alfred
E S m j t h State Office Building and
T h e State Campus, Albany; S t a t e
Office Building, Buffalo; Room
460 at 155 West Main Street,
Rochester (Wednesdays o n l y ) ;
141 J a m e s St., Syracuse (first
a n d third Tuesdays of each
Baenth.
Any of these addresses may be
a s f d for jobs with the State. The
State's New York City Office is
two blocks south of Broadway
f r o m the City Personnel DepartHjent's Broadway entrance, so the
eame transportation instructions
apply Mailed applications need
»ot include return envelopes.
Candidates may obtain applications for State Jobs from local
©«€ts of the New York State
Employment Service.
Tuesday, January 2, 1 ^ 2
THREE S Y M B O L S OF SECURITY
YOUR ASSOCIATION
C.S.E.A. works in your behalf to provide the protection you and
your family deserve. It is your association, made up of people like you who
seek mutual security. As a member of this association, you benefit from
its programs.
YOUR AGENCY
Ter Bush & Powell, Inc., of Schenectady, New York, has been a
pioneer in providing income protection plans for the leading employee,
professional, and trade associations of New York State. Its staff of trained
personnel is always ready to serve you.
YOUR INSURANCE COMPANY
The Travelers of Hartford, Connecticut, was the first insurance
company to offer accident insurance in America. More than 3,000,000
employees are covered by its Accident and Sickness programs. The Company pays over $2,000,000 in the average working day to or in behalf of
its policyholders.
Let them aU help you to a fuller, more secure way of life.
TER
MAIN o r r i c i
^idumit^
'A
P O W E L L ,
I N C .
14S atslen St., ScK«ii*ti«4y 1, N.Y. • Fi«nklia 4-7751 • Aibaiiy 5 3032
1 1 ^ . . •vSolo 3. N.Y. • MwliM>ii 8333
• 4 3 Marflteit a v « . , Naw Y«ik 17. N . y . • Murray HitI
3 7 t 9 s
CIVIL
Tii«fwlaf, JMIH«I7 2, 1962
SERVICE
County Jobs Open
In Variety of Fields
Throughout the State
T h e S t a t e of New York ha-s a n nounced a schedule of civil service exams for jobs with various
county ifovernments throughout
t h e State. For all of them applications will be accepted until J a n .
15.
Unless otherwise specified, the
Jobs require residence in the county where they exist. Following is
a list of the exams, by county,
with the salaries offered:
Chuutauqiia County
Storekeeper (No. 8405), $1.85 to
$2.17 an hour.
Probation officer (No. 8415),
$4,500 to $5,250.
Erie County
Ekjcument clerk fNo. 8425), $3,540 to $^560.
Probation officer (No, 8406), $4970 to
Stores clerk (No. 8407), $3,140
t o $;},920.
Essex County
Assistant superintendent, Essex
Home and I n f i r m a r y (No. 8414),
$3,216 plus one meal per day.
Fire engine driver. Village of
Lake Placid (No. 8418), $63 a week.
Police patrolman (No. 8416),
open to residents of Essex, W a r ren,
Washington,
Hamilton,
Franklin, or Clinton counties. Salary varies.
Richmond County
Probation officer (No. 8413),
$5,400.
Sullivan County
Police P a t r o l m a n (No. 8417),
open to resident-s of Delaware,
Orjinge, Sullivan, and Ulster coun-
FagB
LEADER
ties. Salary varies.
Probation officer (No. 8408),
open to residents of the T h i r d
Judicial District, comprising Albany, Columbia, Greene, Rensselaer, Schoharie, Sullivan and Ulster counties.
fices: Erie County Personnel O f ficer, 45 Church St., Buffalo;
Hamilton County Personnel O f ficer, County Building,
Lake
Pleasant; Orleans County Personnel Officer, Court House, Albion;
Westchester County Personnel O f ficer, County Office Building,
Westchester County
White Plains; and Wyoming CounAssistant receiving and Inspec- ty Personnel Officer, 143 North
tion clerk (No. 8409), $3,530 to Main St., Warsaw.
$4,530.
Intermediate stock clerk (No.
8420), salary varies.
Probation officer (No. 8410), $5,330 to $6,850.
Storekeeper (No. 8411), $3,810
to $4,890.
Two positions for office perTitle t r a n s f e r clerk (No. 8426),
sonnel are open a t the United
$3,530 to $4,530.
W a r e house supervisor
(No. States Departnient of ^Agriculture
at 80 Lafayette St,
8412), $4,880 to $6,280.
The positions are for clerk-typComplete Information and applicatioE forms are available from ist and fi'^r'c-.'i-tpnosrrapher. Both
the S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t of Civil are In GS 3, paying from $3,720
Service, at 270 Broadway In New per annum. The department will
York City, or T h e S t a t e Campus arrange for the necessary Civil
in Albany, or the S t a t e Office Service examinations. Applicants
can apply for these jobs a t the
Building in Buffalo.
Also at the following county of- Lafayette St. office.
Two Office Jobs
Open With U.S.
In New York City
FIT*
NY State
Wants
Men and
Women
Parole
Officers
New York S t a t e needs parole ofTwo years experience In social
ficers, and applications are being work may be substituted for ttia
accepted for t h e positions now. required graduate study.
Candidates must have s a t i s f a c They pay f r o m $5,288 to $7,620 a
tory hearing without the u.se of a
year and are open to both men hearing aid. at least 20/20 vision
a n d women.
using both eyes, glasses permitted.
All candidates must be college
Parole officers must be pUfslgraduates. A year of graduate cally, mentally and morally fitted
study in a school of social work for parole work.
or a master's degree with a m a j o r ^ Applications forms and f u r t h e r
in correction t r e a t m e n t , correction
Information may be obtained f r o i a
administration, sociology, psyclrthe
State Campus, Albany, N. Y ,
ology or criminology i» also nece.sor from Room 2301, 270 Broadway,
sary.
G r a d u a t i o n from a recognized New York City, This exam h a s
law school will be acceptable.
| no closing date.
RESOLVE NOWLmTO ACHIEVE SUCCESS IN '628
T»d«y'» t'ivil St-rvlre KXHIIIS require m bronil kiiuwItMlK* "if many divt>r».
tubjecti. CiiiiiitftKiun U rxirpmrly kppii in Knlruiicr mid l'ri>iii<>(i<tiiHl Imta.
A hisli rating fw iipi'^-.v*!* to «l>(aiii a ixinifioii on lli)> F.lizil^le I.UtM ((<:•( «vi(i
MHiire »>arly «(>ti»iiitm'-nt HMlf-lirarlpd Rtiitly iiietlioilH IPIIII only f o iliHHiiitMintmeiit! Tlioiivmi'lii of ntfii and witiiirn liiivp found SI'KCIALIXKI) l)KI.KI14NTy
PRKPAKATION to br nif kpy to miccMii. Keen are modorati* and may !»• paid
In in<tlallnii>n(4.
iiiw-t at coiiyenifnt hours. Be our guest at a olaiw
•rssion of any
llial intrrcsts you and ••onvlnre yourself of tli« wiNdMia
of niakiiie tiiiit itni:ill iiiviMlinciit in your futur«>.
PATROtM AN - $7,61 5
A « e r omy 3 Y e a r , .
O F F I C I A L EXAM TO BE HELD J A N U A R Y 27!
.4pi>li<'atiuii 11.^.. •
. .M niid tilfd i)<i». Aii-ii wlio un- iipiHiiiilrd will b«
rmiulrrd to li»f in
t'.ly, Nansaii or W>stcl<p.<tfr f o u n t i r i but tiicr. ia n«
ruidenrn r^|iiirmi»>nt at time of aiiplication. Minimum H r i t l i t : S f t . 8 in.,
lni|uire for mniplHc dr('«iU.
TheroNgh Prcparqtion for W r i t t ^ & Physical Exams
3 Lechires & 3 Gym Classes Weekly
M A N H A T T A N : MON., TUES. & FRI. at 1:15, 5:30 or 7:30 P.M.
J A M A I C A : TUES., THURS. & FRI. at 7 P.KT.
^Novil
fccus jiist^oiice!
-FOR THE WHOl£ SUDE
SHOW
HiGH S6NQ0L EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
Neciled by Ni>ii-(.i
of Hi?li School for Many Civil Servi(«e KKania
S-Weelc Coursn Pi>i>ire for EXAMS conducted by >'.Y. State Dent. »( Ed.
ENROLL N O W for Classes in Manhattan or Jamaica
Manhattan: MON. & WED. at 5:30 or 7:30 P.M.—Begin Jan. 3
Jamaica: TUES. & THURSDAY at 7 P.M.—Begin Jan. 4
S A N I T A T I O N M A N Candidates
If yoil t>iif>c'l<(Ml til,' Ki'.v ANswiM'.i anil bdiove that you passed the WiiltCR Rit«m,
itart SPEUIALIZKD I'HVSICAL TRAINING at once.
N O W THE REAL COMPETITION BEGINS!
Standing on the Eligible List Depends Entirely On
Physical Rating and Determines Time of Appointment!
S% to 10<"9 Improvement May Make a Difference of 2 Years or More!
IF YOU C A N DO THE FOLLOWING YOU WILL MAKE 9 0 %
Tax Trainees
Sought for
$5.200Ms
J.—I'rM* an «(• !•». iiuml>l»'ll with one iiand aiMi «0 lbs, witli the (»tl»«*r
(»«i«ili i M > | > i r : i t e l ; ; ) a t f u l l a r m ' s l e n g t h a i i o v e y o u r i i e t t d .
a.—U'ilh
t'2ill4'd
ABHwrri*
Offit'ial
No changes in the tentative key
aniwera to the t r a c k m a n examliutt>>n wluch was taken on Nov.
18 Wiiii made by the New York
Ci&K Civil Service Conunission.
T h e test was given to aome 2.375
caadidiix^i a n d nine objeclioiui
were ralied to queatioiis.
down,
eonie
to
a
Milting
pOHition
with
a
lb.
Applications Open Jan. 3! W r i t t e n Exom A p r i l 14
A f t e r 3 Years
CORRECTIOii OFFICER - $7,400
Full Civil Service Benefits—Excellent Promotional Opportunities
MEN ONLY—20 to 31 Years of A g e — M I N . HGT. 5 Ft. 71/2 I".
Complete Preparation for Both Written & Physical Exams
Attend 3 Lectures and 3 Gym Closscs Every Week
MANHATTAN:, MON., TUES. & FRI. at 1:15. 5:30 or 7:30 P.M.
J A M A I C A : TUES., THURS. & FRIDAY at 7 P.M.
Applications will open in Feb.
PAINTER • $6,457 a Yr.
automatic
slide piojector
This 500-watt Argus projector takes the fussing out of
slide shows, puts the f u n back in.
One focusing lasts for the whole evening because after
you focus the first slide, they're all in focus. Each
one is pre-conditioned so it shows up sharp and clear;
A simple push-pull of the changer lever is all it takes
to show a slide, change it a n d p u t it back in order in
the magasine. W h a t could be easier?
Bring some of your slidea in soon, and see just how
beautiful they ar« with the new Argus Automatic;
Complete with 38-$lide magatine and built-in carrying case.
Ki'V
held
Start N O W ! Classes at Convenient Hours in Manhottna or Jamaica
T a x examiner trainees are berecruited by tiie State of New
York for one -year appointments.
After the successful completion
of the year, the trainees will be
appointed to tax examiner positions without f u r t h e r testing.
For th'» first year, the .salary for
the position will be $5,200 and will
be raised to $5,620 after the training period.
Tins test will be given on Feb.
17, and the last day to apply for
it is J a n . 15. The exam number
is 8033.
Required are either completion
of a two-year accounting course
at a business school or completion
of 24 semester credits In accounting at a college or university.
Tiie written test will consist of
questions on the theory and practice of commercial and governm e n t a l accounting and auditing.
To apply, contact the S t a t e Dep a r t m e n t of Civil Service. T h e
M a n h a t t a n address is 270 Broadway; Albany, T h e State Campus;
a n i Buffalo, Room 212, the S t a t e
Office Building.
r r « « * k i N a n
fi»i>t
dumblMtil bWiiiid yi»ur neck.
8.—Toe a l i n ' a<id
forward witti both feet at one time, making
a broad Junip of 7 f t . 8 in.
SupervUed trjiiiiids' ici our »i>i'i'i:illy eqiiiiiped gyTiin.isiuni* should enal>le yau
to aohit>ve 90% <tr t>i»tl-r in Official Kxams.
UNITED CAMERA
EXCHANGE
Mail Order Oapt.
•RANCHES AT
I f f : .\v«. i*r Amertt«i
l l ( « Av«. Af AwMirM
u i
SUS HiA.aMci Ava.
New r u c k . N.Y.
Mew
York SA. N.V.
VU « I.^M
VISIT OUR
NEW STORE AT
n i Ku»t 4»rd St.
. r r I.exiiiglua A f . .
New Vurk, ti.Y.
7-HoHr Day
250 Days a Year
ilfe* to KO. 9 yeafit trade exi>erienre or equivalent romitinalion of
and voratiun.il t r a i n u u •loalitie'..
eiiierirac.
T H O R O U G H PREPARATION FOR OFFICIAL WRITTEN EXAM
CLASS IN MANHATTAN ON MONDAYS AT 7 P.M.
Prepare N O W for Promotional Exams for
SENIOR & SUPERVISING CLERK
In Practically All City & Borough Depts. and Agenciet
M A N H A T T A N : WED. a t 6 P.M. or THURS. at 5:15 P.M.
Classes Meet at 126 East 13th Street
J A M A I C A : FRI., 4:15 P.M. at 91-24 U 8 t h St.
N.Y. C I T Y EXAM OFFICIALLY ORDERED!
Enrollment N o w Open! Classes S t a r t in January f o r
MOTOR VEHICLE OPERATOR
Salory $81.75 to $102.50 a Week
No Edacatienal or Experience Requirements
Pre|»ar» for OHicial Written Test That Counts for 1 0 0 %
POST OFFICE CLERK-CARRIER BOOK
0 * l a U a t OHir oWlces or by mail. No C.O.D.'s. Refund
i« S day* If aot satisfied. Send check or money order.
V O C A T I O N A L
DRAFTING
M*al>att«ii M iamaica
M
IC
C O U R S E S
AUTO MECHANICS
TV SERVICE ft REPAIR
Manhattaa
l.ouf Inland City
The DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
M A N H A T T A N : I I S EAST 15 STREET
Phoao
3-4Y0f
J A M A I C A 89-2S MERRICK BLVD.. b«t. JoMoica ft Hllltido AVM.
UI'KN
MON
T<»
I'M!
»
.A.M
»
I'.N
-FHIMKII
UN
8.\TUKU.«TT
CIVIL
Pag« Six
SERVICE
LEADER
T«e§<?ay, .TuniiiirT 2 ,
1962
LETTERS
TO THE EDITOR
Letters to t h e editor must be
signed, a n d names will be withheld
from publication upon request.
They should be no longer t h a n
Am€rtca'*8 Largegt Weekly tor P»hlle
KmployeeB 300 words a n d we reserve the right
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
to edit published letters as seems
I
Published
every Tuesday
by
appropriate. Address all letters to:
LEADER PUBLICATIONS. I N C .
The Editor, Civil Service Leader,
97 Duone Street. New Yeric 7. N. Y.
BEeliman 3-6010 97 Duane St., New York 7, N.Y.
Jerry Finkclstein, Consulting
Paul Kyer, Editor
Publisher
Joe iJeasy, Jr., City
j
N, H . Mager, Business
Editor
Manager
! ALBANY - Joseph T. Bellew - 303 So. Manning Blvd., IV 2-5474
KINGSTON. N.Y. - Charles Andrews - 239 Wall Street, FEderal 8-8350
lOo per copy. Subscription Price $2.22 to members of the Civil
Service Employees Associaiton. $4.00 to non-members.
Calls for 1962
State Pay Raise
Legislation
Editor, T h e Leader:
In the December 12 Issue of
The I.eader I read some of the
Civil Service measures being introduced for the 1962 Legislature
by the Civil Service Employees
UTOMATION is upon us. Daily addtional machines are be- Association.
Among them, I was favorably
ing manufactured, sold and used by large corporations.
The City, State and Federal governments are no different. impressed with the proposal t h a t
They too, are automating. The New York City Transit Author- all S t a t e employees under the $7,ity recently announced that it has autom.ated one subway 000-a-year.bracket be paid timea n d - a - h a l f for all overtime over
|;rain and intends to use it in passenger service shortly.
their regular work-week, iiastead
The Transit Authority, however, Is maintaining a strict of getting only compensatory time
policy of no job-loss due to the changeover. Jobs which have off.
been automated are not the cause of mass firing of employees.
I failed to find, however, any
Some 7,000 jobs have been automated by that agency over recommendation for a pay boast
the past several years and to date there is no record of any package for S t a t e employees such
as the one passed a n d granted In
Employee losing his job because of this automation.
I The Authority has a re-training program in action which 1961. I t seema to me t h a t State
fellows the misplaced employee to learn a new skill, trade or employees deserve one more genvocation. Although it means saving less money, a spokesman eral raise to bring their a n n u a l
faid "we will not save money by putting men out of work." incomes u p to a decent living
wage, equal to t h a t of private
t
The City, State and Federal governments must do the
industry.
TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1962
Automation
A
tame as the Transit Authority. Training programs could be
[feet up, before automation of any department is completed.
