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Li E APE
America's Largest Weekly for Public
Vol. XXIV, No. 2 2
It
C5t
I ravel
" _
Proposals
Employees
Tuesday, February 5, 1 9 6 3
See Page 3
P r i c e T e n Cento
A
Aides Facing
RepeatThW
Fight For Coals In
Kennedy's Mr. Smith Years, Felly
Comes To New York
A A T h e n presidential troubleshooter Stephen Smith,
the President's brother-in-law,
w a ? n a m e d by D e m o c r a t i c
National Committee chairman
J o h n B a i l e y to " h e l p s t r e n g t h e n tlie D e m o c r a t i c P a r t y i n
New York" the a n n o u n c e m e n t
at f i r s t w a s m e t w i t h m u c h
r e s e n t m e n t a n d a n n o y a n c e by
the most
important
party
leaders. T h e r e s e n t m e n t w a s
I n c r e a s e d by t h e " n e e d l i n g " of
their followers who were s a y ing, i n e f f e c t , "Aren't y o u able
(Continued
on P a g e
2)
Declares
s t a t e employees face their toughest fight in years for
w a g e s a n d o t h e r b e n e f i t s , J o s e p h F. F e i l y , p r e s i d e n t of t h e
Civil S e r v i c e E m p l o y e e s A s s n . , s a i d l a s t w e e k f o l l o w i n g a
meeting w i t h Governor Rockefeller. The meeting was held
prior t o d e l i v e r y of t h e G o v e r n o r ' s a n n u a l b u d g e t m e s s a g e
to the Legislature.
Feily told The Leader that "we
presented our proposals on salaries, retirement and other employee goals to the Governor last
week and gave the facts to back
up the correctness and justice
of our demands. The Governor
listened to us—and although no
committments were given, further
meetings and studies are scheduled."
No Support
(Special to The Leader)
Levitt Submits
Many Bills On
Retirement
ALBANY,
Feb.
4 — State
Comptroller Arthur Levitt sub-
'College Grads
Only' Label
Draws Fire
Toughest
m i t t e d a s e r i e s of bills t o t h e
Legislature last week t h a t extend present
State
b e n e f i t s of
Employees-
the
Retirement
System for another year and
add
several
new
amend-
m e n t s to the law.
Among the new amendments Is
B U F F A L O , F e b . 4—A s u g a bill to remove Inequities that
gestion that only college gradexist in the granting of vested
u a t e s be e m p l o y e d i n m u n i c - • retii-ement allowances. Presently
Ipal r e c r e a t i o n
d e p a r t m e n t s ' members who terminate service
d r e w s h a r p c r i t i c i s m t o d a y I after 15 years may leave their
f r o m Al B u r k e , p r e s i d e n t of contributions on deposit and,
Erie c h a p t e r , Civil
S e r v i c e upon attaining" age 60, be eligible
for a retirement allowance. Such
Employees Association.
Erie County Supervisor Ran- benefits are payable in accorddolph A. Mineo, who is a physical ance with the 60-year plan even
education teacher in a Buffalo though the individual may have
high school, made the suggestion contributed on the 55, 25 or 20
ttili week at meeting here of the yeaa- plan. The new measure would
New York State Association for pay vested t>enefits to individuals
Health. Physical Education and at the time and in accordance
(Continued on Pace 16)
Recreation.
Mineo said use of collegetrained men might
eliminate
appointments based on "working
for a poHtical party."
Budget Message
Poor Reading
For State Aides
A L B A N Y , Feb. 4 — G o v e r n o r R o c k e f e l l e r d e l i v e r e d h i s a n n u a l b u d g e t m e s s a g e h e r e l a s t w e e k a n d It m a d e poor r e a d i n g a s f a r a s s t a t e e m p l o y e e s go.
T h e o n l y n e w i t e m of a n y r e a l I n t e r e s t w a s t h e i n c l u s i o n of $525,000 for u n i f o r m s or u n i f o r m a l l o w a n c e s f o r C o r rection Officers, S a f e t y Oficers a n d Motor Vehicle License
Examiners.
The budget jrecommendation
does accomplish a long, time goal
of the Civil Service Employees
Assn. but the proposal was dimmed by two factors: it leaves
out of consideration thousands of
Mental Hygiene Department e m ployees who are required to wear
Speaking on salaries, Felly
simple uniforms and, as CSEA
said that "The Governor is hot
President Joseph F. Feily declared
going to recommend or support
(Special to T h e Leader)
"is hardly compensation for the
any kind of state pay raise this
ALBANY,
Feb.
4
—
T
h
e
S
t
a
t
e
•
reallocation appeal the Correcyear. The budget message itself
'
I
spells tiiis out."
S e n a t e g a v e o n e of i t s f o r m e r i tion Officers won, which was reOn
other
proposals,
Feil:'
warned public employees that
every ounce of effort from our
membership will be needed this
year if we are to gain the support of the Legislature to our
cause.
Ail-Out Drive
Indications now are that Feily
will call for an all-out drive by
membership to carry CSEA arguments to individual legislators
through mail, personal contact
and public meetings.
"Unity of purpose has never
been needed so strongly as now,"
Feily declared. "We cannot support a state economy diive at the
expense of the public employee.
We will do everything in our
power to get fair treatment from
the Legislature."
Senate Gives Praise
in Reappointing
Comm. Alex Falk
m e m b e r s a s p e c i a l t r i b u t e h e r e ' jected by the Administration."
last week.
'No Substitute' Says Feily
In unanimously confirming
The CSEA had urged the Govt h e r e a p p o i n t m e n t of A l e x ernor to overide a budget veto
a n d e r A. F a l k t o t h e S t a t e on increasing Correction Officers
Civil S e r v i c e C o m m i s s i o n , Re-1 salaries by one grade, an upgradpublican
and
D e m o c r a t i c : ing that was awarded them by
m e m b e r s g a v e t h e i r f o r m e r ; the Civil Service Commission,
colleague a w a r m tribute.
i Feily said that "while Correction
The applause was for the for- Officers feel they deserve a unimer New York City Senator, who form allowance, few of them are
was named to the commission in expected to accept it as a sub1947 and has served continuously stitute for the reallocation."
ever since.
T h e only mention made of
Former Commission President
state salaries by the Govex'nor
He was named Civil Service was "they have been increased
Commission president by Gover- substantially." This will not be
nor Harriman, afid served as the equated by state employees, Feily
chief executive for the depart- said, with statements by the Govment for four years. He now is ernor and leading GOP spokesthe minority representative.
men that state workers should
never again be allowed to lag
(Continued on Pa^e 16)
behind their counterparts in private industry on pay.
Pay Facts Given
The CSEA Salary Committee,
under the chairmanship of Solomon Bendet, earlier presented the
Governor with facts showing that
state employees are already lagging behind since last year's increases were granted.
Earned Their Jobs
completely ignores the
irke declared, "that a
iiiunicipal recreation
jyes earned their
'"competitive civil
That section of the budget
message dealing with State employees was, as had been predicted, a remembrance of things
past. It confirmed earlier pronouncements that the Governor
was going to hold the line as far
as any new monies or employee
benefits or wages were concerned.
are not college
Burke said,
"but
led on Paffe 16)
Palo S f a t e Sets
OfFicer Nomination
BUFFAIX3. Feb. 4—Nomination
> officers Is scheduled at a meetof Buffalo State Hospital
'chapter, to be held Feb. 22 at
7 p.m. in Banat Hall. 25 Review
Piioe.
Jliird. Marie Trautman, nominatcommitee cliairman, is now
accepting names to be placed
o a nominating ballots. Nominations also will be accepted from
tii9 floor. Food will bd served
t o r (113 meetuig.
Trimper Selected
GOVERNOR HEARS PROPOSALS:
Governor Rockefeller, second from left« is seen as
he talked to representatives of tbe Civii Service
Employees Assn. la a meetinr last week, held i a
the Governor's office and dealing with the CSEA 1963
lefisiativa program. (Sea atoff above.) Also seea
are, from left, Joseph F. Feily. CSEA president;
John T. DeGraff, Sr., CSEA counsel, and Solomon
Bsndet, chairman of the CSEA Salary Committee.
Also attending the meeting were Joseph D. Lochner,
CSEA executive director; Harry W. Albright, Jr., associate counsel, and Gary Perkinson, CSEA public
relatioaa iirector.
ALBANY, Feb. 4 — George J.
Trimper of Eggertsville in Erie
County has been named a member of the Niagara Frontier State
Park Commission for a term
ending Jan. 13, 1970.
Trimper
succeed
William
Hem-y Hepp of Buffalo, whose
term expired.
Page Two
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
Tue8<!ay, February 5, 1963
DON'T REPEAT THIS
contributed to Lodge's race the White House has full con( C o n t i n u e d f r o m P a g e 1)
to clean up your own problems against Ted Kennedy; George fidence in the Integrity, reliaFeldman, friend of House bility, leadership and good
without outside help?"
In some two weeks of "list- Speaker John McCormack, and judgment of its State Chairman, no matter who he
ening," however, Smith has Sam Harris.
already managed to eradicate This type of liason lack with may be."
Smith has a rough job ahead
this animosity by leaving the Washington and lack of access
Impression that his role is to patronage is weakening the of him but it is being said
mainly that of a reporter and; whole party Image, Smith is that most leaders and party
evaluator of the New York | being told. The State Demo- functionaries are now glad of
situation. At the worst, a "wait cratic Committee Chairman, the chance to.say their piece
and see" attitude is reported I whether It be McKeon or any and that, in the end, Smith
from those who are most other person, cannot func- will get a thorough enough
tion without the prestige that picture to make a decision to
critical.
From his role, the county patronage and White House take back to Washington, a
leaders now hope unanimously recognition bring, all the lead- decision that the Kennedys
are expected to implement.
the brilliant 34-yeaj:-old Man- ers are saying.
hattan financier may come up
The Problems
Performance
with what they want most—
Here are some of the probMcKeon's friends told Smith
direct, reliable liason with that the State Chairman's lems facing Smith at this
Washington, D.C. They also leaders have nothing to be writing:
now realize that Smith is hot ashamed of concerning the
How will he handle Wagner,
looking for a job; he doesn't last election. Faced with the a strong man in his own right
need one. His only interest, powerful Rockefeller machine, and a proven vote getter?
of course, is to see that New late nomination of candidates
How will he handle Hogan,
York State is secure for Presi- and an inherited deficit in- another strong man who is at
dent Kennedy in 1964. Inter- stead of bags of money, they odds with Wagner?
necine warfare coupled with managed to improve the DemHow will he rate Levitt in
the fact that a favorite son, ocratic vote of 1958 in 43 of terms of power and authority?
Governor Rockefeller, might 62 counties; pulled upsets
How will the party recap- n e D A D T i i D C
«
.
. . .
, . .
be his opponent here does not in Congressional races despite f , , ^ . .
fo^ir D t r A R T U R c — C o r r e c t i o n c a p t a i n G l o r i a V . L e e , r i g h t , i s p r e ture votes Rockefeller took
^^
j
.. »
c,
•* j * •
„
i
s e n t e d w i t h a g o i n g - a w a y g i f t b y L o r e t t a M o r a n , S u p e r i n t e n d e n t of t h e
give the President the assur- reapportionment;
re-elected away in Negro, Puerto Rican, W o m e n ' s H o u s e of D e t e n t i o n , a t a p a r t y i n h e r h o n o r a t t h e S t o n e w a U
ance he needs abqut winning Comptroller Arthur Levitt by
„„ T h u r s d a y n i g h t . C a p t a i n L e e h a s b e e n g r a n t e d a t h r e e - y e a r
New York "sure" in the next a whopping majority and put Italo-American and civil service groups?
l e a v e of a b s e n c e f r o m t h e N e w Y o r k C i t y D e p a r t m e n t of C o r r e c t i o n
election.
John F. Scileppi on the Court
What area will he rate as t o s e r v e a s s u p e r i n t e n d e n t of w o m e n p r i s o n s i n N i g e r i a , W e s t A f r i c a *
What Smith Is Hearing
of Appeals bench. In addi- producing the best party
At this writing. Smith had tion McKeon feels he has an image? The upstate and subalready talked to most of the outstanding group of county urban districts of men like
party's leading figures, from leaders in terms of youth and McKeon, William Luddy, John
Mayor Robert Wagner to State vigor, community standing English, Otis Pike, William
Committee chairman William and working in the tradition Stratton and Peter Crotty or
McKeon to county leaders to of Kennedy's "New Frontiers- the New York City leaderimportant party functionaires men." Some opponents of Mc- ship, represented by Wagner,
to elected officials. It is re- Keon are saying, however, that Buckley, Steingut and Edward
ported that one of the most losing the top spots in an elec- Costikyan?
important of county leaders tion is still losing.
Correction Captain Gloria V. Lee has been appointed
How Will he make sure the
asked Smith "Why are you
Superintendent
of Women Prisons by the Director of Prisons
offering of his "new ear" will
The Background
here? We have cleared up the
in
Lagos,
the
capital
of Nigeria, West Africa. The Nigerian
not
be
used
to
encourage
new
Smith has been told that the
Inherited confusion and the basic problem goes back to feuds?
Director of Prisons met Miss Lee while' on an inspection
feuding. All that's really the feud between Carmine
What will be done about tour of New York City's correctional institutions.
needed here is to give us DiSapio and Mayor Wagner; patronage? (One thing causCaptain Lee, a Brooklyn resident.
will f l y t o N i g e r i a o n F e b r u a r y
what we deserve—the ability the split among party leaders ing dismay in this area is
to speak to one man and get that developed in the last that, by now, most of the good Wagner Honored, 15 t o b e g i n t h e f i r s t 1 8 - m o n t h
t e r m of a n e x p e c t e d t h r e e y e a r s
fast action on patronage."
mayoralty primary; the en- appointments—federal judget o u r of d u t y . S h e h a s r e c e i v e d a
Many leaders are said to mity between Wagner and ships, collectors of ports, etc. Officers Elected
l e a v e of a b s e n c e f o r t h i s p e r i o d .
resent the lack of r e c o g n i t i o n C o n g r e s s m a n and lead- —are gone.)