As the department is automated, the re-trained personnel
could take over operation of the department as if it were
Just another minor change in operations,
j These retraining programs will give a psychological lift
io those who are afraid of automation. Someone still has to
<llrect the machine.
—
Questions Answered
On Social Security
Below are questions in Social
Security problems sent in by our
readers and answered by a legal
expert in the field. Anyone with
ft question on Social Security
•hould write it out and send it to
t h e Social Security Editor, Civil
Service Leader, 97 Duane St., New
York 7. N. Y.
11 a m a self-employed person
und plan to retire in March 1962.
W h e n should I go to the Social
fieeurity office and what should I
take with me?
,Vou should visit your Social Security office In J a n u a r y or February, a n d you should have inf o r m a t i o n of your 1961 earnings.
Bring your Federal Income Tax
B«turn, Form 1040, along with a n
extra copy 'of your Schedule C
a n d the receipt or cancelled check
showing paymetit of the Social
Security tax.
•
•
»
I've been reading one of those
pamphlets on disability benefits
Under Social Security, and I've
been wondering whether a temporary disability can qualify a
worker for disability benefits u n der Social Security.
No. A remedial condition t h a t
ivill improve with time t)r t h a t can
be treated without significani risk
t o the patient's life or h e a l t h Is
Hot considered a disability under
Social Security.
•
•
•
Who decides whether or not
I meet the disability requirements
of t h e Social Secuiity Act?
A team of trained people — doctors and others who have experience in seeing t h e effects of disAbling cuiiditlons under jieople's
abilty to work — will consider all
t h e facts in your case.
•
•
•
My earnings capacity Jxas been
gradually decreasing for t h e past
four years due to a tropical disease. I a m now completely disabled. Will the decrease in my
earnings In recent years prevent
me f r o m getting disability benefits?
No. If you have as much as five
years of Social Security coverage
out of t h e ten years before you
became disabled for work, you
would meet the insured requirements for disability protection.
* * •
My wife and I have been receiving our Social Security benefits In
a combined check. Now t h a t my
wife is going into a nursing home,
will It be passible for her check
to go to t h e nursing home a n d
mine to come to me at our old
address?
T h e S t a t e of New York must
realize t h a t t h e bulk of last year's
raise went to people in the five.figure bracket, a n d not to the lower paid State aide.
I n my opinion, the percentage
rate of raises for lower paid employees should be higher, a n d t h e n
decrease aa t h e salary grade increases. I t LB not enough to spend
millions of taxpayer dollars on extensive salary studies a n d comparisorbs. T h e necessary legislation should be passed on proposed
bills to achieve salary raises.
Civil Service
LAW & YOU
By HAROLD L. HERZSTEIN
Mr. Herzstein Is a m e m b e r of the New York bar
(The views expressed in this column are those of the writer and
not necessarily constitute the views of this newspaper or of any
organization.)
Logic For Police
CAN YOU IMAGINE 250 men, all employed out-of-title and
getting promotional positions a n d pay without certificates therefor
in a police d e p a r t m e n t ? You could answer t h a t strange question "yes"
u p to last year. B u t stranger t h a n t h a t , t h e d e p a r t m e n t was the New
York City Police D e p a r t m e n t . W h e n anything like t h a t happens in t h e
New York City Department, it h a s been going on for years. No one
h a s ever h a d the courage to question it. B u t it h a s been questioned a n d
ended!
THE ACTION WHICH ended the practice was brought against
the Police Commissioner by some 250 men. They were all eligible on
respective promotion lists for jobs as Sergeants, Lieutenants and C a p tains. T h e men working above their titles were doing so without
appropriate certification a n d were, as I have said above, getting e x t r a
compensation for their work. The 250 men asked the Police Commi&sioner to p u t a n end to the practice so t h a t they could be promoted.
T h e Commissioner refused. T h e 250 m e n went to Court.
THEY WERE VERY lucky to have their case come before Judge
A r t h u r G. Klein, because he decided in their favor in cold and crisp
tones. (19 M. 2d 765). Appeals were taken by the City to the Appelate
Division (10 a p p div. 2d 606) a n d to the Court of Appeals (8 N.Y. 2d.
794); b u t in each case those higher courts, without writing any
opinion of their own, just a f f i r m e d w h a t Judge Klein had done in
the first ^ound.
Judge Klein's Opinion
JUDGE KLEIN based his logic on Subdivision 2 of Section 61 of
t h e Civil Service Law, which contains a prohibition against o u t - o f title work. I t reads, as fallows:
"No personal shall be appointed, promoted or employed under
. any title not appropriate to the duties to be performed and,***no
persons shall be assigned to perform the duties of any position
unless he h a s been duly appointed, promoted, transferred or reinstated to such position in accordance with t h e provisions of t h i j
c h a p t e r (reference to t h e Civil Service Law) a n d the rules p r e scribed hereunder."
THAT S H O R T p a r t of Section 61 made the problem before J u d g e
Klein easy. He leaned on it for the m a i n p a r t of his decision. He Is t o
be commended on his selection of Subdivision 2 of Section 61 f o r
Here's hoping t h a t J a n u a r y , sustaining the position of the 250 men. T h e r e are many, m a n y more
1962, will be as successful as J a n - cases which should be brought on this basis, In places where they
uary, 1961, was in obtaining a have given special men rights not vested in t h e m by law. T h e New
York City Police D e p a r t m e n t was one such place for a long, long time.
badly needed S t a t e salary raise.
•
NAME WITHHELD
Judge Klein Honds I t O u t !
• • «SCOTIA, N.Y.
COMMISSONER KENNEDY tried the real soft stuff on the Court.
Urges Protection
For Disabled
U.S. Employees
Editor, T h e Leader:
T h e r e exists a shameful condition of U.S. Civil Service Employees, injured in the line of duty not
due to their own fault, finding
themselves withouu any jobs, either by R.I.P. or because their job
h a s been eliminated, a i t e r s u f f e r ing a long illness, hospitalization
and p e r m a n e n t disability.
I t did not succeed. T h i s p a r t of Judge Klein's opinion will always be
remembered to his credit,
" T h a t respondent h a s abolished the 'acting titles heretofore
existing is not enough-nor Is,it sufficient t h a t he has, since t h e
Inception of the i n s t a n t proceeding, sought to revive the duties of
t h e position of Sergeant, Lieutenant a n d Cjaptain. His conduct In
assigning on a regular, p e r m a n e n t basis, large numbers of p e r sonnel a t a n increase In salary a n d with the duties and responsibilities of higher civil service position thereto by placement or
regularly established promotion lists Is not In accord with t h e
spirit and purpose of the above cited authorities. T h e petition is
granted."
T H A T SHOULD keep t h e m quiet in m a n y places. And they ought
to s t a r t looking around for the silent competitives.
These individuals, although they
hold "career" s t a t u s and have given years of service to the government, are advised to file new a p Yes. Separate checks can be Is- plications for t h e same positions
As a n aid to readers who contemplate taking Civil Service e x a m sued when a couple are separated. or others, a n d a f t e r doing so find
inations, the Leader is publishing sections of the Rules of the New
They will be issued upon request. themselves on lists f r o m which
York City Civil Service Commission which apply to procedures a n d
•
*
*
they are rarely considered.
ratings of all city tests.
I have often heard t h a t my emThey have n o other rights t h a n
Section 4
ployer should copy my n a m e a n d
a new applicant who files for
Social Security number directly
Examination Procedures
the same position.
f r o m my Social Security card.
4.4.1. T h e Personnel Director shall conduct examinations for such
T
h
e
executive
b
r
a
n
c
h
of
the
Why Is this so Important?
U.S. Civil Service Commission, in positions as m a y be necessary to anticipate the needs of the city
There are thousands of Identical
a face-saving gestui'e, sometimes service.
names In t h e Social Security files.
4.4.2. T h e tests comprising a n examination and the relative weight
sends a notice to the local boards
I n order for your wages to be proadvising t h e m to consider these given to each where not fixed by the rules or regulations shall be
perly posted to your account, It
fixed by t h e director of examinations subject to t h e approval of t h e
unfortunates. B u t do tiiey?
Is necessary t h a t your employer's
I t Is up to t h e whim of the local personnel director and the commission.
reports show your exact njtme a n d
4.4.S. A candidate shall not be admitted to an examination or any
board. Congressional legislation
Social Security number as listed
should be enacted to protect dis- test thereof, whose application therefor has not been presented a n d
on y o ^ Social Security card. I t
accepted in accordance with the rules a n d who h a s not been fingerabled Federal employees.
Is very Important t h a t your receive
printed.
NAME
WITHHELD
full credit for all your earnings
4.4.4. T h e director m a y secure outside expert assistance in e x a m BROOKLYN.
N.Y.
because the amount of Social Seinations in such cases as he deems appropriate and necessary. Howcurity benefits payable to you and
FOU THE BES'I IN
ever, any person who Is a public officer or employee of the city m
(Continued on Page 10)
HOMES — S E E PAGE 11
(Coutiuued on Page 10)
Tuesday, January
CIVIL
1962
SERVICE
LEADER
P«g« Sereoi
American Home Center
FRIGIDAIRE BEST BUYS
FRIGIDAIRE
2-speed, 7-(^cle Washer
for any-fabric washing!
• Patented 3-RinK "Pump" Agitator bathes deep
dirt out without beating.., turns clothes over and
over gently for a sparkling clean wash I
• Automatic dispensing of ail laundry aids - detergent and bleach-dye, rinse conditioners, liquid
or powder-all under water I
• Two fresh water Unt-Away rintei float lint away
automatically-away from the clothes, and out of
the washer!
• Rapidry Spin gets your clothes dryer than any
other washer!
• SudsWater Saver Model WCIR-e2 saves over 7000
gallons of hot water a year!
Ask us about the Frigidaire 15-year lifetime tent! |
YOU SAVE
WHEN YOU SPEND
FOR BEST BUYS FOR
BETTER
LIVING
Model WCI-62.4 colors or white
K F l i a i D A I R E
m O O U C T
OF
OKNERAU
MOTORS
FRIGIDAIRE Flowing
Heat Dries Clothes
BREEZE-FRESH!
• it's Exclusive-Flowing Heat dries clothes breezefresh, even safer than sunshine!
• "Automatic Dry Control" sets drying time for youi
shuts dryer off when clothes are dried just
enough-or dial your own drying time!
o
• No-steop nylon lint screen on the door!
• Porcelain enameled drum won't snag clothes!
• 5-Po$ition Fabric Heat Selector lets you pick th«
right, safe heat for any fabric. No-Heat setting
dries plastics, airs and fluffs bedding!
Model DIA-62,
24a'V. electric—120 V. optional
K R i a i D A I R E
p R O o u c r
O f
O K N e r v A u
Lowest price..
•
Biggest
value!
ONLY
PENNIES
A WEEK
M o r o i t s
AMERICAN HOME CENTER, INC
616 THIRD AVENUE AT 40TH STREET. NEW YORK CITY
CALL MU. 3-3616
CIVIL
Page Eight
SERVICE
City Library Aide
Opening; Requires
Only HS Dip oma
D e p a r t m e n t library aide is New
York City job title for which there
are vacancies in several City dep a r t m e n t s , and which pays from
$3,000 to $3,900 a year.
F r o m J a n . 3 to J a n . 23, applications will be accepted for this job
a t the City's D e p a r t m e n t of Personnel, Applications Section, 96
Duane St., New York 7, N.Y.
T h e only requirement for the
test is a h ' s h school diploma, an
equivalency diploma issued by
V
•
the State ot
York, or an armed forces G.E.D.
certificate.
T h e current vacancies are with
t h e departments of Hospitals and
Correction and the New York City
Community College. More vacancies may be expected in the near
future.
Duties of Job
Library aides perform various
library tasks, such as charging,
discharging, shelving and cata-
loguing books and other material.
Thpy inspect and rearran^re books
shelves and library display material and exhibits.
They also do simple mending
and assist readers in sslecting
books and in using library facilities. Aides do routine clerical dutes, such as typing cards and operating simple office machines,
and filing cards and records.
The written test is set for March
31: it will count for all of the final
grade and will require 70 per cent
right to pass.
The exam is designed to evaluate the cardidate's judgement in
situations commonly encountered
by aides, his knowledge of elementary library information, comprehonsion of pertinent library literature, knowledge of vacabulary
relevant to duties of the job. and
ability to utilize elementary classification techniques.
Social
Investigator
TraineesEarn$4,8S0
During
Training
All candidates will also have to
pass a qualifying medical test before being appointed.
The standard City residence requirement will not apply to those
persons appointed to the community colleges.
state Banking
Department
Seeks Reps
The New York City office of the
S t a t e Banking D e p a r t m e n t is in
need of sales finance representat l . es. Applications will be accepted
until J a n . 15 for the positions
which pay from $5,620 to $6,850.
Required are two years of experience in a sales finance comp a n y or in the sales finance dep a r t m e n t of a commercial or industrial bank or of a retail s-alos
organization, or similar organizations, and either r bachelor's degree or two more years of experience.
A written test will be given and
will count for all of the final
grade. I t v/ill have questions on
laws pertaining to retail installm e n t sales, the operation of sales
f i n a n c e companies and premium
finance agencies, conducting interviews and investip;ation£, and
preparing reports.
T h e State Department of Civil
Service will supply complete inf o r m a t i o n and application forms.
I t s New York City office is at
370 Broadway, and In Albany at
T h e State Campus.
Applications can also be obtained by calling in person at the
offices of the State Employment
Service throughout the State.
Application-s are being accepted
on a continuing basis for social
Investigator trainees. These positions pay from $4,850 to start.
After a year of satisfactory
training, social investigator t r a i n ees will receive regular appointm e n t to the title of social investigator at $5,150 to $6,590 a year.
A baccalaureate degree issued
upon completion of a four-year
course in a n accredited college is
required for the position. A college
series application f o r m m u s t b e |
tiled by the applicant.
Undei- close supervision, a social
Investigator trainee receives t r a i n -
More Than 2 0 Assistant
Statistician Jobs Open;
Apply Jan. 3 for Them
Assistant statisticians are needed
now to fill more t h a n 20 vacancies
in various d e p a r t m e n t s of the City
government. The jobs pay f r o m
$4,250 to $5,330 a year, and will be
open to applicants a f t e r J a n . 3.
The only requirement for t a k ing the test is a baccalaureate degree with at least 24 credits in
mathamatics or statistics, including a least six credits' in the latter.
Applications will be accepted
f r o m candidates who do not yet
meet the requ'rements, but will
meet them by September of 1962.
• .int statisticians are given,
w'^-n "Mgible, opportunities for
promotion
to statistician
jobs,
which pay f r o m $5,150 to $6,590 a
year.
No Test
There will be no actual examina$5,400 position of bank examiner tion, and candidates for the jobs
will be rated on the basis of
aide II a f t e r one year.
This is not a regular training their education only, a college
program in the sense of providing j series application form must be
a n automatic promotion at the end filed by the applicants. The last
of training. T h e point of it is to
:
. ide persons who want to enter
Test llalod Chanj^od
the field of bank examining with
tiie necessary requireme:it,s for
T h e new test date for promotion
admission to a test for bank ex- to Public Health Director (Preaminer.
ventable Diseases) is J a n u a r y 23,
The only requirement for this 1962, instead of the originally
tesi is a bachelor's degree. It is scheduled date, J a n u a r y 24, 1962.
open to all qualified residents of
New York, Connecticut and New
Jersey.
Competitors will take both a
written a n d a n oral test, which
will be rated equally. The written
IS CONVENIENT FOR
exam will test general abilites,
BUSINESS OR PLEASURE
paragraph reading, table interpreClose to the
tation, arithmetic reasoning and
glamorous
vocabulary.
theatre-andThe oral test will rate ability to
nightlife, shops
get along with others, ability to
and landmarks.
speak a n d converse effectively, and
judgment.
The number of the exam is 8000.
To apply for it, contact the State
Express
Department of Civil Service at
subway at
270 Broadway, M a n h a t t a n ; T h e
our door takes
State Campus, Albany; or through
you to any part
offices of the State Employment
of the city within
Service.
a few minutes.
That's convenience!
l l r o o k l y n Vt^l's H o s p i t a l
A handy New York
subway map is yours
.StM^kii U i o t i l i a i i ;
FREE,for the writing.
T h e Veterans
Administration
Banking Trainees
Wanted by State
For $100 Jobs
T h e state is now recruiting men
a n d women for positions as bank
examiner aides I. The positions
pay $5,200 annually to s t a r t and
will advance automatically to the
Tuesday, January 2, 1962
LEADER
Hospital in Brooklyn h a s a vacancy for a dietitian. G-7, $5,355 to
$6,345 per a n n u m , requiring, in
addition to a bachelor's degree,
two years of specialized experience
or completion of a n approved Internship.
For f u r t h e r information, please
telephone Mis. P. Baron or Mr.
\V. Andersen a t TErrace 6-6600,
Extension 389.
i
IMMEDIATE CONFIRMED
RESERVATIONS
day for filing is M a r c h 30.
T h e duties of assistant statisticians include performing statistical analyses, compiling d a t a and
using professional s t a n d a r d s and
techniques. -'"They also abstract,
code a n d edit routine data, and
prepare tables, graphs and charts.
After J a n . 3, interested persons
can apply to the Applications Section of t h e City D e p a r t m e n t of
Personnel, 96 Duane St., New York
7, N.Y.
r^^^lVelljngton^
7»h A v e u l 5 S t h S»
N i .s York
A written test will count for all
of the total grade a n d 60 is the
passing m a r k . The test will be of
the multiple choice type a n d will
include questions on general i n telligence, dealing with .people,
psychological and sociological c o n cepts a n d general background i n formation.
Applications can be filed, in p e r „ „ ^^^^ Tuesday be,.30
g.30
241 C h u r c h
^ h e te.5t will be
given on the same day. C a n d i dates who have failed a test in
the title in the preceding six
m o n t h s will not be eligible to t a k e
the written test.
Applications are available a t
the Applications Section of t h e
D e p a r t m e n t of Personnel, 96 D u ane St., New York 7. N. Y.
HIK THIi; KEM'I in ItoiikH — ( j i f U —
(jrpeting ('aril* — StHtltinery
ArtlHti' Supplir* and Ollirr Kquipmrnt
UNION BOOK CO.
lncorporal«-i)
I it I
237.241 State Strtef
Schenectady, N. Y.
EX
SPECIApATES
for Civil Service Employees
E R
SPECIAL RATE
For N. Y. State
Employees
l i n g U room, with pri*
v o t e both ond r a d i o .
In NEW YORK CITY
Pork A v « & 34fh St.
In ROCHESTER
2 6 Clinton Av«. South
HOTEL
Wellington
DRIVE-IN G A R A Q E
AIR CONDITIONING . TV
N o parking
problems at
Albony'i. lorgett
hotel . . . with
A l b o n y ' i only driv«-in
e o r o g t . Y o o ' l l lik* the comfort a n d convenience, tool
F a m i l y rates. C o c k t a i l l o u n g e .
1 3 6 STATE
In ALBANY
Stol* and Eaglt S i r t c i t
*Sfafe
Rate in New
is 58.00
per day.
dance with
new
allowance.
STREET
OPPOSITB STATE C A P I T O l
See your friendly
York
City
In accorper
diem
PETIT PARIS
RESTAURANT
ACCOMMODATIONS
FOR PARTIES. — O U R
C O T I L L I O N R O O M , SEATING
200 COMFORTABLY.
L U N C H E O N DAILY I N THE
O A K R O O M — 90c UP
12 TO 2:30
— F R F H P.ARKTNG IN RFAR —
1060 M A D I S O N AVE.
ALBANY
Phone IV 2-7864 or IV 2-9881
(JWj)
trove/ agent.
SPECIAL
WEEKLY
FOR EXTENDED
RATES
STAYS
MAYFLOWER - ROYAL COURT
APARTMENTS — Furnished, Unfurnished, and Rooms, Phone H E .
4-1994, (Albany).
ALBANY
B R A N C H OFFICE
r O R INB'OHAIA r i O N ii;«mdini; aUvei tifclnf.
Please write or call
JOSEPH T UELLEW
8 0 3 s o . MANNING BLVD.
ALBANY 8 . N.Y
Plioone I V 2 - M 7 4
COLD BUFFETS, $2 UP
FULL COURSE DINNERS, $2.50 UP
ARCO
C I V I L SERVICE BOOKS
and all tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 Broadway
Albany. N. Y.
M a l l & Phone Orders Filled
Tkt
M c V e i g h
FUNERAL H O M E
208 N. ALLEN S I .
ALBANY, N. Y.
IV. 9-0188
In New York: Circle 7-3900
In Albanyt HEmlock 6-0743
In Rochester: LOcutt 2-6400
SinitleK f r o m t T . ' i t i
D o u b l e * f r u u i StX.UO
ing and performs beginning level
work in Investigating need and
determining eligibility for public
assistance.
Jome* P.
OWENS
Jamet J.
Rktubllthed
1B16
Aibauy i
Most Centrally
L o c a t t ^ O Home a t Time u f
Akf
Nued At No Extre Gout
roiMlllliincil
•>•
I'Mtklng
220 Quoll St.. Albany. N. Y.
HE. 6-1860
In Time of Need, Call
M. W. Tebbutt'sSons
176 state
12 Colvin
Albany
Albany
H O 3-2179
IV 9-0116
Albany
420 Kenv/ood
Delmar HE 9-2212
11 Elm Street
Nassau 8-1231
Over I I I rears of
DisNnguished '
Service
CIVIL
Tuesday, January 23, 1962
SERVICE
LEADER
Filing Now Open
For Police Tesf;
Pays to $7,616
When they are appointed, c a n The D e p a r t m e n t of Personnel
is now seeking candidates for the didates must live either in New
next examination for patrolmen Yoric City or in Nassau or Westwhich will be held J a n . 27.
chester Counties. A driver's license
The present policy of the De- is "also required on appointment.
p a r t m e n t calls for the e x a m i n a Physical Requirements
tion of candidates every few
Applicants must be a t least five
months. Although for the past feet eight inches in bare feet with
year the Police D e p a r t m e n t has normal weight for height. Rebeen in u r g e n t need of men, the quired vision is 20/30 in each eye
crash program established by the without glasses.
Department of Personnel to recruit
Proof of good c h a r a c t e r is neadditional men has now succeeded
cessary for appointment. Persons
in bringing the d e p a r t m e n t to
who have been convicted of a felfull force. I t is expected t h a t ,
within the next year, a sufficiently jo^y- P^^ty larceny or who have
discharged
dishonorably
strong p a t r o l m a n eligible list will
the Army will not be apbe established to enable the testing I
^^^ ^ r m y
program to r e t u r n to its normal
The written test county for all
basis.
These career jobs, with retire- of the total grade and a grade of
m e n t guaranteed a f t e r 20 years, 75 is required to pass. T h e test will
begin at $6,133.76 annually and in- be of the multiple choice type and
crease, after three years, to $7,- will be designed to measure the
616.50. Included in this salary is candidate's intelligence, initiative,
overtime, uniform allowance and judgment a n d capacity to learn
the woric of a patrolman. It may
paid holidays.
Applications will be accepted include questions on police situareading
comprehension,
f r o m any area of the United tions,
States but residency requirements arithmetic reasoning, vocabulary,
must be met at the time of a p - and current affairs.
pointment.
Qualifying medical a n d physical
At the time of filing candidates tests are also required. A second
must be at least 20 an^ not more physical test will be given to candidates who either fail or do not
t h a n 29 years old.
Exceptions to the age require- appear foi* the first physical test.
m e n t s are made for veterans as
The physical test will be given
defined in Section 243 of the Mil- a f t e r the medical examination and
itary Law.
the D e p a r t m e n t of Personnel reAt t h e , time of appointment serves the right to exclude any
candidates must be a t least 21 canfii^ote who is found medically
years old and have a high school unfit from the physical test. Medical and physical requirements as
' diploma or its equivalent.
Page Nine
Navy Y a r d
Told It Must
Add 500 Men
In Brooklyn. T h e Navy also a n nounced a $4.2 million pier modernization plan for the Yard.
Unless the Brooklyn Navy Yard
c a n add 500 men to its present;
compliment of 13.500 employees,
extra work given to the Yard by
the Navy will be of no benefit to
It, Rep. Hugh L. Carey (Dem.N.Y.) said recently.
posted on the D e p a r t m e n t of Personnel bulletin board must be met.
Candidates shall be rejected for
any deficiency, abnormality or
disease t h a t tends to impair
health or fitness.
Candidate who take one written
test will not be permitted to take
another test for at least six months.
For application blanks, write or
visit the Applications Section of
the D e p a r t m e n t of Personnel. 96
Duane St., New York 7. N. Y. If
requesting a n application blank
by mail, enclose a stamped selfaddressed envelope with the request. Piling is continuous.
He said the Yard was having a
difficult time meeting the deadlines set by the Atlantic Fleet
Command. Unless it can meet the
deadlines, it will be judged inefficient, and work t h a t might
have gone to it will go elsewhere.
He said t h a t the Yard, if i t can't
meet its work schedule, is "out of
business."
His remarks were brought about
by the Navy's recent announcem e n t t h a t overhauling work on
f o u r a i r c r a f t carriers,, two oilers,
four destroyers, and four destroyer
escorts would go to the Shipyard
Prepare
For
Your
$35- HIGH -$35
SCHOOL
DIPLOMA
lis 5
WEEKS
GET your Hifh School K<in)valency
Diploma which la the legal e q u i T f t lent of 4-year» of Hiirh Sclinol Thta
niriloma la accepted for Civil Servle*
puaitions and other purpoees
ROBERTS SCHOOL
.517 W.
57th S t . .
New
PLaia
7-0300
Please send
mation.
Name
Vork
me F R E E
Inforhsl
_________________
Address
Jity
Thriftiest Frigidaire Frost-Proof
Food Freezer!
• No frost! No defrosting! Exclusive
Frigidaire Frost-Proof system
stops frost before it forms!
• Hot Weather Safe! Frozen foods
stay zero zone c o l d — e v e n at
1 1 0 ° test room temperatures!
• Big 412-lb. capacity. 5 roomy
door shelves!
• Famed Frigidaire Dependability!
• Ask about Food Spoilage Warranty!
Model U F P D 1 2 6 2
11.78 cu. ft.
net capacity
K F I I G I D A I F I E
r n o o u c T
US Increases Number
OfGS 16,17, & 18 Jobs
oi*
OANONAI.
ONLY PENNIES
M O T O R S
A DAY
immediately subject to allotment
among apencies by CSC.
Taking
into account
lower
grade spaces made available when
the Commission upgrades a posi- ,
tion already in grade GS-16 or
GS-17, 443 positions were alloted
in the latest action. Of this n u m ber 49 were placed in grade GS-18,
Each agency received individual 101 were placed in GS-17. a n d 293
notification of the action taken in GS-16.
by the Commission on its requests
The m a j o r i t y of t h e new jobs,
a n d justifications. Duties a n d re- 54 percent, are in t h e competitive
sponsibilities of each individual service; 25 percent are in Schedule
job were weighed by the ComC; 15 percent are in Schedule A;
mission.
a n d 6 percent are excepted by
After setting avside the legally
statute.
pre.scribed reserve of 50 such positions which are for allotment by
the President, there were approxINVEST I N FLORIDA L A N D
imately 380 additional positioiis
Acting under recent legislation
which increased the limitation on
t h e number of Government positions which may be placed in
grades 16, 17, and 18, the Civil
Service Commission h a s completed allotment of several hundred
additional top jobs to Federal
agencies.
Feature-packed
Frigidaire Range Value!
• Automatically, Cook-Master can start
and stop oven — cooks dinner while
you're away.
• Broil to perfection — with deep radiant
heatl
• Unlimited heat settings from SIMMER
to HIGH for all 4 surface units.
• Choice of 4 colors or white!
Frigidaire Dependability, too!
MONROE & COLLIER
Took Needed in
WesU'liesier at
t o Start
There is a vacancy now in the
•New Rochelle City School District
for a n experienced cook. The Job
pays f r o m $2,459 to $3,167 a year
a n d employment is for a tenm o n t h period. Residence in Westchester County is required.
Applications can be filed until
J a n . 2, 1962. with the New Rochelle Civil Service Commission.
62 Wildcliff Road, New Rochelle,
N.Y. The telephone number is NE
2-2021.
COUNTY
50 Milei West o(
Mlomi
5 ACRES
$5 Per Month
NO
DOWN
TOTAL
SALES
PRICi
PAYMENT
'595
• NO INTEREST
• NO OTHER COSTS
U N D E V E L O P E D virgin land with no roodt
ond sold OS a ipcculonvt Invcttment.
Fre« M a p a n d
Brochurt
Miami Gult Land Investors.Inc.
jBiicayne Building. Migml 37, Flerido
I R o o m n07-T(lephon«fRankiin 3-749I
IaD 5 8177(e) (1).
30* Electric
Model RS-35-62
Uiij
K
k r i g i d a i r e
P N O O U O T
OP
IIWOTOR*
AMERICAN HOME CENTER, Inc
616 THIRD AVENUE AT 40fh STREET. NEW YORK CITY
CALL
MU
3-3616
19
CIVIL
Page Ten
SERVICE
LEADER
f.'ayor Names Staff
To Head Departments
Poui- important conunissioners
were appointed and five others reappointed by Mayor Wagner at
Leader press time. Others were expected before Monday. Appointed
wera:
Buildin? Commissioner Peter J.
Reldy, as Commissioner of Public
Works at a salary of $25,000, He
resides at 30 Beekman Place, M a n hattan.
Deputy Building Commissioner
Harold Birns, as Building Commissioner at a salary of $22,500.
H e resides at 51 F i f t h Avenue,
Manhaf<-an.
Deputy Pire Commissioner A1
F a c e t t a , as Commissioner of M a r kets, to succeed Commissioner M a •carelli at a salary of $20,000. He
r&sides at 196-07 McLaughlin Avenue, Holliswood, Queens.
Mayor Wagner in making tliese
announcements
said:
"I
am
pleased to announce these appointments. I am confident t h a t
each one of them will do a n outstandinar j.ob. They are all experienced and will continue to give
t h i s city tlie kind of clean, efficient administration t h a t it deserves and must have."
er New York Councils, Boy Scouta
the Construction Division, G r e a t York County, a n d co-chairman of
of America. He Is married to the
former Alby (?obb.
He is a member of the Mayor's
Committee on Practices and Proi cedurea in the E>epartment of
Buildings, which h a s set f o r t h the
plans for improving m a n a g e m e n t
and administrative practices In
the department.
He wa3 formerly an official of
Purdy <SC Henderson and was responsible for t h e structural design
of a number of New York's most
important buildings, including the
B a n k of M a n h a t t a n at 40 Wall
Street, Hunter College on P a r k
Avenue, the Metropolitan Life I n surance Home Office at 24 Street
and its executive office building at
1 Madison Avenue, and the Western Electric Building at Broadway a n d Fulton Streets. His company h a i been engaged in the
preparation of engineering studies
and gerieril design of Industrial
buildingd atid specialized design
of all type.3 of steel, concrete and
timber structured. I n addition to
work in the United States, Mr.
Reidy's activltiej have taken him
throughout the world. The s t r u c tural design of some of the great
building} of Montreal. C a n a d a ;
Havana, Cuba; a n d Tokyo have
been created by Mr. Reidy and his
firm.
T h e following re-appointments
were announced:
Commissioner F r a n k Lucia of
Sanitatl')n: Commissioner Leona
B a u n u a r t n n - of the Health Dep a r t m e n t ; Commissioner Roger J .
Browne of Purchase D e p a r t m e n t ; |
f f a r o l d IBircM
Commissioner Bernard J. O'Con- iI
Commissioaec Birns is 48, m a r nell of License Department, and
ried and bh* f a t h e r of two chilPresident William E. Boyland of
dren. He is a member of the
t h e Tax Commission.
Metropolitiu Advisory Board of
Peter Reidy
the Anti-Defamation League, and
Commi.ssijtier Reidy was born a trustee of t h e Village Temple.
l a Astoria, Queens, in 1900 and
Prior to hbi po»ition as Deputy
t3 a licensed professional engineer
Commissioner
lu the Department
In five states, a member of the
G r a n d .Jury A.ssociation of New of Bullding.4 he was New York
Civil Service Exam
(Continued
from
Rules
Page «)
t h e classified service thereof shall be Ineligible to gender such assistance.
4.4.5. Examinations for positions in the personnel examining-occupational group shall be conducted by the personnel director or by
persoiio employed by him.
4.4.0. Except as provided In p a r a g r a p h 4.4.5. every examination
•hall be under the direction of t h e director of examinations, who
shall con.sult, - when necessary, with appointing officer.* concerning
t h e qualiflcations for the position for which a n examiation U to be
held. Such examination shall otherwise be free f r o m the influence or
participation of the appointing officer or of hit subordinates.
4.4.7, The director of examinations shall a s s i j u t h e examiners for
a particular examination. All written questions prepared by such examiners sliall be placed in his custody In advance of the examination.
Such questions shall be printed from type or other process under his
Immediate supervision or under the immediate supervision of a sub• r d i n a t e designated by him unless relieved b / the personnel director,
h e siiall be responsible for their safekeepinj. 3o f a r
practicable
•ucli prin^ iv> .shall be done on tlie day of e x a m i a i t i o n .
4.4.8. Oral tests, whevere practicable shall be recorded by stenottypj or oiluM- satisfactory method of recorditii.
4.4.9. On the day of the examination, the identiflcation cards of
t h e candidates shall be enclosed in an envelope a n d sealed and t h e
Identity of each candidate shall remain concealed until the ratings
* r e completed.
4.1.10. No candidate shall be given a second or special competitive
lest in connection with any examination held, unle^n It be shown to
t h e satisfaction of the commission, t h a t his failura to take or complett> sucli tf^st was due to
(a) a manifest error or mistake for whicb tUe department of
personnel is responsible, the nature of whioli stiall be set f o r t h
In Its minutes;
(b» cotnpulsory a t t e n d a n c e before a court or other iJublic body or
ofllcial have the power to compel attendance;
(c> physical disability Incurred during the coai;i» of and within
t h e scope of the municipal employment oC such candidate where
guch candidate Is a n officer or employee of the city.