By Engineer Group A D e p a r t m e n t of C o r r e c t i o n
f r o m \ ; ^ a s h i n g t o n i n t e r m s o f ! J. Charles F. Buckley; the
How will the party treasury
v e t e r a n of e l e v e n y e a i ' s s e r v i c e a t
patronage, access to the White victory of Stanley Steingut in be replenished? (The present M a y o r R o b e r t P . W a g n e r w a s t h e H o u s e of D e t e n t i o n f o r W o House and appointment to im- Brooklyn over the Wagner deficit is said to total about c i t e d a s t h e c i t y ' s " E n g i n e e r - m e n , C a p t a i n L e e p o i n t e d o u t
portant posts. This lack of candidate, the enmity between half a million dollars. Smith M a y o r " a n d p r e s e n t e d w i t h a t h a t h e r a s s o c i a t i o n >vith t h e d e recognition, they feel, has forceful Manhattan DA Frank is said to be breeding hope and s c r o l l a t t h e 6 0 t h a n n i v e r s a r y p a r t m e n t h a s e n a b l e d h e r t o g a i n
robbed them of the prestige Hogan and Wagner. He has confidence about clearing up d i n n e r d a n c e a n d a n n u a l m e e t - n e w i n s i g h t s i n t o , t h e c o n c e p t s o f
modern penological a n d rehabilithat should normally be theirs also been told that McKeon things in this area.)
i n g of t h e M u n i c i p a l E n g i n e e r s of
ate treatment programs.
with a Democratic President has put in strong efforts
The problems are formidable t h e C i t y of N e w Y o r k a t T a v e r n - tCa at ipvt ea i inn m
L e e . in a c c e p t i n g t h e p o s i in Washington.
and
most
leaders
feel
they
o n - t h e - G r e e n , C e n t r a l P a r k , last tion. receives a large salary c u t .
to reconcillate these factions.
"Rankling" Example
One of the stumbling blocks, needed airing. All in all, they w e e k .
With a practical background in
An example of what rankles Smith has been told, is the are saying that Smith has W i l l i a m N , P u r d y , J r . , d e s i g n e r - i n s t i t u t i o n a l
administration
some leaders occurred when number of people in and out turned out to be a good lis- I n - c h a r g e of p l a n s of t h e N e w t h e H o u s e of D e t e n t i o n
appointments were made to of the party who find this tener and just the medicine Y o r k C i t y T i a n s i t A u t h o r i t y w a s m e n . t h e C a p t a i n
e l e c t e d p r e s i d e n t of t h e M u n i c i - i m p i ' e s s e d w i t h t h ^
the highly prestigious board strife to their advantage. the party needed.
p a l E n g i n e e r s f o r 1963. He^ s u c - p e r f o x - m i n g
of directors that will even- These men are reported to be
plonet
ceeds J a m e s D. Carroll, assistant t h e prison system
tually direct the operation of less Interested In a Kennedy
d i r e c t o r of t h e B u r e a u of
t h e developed republic.
Telstar. Among the group, victory In 1964 than in secur
Budget.
three New Yorkers were named ing their own nomination for
P o u n d e d I n 1903. t h e M u n i c i but not one of them was pro- local office or boosting their
p a l E n g i n e e r s i s c o m p o s e d of 600 Frank ReidN, ^
posed by the State chairman; own prestige.
engineers a n d architects employed
nor did he have an inkling
b y t h e C i t y of N e w Y o r k o r a s - Asst. Dist. Engil
In the main, the toughthe appointments were com- minded Smith has heard that
sociated with firms engaged in
ALBANY.
Feb.
4—Frank
JT
ing. The appointments went what the party needs In this J , L a w r e n c e M u r r a y , a f o r m e r e n g i n e e r i n g w o r k f o r m u n i c i p a l R e i d of B i n g h a m t o n h a s b e e n
promoted
to
the
position
of
to Investment banker Sidney state Is one leader—not two S c h e n e c t a d y r e p o r t e r , h a s b e e n g o v e r n m e n t .
O t h e r o f f i c e r s e l e c t e d f o r 1963 a s s i s t a n t d i s t r i c t e n g i n e e r f o r t h e
Weinberg, a Nixon supporter or more. Most of the county n a m e d t o a p o s t a s a c t i n g c h i e f
In 1960 and whose son leaders feel that patronage a d m i n i s t r a t i v e o f f i c e r f o r t h e I n c l u d e A b r a h a m S h u l m a n . O f - B i n g h a m t o n D i s t r i c t of t h e S t a t e l
S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y . H i s o f f i c i a l t i t l e f i c e of t h e C o m p r t o l l e r , f i r s t v i c e - P u b l i c W o r k s D e p a r t m e n t .
His
and liason should be funneled w i l l b e s e c r e t a r y of t h e U n i v e r - p r e s i d e n t : J o h n T . C a i T o l l . C o m - s a l a r y w i l l b e $ 1 5 , 1 3 0 a y e a r .
C I V I L BBKVICB L B A U M
through the office of the State s i t y b u t M u r r a y w i l l b e t h e c h i e f m i s s i o n e r o f H i g h w a y s , s e c o n d
R e i d i s a n a t i v e of A l b a n y a n d
America'* Le«din( N e w m u a r a t l M
f o r Fubllo Employees
Democratic Committee Chair- a d m i n i s t r a t i v e o f f i c e r a n d w i l l v i c e - p r e s i d e n t ; L e o N . K o m i a k o f f , h a s b e e n w i t h t h e d e p a r t m e n t
LEADKK r U B M C A T i n N S , W O .
man. And this wouldn't lessen h a v e t h e a u t h o r i t y of s i g n a t u r e . C i t y A d m i n i s t r a t o r ' s O f f i c e , s e c - s i n c e 1929, w h e n h e h e l d t h e t i t l e
• 1 D u a n * St.. New York 7, N. X.
Tcleiibonai B U c k n i a a S - 6 0 1 *
the power of Wagner or any H i s a p p o i n t m e n t c a m e a s a r e t a r y ; a n d H a r o l d S a p l r o , D e - j u n i o r a s s i s t a n t e n g i n e e r . U n t i l
Bntei-ed a i lecoud-claM m a t t e r , October
3, 1 0 3 8 a t t h e post offlc* a t New
Congressman, they say, be- r e s u l t of t h e r e s i g n a t i o n of D r . p a r t m e n t of H i g h w a y , t i e a s u r e r . t h e p r o m o t i o n , h e w a s a n a s s o Thomas
Hale
Hamilton,
the
York, N . Y. and Bridgeport, Coun.,
cause It Is unlikely that re- f o r m e r p r e s i d e n t . D r . H a r r y W . A l s o e l e c t e d ajs d i r e c t o r s of t h e c i a t e c i v i l e n g i n e e r .
u n d e r t h e Act of M a r c h 8 . 1U78
Society
were
Arthur
O.