No such claim shall be granted unlesi it l-i filed in writing with
ttie Department of Personnel within two moatlw of the date of the
rsguUt' i^'xamiuation
Ne.\t
How p a p e r s are
rateJ,
Tiirsflay, Janiiarf 2, 1962
Stot« Credit Unit Declares Dividend
T h e Board of Directors of the
New York S t a t e Employees Central Credit Unon h a j declared a
dividend of four percent, payable
on all s h a r e holdings on deposit,
during the year 1961. It is expected
t h a t a t least the same r a t e will
be paid for the year 1962 provided
County District Attorney In the
Rackets Bureau. He has conducted
G r a n d J u r y Investigations involving the D e p a r t m e n t of Housing
and Buildings, Board of T r a n s p o r tation and Board of Education. He
h a s also probed corrupt relationships In the l a b o r - m a n a g e m e n t
field and conflicts involving the
garment center a n d
trucking
firms. Mr. Birns was with the
Rackets Bureau f r o m 1950 to
1959. He h a s also served In the
Complaint Bureau, Indictment Bureau, and the Homicide Bureau.
His work Included prosecution of
J o h n Dioguardi, Samuel Goldstein and Max Chester for conspiracy a n d bribeiy of labor r e p resentatives; J o h n G. Broady and
others for conspiracy and unlawf u l wiretapping; a n d numerous
racketeers for extortion.
t h a t earnings continue a t a favorable rate.
T h e New York S t a t e EJra,pl3ye<Ni
Federal Credit Unit m a l n t a l a i two
convenient offices. T h e m a i n of».
flee is In Room 900 a t 80 Center
St„ New York City. ThL? offico
is open every day except Friday
f r o m 10 a.m. to 1:30 a.m. a n d
from 12:30 r m. to 3 p.m. Office
hours on Friday a r e 12:30 p.m,
to 3 p.m. Another office is m i i n talned in Room 1113 a t 270 B r o a d way, New York City. Office hour;?
are f r o m 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
daily.
D e p a r t m e n t to Assistant to Screvane.
J . J e f f r e y Roche, Director of
Communications for the
past
four years will become Deputy
Commissioner of Sanitation In
charge of community relations. He
will b e replaced by Mrs, J a n e
F R E E B O O K L E T by D. 8. GOTKalmus, who was radio and tele- emment on Social Secaritjr. BfaU
vision director In the mayorality only. Leader, 97 D a a a e Street,
campaign.
New York 7. N. T.
Mr. Birns is a m e m b e r of the
Special Committee on Housing and
Urban Development of the Association of the Bar, and is a m e m ber of the New York State Bar
Association Committee on M e n t a f
Hygiene. He was formerly a m e m ber of the Bar Association Committee on Arbitration and of the
Bar Association's Special Committee to Cooperate with the Judicial
Conference.
Albert Pacetta
Commissioner Pacetta Is 43
years of age, is married and h a s
two children.
H e was graduated from the
University of Notre D a m e in 1939
and received the degree of Batchelor of Arts a n d Letters; His m a j o r
subject was philosophy.* He was
also graduated from St. J o h n ' s
Law School receiving the degree
of Batchelor of Laws and was a d mitted to the New York S t a t e
Bar in AprU, 1946.
He enlisted in the U. S, Army
Air Coi-ps in December 1941 and i
served for four years. His duties j
included t h a t of Glider Pilot, I n telligence Officer and Trial Judge
Advocate. As Trial Judge Advocate
he handled hundreds of m a t t e r s
involving ^ o s e c u t i o n of personnel
In Army court martial proceedings. He received the following
decorations: Air Medal with four
Oak Leaf Clusters; three Presidential Unit Citations; Purple
Heart for wounds received in action; Bronze AiTowhead indicaiing
Spearhead Troops and invasion;
seven battle stars, and others. He
was honorably discharged as leiutenan^ . • l:)V~m >fM- 1945.
Other Ckaii^es
Debs Myers, a former newspape r m a n and magazine editor was
named Executive Secretary to M a yor Wagner last week. He will replace Fi'ank Doyle who has been
named Special Assistant to the
Mayor.
Julius Edelstein, former White
House and S t a t e Department aide
will replace W a r r e n Moscow as
Executive Assistant. Mr. Moscow
will t r a n s f e r t o the post of Consiiltant on Inter-governmental Affairs, under the City Administrator.
A career Civil Service employee
h a s been named to the post of executive assistant to the City Council President. Charles F. Rodriguez,
formerly Administrator to the
Bronx Borough President will fill
the post as assistant to Paul R.
Screvane, the new president of the
City Council.
Richard Fenton, another career
civil servant will move from the
potst of Astiistant to tlie Dir c.or
of Operations in the Sauitati-ju
TAKE
ReSEARCH
MAKES THE
DIFFERENCB
ALONG...
If you arc m the trail of today's bigiest portable value . . .
p i ' l i finish i Winer with a SONY TRW-621 . . . the skier's best
friand. Set th<j precison 7-jewel watch on this tiny, new, aih
transistarjzect pocketable radio and it turns the set on —
•utomaticaily . . . wikens you to your tavorite program . . .
givat you the lecal weather report
. keeps you up to tfi«
^nuta on ski and road conditions . . . entertains you at nigNt
• . , puts yoii to sleep . . . and turns itself off. It's only thi
tiza of a pack of cigarettes so you can carry it comfortably in
any p o c k e t . . . in its own carrying case. It operates for scores
of hours on stindard batteries. It has its own easel stand for
taUa-top pljyinij Listen tor yourself. Test-Play it Today . . .
Complaia with Battery, Earphont and leather case. LIST: $4f.M
• m Kflna WflMMIIWt« MllWt
tm i D Kill MM. INIf MM M M (IIUIT IMllK IM Ml CiMUHi f l l t W I ^ I
American Home Center, Inc.
614 T H I R D AVENUE A T 4 0 T H STREET
N E W YORK C I T Y
C A L L M U . 3-3414
CIVIL
Tuesday, January 2, 1962
SERVICE
LEADER
REAL ESTATE
Pag« Elevn
VALUES
INTEGRATED
4
HEMPSTEAD
INTEGRATED
OFFICES READY TO
SERVE YOU!
Call For
Appoinfment
2-FAMILY
Gorg-eoun
ranch, oil
basomrnt,
ca-h. G.I.
UNIONDALE
135-19 ROCKAWAY BLVD.
s o . OZONE PARK
277 NASSAU ROAD
LIVE RENT FREE
J A 9-4400
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
Play bedroom, flnished basement, eat-in kitchen, formal
dininir room. Onl.v $800 ra«h,
G.I. only $200 with morttraire.
Call LA 7-HlOO
141-44 Sntphin Blvd.
Jamaica
MA 3-3800
HEMPSTEAD
$ 1 3 , 0 0 0
DETACHED, 7 rooms, porch,
eat-in kitchen, tiled modern
bath, oil heat, full basement.
Vacant on title. Only $400 on
contract.
BRING DEPOSIT
JA 3-3377
2 GOOD BUYS
HEMPSTEAD
1-FAMILY, 6 rooms, stucco
home, 3 large bedrooms, dressing room off Master bedroom.
Custon designed modern kitchen with indirect lighting. Plenty
of cabinet space, oil heat, garage. Many '^-tra.
IV 9-5800
ALL 4 OFFICES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
$18,400
ST. ALBANS
FROM 9:30 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.
2-FAMILY, brick and shingle,
414 rooms first floor, 3'/a on
second, 2 rooms in finished basement, beautiful patio and breezeway leading to garage, ranch
fenced and hedge, 60x100 corner
plot. A priv^'fe hoven.
INTEGRATED
MOLLIS
$21,600
Immediafely
Oihtir
NO CASH G.I.
V
^
V
Y
k
Ii"l3"i3"lj"A
JAMAICA
AX 1-5858 - 9
HILLSIDE
JJAMAICA
AMAICA
i
^
A X 7-7900
LEGAL
notice:
HALIi. FRANK E. — CITATION. — THE
J'EOPLE OK THE STATE OK NEW
YOKK BY the Grace ol God Kree and
Xnilepenaent TO: HENRY J. HALL. PR., il
I liviiiir, niul the unknown Ipgiil repiesentatives of the EHtatRs of HENRY J. HALL
Imlcpeiulent TO: HENRY J. HALL. JR., il
l'.' hen-s at law. next ol kin. distributees,
' legratees anil sucoPssors in tnterest of
! niENRY J. HALL. JIARY J. HALL, and if
I he be dead, of HKNRY J. HALL, JR..
buintr the persons interested as orfditors.
legatees, devisees, beneficiarit's, distiibutees or otherwise in the Estate of FRANK
E. HALL, deceased, who at tlie time of
his death was a resident of the County of
• New York, State of New York, SEND
I
GREETING:
Upon the petition of CHEMICAL BANK
NEW YORK TRUST COMPANY having: its
principal office at 105 Broadway, New
York, New York.
You and each of you are hereby cited
to show cause before the Snrrotrate's Court
of New York County, held at the Hall of
Aecordg In the County of New York, on
the sard day of January.
at 10:;J0
o'clock In the forenoon of that day, why
the account of proceediiiir of CHEMICAL BANK NEW YORK TRUST COMI'ANY Hs Successor Trustee under the
Last Will and Testament of ERANK E.
HALL should uot be judicially settled,
l a ttbtiniony whereof, wo have caused
the seal of Surrogate's Court
of the said County of New York
*
to be heretinto affixed. Wtiness.
(Stal)
Honorable S. Samuel Di Ealco,
a SurroK;ate of our said county,
at the County of New York, tb«
6lU day of December. IDBl.
PHILIP A. DONAHUE,
Clerk of the Sunotat*'* Court
1
1
INTEGRATED
ST. ALBANS
CALL FOR APPT.
NOW!
Open 7 day* ft wfrk
Till 8 f.M.
JEMCOL
170-03 Hillside Ave.
Jamaica, L. I.
QUEENS
$800
TAKES OVER F.H.A. MORTGAGE.
NO CLOSING FEES. l-FAMILY.
SPOTLESS CONDITION. PATIO
LANDSCAPED, ALL AROUND.
OIL HEAT. MANY EXTRAS.
AX 7-2111
REALTY
Next door to Srnri-Rnrbiirk.
In<l. " E " or " F " (rain to
160th St. Sta.
•t FREE TARKING i-
AX 1-5262
3
INTEGRATED
CONVENIENT
OFFICES AT
YOUR SERVICE
HEMPSTEAD
& VICINITY
STOP PAYING RENTI
" H O M E S T O FIT YOUR P O C K E T "
NEW YEAR SPECIALS
G.l. or FHA SPECIAL
ATTRACTIVE
SPACIOUS
BUNGALOW, lovely 61,2 rooms
with porch, 2 baths, on 80x125
huge plot, full basement, oil
heat, garage, low tax. G.l.
Special Only $100 Down.
BUNGALOW with 2 spacious
bedrooms on large 50x125 plot,
with oil heat and basement,
lovely porch. G.l. $100 Down.
FREEPORT
FREEPORT
COZY . IMMACULATE
2-FAMILY
INCOME PROPERTY
^
RANCH, 2 bedrooms, with 2
rooms in basement, on large
60x100 plot, oil heat, garage.
Call to see this cozy home.
7 HUGE rooms, 2 full baths,
huge 92x125 corner plot, oil
heat, porch and patio. DEPOSIT
TO HOLD.
ROOSEVELT
HEMPSTEAD & VIC.
E. J. DAVID REALTY CORP.
159-11 HILLSIDE AVE.. J A M A I C A
Open 7 Days a Week
LIST REALTY CORP.
ASKING $14,500
Unfurnished Apts.
HOLLIS
L'NFURMSHKU apt. 3 rooms, moilpvn
elevator builiUne, euitable for couiile.
Kast 6th Street. Manhattan. Call TY.
3 0161.
14 SOUTH FRANKLIN STREET
HEMPSTEAD, L L
6 ROOM bungalow, garage, full basement, oil.
OI'EN 7 D.\YS A WERK
2-FAMlLY. 5 and 3, 2 car
garage, finished basement.
Upstate
ASKING $19,900
SULLIVAN COUNTY — Nevf York State
Dairy-Poultry farnii. taverns. Boanling
HouseB, HoteU, DwellinpH, Hunting &
Building Acreage. The Tegelei* Ageni-y
Inc.. Jeffersonville, New York.
ST. ALBANS
For Rent • Upstate
1 BEDKOOM, Colonial, fin.
ished basement, 2 oar garage.
IDEAL KKTIUKMENT apurlnient In development overlooking village. Beautiful
Finger Lake» region. Travel oar. AUNES
JENSEN, cor. Clinton & Walnut Sie.,
Penn Yan. N.Y. Tel 2231R.
ASKING $19,900
$2,000 Down
;Belford D. Harty Jr.
192-OS LINDEN BLVD.
- ST. ALBANS
Fleldstone 1-1950
F R E E BOOKLET by U. S. Government on Social Security. Mail
) j»nly. Leader, 97 Duane Str«**V
, New York 7. N. Y.
Hemet
168-33 LIBERTY AVE.
$16,500
r
1 & 2 Pami/y
HAZEL B.' G R A Y
Walk To Station
7 ROOMS. GARAGE. OIL HEAT
* * Plus Many Other Homes From $9,000 &
ACT FAST — CALL
HOLLIS
BETTER REALTY
M o v e In
JM
m f
Defached, large plot, garage, new oil burner and plumbing,
refrigerator, aluminum storms and screens, porch and pantry.
Close to schools, shopping and transportation. Ideal buy for
single person. No credit check—any can buy. Small cash over
mortgage. Payments arranged.
OL 9-6700 — LA 7-9100
IV 3-3400
17 South Franklin St.
JAMAICA
7
room home w i t h
bedrooms
T-R-O-J-A-N
$13,500
DETACHED, stone and brick,
ranch, 9 years young on large
corner plot, 5 modern rooms,
all on one floor, ideal for retired couple or newly wed.
Total down payment to all
$450. Hurry, be first with deposit.
159-12 HILLSIDE AYE.
NO CLOSING FEES
4 bedrnoqig, brick, irariiire. oil
heat, finished basmient. Mfal
e . T t r a income, l.irtre family Only
$!»O0 caph. G.I. $700 cash. Call
TRO.IAN
I. A 7-0100
18H-I8 Linden RIvil., St. AlhiniK
ROOSEVELT
J A M A I C A
V A C A N T — MOVE RIGHT IN
HOLLIS
$ 1 1 , 9 0 0
OUTSTANDING voiue, ideal location^, nr. transportation. Con
buy with only $390 down or
$50 down to veterans, situated
on large landscoped plot in
perfect suburban setting, gas
heat, garage, basement and
24 f t . living room. Easy terms.
Pay like rent.
RENT W I T H OPTION TO BUY
IV S-.TIOO
So. Franklin St,
Hempstead
R A N C H
11 HUGE rooms. 2 full opts,
entire house available upon approval of mortgage, excellent
income and opt for buyer, plus
rentable
finished
basement.
Owner's sacrifice to sell before
end of year at $11,000 full
price with $350 down.
brick, 4 bedrooniii.
heat, grarapr, flni.-hpd
lar^e plot. Only $ ! I O ( l
only $200 cash.
BIVICUSIDE OUIVE.
* 2 H prlTkU
•psrtinMiU (Dterraclai. ruruiib»d TIU
(>IfW 7-411*
For Rent - Manhattan
FUUMSHKU room, $0 and up. men only
East IDih Street, call UU 3-7130, 10 to
6 p.m.
IV 9-8814 -8815
Directions: Take Southern State Parkway .Ext. 19, Peninsula
under the bridge to South Franklin Street,
Boulevard
135-30 ROCKAWAY BLVD., SO. OZONE PARK
JA 9-5100
160-13 HILLSIDE AVE., J A M A I C A
OL 7-3838
OL 7-1034
Farms For Sale - Ulster Co.
HICTIUE-MENT HO.MES Troni $4,500 up.
Other good buys in Tavern*. HoteU.
Gas Sta. iilore«, Martha Lowu, Shand»ken. NY. OV 8 00H4.
HEMPSTEAD
GORGEOUS brick, i bedrooms, ranch, vU
heat, garage, flnished baeeuient, l a r f e
plot. Only $000 cash. Q.I. OKly fSOO
cash.
IV 8-3400
HOLLIS—$10,760. Live-rent-free. Legal Z
family, DO rent control, 4 and 2. Take over
existing mortgage, no closing fee» or credit
>htiki. Can take title In !i4 houri, small
HOLLIS
Bayside HilU
8 FAMILY. Bolid brick, 4',i up «i).l 4 down payment to gll. Alliliated Homes, 4 BEDROOMS, brick, garage. oJl beat, flo164-08
B311«ide
Ave.,
Jamaica,
JA
6-6000.
Ished basentent. Ideal extra Income, large
down, llni»hea basement with t*tr;i«.
family. Ouly $000 cash. G.I. $700 outk.
Transportation to tchoolt, churchtit and
HEMPSTEAD (Uniondale), $18,600 KHA
LA 7-UlUO
•hopping. Excellent community.
biipruvttl.
llrii'k
and
hliingle
Cape
Cod,
!2
BA 0-1046, a p.m.
baths, flnisittd attic, 4 bedrooms, flnished
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
b.ibiiiiuit, 1 c a r garage, nice plot, exFor Rent - Bayside
Mllciit' iieighbnrliood. Low I'atih down. PLAY bedroom, finished bahemtnt, «at-ln
4'a KOd.MS, pi ivalc house, hi'Il eiit d p.in-h, Artiiiait'd Homes, 27 Gicenwuh Street,
kiti'hen. formal dmitig room. Only $bOO
wall to wall iMrpet. Kre»> ga«, 41 TO lit iiip'^lead.
cash. G.l. only
wiih luortguge.
luunth. tiA V iUrlO.t) p.iu.