Ford,
Member ot Audit B u r e a u of C i r c u l a t i o n s
H e succeeds Edward R. Cregg,
quests from them would be P o r t e r , p r o v o s t of t h e . U n i v e r s i t y , W i l l i a m A . O ' L e a r y , F r a n k E l d e r ,
8«bto«lptlou Price 1 4 . 0 0 Per Xc«i
who has been transferred to the
liiillTlilual coplea, lOe
refused.
The
party
feels
Itj^jjj
continue
to
hold
the
top
A r t h u r A s s e r s o n a n d J a m e s A. U t i c a Disti-ict o f f i c e a s a s s i s t a n t
BKAU T h e I.euder every week
tor Job (Ipportuiiltlee
itt^^st be publicly known that academic post.
Dawson.
district engineer.
Correction Capt.
Named New Head
Of African Prison
Murray Named
Administrative
Chief of State
Tuestlav, Fehruarv S,
CIVIL- SERVICE
Civil Service Report Shows
Dutchess County Hus
One Public
For Inch 17
Employee
Residents
LEADER
Pajfe TTiree
CSEA Calls For Meeting
With Hurd And Levitt
To Liberalize Expenses
The Civil Service EmplosTees Association has called for a joint meeting with State
Comptroller Arthur Levitt and Director of the Budget Dr. T. Norman Hurd to discuss the
Association's seven-point request for more adequate rules and reimbursements to state em(From Leader Correspondent)
POUGHKEEPSIE, Feb. 4—This year markh the 80th an- ployees who travel on official state business.
niversary of the Civil Service Act of 1883 and William F. Tlie CSEA recommendations,
Moehrke, Executive Secretary of the Dutchess County Civil contained in a letter from Asso- -4, Appropriate expense advances i sion of the Budget in cooperation
for purposes of official state ' with the Department of Audit and
Service Commission, recently supplied figures to show how ciation President Joseph F. Feily
^
j Control. We expect that this study
to the State Comptroller, seek travel.
effective the la,w has become.
In Dutchess County, he reported, there now are 11,283 men
Another 2,599 persors come
and women in civil sei-vice jobs, under the jurisdiction of tlie
or about one for each 17 resi- Dutchess County Civil Service
dents.
Commission, with 1,060 of these
The bulk of these, or 7,338 rep- Representing employees In the
resents state jobs, with state in- school districts and 43 In other
stitutions here accounting for the districts, such as fire districts.
Mr. Mochrike reported there was
great number of these. Mr.
Moehrke said there are 1,541 state 843 public employees, 357 county
employees at the Harlem Valley employees, 373 township emState Hospital, Wingdale; 1,981 ployees and 118 village employees
at tlie Hudson River State Hos- under Civil Service.
There are also 469 municipal
pital, Poughkeepsie; 1,266 at the
Wassaic State Sciiool; 988 at employees in Poughkeepsie and
Matteawan State Hospital for the 106 in the City of Beacon.
Criminally Insane, Beacon, and Moehrke estimated federal Civil
451 at Green Haven Prison, Green" | Sei-vlce employees in the county
Haven,
i at 1,300.
tlie following provisions:
1. An increase In mileage
reimbursement for use of personal
cars on state business from the
present nine cents a mile to
eleven cents per mile.
2. An increase of at least three
cents per mile for Public Works
employees who travel during their
work hours over unpaved, ungraded road beds to supervise
road construction.
3. Consideration of a possible
amendment to the Comptroller's
rules to provide for first class
commercial lodging rates both in
and outside of New York State
while the employee:^ are on official travel status.
CSEA Protests Correction
ExamConfusion;AsksMore
Careful Question Selection
ALBANY, Feb. 4—The Civil Service Employees Association has expressed repeated disapproval of a recent Civil Service Examination for the title of correction sergeant and has
called for appropriate measures to avoid a recurrence of the conditions which led to the
present difficulty.
The requests were contained in ,
a series of letters from CSEA ' present any alternate answer
President Joseph F. Feily to which was correct. In otiier
H. Eliot Kaplan, president of words," he said, "there was no
the State Civil Service Commis- j 'best answer.'" He explained
sion, and William J . Murray,: further that "the Commission
administrative director of the j felt that, under the circumstances,
State Civil Service Department. ; no credit could be given for any
In his letters, Feily refeiTed of the answers . . . "
to an exam given last year in
Murray said, "the deletion of
which seven questions used in these two items raised the score
the test were deleted from con- of those candidates who had ansideration In the final rating.
He pointed out tliat five questions were deleted before the final
key answers were issued and two
additional questions were deleted
after the final key was issued.
The Association took the action
after CSEA members employed in
Correction Department raised
s as to "liow careful the
e Department is in
validity of the exterial to be used
iial draft of examirial is prepared."
ation first came to the
of CSEA last October
t received a number of
Plaints from Correction meniwho took the exam. Upon
receipt of the allegations, the
Association contacted the Departjiient of Civil Service requesting
Information surrounding the examination in order to answer
Inquiries rai.sed by memljers.
^
In reply, William J. Murray,
^
Administrative Director of the
m^ Depariment of Civil Service, exB
plained that his Department reB
ceived a number of appeals from
B
candidate's who took the exam.
B
After a review, of the appeals,
I"
that
...^.v.,
two of
..
vvv.v^vv.
CREEDMORE
tlie items did not 1 M e m b e r s
ot tbe
iwill support an adjustment from
the present nine cents per mile
rate."
In asking for appropriate expea^e advances, Feily said, "Our
members strongly criticize the
present situation wherein thousands of state employees sub(Continued on Page 14)
|
departments from setting
, "P their own rules for mileage
; ^nd subsistence re-imbursement
which-limit payments to less than
the maximum established in tlie
present rules.
7. A flat per diem expense
BUFFALO, Feb. 4—Erie chaptallowance to save the time and
er, Civil Service Employees Asso• cxP^rise of processing and auditciation, will meet Wednesday,
ing expense accounts and to
Feb. 6, at 8 p.m. in a new meetenable prompt payments.
ing place, the L Room, of Adam
The CSEA letter said that at
Plewacki American Legion Post,
their last delegates meetitig in
Paderewski St. and Memorial Dr.,
October, representative? of more
Buffalo.
than 85-thousand stat« employee
"It will be a very Important
members directed the Association
meeting," said President A1 Burke,
to take steps to secure improveand he m-ged a large atendance.
ments In rules governing travel
Speakers will be Albert C.
expenses and mileage,
Killian, Buffalo parks commisCommenU on Study
sioner and a first vice president
As for the inct'ease in mileage of CSEA; Vernon Tapper, third
allowance, Feily said, "We are CSEA vice president, and Gerald
aware of a study of car operat- Rogers, newly-appointed superviing costs undertaken by the Divi- sor of CSEA field representatives.
Erie Chapter Sets
New Meeting Place
Management Development
Plan Of Solomon Senior
Praised By CSEA Chapter
•
swered them incorrectly since the
number of their correct answers
remained the same and the number of their incorrect answers
"The Executive Council and members have asked me to
was reduced.
extend to you our sincere appreciation for your efforts in pro"On the other hand, candidates
moting the welfare and betterment of Board employees."
who had chosen the answers
corresponding to our key lost the These are the words of A. Victor Costa, president of the Alcredits which they had originally bany chapter of tlie Civil Service Employees Association of
received. Accordingly, some can- the Worlcmen's Compensation Board, to Colonel S. E. Senior,
(Contiaued on P a g e
DELEGATION
. ^
Creedtuor*
5. Mileage reimbursement and
reimbursement for meah and
lodging for persons called for
interviews for competitive promotions, if they must travel more
than fifty miles to ttie place of
the interview.6. Action to prevent separate
SUU Hospital cliapter,
14)
chairman.