Call LA 1-UIUO
IV S ti337
y
C I V I L
Tvrelir*
9 E K V I C E
Apply Now For
Federal Service
Entrance Exam
Some 9,000 Jobs are expected to
lie filled from the Federal Service
E n t r a n c e Examination, now open
for filing.
Successful candidates can expest appointment to a job in any
one of many fields in the govern-
L O A N S
$25.$800
R e j a r d / e s s of P r e s e n '
DIAL
Debts
"GIVE MEE"
(Gl 8-3633)
For Money
Freedom Finance Go.
T R A I N S !
Ttie World's Largest Display of
Sets af Huge Discounts.
Trade
Your
Old
Trains
Sir.k Trains M a d e
For
Well
New
TRAIN T O W N
103 DUANE STREET
(near City Hall) Diqby 9-0044
NOTICE
RIIRLRV. MARY.—CITAl^ION.—P" 40.10
IfWft.—The I'eoide of the State of Nr-w"
Yi»ik, By til" Grace of Goil Free aiij
Ii.;l"i»>i,,|,.„t. To Michael Duffy. Philip
Ditffir. |»;itrlck Duffy. Janie- Diitly, Shaiium
Ciir(».Mi.v. I'alrick Carbcrry, Mirhapl CarIx'rry, riiiliii Carberry, Rose Ann Caibeiry,
t)«c iiCKl of kin and heir? at law of
M \ R V Hf'RI.KY. doeeaseil. send trpflinifWli ' ' n . DOROTHY A. DIIKKY. who re,.( .i^t! West 54 Street, ihe r i i v of
New Y.»rk.
lately applied to the "Siirraij.jt • C o u r t of our County of New York
t ^ l.i-Vi? :t <:Tt.iin instrument in wriiiny
boaiiff,' (J.itc December 10. 1K56. to both"
Mcil ,.(r I (. 'i soiial property, duly proved
•.<4 till- I m vrlll and tectament of MARY
HCRl.HV. deceased, who wa.s at the time
«f h . r (I.Mili a resident of 5K AVe»t 54
8triv(. (Ii.» County ot New yo:k.
Tti
ymi and each of vou are
cited M. rti.owr c,<iise before the Sniro^-.itP'B
Com).
(HPf County of New Yoik, at the
K«t( or Rcc,>nls in the County of New
Y<nU. ou Ml? ;;.-,lh day of .laniiary. one
tlioiiKtiid nine hundred and sixiv-two. at
biir-i.'.i^t ten o'clock in the forenoon of
tb»t
why the said will and tcalai ifnt
•Uoitid not be admitted to probaie a* a
Will of rcitl and pcrnonal properly.
Ill t.'utiniony whereof, we have 'caH,ieil
tti! Jical of the SurrcKaie e Court
ot tb/! aatd County of New York
tn be hereunto aflixed. AVitnuH
Hc)ni»rable S. Samuel Di Kalco'
(L. 9.)
Siirioirate of our said Ci.uniy of
York, at said rountv. the
n t h day of December m ihe
y c c ot our Lord one thousand
iiina hundred and si.xiv-one.
PHILIP A. DOX.VHCK.
Clerk of the Suroraft B Co.irt
CITATION — THK PKOPLE OF THE
»TATK OK NEW YORK, Bv the fira.e
of God. Fre.? and Independent TO Attorney
Oniifi >1 of the State of New York- Helena
Wc»wc:-,iiv; Michael Wowczak;
F'ara^ka
Chief or Acting Chi^-f of
tlin Coutnular Division of ihe Embassy
of tlK» PolHh Peoplea Republic: and to
M.iry
the name "Mary Doe' beInflT ti.ililioiu. the alleKed widow of Metro
Waclidiv, also known as Dniytro VVowizak,
d«co:i.i'd. if liyinic and if dead, to the
•*<viit,)ri.., adiiiiuistratora, distributees and
«4'»ii|.i-i ot "Mary Doe" deceased, whose
numei :tii.i post ofHce addresses are unkiirtwit aiil c.mnot after diliirent inguiry
Iw •'loci i uii<fd by the petitioner herein;
•nd ti> tin di<lributeea of Met o Wochak.
•Iflti Icuowii ai Duiytro Wowczak. deceased.
n;im..j anil post office atldre^nea
•r« tinknown and cannot after dilifent
IniiuU'ir iM »<(.'ertalned by the petiltoner
hacam: b^inr the persons interested as
oradl(o'<, distributees or otherwise in the
Willi I ot Mtrtro Wochak, also known as
Dujftro W.>wezjk, deceased, who at the
tloM oC hU d«ath was • resident ol "255
i«.»ui» Htreat, New York. ^'.Y. Send
ttSerCNO:
O p j a tlij petition of The Public Admlalii jit;>i- of the County of New York.
hi»rla« ikt* otMce at Hall of Re( ordD, Room
•Ot*. lt-»rju<U of Manhattan, City and
th<t Ortuaty of New York, as administrator
tU«
obatteli and credit! ot
8
tiHi aaJ each ot you are hereby cited
1 afiiw oiuee betora the Surrogate'*
>art af N*w York County, held at the
|»U o( R},-orJs. In the County ot New
rock
tUi tiad day ot January
lintt p w : tea o'clock In the forenoon
tliat vJiy, why the account of proaf The Public Adialnlatrator of
• J tow O'Mjatf of New York. a« administrator
M tUj itor>U, chattels and credits of said
l»09di!l sfioulil not be Judicially eettled.
IN TK-il'tMONif WHi-mEOl!'. We have
MUiMd tlif 0,111 of the Surrogate's Court
af the said County of New York
ta lt4 hereunto aOlxed.
(f}Mi»
WITNESS.
HONORABLE
JOS E t ' a A. COX. » Surrogate of
oir jiid County, at the County
u( Ndw York, the l a t h day of
Ni»».*iiiU«r, In the year of our
I.i»i I :*ne ttiouaand nine liumired
a i i j eixiy-oiie.
I'hiliii A. Donahue
Clerk of the Surrogate e Cour|
m e n t aervise. T h i s title U especially popular with retired state
a n d city employees because of the
lack of pension barriers in federal
employment.
Filing for t h e test is limited to
college fftaduatei a n d those who
will graduate within t h e next 21
months. However, three years or
more experience in administrative,
professional, investigative, technical or other responsible work will
be accepted in lieu of the educational requirements.
Any equivalent combination of
the educatidn and experience will
also be satisfactory. I n combining
academic year of study will be
education a n d experience, one
considered equivalent to nine
Farms - Ulster County
ACKK faroi, li^vcil.
baiin, 7
i-ni lioii+'?, I>e,uitifut vistw. $7,50i).
0 ROOM rH>}!ferni»:i?Tj lioaie, IjatU,
acre
$1,500.
vn,LA<iK homo, T n t n . $5,000.
00 ACRK poultry tinm. a.OOO layer capacity. iiica 7 rm h(M»ie. $5,500. Tt'rau.
Will Pcorion. ie^tlt<»r, R<H>t9 No. 'Ht
Sloaiwville. NT Tet L>ntrA( Bride*
60
LKMAL
tVOTICB
CITATION. — THPV PEOPLE OF THE
STATE OP NKW YORK, By the Grace
of God. Fres and Ind.'penl>nt
TO: Attorney (ietiec,»l nf t h i Stats of
New York: Yskko/ I, HuitiuU: Marie I
Ilnitzkaya: Wolf, Popper, Roie, Wolf
& Jones: and to ' ^fa(y D w " the name
"Mary Doe" Iwinfr ficliti^u,^. the alleged
widow of John Huatiuk. cHceuM, il living and if dc.tnl. t(» tUw e»e(nitors, administrators, distnbut'.M dMd aasiru* of -Mary
Doe" deceased.
n.-»mei and po-st
office
ars uoknowa and cannot after Jilig-nt inquiry b^ aacertained by the petitioner lierein; and to the
diatributees of .IOIKI Hnstiuk, also known
a.s Iwan HnaliuU. t w i n Tnatink and John
Iwan Hnatiuk. dw.-ased, whose names
and post office adUre^^e* are unknown
and cannot »ft»r 'Jili^.'t Innuriy be aicertained by thu p-litianer haiein: being
the person* intereHtsfl as creditora, distributees or otberwue In tha estate of
John Hnatidk. al«» Uiiawn a« Iwan Hnatiuk
Iwan Hnatink and John Iwan Hnatiuk,
deceased who at the tinn of his death
wa.s a resident of 509 E j i t 11th Street,
New York, N.Y.
Send GREETING:
Upon the petition of The Public Administrator of tha CiKinty of New York,
having- his offi/-^ at Hall of Record*,
Room 309, Borough if Minhattan. City
and County of New York, as adiuini.stralor
of goods, chuttelu atnl credits of said
deceased:
You and e.»cU ot you are hereby cited
to show cause bef,,r-f tin Surrosrate's Court
of New York County, lielj at the Hall
of Record.*, in th.» Cninty of New York,
on the aoth day of January. 19tJi:, at
half-past ten o'.-Io.'k in the forenoon
of that day, why ths account ot proceedings of aiie Public .\duiini.strator of the
County of New York, a* administrator of
goods, chattel* and c r ^ i t * of said deceased,
should not IM juJiciallv settled.
IN TE-STIMONY WHEREOF. We have
laused thu ee»l ot th» Surrojate's Court
of »hj *iiil Ci)Unly of Naw York
to brt h?i ?unto affixed.
(Seal)
WITNESS,
HONORABLE
S
SAMUEL DI FALOO. m Surro*at» ot our said County, at the
County of N'jw York, the I J l h
day of D.^caibir, fn the year
of our L o r l o m thousand nine
hundred and uixty one.
Philip A. Donahue
CHrk ot tU» Surrogate's Court
m o n t h s of ixperience.
T h e Federal Service E n t r a n c e
Examination Is Issued to fill jobs
in nearly all branches of the federal government. T h e positions
which are to be filled f r o m the
test are located throughout the
United States a n d In U.S. agencies
in foreign countries.
For grade G S 5, paying f r o m
$4,345 to $5,830, candidate must
meet the above experience or educational requirement. For the G S
7 positions, paying f r o m $5,355 to
$6,840, candidates must have a n
additional year of graduate study
of a combination of graduate
study and experience totaling one
year.
Management Internships are also offered. This test is to recruit
people with m a n a g e m e n t potential
for special training. The number
of m a n a g e m e n t internships available is limited a n d only o u t s t a n d ing candidates are rated eligible.
Mast of these m a n a g e m e n t interns positions are located in the
Washington, D.C. area. These jobs
are in grades G S 7 a t $5,355 a
year. Minimum qualifications are
a bachelors degree or four years of
appropriate exp>erience or a satisfactory equivalent combination.
Federal Service Entrance E x a m ination tests will be given in a n uary, February, March, April and
May. Management internship tests
will be given only in January and
February.
Candidates who wi&h to take the
m a n a g e m e n t intern tests must file
by J a n . 25, 1962. Candidates for
general positions must file by
April 26, 1962.
Application form 5000 AB can
be obtained from the regional office of the U.S. Civil Service Commission, 20 E . 42nd St., New York
17, N. Y., or from the U.S. Civil
Service Commission In Washington, D. C.
Math. Engineering
& 2!$(*ience A i d e s
Out:
Mathematics, engineering and
physical science aides are needed
in California by the U.S. Government. T h e jobs pay starting salaries of $3,760, $4,040 and $4,345 a
year and up, depending on experience a n d ability.
For f u r t h e r information write
to the U.S. Naval Laboratories,
Board of UJ8, Civil Service E x a m HOOKER, BRNESTINE. — CIT.\.TI0N.
iners, Navy Department, 1030 East
P 4045, 19«1.—THE PEOPLE OF THE
STATE OF NEW YORK. By the Grace of Green St., Pasadena, Calif. Apply
God Free a u j Independent, TO: KARL
until f u r t h e r notice.
GOLDSTEIN. MARIA GERHARDT,
BERT GERHART. FRANZ OERHARDT
HEINZ GERHARDT. M.\RIANNE PIERSTOREK. ELHABETH HELLER, FRED F.
HOLSTEN AND ERNSTEINE 8CHOLZ
the next of kin anl hel'e at law of
ERNESTINB HOOKER, dsceasad, lend
greatlnr:
YOU ARB HEREBY CITED TO SHOW
CAUSE before tU* Surro^ata'e Court, New
York County, kt Rxtai &04 la the Hall of
Records In the County of N^w York, New
York on January 21). 19rt;. at 10:30 A.M.
why • cwtain writlutf d i t e J February 8.
lOUO. which hi.1 IhMQ oRirdhl for probate
by The Ch4.i4 MAuUittin Bank, » New
York e o r p o r i t l j a hiylii# lt« vrlncipal
otUc* and pU.^e of bu«iniM at 1 OhMe
Manhattan PUas, la IU< County of New
York, the Eiesutof niru+i la tha Laet
Will and Te«t*niiac of E(ue*tla<» Uoatiar,
deceased. ihouM n tt b i pc tbate^l ae the
laet Will and T - j t i n i j a t . rdUtlu* to real
and personal prjparty, of th* e.ili Erae»tine Ha>k«r,
wUv> wm at ttie
time .of her di^itii a nMiit-'ot of Hotel
Sherman S i u i r j , R i o i l w i / Uitwjtn 70tU
(Uid 7 U t 4t.,v«n, in tUj County of NdW
York. Niw York
D*i»l. A t t u l j j a<itJ S'jalKj De>;ful>jr
15, lijiU
HON 9. SAMUIst. Di PALCO,
(L 3.)
SkirroAur, Ni'w Yi>i k Coumy,
r n n . l l ' A. DONAUUE.
Cl«rk.
Ttf^fiYay, J a n . « r f
L E A D E R
1962
Urban Renewal Aide
Set; Requires Only
A Bathehr's Degree
Housing, p l a n n i n g a n d dedevelopment aide is a New York City
job title for which applications
will be accepted beginning J a n . 3.
a n d which pays $4,550 a year.
A bachelor's degree Is the only
requirement to take the exam.
This is a trainee position which
lasts one year. At the end of the
year those employees who successfully complete the p r o g r a m
will be eligible tor promotion to
junior planner, at $5,150 to $6,590
a year.
A junior planner position will ^le
held in reserve for every housing,
planning a n d redevelopment aide
employed.
Aides' Duties
4
-I
and writing abilities, aptitude for
the job, and awareness of social^
a n d economic trends. It will count
for 70 per cent of the grade. An
oral test will count for the o t h e r
30 per cent.
Apply a f t e r J a n . 3 to the Application Section of the Citv D o r n v t ment of Personnel, 96 Duane St.,
New York 7, N. Y. The filin;; [>eriod will remain open until M a r c h
30, 1962.
C i t y Junior
Bacteriologist
Set for Jan.
During the training period aides ;
will be a.ssigned to various City
agencies engaged in urban renewal
activities. Tliey will perform beginning-level professional work
for the purpose of acquiring
knowledge, skill a n d competence
in the field.
T h e City of New York is o f f e r * ing a n excellent career opportunity to college g r a d u a t e s i n the f o r m
of its junior bacteriologist exaua.
which will open for the filing of
applications on J a n . 3.
The only requirement is a bacheloi o uegree with a m a j o r iu uio-»T h e test, to be given April 7, Is logical science or a m a j o r in chemdesigned to evaluate analytical istry and a minor in biological scl
ence.
Junior bacteriologist is a $4,850
to $6,290-a-year job. Presently,
appointments are being made a t
the first increment level of $5,099.
Opportunities exist for p r o m o tion to the position of assistant
Ten apfwintments to positions bacteriologist, which pays f r o m
starting at $9,030 a year are ex- 1 $5,450 to $6,890 a year.
The duties of a junior bacteriolpected to be made by the New i
York State Department of Public ! ogist include examining s m e a r s
Works' Division of Architecture! and cultures, doing analyses a»nd
a s a reS'Ult of a J a n . 20 civil ser- assisting in general histological
vice examination for senior archi- work.
Tliey also assist in the m a n u f a c tects. The positions are in Albany
and have five a n n u a l raises to ture of biological products, assemble data and keep laboratory r e c - "
$10,860.
Applications, which should be ords.
"The written test, scheduled for
filed as soon as possible, will be
April
28, 1961, will count for all
accepted from licensed architects
with two years experience in the !, of the grade and will require 70
preparation and review of large per cent to pass. It will have quesand complex building plans and tions on general and pathogenic^
histological'
designs. Applicants need not be microbiology, basic
methods, general chemistry, a n d
residents of New York State.
general laboratory techniques a n d
Senior architects with the Deprocedures.
p a r t m e n t of Public Works work
Apply a f t e r J a n . 3, and until
on building plans and designs.
They develop working drawings March 30, to the D e p a r t m e n t uf
and full-size details of building Per.sonnel, Application Section, 96
Duane St., New York 7, N.Y.
projects.
10 Jobs Open
To Sr. Architects
Starts at $9,030
Applications and additional information may be obtained by
writing to or visiting Department
of Civil Service offices a t T h e
S t a t e Campus and In the Alfred
E. Smith State Office Building,
Albany; a t 270 Broadway, New
York City; and in the S t a t e Office
Building, Buffalo.