In his letter praising a new
management development plan
for employees, Costa further
stated in part, "the participation
of management In furthering
your plans has stimulated employees' interest in the many
complex problems of the Board.
It Is the feeling of this chapter
that a giant step forward haff
been taken In recognizing the employees' contribution to the task
ahead."
New System
Costa's remarks followed an
announcement
In
the
WCB
chairman's letter, printed four
times a year, that a new appraisal
system for 1963 would provide for
periodic
discussions
between
supervisor and employee, with
accent placed on counseling —
mutual development — and work
performance. The Board, in developing potential for higher level
positions, has created a special
appraisal committee, with responsibility for selecting a number of deserving employees yearly,
for Inclusion in a special oneyear training program, covering
all aspects of the Board operations. These employees will be
Civil Service E m p l o y e e s A s s o c i a t i o n a r e s h o w n
m t h e y a ti ti e n du it nh e rreecceeni ut m e e t i n i ; of t h e M e t r o - reli*?ved of their normal duties
poUtan Conference,
CUtlA.
CIVIL
Page Four
Where to Apply
For Public Jobs
Tbe following directions tell
where to apply for public Jobs
and how to reach destinations in
New York City on the transit
•ystem.
NEW YORK CITY—The Applic a t i o n s S e c t i o n of t h e New York
C i t y D e p a r t m e n t of P e r s o n n e l is
l o c a t e d a t 96 D u a n e S t . , New Y o r k
7, N . Y . ( M a n h a t t a n ) . I t is t w o
b l o c k s n o r t h of C i t y H a l l , J u s t
wes'. of B r o a d w a y , a c r o s s f r o m
The L e a d e r c f U c e .
Hours are 9
Closed S a t u r d a y s
Inquiries f r o m 9
phone COrtland
A.M. to 4 P.M.
except to answer
t o 12 a . m . Tele7-888C
Mailed requests for application
blanks m u s t include a s t a m p e d ,
self-addressed
business-size
env e l o p e a n d m u s t b e r e c e i v e d by
the Personnel D e p a r t m e n t a t least
five d a y s before the closing d a t e
f o r t h e filing of a p p l i c a t i o n s .
Completed
application
forms
w h i c h a r e filed b y m a i l m u s t b e
s e n t to the P e r s o n n e l D e p a r t m e n t
with t h e s p e c i f i e d filing f e e in t h e
f o r m of a c h e c k o r m o n e y o r d e r ,
and m u s t be p o s t m a r k e d no later
t h a n t w e l v e o ' c l o c k m i d n i g h t on
t h e d a y f o l l o w i n g t h e l a s t d a y of
r e c e i p t of a p p l i c a t i o n s .
F E D E R A L — S e c o n d U.S. Civil
Service Region Office, News Buildi n g , 220 E a s t 4 2 n d S t r e e t ( a t 2 n d
AV(\), N e w Y o r k 17, N. Y., j u s t
w e t t of t h e U n i t e d N a t i o n s b u i l d i n g . T a k e t h e I R T L e x i n g t o n Ave.
L i n e t o G r r n d C e n t r a l a n d >valk
two blocks east, or t a k e t h e s h u t t l e
from Times Square
to
Grand
C e n t r a l or t h e I R T Q u e e n s - P l u s h Ing t r a i n f r o m a n y p o . i t on t h e
line t o t h e G r a n d C e n t r a l s t o p .
H o u r s a r e 8:30 a . m . t o 5 p . m . ,
Monday
through
Friday.
Telep h o n e n u m b e r is Y U 6 - 2 6 2 6 .
Applications a r e also o b t a i n a b l e a t m a i n p o s t offic&s, e x c e p t
t h e New Y o r k , N.Y., P o s t O f f i c e .
B o a r d s ot e x a m i n e r s a t t h e p a r ticular installations offering the
t e s t s also m a y be applied to for
further information and application forms. No r e t u r n envelopes
are required with mailed requests
for application forms.
h e c a l l e d f o r a 36,800 p e r s o n j o b
Increase. T h e total f e d e r w e m p l o y m e n t a t p r e s e n t la 2,534,500.
The
Veterans
Administration
w i l l i n c r e a s e b y 500 e m p l o y e e s ;
t h e P o s t O f f i c e , b y 10,000; t h e
A g r i c u l t u r e D e p a r t m e n t , b y 5,000;
t h e T r e a s u r y D e p a r t m e n t , by 4,000; t h e N a t i o n a l A e r o n a u t i c s a n d
S p a c e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n , b y 4,000;
Health, Education and Welfare,
b y 6,000; a n d t h e H o u s i n g a n d
H o m e F i n a n c e A g e n c y , b y 1,000.
T h e Defense Department, on the
o t h e r h a n d , w i l l s u f f e r a 10,000
e m p l o y e e decrease.-
By MARY ANN BANKS
Premium
Increase
In Uniform
Health
Benefits Plan—July
1
E f f e c t i v e J u l y 1, 1963, t h e r e will
be a n increase in t h e p r e m i u m
rates for the Uniform
Health
B e n e f i t s P l a n I n w h i c h s o m e 135,000 e m p l o y e e - a n n u i t a n t s w h o r e t i r e d b e f o r e J u l y 1, 1960, o r t h e i r
s u r v i v o r - a n n u i t a n t s are enrolled.
T h e Civil S e r v i c e C o m m i s s i o n h a s
also decided to increase t h e G o v ernment's
contribution
to
ann u i t a n t s enrolled in t h e U n i f o r m
P l a n a s weU a s t o a b o u t o t h e r
110,000
annuitants
in
various
qualified private plans.
T h e Government's increase from
$3 t o $3.50 f o r s e l f - o n l y e n r o l l m e n t will a l s o b e e f f e c t i v e J u l y
1 of t h i s y e a r . T h e
self-andf a m i l y e n r o l l m e n t s will b e i n c r e a s e d f r o m $6 t o $7, T h e G o v e r n m e n t Increases a r e in line with
p r e m i u m I n c r e a s e of 1 5 %
TuesiJay, February 5, 1963
LEADER
U.S. Service News Items
T h e CSC has noted t h a t most
of t h e a n n u i t a n t s w h o e l e c t e d
qualified private plans have alr e a d y experienced, or will by J u l y
1 have experienced, a n increase
in p r e m i u m s since t h e original
a m o u n t of t h e G o v e r n m e n t ' s c o n The
Applications Section
of t r i b u t i o n t o t h e c o s t of t h e i r
t h e P e r s o n n e l D e p a r t m e n t is n e a r h e a l t h i n s u r a n c e w a s s e t i n I960..
t h e C h a m b e r s S t r e e t s t o p of t h e
m a i n s u b w a y lines t h a t go t h r o u g h
Elected
t h e a r e a . T h e s e a r e t h e I R T 7 t h ]Veiu Officers
A v e n u e L i n e a n d t h e I N D 8 t h By Area AFGE;
1963
Avenue Line. The I R T Lexington
Sited
As
Good
Year
A v e n u e L i n e s t o p t o u s e is t h e
J o s e p h P. Lewis w a s elected
Brooklyn Bridge stop a n d the B M T
B r i g h t o n L o c a l ' s s t o p is C i t y H a l l . p r e s i d e n t of t h e A m e r i c a n F e d All t h e s e a r e b u t a f e w block.s f r o m e r a t i o n of G o v e r n m e n t E m p l o y e e s
G 5 . A . L o d g e 1289 f o r t h e y e a r
the Personnel Department.
of 1963. T h e e l e c t i o n w a s h e l d
Administration
S T A T E — F i r s t f l o o r a t 270 a t t h e V e t e r a n s
B r o a d w a y . N e w Y o r k 7. N. Y.. B u i l d i n g i n N e w Y o r k C i t y .
Other
officers
elected
were
c o r n e r of C h a m b e r s S t . , t e l e p h o n e
BArclay 7-1616; G o v e r n o r Alfred J a m e s T . Calvin, vice p r e s i d e n t ;
E. S m i t h S t a t e O f f i c e B u i l d i n g a n d S a l v a t o r e C o p o b i a n c o , t r e a s u r e r ;
T h e State Campus. Albany: State a n d Irwin Thomas, secretary. T h e
Office Building, Buffalo;
S t a t e o a t h of o f f i c e f o r t h e n e w o f Office Building, Syracuse:
a n d ficers was administered by Miss
E. O l d j n g ,
national
R o o m 100 a t 155 W e s t
Main Heremetta
Street,
Rochester
( W e d n e s d a y s v i c e - p r e s i d e n t of t h e S e c o n d D i s t r i c t of t h e A . F . G . E . , c o m p r i s e d b y
only).
t h e s t a t e s of N e w Y o r k a n d N e w
A n y of t h e s e a d d r e s s e s m a y b e
Jersey.
used for jobs with t h e State. T h e
Miss Olding commended
the
S t a t e ' s N e w Y o r k C i t y O f f i c e is
t w o b l o c k s s o u t h o n B r o a d w a y c o m b i n a t i o n of n e w o f f i c e r s a n d
f r o m t h e C i t y P e r s o n n e l D e p a r t - pi-edicted m a n y a c c o m p l i s h m e n t s
employees
m e n t ' s B r o a d w a y e n t r a n c e , so t h e b e n e f i c i a l t o f e d e r a l
In
1963.
tame transportation
instructions
apply. Mailed applications
need
n o t include r e t u r n envelopes.
Candidates may obtain applicat i o n s for S t a t e jobs f r o m local
o f f i c e s of t h e N e w Y o r k S t a t e
E m p l o y m e n t Service.
SERVICE
buildings will p r o b a b l y be o n e
of tire f i v e b a s i c d e s i g n s a l r e a d y
developed.
A d m i n i s t r a t o r of G e n e r a l S e r v ices, B e r n a r d L . B o u t i n , s a i d of
the
project,
"In
many
cities
throughout
the
United
States
t h e r e i s a s e r i o u s s h o r t a g e of
office and postal space and a n
urgent need t o provide adequate
s p a c e t o f a c i l i t i e s In w h i c h F e d e r a l
T h e President h a s Inferred t h a t
agencies can carry out t h e i r prothe manpower Improvement and
grams."
the Increased productivity prog r a m s were primarily responsible
f o r t h e l o w e r n u m b e r of j o b r e Lankford
Supports
quests. " I n striving for greater
Family
Participation
efficiency, we are pressing forA n o t h e r bill h a s b e e n i n t r o - w a r d
on three major
fronts:
d u c e d t o t h e f l o o r of C o n g r e s s . M a n a g e m e n t I m p r o v e m e n t ,
cost
T h e bill, w h i c h i s s p o n s o r e d b y r e d u c t i o n , a n d t h e r e f o r m of o u r
R e p . L a n k f o r d ( D e m . ) of M a r y - p u b l i c s a l a r y s y s t e m s , " s a i d K e n l a n d , c a l l s f o r a r e p e a l of t h e n e d y .
present law allowing no
more
t h a n t w o m e m b e r s of a f a m i l y
TO BUY, RENT OR
living u n d e r t h e s a m e 'roof
to
SELL A HOME — P A G E 11
hold Federal jobs.
T h e Civil S e r v i c e C o m m i s s i o n
a g r e e s w i t h t h e L a n k f o r d bill t h a t
the present law restricts the Government
from
hiring
hi^lyquallfled persons. Another
Inc o n s i s t e n c y I n t h e p r e s e n t l a w is
the f a c t t h a t it waives t h e " n o more-than-two"
provision
If
e i t h e r of t h e p a r e n t s ai'e v e t e r a n s .
I
Kennedy Calls For
36,500 More Jobs
With U,S.
Agencies
POUGHKEEPSIE,
S c h o o l i m i t of
Service
the
GSA Has Called For
ISew Offices For
Federal
Employees
F e d e r a l e m p l o y e e s i n 36 s t a t e s
a n d Puerto Rico m a y be working
In n e w o f f i c e s s o o n . T h e G e n e r a l
Services A d m i n i s t r a t i o n h a s s u b mitted' a program to the Public
W o r k s C o m m i t t e e of t h e C o n g r e s s
w h i c h c a l l s f o r 145 n e w c o n s t r u c t i o n p r o j e c t s i n t h e s e ai'eas.
F K E E B O O K L E T by U. S. G o v T h e new buildings, primarily
e r n m e n t on Social Security Mail p o s t a l f a c i l i t i e s , will r a n g e
in
• n l y . Leader. W D u a n e Street. c o s t f r o m $115,500 to $399,400
N e w Yorit 7, N. Y.
a n d will b e r e l a t i v e l y s m a l l . T h e
wilf spon-
sor a r o u n d a n d square d a n c e
t h e g y m n a s i u m of A r l i n g t o n
nior
High
School,
in
Ju-
Poughkeepsle,
o n F e b . 16 f r o m 9 p . m . t o 1 a . m .
D o o r p r i z e s will b e a w a r d e d .
M u s i c will b e b y t h e " A m b a s s a d o r s " a n d M a r v i n O n g will b e
the caller.
C h a r l e s B i s h o p , of P o u g h k e e p sle, a n d J o h n Kondas, P l e a s a n t
V a l l e y , a r e c h a i r m e n of t h e t i c k e t
c o m m i t t e e . T i c k e t s will a l s o b e
available a t t h e door a n d f r o m
a n y b u s di'Iver of t h e A r l i n g t o n
Centi'al School Disrtict.
M e m b e r s of t h e
refreshment
c o m m i t t e e Include Alton Gibbs,
John Kondas, John Malcher, E d ward DlGlovannl
and
Charles
Sinon.