ATTENTION
ALL FIREMEN!
if yuti would like to eurn extra
ninney ilrlvlnir private taxU diirinK
your Hpare time between llie h»iir.«
of A A..M. anil « P.M. and you lire
In t'luHhtiiic, <ilen 4lak«, Itayii^e
or
viriiilty,
please write
to:
Hox 100, r / o <Mvll .Servlre I.MitiT.
Uiiane Ht., New York 7, N.Y.
Shoppers Service Guide
DON'T PLAY
SCRABBLE
without the e«n«ati<>iial new cuiniiiti-t
TYPWRITKR BAllGAINS
Siiilth$17.50. Uniierwooa-$U2.!M): ocber*
Pe«i;l lire*., 47« HiaUh, Bka, I'K 6-^t««4
turiuahle!
No more epillii, ecrnithl'?^. Gripi board,
turni emootUly t<j eai.>U flayer—$100
worth o( adJcd enjoyur.-iit! ONLY
POSTP.A.IU.
IJesl fitt—order now t j r »3l( t u d
IrleiiiU.
SPECIALTY SALES OP N. Y..
D«ph C
4002 « Av«., Iklyii 32
PHOTOGRAPHERS
H«lp Waafed
WEDDINGS
^
PORTRAITS
^
COMMERCIAL
GUARDS—Part-Full Ttui*, Mut tisre pUtol
p<)ruilt. Retr>J polo* atttcert, preferred
lutjulre Vet^ria Dataotlvi Burdiu, Ino.
4I«7 Park .We Bx OH I I AM to 7 PM
305 I woy. N e w York City
W O 2-0170
Salej 4 Sfivit'e
re''>>»i Re(rtj(i«. Stoyee,
WMU MU''IIIU'*'I,
aiiik^.
TKACY KKHtHjit:KATlON—CV.
U I4» at t l.!OI (:.i<tle HilU A*. Bs
TKACX HBKVICINU CttKr.
^
i
Applionce Services
Adding MachiiiM
Typ«writtr«
Mimeofraphs
Addressing MaehinM
'25
Guaranteed. AUo Keuiate, Kepaire
ALL LANGUAGES
TYPEWRITER CO.
Cli<>l»ea S-HOrttf
l i t W. tSril nr., NKW VUKB 1, N. T
REAL ESTATE — PAGE I t
,
L
TM««<l«y, Januanr 2 , 1 9 6 2
C I V I L
S E R V I C E
L E A D E R
PmgB
riiirlM^
CONGRATHJLATBONS
MERRY C H R I S T M A S — curistma.
Cr^etings are brought to residents of the Neponsit
Home for the Aged by children of St. Francis deSales
Cbureh. This was the first activity of the home which
FIRST CLASS
—— Shown above is the first
class of students in the School for Practical Nurses
^ h i c h is being conducted at the Willowbrook State
School, Staten Island. The 27 in the class and their
instructors are, at left, front row, left to right:
Dr. M. Jacobs, assistant director; Miss M. Nichoils,
R.N., instructor; Miss F . Ryan, R.N., instructor;
and Miss M. Cavello, R.N., assistant principal of
the School of Nursing. At right, front row, left to
j i g h t , a r e : Miss V. Magee, R.N., instructor; Dr. H.
opeaed en Aor. 31. In addition to the facilities available ta residents, non-residents living within reasonable transportation access are also invited to
take part in activities of a day center which will
open next month.
U. Henry R. Klein .{riRhi) of
the Transit Aothority Police Department is shown being: congratulated
by TA Police Chief Thomas J. O'Rourke on being elected Corresponding and Financial Seci«tary for 1962 of the National Conference «f
Shonnrim Societies at the annual conference held at the Concord
Hotel, Kiamc«iba I.ake, N.Y. This organization consists of eight mscnaber socitjes tbrcnghout the country with a membership of 5,060, all of
the Jewish faith, engaged in police, fire and other public safety picfesaion. Lt. Klein who is president of the Authority's Gonem Society, !ive«
in the Botanical Ciardens section _pf Brooklyn, has been with t h e
Transit Police Department for over 20 years. He is married aod
has one child.
H. Berman, director, of Willowbrook State School;
and Miss M. Kelly, R.N., principal of the School of
Nursing. Second row, left to right: C. D'Arcy, J .
White, L. Powers, J . Sloper, D. Trioanello, E . Spear,
R. Jones, A. Lee, A. Eckett, M. Kotary, and £ .
Lathrop. Third row, left to right: R. Karakash,
S. Lee, A. Malloy, A. Zoltner, P . Powers, R. De
Jourdan, and D. Thiers. Fourth row. left to right:
Welfare Commissioner
James
B. Dean, R. Moore, C. Livingston, L. Briggs, T. Dumpson (center) and Deputy Commissioner Robert J . DeSanctis look
Marshall, H. Goods, € . Mclver and R. McCartney. on as Ameiican Red Cross Nurse Marguerite Cox prepares donor Alma
Shepherd, ef Welfare Center 26, for blood donation. Welfare staff m a d e
record donation ef over 700 pints recently.
BLOOD DONOR
Social Security Questions Answered
or does he get his full benefit at
age 65?
If he does not r e t u r n to work
the a m o u n t would remain t b s
same for the rest of his life.
ever, if he should r e t u r n t e w s f k
a n d lose p a r t of his monthly benefits because of his work, h
ily n R c i
fit woiUu be autemat{«>a)ly
*
*
•
t e a higher amount when 1M
I will b« 73 In JaAtwry 19«2. Do reaches age 65.
I still have t e HbqH m j eaminR« |
to receive
my social security i I don't see much reason for filciiecks for the .year?
' ing an estimate of earnings. Jwi't
N«. You caa lecciv* benefits "estimate" just a fancy woid lor
for all twelve m o n t h s of the year "guess"?
I have been drawing social se- regardleos ef •y c• c*a n u n g s .
If you like. We recognixe t h a t
curity retirement benefits for a
people aren't going to be able to
Will m y dl«U»jllty benefits be tell huw much money they'll make
inci ea«ed when I b£q 65?
to the penny. T h a t ' s why we have
Your disability l)en«fits a r e fig- a n a n n u a l report a t the end ef
ured t h e same as vld-age benefits. the year. However, who is bcttei
W h e n yott reach 65, your disability | able to estimate what you'll e a r n
s t e n o g r a p h e r Jobs paying $78 benefits will be ehangcd ever to th;.n yourself? One purpose ®l
weekly are cuirently open with old-age benefits, bi»t the amount ! estimating your earnings is to giYS
Headquarters. F o r t J a y . Govern- yoH receifc each m o n t h will re- fl'.vl' MMv. Benefits are nrid on a
or's Island.
i m a i n t h e same.
monthly basis, while your earnJugs
•
«
•
are totaled by the year, t s t i r o a t e s
Interested
applicants
should
If a inan aj:«)Ues for old-age enable you to have your monthly
visit the Civilian Personnel Office,
Headquarters F o r t Jay, Building benefits ul 4i' M^e #2, but Ixfore income based on your own goed
tor you to W eligible, your wife 400 S' ction D, Governorf Island, he reaches tf5, will the leduced Judgment of your earning p o t e a regarding must iuive worked under Mteial Ni-w
, for a n interview
bin.lii r m - i n th '
ine for l i f t . tiai.
work apply to younger workers, as
your dependents or survivors is well as older one«?
^ based upon the a m o u n t of e a r n The a m o u n t of work required
credited to your account.
for t h e payment of retirement or
• • •
survivors benefits h a s been reI am 30 years of age, am m a r - duced f o r anyone who will reach
lied, and have four children u n - retirement age before 1982. A m a n
d e r age 18. Three m o n t h s ago, I becoming age 65 a f t e r 1981 or a
fcecame disabled. Is there any pay- woman becoming age €2 a f t e r t h a t
year will still need ten full years
m e n t to myself and my family?
of work under social, security t«
Social security disability benebenefits.
f i t s are payable to any disabled qualify for retiremer^
• • •
individual who meets t h e following qualifications: (1) you must
"When I reached 65 last year, I
h a v e worked under social security applied for social security payfor a t least five years in t h e ten ments on my wife's social security
year period before you became ! account. I was told t h a t even
disabled. (2) Your illness or in- I though she frupported me for
jury must be so severe t h a t you , many, m a n y years before h e r
* r e unable to do any substantial ! death, I could not receive benefits
g a i n f u l work (3) I t must be a n ; bec«ue« f h € h a d died before 1950.
llln#ss or injury which is expected Have there been changes in the
to last Indefinitely a n d will show law making H pobuble for me to
• p in medical examinations and receive benefits?
te*t8. Benefits may also be p a y Yes, tb«r« h a s been m change
ftble to your dependents, children allowing monthly paymenits to be
« n 4 e r age 18 a n d » wife. 6 u i h made to the aged dependent widJkenefits are paid seven months a f - owers of women workers who died
ter the disability began.
before September 1950. I n order
•
•
•
Doee this new rule
security for a t least a year and a
half , out of the three years just
before she died. You must file
another social security claim and,
in addition, you m u s t present
proof t h a t your wife was supporting you at the time she died. Visit
or call your local social security
office at your earliest convenience
so t h a t , if you c a n get these
monthly payments, they need not
be delayed f u r t h e r . First benefits
under this change in t h e law Mere
payable for October 1960.
• • •
$79 a Week Steno
Jobs at Fort Jay
number of yeais. Rcccntly a friend
of mine told me t h a t my benefits
would fioon be exhauited. Is this
true?
No. Your l)encfit8 are payable
until death. Yoar friend gave you
misinformation. You need have no
worry thai ycxir social sccvrity
p a y m e n t s will imm ooi.
Page Fourteen
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
Tuesday, January
1962^
Siate Police Career Meii
Promoted and Reassigned
(Frqm Leader Correspondent)
ALBANY. Jan. 1 — A series of
16 career ' "motions and rea&signments of State Police personnel
have been announced by Superintendent Arthur Cornelius, Jr.
THE LEADER presents a list of
the promotions and reasisignments,
plus a brief biographical sketch of
each of the officers.
Lieutr «int Supervisor Donald
F. Lang of Troop G, Loudenville,
promoted to the position of Captain to supervise the Traffic Bureau of tlie State Police at Division Headquarters, 162 Washingr
ton Ave., Albany. Salary $12,785.
Donald F. Lang, age 47, a native
of Geneseo, and a graduate of
Geneseo High School, enlisted in
the New York State Police in
1936 after attending Geneseo State
Teaciier's College, was promoted
t o Corporal in 1949, to Sergeant
In 1953 and to First Sergeant in
1955.
He is a graduate of Northwestern Univer.sity Traffic Institute and served in the Division
Headquarters Traffic Bureau. During April 1961, he was promoted
to
Lieutenant
Supervisor
at
Troop G, Loudonville and was
acting Troop Commander there
from May to October 1961. He
resides in Brookwood Park, Latham, witii his wife, the former Ruth
Neeley of Troy, New York, and
two daughters.
and Judy,
• Donna
• •
Captain Robert V. Annett, Division Traffic Bureau, promoted to
command Troop T, a new troop
created with jurisdiction over all
State Police functions and personnel on the State Thruway and
the Cro.ss Westchester Expressway.
Captain Annett, age 56, a native of New Jersey and a graduate
of St. Peter's Preparatory School,
Jersey City, New Jersey, entered
the New York State Police in
1929 and served in numerous parts
of the State as Trooper, Corporal
and Ser,ieant, until October 1936
when he v/as placed in charge of
the Taconic Parkway Detail.
A arraduate of Nortli vesteni University Traffic Institute, he assist a ui tiie organization of the
Division's Traffic Bureau in 1941
and shorciy thereafter was promoted to Inspector and in 1956 to
Captain. He has been Supervisor
of the Division Traffic Bureau until reas^ignn.ent in command of
the newly created Troop T. He resides at I Kingwood Park, Pougiikeepsie vith his wife, the former
VioU. Swenson of that city.
''
t/hom Drive, Batavia. New York, Jennie and three daughters at and two sons at Pawling, New
with his wife, the former Gertrude 175 Doris Street, Port Ewen, New York.
•
•
•
York.
E. Smith of Oneida,
* * *New York.
• •
•
Sergeant Clayton E. Bailey.
First Sergeant Harold M. Os- Thruway Detail, Albany Section,
Lieutenant John P. Nohlen, Troop
D, North Syracuse Station, pro- born, Troop B, Malone, New York, promoted to Lieutenant and asmoted to Lieutenant Supervisor of promoted to Lieutenant assigned signed to Troop A, Wellsville, New
Troop A, Batavia. New York. Sal- to Troop G, South Glens Palls, Yoik Station. Salary $10,110.
New York Station. Salary $10,ary $10,710.00.
Clayton E. Bailey, age 51, was
John P. Nohlen, age 50, a n a - 110.
born at Fishkill Plains, Dutchess
Harold M. Osborn, age 42, a County and is a graduate of
tive of Albany. New Y'ork, and a
graduate of Christian Brothers graduate of the Hempstead, Long Rhinebeck Kish School. He enAcademy, enlisted in the New York Island, High School, enlisted in listed in the New York State PoState Police in 1936, was promoted thp New York State Police in 1941. lice in 1937 and after 3 year-s serto Corporal 1943, to Sergeant 1947 After several years service in the vice in the U. S. Navy he was asand to Lieutenant 1953. He has U. S. Navy, he returned to the signed to Troop C, Sidney, where
served in numerous counties of the State Police and was promoted he attained the rank of Corporal
State, his last assignment since to Corporal in 1950, to Sergeant in 1950.
April 10, 1961, being at Troop D, in 1954 and to First Sergeant in
He was promoted to Sergeant in
North Syracuse Station. He is 1959..
1956 and assigned to Troop K,
Stationed at Troop B, Malone, Hawthorne. Since May 1961, he
married to the former Agnes Webert and resides with her and since that date, he resides with his has been assigned to the Thruway.
daughter Judith Ann at 1038 wife, Joyce, and two children at He resides v/ith his wife, Marion,
Wadsworth Street, Syracuse, New 105 Welister Street, Malone, New at 2 Townsend Boulevard, PoughYork.
York.
keepsie. New York.
•
•
•
•
*
*
Lieutenant James H. Smith,
Sergeant
Alexander
Gallion,
Sergeant Howard D. Smith.
Thruway Detail, Albany Section,
promoted to Lieutenant Supervisor Troop C, Vestal, New York, pro- Troop A, Wellsville, New York Staof Troop G, Loudonville, New moted to Lieutenant in Troop T tion, promoted to First Sergeant
^ T h r u w a y ) , Buffalo. New York in TrooD A at Batavia, New York.
York. Salary $10,710.
Section. Salary $10,110.
Salary $9,310.
Lt. S n i t h , age 53, a native of
Alexander Gallion, age 43, was
Sgt. Smith, age 41, is a native of
Albany, New York, and a graduate
born in New York City and graduRochester, New York, and a gradof Cathedral Academy High School,
ated from George Washington
uate of Monroe High School in
was appointed to the New York
High School. Appointed a Trooper
that city. After service with the
State Police in 1936. He served in
in the New York State Police in
United States Air Force, he was
the B.C.I, and was promoted to
1941, Gallion served in the U.S.
appointed to the New York State
Corporal 1947, to Sergeant 1951,
Coast Guard and on returning to
Police in 1946. Promoted Corporal
and to Lieutenant in 1957.
the State Police at Troop C, Sidin 1951, he attained rank of SerSince 1958, he has been assigned
ney, he was promoted to Corporal
geant in 1955.
to the Albany Section of the
in 1947 and to Sergeant in 1952.
Thruway Detail. Smith resides
He has served with both the
His most recent post has been B.C.I, and the Unifonn Force, the
with his wife, Virginia and son,
Kevin, at 36 Clermont Street, at the Vestal Station. He resides last a&slgnment being at the Wellwith his wife and three children sville Station of Troop A. He is
Albany, New York.
•
*
•
at 15 Main Street, Dpposit, New man-ied to the former Geraldine
Senior Investigator
R o b e r t York, and has been active as a Warner and resides with his wife
Quick, Division Headquarters, Al- Committeeman of the Boy Scouts and five children at Andover, New
bany, promoted to Lieutenant, Bu- of America in t h a t community.
York.
•
*
*
•
*
*
reau of Criminal Investigation
Sergeant Robert J. Cummings,
and assigned to Troop C, Sidney,
Lieutenant Edgar D. Croswell,
Troop K, Brewster, New York, pro- B.C.I., Troop C. Sidney, New York,
New York. Salary $10,710.
Robert D. Quick, age 35, a na- moted to Lieutenant assigned to has been transferred to Division
tive of Port Ewen, New York, and Troop D. Waterloo. New York Sta- Headquarters, Albany, where he
a graduate of the Kerhonkson tion. Salary $10,110.
will supervise special investigaHigh School, enlisted in the New
Sgt. Cumming.s, age 48, born in tions and personnel assigned to
York State Police in 1948 after Brooklyn, New York, embarked on these investigations.
service in the U.S. Merchant Ma- a professional baseball career a f Edgar D. Croswell, age 48, Is a
rine. He was promoted to Corpor- ter graduation from .Erasmus Hall native of Woodstock, New York,
al in 19.52, assigned to B.C.I, in High School in 1932. After playing and a gx'aduate of Kingston High
1953 and promoted to Sergeant in with various teams in the Cotton School and Spencer's Business Col1955.