HIGH
SCHOOL
A T H O M E IN S P A R I T I M E
Standard Tvxt B«oks Ustd
Yow mwtt b« 17 or over and have i«lt ichaoL
Write for FREE 53-pogo High School booklet todoy.
130 W. 4}n4l St., New Yerh M. N. T. ^hene Myont t-3M4
Send me your free SS-page High School Booklet.
Name
Ag^
Address.
.Apt.
-Zone.
.State—
OUR 65th YEAR
Nobody likes to think about
being sick or injured, but the sad
fact is that most of us, sometime
during our lives, will be forced
by sickness or accident to stay
out of work. Fortunately, this,
period is usually short. • • But,
you can't always count on this.
You can count on C,S.E.A. Accident and Sickness insurance to pay you
steady income if you are disabled. Over 40,000 C.S.E.A. members enjoy this
protection—which supplements their benefits under the State Hospitd Plan.
Hundreds of members already have received benefits totaling millions
of dollars.
You owe it to yourself and your family to investigate the C.S.E.A. Accident
and Sickness insurance plan.
ForJuJl it\fomation call or write
T E R
Civil
Employees Association
Birthday
Celebration
Includes Over 100
Area Army
Employees
O v e r 100 f e d e r a l e m p l o y e e s of
the New York P r o c u r e m e n t Dlsti'ict, U . S . A r m y . N e w Y o r k C i t y ,
r e c e n t l y r e c e i v e d D e p a i ' t m e n t of
the A r m y certificates and
emb l e m s in h o n o r of t h e i r m a n y
y e a r s of G o v e r n m e n t , s e r v i c e .
These merit awards, presented
annually to Federaj employees
w i t h l e n g t h service records, are
g i v i n g d u r i n g t h e o b s e r v a n c e of
t h e Civil S e r v i c e A c t . T w e n t y year awards were presented to
60 e m p l o y e e s ; t e n y e a r a w a r d s
w e r e r e c e i v e d b y 43 civil s e r v a n t s .
-i
Central
AMERICAN SCHOOL, Dept. 9AP.8Z
In President Kennedy's budget
m e s s a g e t o C o n g r e s s f o r t h e 1964
f i s c a l y e a r , w h i c h s t a r t s J u l y 1,
4
Feb.
M e m b e r s of t h e A r l i n g t o n
TURN OYER A NEW
LEAF IN '63 FINISH
I
I
Arlington School
Unit Schedules
Dance Session
^ J ^ j A P p W E j L L ,
INC.
SCHENECTADY
N E W YORK
BUFFALO
EAST N O R T H P O R T
SYRACUSE
Tuesffajr, Feltrtiary 5, 196,^
CIVIL
Personnel
Examining
Trainee Positions
Are
Open Until March
14
The City of New York is recruiting for personnel trainee
positions through the Department of Personnel. The titles
require graduation from a fully-accredited, four year college program.
Filing
March
will
14
remain
and
open
those
until
planning
obtain their BA by J u n e are
eligible.
The
annual
salary
the
end
In
this
position
of
of
class
offers
$5,450
one
year,
of
to
also
but,
will
title
of
assistant
to
the
personnel
exgrade
tentatively scheduled for May
15, w i t h a s a l a r y r a n g e o f
$6,050
will include q u e s t i o n s
re-
Trainees
perform,
under
beginning
close
level
pro-
fessional work for the purpose
Tentatlve Key Ans.
For Foreman Exam
acquiring
are
9390
for
(Buses
held
for
the
the
promotion
and
to
Shops)
January
answers
tentative
for
key
examination
com-
petence In the
professional
fields
of
management
and
personnel
o n e of
3, D ;
6. C ; 7, C ;
8, B ;
A;
13, B ;
16, B ;
17, D ;
A;
21, D ;
25,
B;
26, C ;
D;
A;
9, A ;
C;
27. B ;
the
typical
tasks
In-
ex- nation,
A;
5.
10, C ;
14, C ;
15,
19, A ;
2 3 , C ; "24,
28, D ;
32,
45,
Among
the
29, A ;
33, C ;
B;
rating
of
examinations
C;
46, B ;
B;
conducting courses, evaluating per-
c a t i o n s will be issued a n d
received
Monday
from
30. a. m .
until
34, D ;
47, D ;
and
11, f o r m a n c e r e p o r t s , r e v i e w i n g s a f e t y
A; reports, a n d other similar tasks.
20,
During this filing period, appli-
35, B ; 36, A ; 37, D ; 38, B ; 39,
A ; 40, D ; 41, A ; 42, C ; 43, C ;
44,
work.
are
4, A ;
18, A ;
22,
31, C ;
pther
using rating guides, planning
2, D ;
12, D ;
and
volved i n this position, trainees
w a s a s s i s t I n t h e p r e p a r a t i o n of s i m p l e
the multiple-choice items for exami-
which
amination.
1, D ;
related
examining
foreman
26. T h e s e
part
no.
knowledge,
of
skill,
personnel
These
through
Filday,
9
to 4 p. m . a n d Saturday,
noon.
Application
blanks
are obtainable free at the
applica-
t l o n s e c t i o n of t h e D e p a r t m e n t
48, P e r s o n n e l , 96 D u a n e S t r e e t .
of
B : 49, B ; 50, B .
Candidates
protests
who
agaln.st
wish
these
to
file
tentative
Krepa N e w M a j ^
k e y a n s w e r s l i a v e u n t i l F e b . 14 t o
A L B A N Y . J a n . 28 — M a j . G e n .
togetiaer W . R e y n o l d s C a r r ,
commanding
with the evidence u p o n
w h i c h g e n e r a l of t h e N e w Y o r k G u a r d ,
e u c h p r o t e s t s a r e b a s e d . C l a i m s of h a s a n n o u n c e d
appointment
of
file
their
protests,
m a n i f e s t e r r o r i n k e y a n s w e r s w i l l J a n K . K r e p a of A l b a n y , a f o r m e r
not
be
accepted
If
a f t e r m i d n i g l i t F e b . 14.
An examination for promotion to stockman has been announced by the New York
City Department of Personnel. Filing will remain open until February 21 for this grade
10 position which has a salary range of $4,550 to $5,990 per annum.
The written test, which is
a m i n e r . T h i s p o s i t i o n Is I n
t o a n d i n c l u d i n g $7,490 p e r a n n u m .
postmarked officer in the Polish A r m y a n d
tlie P o l i s h u n d e r g r o u n d forces, as
storage
methods
stock
tations
i
I
I
I
"How much was eight timtfi twelve
hyourday?"
Numbers have stayed the same; it's dollars that
seem to have losttheirold "zing."Happily,though,
one item in the family budget is still a great bar*
gain-electricity!
Chances are, if you're like most folks, you're
usingmoreelectricitynowthaneverbefore-prob*1
ably twice as much as you did 15 years ago. SoJ
your electric bill Is somewhat higher these days,]
rr ^
\but it Isn't twice as high, because
v^*J K
with Con Edison's step-down rates,
'
' I the more electricity you use.the lessit costs per kilowatt-hour.,
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
A
scaling
C c m ^ E c t t u r ^ ^
in
AH
stockman
for
receive
4,144
candidates
passing marks. Under
the
added
to the
appli-
cant
t o t a l s c o r e of
who
under
gets
each
a
raw
are
still
score
of
93.