States League, the Southern As- lege in that city. A former member
A graduate of the Harvard Un- sociation, the Eastern League and of the Kingston Police and Fire
iversity Homicide Seminar and a with Albany in the International Departments, he enlisted as a
lecturer in Criminology at New League, he enlisted in the New Trooper in the New York State
Paltz College, Quick has had ex- York State Police in 1942.
Police in 1941, and was promoted
tensive service as an instructor at
He was promoted to Corporal to Corporal 1948, to Sergeant 1952
law enforcement fjchools and at 1952, was assigned to the Govern- and to Lieutenant in the B.C.I,
the State Police Academy. He or's Detail for 5 years and wa,s in September 1961.
completed the State Police Ad- promoted to Sergeant in 1955.
He has had extensive investigaministrative School in November Married to the former Natalie tive experience having served in
1961. Quick resides with his wife, Keys, he resides with his wife the B.C.I, for most of his career
liiejiteiiant Supervisor Wallace
R. S'v'miin, Troop A. Baturia,
promoted to Inspector and assis^iu'd lO Division Headquarters,
Al'jany, Ntnv York. Salary $11,-
G91).
Walhi?e R. Spelman, age 47, a
native jf Silver Bay, New York,
and a graduate of Silver Bay
Preparatory School, attended Cornell Uuiverfity where he was
prominent in varsity sports. Appointed a Trooper in the New York
Stale Police in 1939, he was promoted to Corporal 1949, to Sergeant 1932, to Lieutenant 1958 and
to Lieuti uant Supervisor at Troop
A, Batavia in 1961.
A graduate of the F.B.I. National Academy, Spelman has had
wide service as an instructor and RETIRING — R o c k l a n d State Hospital honsppoi. . .. numerous law enforce- ' ored 23 retiring employees recently with m party
ment scliools, as well as civic given for them. Twelve of the 23, shown above, are.
uweiii..., at- resides at 19 P i c k - | from left, front row: Mrs. Neil Hints, Mrs. Eva A.
in the State Police. Currently as- I
signed to B.C.I, at Troop C, Sid- '
ney. Croswell is being transferred
to Division Headquarters to direct special investigations and personnel assigned to these investigations on a state-wide basis.
• • •
Lieutenant Martin Hynes, Divl-4
sion Traffic Bureau, Albany, has
been reassigned to Troop T ( T h r u way), Albany Section.
^f
Lt. Hynes, age 44, a native of
Brooklyn, is a graduate of Richmond Hill High School, Riohmonid
Hill, New York. He enlisted as ^
Trooper in the New York Static
Police in 1940, was promoted t>o
Corporal 1947, to Sergeant 1951
and to Lieutenant in 1957. Lieutenant Hynes served in the U. S.
Navy and has attended law enforcement schools at Northeastern
University and the Homicide Semr
inar at Harvard University.
i
Since 1959, he has been assigned
to the Traffic Bureau at Divis'oa
Headquarters and Is now being reiasji^iicd to 1/iie newly cre.ited
Troop T (Thruway), in charge of
the Albany Section. He residsji
with his wife, Lillian, and threfe
children, at Latham,
• * • New York.
Lieutenant James E. Var^i,
Thruway Detail, Buffalo, New
York Section, has been reassigned
a.s Lieutenant at Troop D, North
Syracuse, New York Station.
James A. Vann, age 39, a na^
tive of New York City, is a g r a d u - "
ate of Babylon High School, Babylong, Long Island. After service
with the U. S. Navy, Vann enlisted as a Trooper in the N^w
York State Police in 1947.
He was promoted to Corporal
in 1953, assigned to B.C.I, in 1955
and was made a Sergeant in 1957.
He was promoted to Lieutenant in
May 1961 and assigned to the B u f falo Section of the Thruway. He
is now being reassigned as Lieutenant at the North Syracuse Station of Troop D.
*
*
*
Technical
Sergeant
Clayton
Snook, Traffic Supervisor at Troop
D, Oneida, New York, promoted ^o
First Sergeant and assigned to
'j.
p D at Oneida, New York.
Salary $9,310.
Clayton Snook, age 43, a native
of Gloversville, New York, is a
graduate of Gloversville High
School and attended Clarkson College of Technology. He enlisted ais
a Trooper in the Ntw York Statip
Police in 1942.
"
i
Upon return to the State Police
after service in the U. S. Army,
Snook was promoted to Corporal
in 1952 and to Technical Sergeant in 1955 at Troop D. Oneida,
New York. He resides with his
wife, Betty, and son at 3L1 Leonard Street, Oneida, New York, j
• * *
Sergeant George R. Abare,
Troop B., Adams Station, promoted to Fii'st Sergeant and reassigned to Troop B at Malone,
New York. Salary $9,310.
Sgt. Abare, age 34, was born aX
Port Henry, New York, is a graduate of Poit Henry High School
and attended Clarkson College of
Technology. He enlisted as a
Trooper in the New York S t a t e
Police in 1949, was promoted to
Jascheck, Carolyn L. Sherwood, Mrs. Mr.77 € . Fra- Corporal in 1956 and to Sergeant
sier, Sylvester DeLisio and Andrew Cantone. In in 1959.
back: Mrs. Florence Gardner, Mrs. Helen Keeton,
He is assigned to Troop B at thS
Mrs. Henrietta Kothe, John Mutt, Mrs. Agues Lou- Adams Station and is being reden and Louis Franklin.
(Continued from Page 16}
j
|
j
.
^
H^TiMfl^Yaf, January 2, 1962
CIVIL
STOP WORRYING ABOUT
YOUR CIVIL SERVICE TEST
PASS HIGH
the EASY
ARCO WAY
AM-» 0«piify Clerk _ .$4.00 •
Admiiiisfrativ* Asst. _ $ 4 . 0 0 •
Accoantaiit ti Auditor .$4.00 a
ApprcRtie* 4th Class
M*ch«iiie
$3.00 •
• A««« ERfintmon
$4.00 •
• A a f * MoekiRitl
$4.00 •
a
• A r f * Mochanie
$4.00
• Ass't F«r*maR
a
fSMitotien)
$4.00 •
AttcRdflRt
. ..
$3.00
••«iRRiR9 Offie* W«rk«r $3.00 •
•••khtcpar
$3.00 a
I r i d f * ft TunntI Offiecr $4.00
C«ptaHi (P.D.)
$4.00
Clieiiiisf
$4.00
• C. S. Arrtli ft Yoe
$2.00
• Civil Engineer
$4.00
• Civil $crvlee Handbseh $1.00
• Unemployment Insurance
Cloimt Clerk
$4.00
n
• Claims Examiner (Unem«
pleyment Insurance)
$4.00
• Clerk. GS 1-4
$3.00
O Clerk. NYC
$3.00 •
• Complete Guide to CS $1.50 •
• Correction OfPleer
$4.00
n Dietitian
_$4.00 •
• Electrical Engineer
$4.00
• Electrician
$4.00
n Elevator Operator
$3.00 •
• Employment Interviewer $4.00 n
•
• Federal Service Entroace
Exams
$4,00 •
n fireman (F.D.)
$4.00 •
• Firo Capt.
$4.00 •
• Firo Lieutenant
$4.00
• Fireman Tests In all
•
States
$4.00 •
n Foreman
$4.00 a
n Fereman-SanHation
$4.00 •
• Gardener Assiitont
. $3.00 a
n H. S. Diploma Tests
$4.00 •
• Heme Training Physical $1.00 •
G Hospital Attendant . .$3.00
Rtcsident Building
Snperintendent
$4.00
$3.00
O Housing Caretaker
_$4.00
n HoRsing Officer
_$4.00
• Housing Asst.
_ How to Pass College
Entrance Tests
$2.00
n
• How to Study Post
Office Schemes
$2.00 •
• Home Study Course for
Civil Service Jobs
$4.9S •
n
n How to Pass West Point
n
nnd Annapolis Entiance
Exoms
. .$3.50 n
•
Q InsuroRce Agent ft
Broker . .
M.OO
• Investigator
ICritiRol and Low
O Investigator Inspector .$4.00
Enforcement
$4.00
n Investigator's Handbook $3.O0
• Jr. Accountant
$4.00
Jr. AHorney
$4.00
Jr. Government Asst. . .$3.00
• Janitor Custodian .
$3.00
• Laborer • Physical Test
Preparation..
. ..$1.00
$2.00
n Laborer Written Test
n Law Enforcement Post*
tlons
$4.00
$4.00 •
n Low Court Steno
$4.00
n Lieutenant (P.D.)
•
• License No. 1—Teaching
Common Branches
$4.00
•
a
•
•
••
•
•
•
•
•
•
••
•
••
B
FREE!
Librarioa
$4.00
MointeRORC* M « a . . . . $ 3 . 0 0
Mechanical ER9r. _ _ $ 4 . 0 0
Handlor
$3.00
M e t e r Atteadanf
$3.M
Motor Veh. Op«r.
$4.00
Motor Vebicio U c e M *
Examiner
QQ
Notary PaMtc . .
$2.50
N i r s e Practical ft P«Mic
Health
$4.00
Oil Baroer Installer
$4.00
Office M a c M n * Oper. _ $ 4 . 0 0
Parking Meier AttCRdoH $4.00
Park kanger
$3.00
P a r t l e Officer
$4.00
PatrolmoR
$4.00
Potrofman Test« la All
Stoles
$4.00
Personnel Examiner
$5.00
Ploygroend Director ^ $4.0(
Plumber
$4.00
Policewoman
$4.00
Postoi Clerk Carrier
$3.00
Postal Clerk fa C h a r g *
ForcmoR
$4.00
Postmaster, l i t , 2Rd
ft 3rd Class
$4.00
Postmaster. 4t1i Class .$4.00
Practice for Army Tests $3.00
Principal Clerk
$4.00
Prison Gvord
$3.00
Probation Officer
$4.00
Public MonagemeRi ft
Admin.
$4.95
Railrood Clerk
$3.00
Railroad Porter
$3.00
Real Estate Broker . . . $ 3 . 5 0
Refrigerntioa Llceas* .$3.50
Rural Moil Carrier . . . $3.00
Safety Officer
$3.00
School Clerk
$4.00
Police Sergeant
$4.00
Social Investigator
$4.00
Social Supervisor
<4.00
Social Worker
$4.00
Senior Clerk NYS
$4.00
Sr. Clk., Supervising
.$4.00
Clerk NYC
-$4.00
s t a t e Trooper
stationary Engineer ft
-$4.00
Fireman
Steno-Typist I NYS)
$3.00
Steno Typist ( G $ 1-7) $3.00
Stenographer, G r . 3 ^ $4.00
Steno-Typist (Practical) $1.50
Stock Assistant
. . $3.00
Storekeeper GS 1-7
$4.00
Structuro Maintf|iner _ $ 4 . 0 0
Substitute Postal
Transportation Clerk
$3.00
Surface Line Op.
$4.00
Tax Collector
$4.00
Technical ft Prefessionol
Asst. ( S t a t e )
$4.00
Telephone Operator . . p . O O
Thruway Toll Collector $4.00
Title Examiner
$4.00
Transit Potrolmaa
$4.00
Treasury Enforcement
Agent
$4.00
Voc. Spell ond
Grammer
$1.50
W a r Scrvico Scholorships
$3.00
Uniformed Court
Officer
$4.00
You W i l l Receive an Invaluable
N e w A r c o " O u t l i n e C h a r t of
N e w York C i t y G o v e r n m e n f . "
W i t h Every N . Y . C . A r c o Book—
ORDER DIRFOT—MAIL
COUPON
45c for 24 hour ipecial delivery
C . O . D . ' i 30c exire
LEADER B O O K STORE
97 Duane St.. N e w York 7, N . Y .
FUat* t«nd me
copies ol booiit checked ebcve.
1 e n c l o t e c h a c k or m o n t y o r d s r (or
Name
.
Addreu
City
..
Staff.
B* turt io includ* 9% S«lct lei
SERVICE
LEADER
Psgr Kifleca
The Job
State Offers
Principal Mail
Clerk Promotion
Market
A Survey of Opportunities
In Private Industry
By A. L PETERS
In
Manhattan,
Bronx
and
Queen?, thei-e are jobs for nurses
aides and orderlies, men only.
Mu^t be able to take temperatures,
pulse and respiration and to give
be"d b a t h s and enemas. Must also
have checkable references and
about 6 m o n t h s ' experience. Jobs
pay $140 to $200 a month. Apply
a t the M a n h a t t a n Service I n d u s tries Office, 247 West 54th Street.
bend and f o i m difficult pieces of
sheet metal to close tolerances
a n d to read simple blueprints.
Must be U. S. citizens, able to use
various precision instruments to
inspect own work. Job pays $2.25
fen hour.
Also wanted is a n experienced
machine shop foreman, able to
supervise 40 workers in operation
of lathes and grinding and milling machines. Close precision
Tailors
work on small parts. P a y is $200
I n various parts of Brooklyn,
a week. Apply at the Queens I n there are job openings for alteradustrial Office, C h a f e - M a n h a t tion tailors m e n with dry cleaning
t a n Bank Building, Queens Plaza.
experience and c4ieckable references, to do all kinds of alterations
a n d repairs on men's and ladies'
c i v i l . (iKRVICE O O M t l i N O
garments. Must be able to use sew* I ' m n . Eiaois
ing machine.
FKnCIC.AI. K N T K . ^ M B EXAMH
Jobe pay $1.50 an hour and up,
MIST I f K K H B <'l.t:iCK-4-ARKIEB
HU;H M'H4H»L I»lfM»MA
depending on experience. Some
J r . A .A»»t ( i t i l U*.-*!
Ai<-ti Eitcr
jobs aae on a commission basis.
<'ivil .Mrch K k ^ t ' l .
IfrHflKniiin
M I K N N K ^ : «<l«lr>. K«fri|;. K I r r t r ' n
Apply a t the Brooklyn Service I n Malh't'.S. .Arilh 41K
Trif l*li.««
dustries Office, 582 Pulton Street.
Plumbers
I n Brooklyn, too. there are job
openings for plimibers, m e n who
have worked recently for New
York City contractors on jobbing
and alteration work. Jobs pay
$2.50 a n hour a n d up.
A baker is wanted to bake Jewish bread a n d rolls and some
cake. Experience in Jewish bread
line is necessary. Night s h i f t : 9
p.m. to 4:30 a.m. $22 and up per
night.
Men interested in extra income
i jobs washing cars on Pi-idays and
Saturdays, or just Saturdays. Apply any Thursday or Friday m o r n ing. No experience required. $1 a n
hour. Apply a t the Brooklyn I n dustrial Office, 590 Fulton Street, i
In Manhattan
I n M a n h a t t a n , there are job •
openings for stone gluers, men ]
a n d women who can use a tube !
and glue to paste single stones,
i tooth pick and lacquer for multiple stones. Should have at least
one year's experience. Piecework
rates, 11 to 15 cents a gross or
$40 to $50 a week.
'
Button and buckle makers are
also wanted, men and women who
can operate a kick pres-s and make ^
cloth-covered buttons and buckles. !
Must have at least two years' experience. $1.65 a n hour.
.1,. r Tub bl«li;) W1 'J-l^JOPe
GRADED DICTATION
AIm R ^ i n n r r •imI K*vi«tf 4ittM>ra in
STKNtl. T V I ' l > i i , iMNtKHKKI'INti.
CO.Vll'TOMKTKV. tMCKK'AL
DAY
AKIKK
KVFNMN«
City Exam Comiaf S»«ii f « r
ACCOUNTANT
INTENSIVE COURSE
COMPLETE PREPARATION
Class mtets Sat. 9:15-12:15
b*9inHiii9 Jan. 20
Write or phone f o r Infoi'matioo
Eastern School
AL 4-502f
Rrondway, N . T . S (nfHr N S t . )
Ple:ise write m e fr«'e abo>il t h e
ACCOUNTANT c o u r w .
Name
154 Nassau St. (cpp. t^YC Holl)
BEekmen 3
SCHOOLS
IN ALL
Aiiilrfst
Bore
IZ.,.C1
ICROUGHS
City E x a m Coining Soon For
P r o f . IRVING
PAINTER
CKAYKIN,
C. p. A.
O f f e r s a C o a c h i n g Course
Union Rates - Year Round
For Tfie N . Y . C .
INTENSIVE COURSE
COMPLETE PREPARATION
ACCOUHTANT EXAM
Two separate, ideniical series
of 16 lectures are available on
EITHER W e d n e s d a y evenings,
beginning January 2 4 , 1962,
or Saturday mornings, beginning January 27, i 9 6 2 .
ot 247 W. 4««h St.. N.Y.C.
Call r i m
Class meets Thursday, 7 to I
W^riu or phono f o r Information
Eastern School
AL 4-5021
BroadWky, N.T. 8 ( n r u r S M . )
Please write me free a b o u t the
P A I N T E R conrsc.
Name
A«ldrvM
r z . . . .1.38
Boro
f c r infermafraR
7>«230
EVENING I
N
COURSES I SJSomTE
• DEGREES &
CERTIFICATE P R O G R A M S
Cltcmical • Cefmncrcial Art
C«nstn»ctt«n • Gtaphic Aits I. Advt{.
Electrical • Acccuntinf • Metcl
Meckanicai • ReUilinc • Oraftinf
Medical Lab • ImlNstfial IMt£. & Sales
Typists
I n M a n h a t t a n , too, there are
jobe for legal stenographers. Legal expex-dence esseaitial. Good
^ e d s in stenography and use of
electric typewriter sere also necessary. Pay range, $90 to $110 a
week.
Experienced statistical typists
are als^ wanted. Jobs pay $75 to
$90 a week. Apply a t the M a n h a t t a n Commercial Office. 1 East
\dth Street.
In Queens, a n experienced power brake operator 1» needed to
Efltlish • Stcial Science« Math • Science
T h e headquartera u n i t a t Fort
Hamilton, Marine Avenue a n d F o r t
Hamilton Parkway, Bay Ridge,
BiookJyn, Is urgently in need of
clerk-typibtfi, GS-3, $3,760 to $4,390 a year. Applicants may visit
Uie Poht or call £H &-7dOO. ext.
22233, lujr tiutlier w l o r m a t i u u .
For complete infoi-mation a n d
application form.s contact one of
the following offices of the St«i#
Civil Service D e p a r t m e n t : 270
Broadway, New York City; T b t
S t a t e Campus, Albany; or tJie
S t a t e Office Building, Buffalo.
MONDELL INSTITUTE
t.io W.
B r u s h makers are needed, men
a n d women who can make cased
paint brushes by h a n d . At least
one year of experience necessary.
Men can average $70 a week a t
piecework rates. Apply at the
M a n h a t t a n Industrial Office, 255
West 54 t h Street.
Fori Maaiillun H a s
ll«»rk-Typittt J o b s
Senior mall and supply clerki
with t h e State D e p a r t m e n t of L a bor's Division of Employment hav«
until J a n . 15 to apply for a p r o motion exam to the title of p r i n cipal mail a n d supply clcrk.
This is a $4,760 to $5.840-a-yeaT
job. Candidates for it must havB
been employed for at least on®
year In their present title, a n d
must be permanent, competltlvt
class employees.
SPRING REGISTRATION
J o n . 3 1 , Feb. 1, 6 - « P.M.
Clo»*«s Begin February Stii
Tuition $ 9 pei S«m. H e a r
REQUEST CATALOG CSI
NEW YORK CITY
COMMUNITY
COLLEGE
L 3M KARL ST.. B'KLYN 1 • T l M A M
BiMUya I w a NaU
Barn Your
High School
Equivalency
Diploma
for ciril servic«
for personal satisfariioii
Class Toes. & Thurs. at 6:39
Write or Phone for Informaticn
Eastern School
A L 4-5029
721 Broadway N.Y. 3 (at 8 St.)
P l e w e write me l i r e u t o u t
School X < ] u l T a l e u c / claca.
Bith
Name
AddreM
Boro
..PZ... LI
SCHOOL DIRECTORY
ISlblMCbb
eit'UUOI.I»
ADELPHI>EXECUTIVES*
IBM—Key Ptinch,
^•'•.krni
^ p t r . t i o u . Wiriiif
Eit-c., Kite.. T u j i . s S H i u i a < l , r i , „ p t o m t l r y . All
(MaclalD« Sboitliiiiid) I H E P A E A T I O N (or CIVIL
Plawnnt Svct) 171V Kiima Uwy. liUlyn Next to
Sorter. T a U , Collator. Rtpic<3iioa,
S B C a r r A R U I ^ M K j i c « l . LNtiJ.
Bteooa. Iiictaphoiit. S T E N C n f i *
BERVICK. Coed. Day. Eve. » R U
ATalon T h e a t r a . DE 6 - 7 2 0 0 .
MONROE S C H O O L — I I M COURSES
v/iriot, i^twciAL
m w i ^ n w E ^ w n v r w b — ' i B m V V W K 9 C 9 ^REPARATIO
N lau4
O K CIVIL
Day
ClaMWa.
VICE IBM TKK'ra (AOIJIUTM) toi V c u > t w i t c h b o a r d , i r p i o f
team Titiuoiil Ave boHtoo KouU Bicua HI 2-6600.
S H O P P I N G FOR L A N D OR H O M E S
LOOK A T PAGE 11 FOR LISTINGS
^
CIVIL
Page Sixteen
SERVICE
Tiiesday, January 2, 1 9 6 2 ^
LEADER
Creedmoor Chapter Host
To Legislative Luncheon
Dr. La Burt, di/ector of the ter; Ruth Bickel; Sol Bendet,
Hospital, spoke of the necessity ••president of the CSEA Metropofor higher wages and improved politan New York Confea-ence;
working conditions to attract and Henry Shemin, chaliinan of the
Resolutions Committee of the
hold qualified personnel.
The medical staff was repre- CSEA; and delegates of the Nas.sented by assistant directors Drs. sau County, Brooklyn State and
Tomlinson, Gibbqii and Brice. P&ychiatric Institute Chapters.
The di.scussion was related to
John L. Murphy, chairman of the
The le<Tislatoi-s pi'omiisod co- lerrislative committee of the Chap- salary, uniform working hours,
operation and support on the bills ter, presided at the meeting.
sick leave payments, annually and
when they are reported out of
Those present in;
i Joseph •at retirement, and elimina'tion of
Buccaria, president of the Chap- the "death gamble".
committee in the Legislature.
The Ci-eedmore State Hospital
chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assoc. was host to a legislative meeting recently. Assemblymen Louis Wallach and Charles
Eckstein listened to speakers describing various resolutions adopted
by the delegates of OSEA.
FORESTRY LIBRARY CITED - Dr Hardy L. Shiney.
I left, dean of the State University College of Forestry at Syracuse
I University, congratulates Prof. Terence J. Hoverter, librarian, for
i the award that was presented to the college library by The Forest
I History Society. The citation recognizes the Forestry College as an
I Approved Repository of North American Forest History and singles
out its library "for its meritorious contributions in the collecting, preserving and disseminating of North American forest and forest industries history . , . and other materials relating to forest history."
State ESigible Lists
DISCUSS L E G I S L A T I O N
—
Solomon Bendet, center, presidi-ut of the Metropolitrm Conference of the Civil S" vice Employees
Association, j s shown discussing a CSEA legislative
rcc
uuiiun with Assembiynien Louis Wallach,
second from right, and Charles Eckstcin, right, at
the recent legislative luncheon hosted by the Creedmoor State Hospital chapter of the CSEA. Joseph
Bucaria, left, president of the Creedmoor chapter,
and John Murphy, chairman of the luncheon, look
on.
SENIOR SANITARY CHF.MIST—HKAI.TII
( K X O L U S I V K O f ' T H K IIOSIMTAI S )
1. K o b a y a s l i i , S.. A l b . i n y
2. I<eikhim, E., A l b a n y
a . I.aiTpr, R . , K . ( i i e p n l ) > l i
St|.'{
S-.'K
'HI
4. Olspn. R., Detmar
T;:!
5.
?:;!
Rcitft-I. M . ,
8KNI0R
1.
3.
Albany
TYPIST. AI.HANY O r i
r i KMC HiiltVU K
KT,—
O Npill. H.. T r o y
Daye. H.. T r o y
Morris,
M.,
Albany
H(0
^IM)
S K M O R A I ' D I T CM'^RK. IHIVT. O T
r i N A M ' l i , W K S T C H K S T K K ('((I N T V
]. Honzp, M.. H;islin!.M
;!.
Sacliar.
F.,
!>-Tl
Hastint:<i
sc.'
3. Aiulcrson, A., Harlsdale
^J.')!!
H K A D M O T O R V F . H U ' I K I M I'.N- K
K X A M I N K R — M(>n»K \ KIIK'I.KS
1.
3.
4.
5.
"H'raliPS,
Guililprland
fM«
McMann, H.. Ma>ii)ctU
!il1
Kispnmpyei'. I.. BUlyn
V o e t , H., M p c l m n i i v l
Kllis. D.,
Albany
A.,
si:.'j
s.";
s-;,s
A C r O I ' N T A N T . D K I ' T . O F SIX l A I ,
W K I J A R K . i;iSII'; < 0 1 N T V
1.
2.
N>il,
J..
Hiiffaln
B a r o n e , S., B u f f a l o
riiiKF
A r r o i N T ( I . K K K . I>I:I'T. O F
SOMATW I X F A R F .
KRIF,
N U
NTV
Donoulnip,
Kpnniore
SS7
R a p p . K.. Buffalo
v ' |
3. M a c k a l p . R.. H a n i b i i r ?
SMI
4. T r a i n a , R . , B u f f a l i i
M 7
1.
10.
11.
I'l.
13.
BPtbpl, H..
J ' e r r a s , A..
T u r n p r , I,.,
Bliunenthal,
Albany
Voorhcpsvl
Renss-'afr
S., A l b a n y
14. Krutf. A.. DPbnar
15. Connors, T., (H^n I'Ms
IJh(
1.
•I.
3.
4.
5.
Bpnpdiot,
T)pinasl,
Marriott.
Koatinp.
HpnUiii.
H
W . . Df l n i a r e
.1.. S i h l d v
K.. B - l n i . i r
R . . D Imai
H . . Allciiiy
1
tS. ScbniPdrr, .1., Albany
7. f.ans'liorsi, W.. B'nfrlniinlon
S,
!>.
l(t.
II.
I*;.
i;t.
M.
I!"i.
17.
IS.
lit.
K v a n s . B.. A l b a n y
H o i i r i i r a n . K.. T.ourloiivl
T y r r p l , N.. A l b a n y
S b p p b a n . M.. A l b - t i y
I ' a r l t P r , B., 11 InriiB c l b p l . W . , A lb,-my
l'pri;iH, A.. V d o r l i p p s v l
Rrid'/.ivila. R . P o l i ; r b l ; p p s c
T i i r n r r , T.., P . ' n - y p l a p r
S o u c y , W.. I,i)i|(loiivl
B l i i n i c n i h a l , S,. Alli.iny
III. Worona. N.. ('Mni))ridK'e
VM
•:0. K r n j r . A . , D i l n i a r
'.M. C r i l c h l o w . H . . B n f f . i l o
Connor.-:, T . , ( l i e n s KIs
s;(;c
M?
TS7
VAS»<\II COI NTY
SFNHMt HTI;N'(M;KAI'IIF.R —
TltKA.SFKKK'S OFFH K
1. Kcpffan, C., Ovstp Bay
80 113
N \,';S\|1 CO I NT Y
SKNIOR STKNO' ifAfllF.K —
>V I ; I, !• A K I')
1. D a l z ,
A.,
I»I : I' A I{ R > J I ; N T
I''.. I;,UV.'V
0(i 0 '
I'arlrcy, A., Ni w HydP I'lc . . . .O.'S.'.'.'j:!
Al»
CI.KRK—AiniT
rut
ANO
CONTKOI.
A
Dow.
C.,
Albany
Wyi-ant,
G..
Troy
H a n a v a n , R.. Slinuprln
Kollin,
I..,
Spbt.ly
Bppnier,
H., Balliiinr
!";S
!l(is
sT,
SSI
sr)(t
LlMt U
r»ow,
r.,
Albany
!irS
Wyfe-ant, G., Troy
iMi;!
!i(i(i
. Dwyer. K.. Troy
Hr>S
1. P i ' r r y .
. VanKlyltp, M . . A l b a n y
. Krjuitrlcy, M . . All>aiiy
. Bcrnipr,
H., Baltiiior
sr. 1
'.M
fC.d
rr S p a r r o w ,
. Rapp,
LUNCHEON
Uriuy Sliemin chairman of the Civil Service Ehipioyers A->>u€iittioiv legislative committee, addresse*
luncheon at the Creedmoor State Hoiipial on
aspects
the OSEA le-^,lative tvogram. Listening
are Joseph Bucaria. president of the Crenimoor
chapter of the CSEA, and Mrs. Bucaria
Trooper Changes Louis Cartwright, Rochester
(Continued from Page 14)
•AJlgi\ed as First Sergeant to
Troop B headquartera at Malone,
New York. Sergeant Abare is married to the former Dorothy Gould
Of Watertown and resides with
hU wife and two daughters, age
IT and 10, at 417 West Ten Eyek
atreet. WaterLown, New York.
All promotion* and reas£ienments were effeotdve Decejxiber
U . 1961, except t h a i of First
Sergeant Snook, which was effective December 27, and those
of LieutPiiants Croswell and Quick
Which are effective Jan. 2, 1962.
Postmaster, Resigns Jan. 5
J..
ministration in Washi ngton.
Also to be filled is ti^e post of
assistant postmaster, vacimt since
the resignation of John
.
Oct. 31. Both positions are rated
conyietitive Civil Service, bui the
atH>ointment8 must be approvea by
the Post Office Department.
The assistant postmaster receives between $10,000 and $14,000.
Postmaster's salaries vary depending on revenue of the postoffice. number of employes, volume
D, linar
X ASS A IT c o r NTV
Si;\H»R STFNOCIC\I"II'K —
NASSAII COI,I.K<iK
K.,
s"7
Sl7
fv.rip
I'l
WolKky. K.. Mini-ol,!,
B..
Wi'Hi'uiry
H F A D M A I N T F . V A N C K SI I ' F K \
IJ*TF,KI)FI*ART\IKNTAI,
1. HafUey, W., «yrinni«)
.loliiiKon, I .. OK'jininir
3. M a l h p w i . K.. B e d f o n l
1. f l a i i h a n ,
f»;U
ii.'ip
HI
AHSOCJATK C i v i l . E N f J I N F . K K
— IM KLIC H O K K 8
•;(;•.>
(IIFSI<;N)
X.tsl A
1. B e n p d i r t , W . . D e U n a r
a. Demasi, J.. Sfhlily
1000
••!U
8. Marriott. K.. Delmar
!•!•!
4 . Kealinir. R., Di'lmar
fl. H e n k i n . H . . A l b a n y
. 8 . E v a n s , B.. A l b a n y
% Hoiiriisan. K., Loiidotivl
M..
Albany
0. Parker, R.. Delmar
JiJ.'j
irMl
!<IH
SS.'i
S81
!»0.i;i7
. . . . . . Sfl «V-i
N . \ S S \ r COI'NTV
SFNIOK
,STI':NO<;IC X I - I I K R
MKNTAI. IIKAl.Ttl
9he«lian.
RCXJHESTER, Jan. 1 — Rochester Postmaster Louis B. Cartwright will resign his federal Civil Service post Jan. 5.
Cartwright, 66, has permanent
Civil Service status, which means
he could not be removed unless
brought up on charges such as
violations of the Hatch Act.
Cartwright has been postmaster
eigivt years. The position pays
114,350 a year and It will go to a
Democrat appointed by the ad-
B.
Albany
!);t..'tr
00.805
<10 4<iH
SO.S'.'«
. . . .84.'1:17
XAs.i^viT c o r x T V
SFNIOR STF.NOGi: M'lil'.R —
I'l.ANMNf; COHMK.SIiiN
1. Hopfl, K.. Klor.il I'k
Sfi ;tOO
Padiila, R.. A l b a n y
, TuoUcr. F.. Albany
, H a n a v a n , R.. Slinuprln
, Kollin.
L..
Schtily
. I'^prinKliaiii,
HSSES
!in,s
!{. Q i i i n n , M., B c l l n i o r n
4 . 1 , a r s o n , 1., llnion-i.-lp
.5. K b n i k p , H . , O r f a t .Neck
lloi'spy, 1.., H'Mnpslcad
7 . B r e i t f i i b p c u p r , K., K R i ' k w y
K., K H<kwy
—
IMtAKil
O.'MSS
NASSAF CO! NTV
SFNMMt HTF,N4»<iR XI'IIKR —
IIF.AI.TII l ) i : r \ R T M F \ T
1. O l o c k , J . . H n n p s t p a d
Ilollpy, L., C.lpn Covp
<
8,S.7«4
8J.i;04
1
NASSAII CO I NTV
SF.N'IOR STKNOCKAI'IIFR —
MKAJI'OWItROOK liOhl'ITAI.
1. C n a i n e r . A., J . p v i l l o w n
. l o l i a n g o o n , K., B p t b p a p p
I
(».'5.4fi.1
(il.tiOB
NASSAII CO! NTY
HKNIOR HTIONtKiRAIMIFR —
NASSAII CO! NTV SANATORIl'M
1. ( H . n n a n ,
R.. BcthDyge
,
1
80.(n$
NASSAII COI'NTV
SKNIUR STKNtKiRAI'HFK —
I'l'HMC WORKK
|
,
!
•
of (nail and other factors.
1. S i n i l h , D . . H o o s p v e l t
80 .I'jr
•
'i.
S
c
U
u
l
p
p
.
M
.
.
WilliHtun
P
k
8U.t«ti6
1
v.,artwrignt was Rochester City
Manager for 13 years before beNASSAII COI NTV
,
HKNIOK STKNOtiRAI'lIKK —
'
oomli ^ po4«tmaster under the
UIMT. SUI'T. (»F SCIIOUKH Nu. 8
|
E l s e , hower administration. He 1. Tliatclier, D.. North Merrick ..SS.tWd I
.said he liad det*i»-nlned to retire
because ha 1» past the age he
CORRECTION
'
i^ould have otepped dov^r. in InIn last week's eligible list. S e n i o r ^
d'<slry, and lu order to "be on Lab Technician should have read j
m. own instead of working regular —- Sr. Lab. Secretary, No. 8047 — ,
hou v."
Salary
$5,020.
^
Download