Candidates
take
and
pass
medical-physical
position
obligated
a
qualifying
test
to
o n t h e eligible
attain
list.
T h e key answers are as follows:
2, A ;
3, D ;
7. C ;
8, C ;
12. C ;
16,
B;
21, D ;
C;
C;
25,
26. B ;
33, C ;
C;
19,
C;
24,
29. B ;
30.
33, D ;
34,
C;
38, D ;
39,
B ; 40, C ; 41, D ; 42, C ; 43. C ;
44,
B;
C;
48,
54, B ;
55.
45, C;
37, . A ;
15,
23. D ;
28. B ;
36, A ;
10,
18, B ;
32, B ;
D;
14, t ) ;
22, D ;
27. D ;
31, A ;
5,
9, B ;
13, B ;
17. C ;
20, B ;
4, B ;
46, B ;
47, A &
A ; 49, D ; 50, C ;
51, A ;
52. A ;
56, C ;
60, D ;
61, D ;
A;
C;
65,
69, C ;
B;
58, A ;
62. B ;
66. C ;
70, D ;
74. B ;
53. C ;
57, A ;
59,
71, C ;
75. D &
A;
63. A ;
67, D ;
64.
68,
A;
7 2 . D.;
73.
B;
76,D; 77,C; 78,C; 79,D; 8 0 , B ; 81,
A;
82.B;
87, A ;
A;
83,A;
84.D;
88, B ;
92, B ;
96. C;
86,D;
89, D ;
93, B ;
97. B ;
94, D ;
98. D ;
86.D;
90, C ;
91,
95,
99, D ;
D;
100,
D.
Military
In
Brooklyn
has
an
nician
has
(Drafting)
Place
an
from
annual
$5,540
to
tech-
position
salary
which
range
a
total
of
Including
four years'
three
of
$7,205.
Applicants are required to
years
have
experience
of
general
non-professional technical work in
an
engineering
related
field
a n d o n e y e a r of apeclailzed
work.
For
further
Fort
or
tnfprmation
write
Hamilton,
and
Headquarters
Brooklyn
9.
TO BUY, BENT OR
SELL A HOME * PAGE II
assistant
not
less
A general
list will b e
established
and
supplies
taking
charge
caring
and
of
a
storehouse
or
receiving,
checking,
material,
equipment
issued
in
a
exam
received
Friday,
from
at the
application
of
will
Monday
through
9
a.m.
section
to
noon
of
the
Personnel,
96
St., N e w Y o r k
7.
stockstoring,
for
ma-
section
of
yard;
and
storing
and
tools,
sup-
required
large
Visual Training
O F CANDIDATES
a
for
FOR
PATROLMAN
FIREMAN
FOIt T H E E Y E S I G H T T E S T O F
CIVIL SERVICE
REQCIREMENTS
DR. JOHN T. F L Y N N
housing
project.
Oiitometrlat • OrtUopigt
Exercise? S u p e r v i s i o n
Stockmen
by
for the
and
4 p.m. and Saturdays, until
this
in
They
prepare
man
t h e m a i n t e n a n c e of a s e c t i o n o r a
storeroom
Applications
be
Department
a
and
than
equipment;
storage
records
promotion
d u t i e s of
terials
distributing
keep
duties.
reports.
from
c o n s i s t of r e c e i v i n g ,
plies a n d
also
other
engaged
afore-mentioned
Duane
general
are
also
excerising
act
direct
as
16 PARK AVE., N. Y. C .
(S\V Cor. 8 5 t h
foremen
supervision
M U 9-2333
Street)
WA
9-5919
Make 1963 a Year of Accomplishment!
PREPARE NOW FOR A SUCCESSFUL CAREER
Opportunities f o r Men & Women —
17 Years and O l d e r !
Applications Open M a r . i f o r N.Y. C i t y Exam f o r
C L E R K S - $67.50 to $88. a Week
Full Civil Service Benefits-Pension, Liberal Vacation, Sick Leave, etc.
HUNDREDS OF PERMANENT A P P O I N T M E N T S W I L L BE M A D E I
Excellent Promotional Oppportunities Leading t o
Supervisory & Administrative Positions a t up t o $10,000 a Y e a r .
NO EXPERIENCE REQUIREMENTS!
Expert Preparation for OfFicial Written Exam
Classes in Manhattan WED. at 5:30 or 7:30 P.M.
ENROLL
NOW! Or
Be O u r Guest at
o C/oss
Session
BE SMART! Prepore First . . . at DELEHANTY
There Is No More Rewarding Career for Any
Young Man Than fo Be One of New York's "Finest"!
ENROLL NOW! Intensive Training for New Type Exams
R E M E M B E R — F A I M RE IN
PATROLMAH -
W R I T T E N T E S T M E A N S 6 MONTHS
AppointinrnU!
$7,978
DELATI
After 3 Yrt.
40-Hour W e e k • • Paid Holidays • Pension A f t e r 20 Years
Many Other Benefits • Excellent Promotional Opportunities
We Prepare You for BOTH Written & Physical Exams
BE OUR GUEST AT A CLASS SESSION
Day & Eve Classes - Attend in Manhattan or Jamaica
HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
Needed by Non-Graduates of High School for Many Civil Servlea Exams
5-Week Course. Preuara for UXAM3 conducted by N.Y. Stats Dept. of Ed.
ENROLL N O W f o r Classes in M a n h a t t a n or Jamaica
FIREMAN
Candidates
start Training Now for Strenuous Physical Tests
immediate
opening for an engineering
of
Attention!
Reser-
vation a t 7th Ave. a n d Poly
of
who
MANHATTAN: MON. & WED. at 5:30 or 7:30 P.M.
JAMAICA: TUES. & THURS. at 7 P.M.
Drafting Positions
Open In Brooklyn;
Pay To $7,205
Hamilton
title
six m o n t h s .
to
f o r m u l a , six p o i n t s will be
C;
the
or housing supply
distributing,
which
permit
the
o v e r assistanrt; s t o c k m e n a n d
employees
Departments
period
The
d u c e d f o r tills e x a m i n a t i o n
will
a
man
intro-
C;
and
examination.
was
to
subordinates;
work.
and
T h e e x a m will be o p e n t o e m c o m p u - p l o y e e s of a l l c i t y
departments
stores work; who have been permanently em-
formula
applications
f^
of
related
arithme^tic
The New York City Department of Personnel has announced the approved final
key answers for the examination which was given to
fireman candidates November
17, 1962. The examination no.
was 9606.
Fort
!
I
other
techniques;
Fireman Test
Key Changed;
Results Scaled
B;
I
i
supervision
ployed. In
11, A ;
I
I
I
I
I
i
I
i
I
and
involved
6, C ;
I
18,
concerning
control, .Identification
description;
1, D ;
I
I
Page Five
General Promotion Exam
For Stockman Jobs At
$5,990; File Till Feb. 21
at
supervision,
answers
LEADER
an
employees
position
ceive regiilar a p p o i n t m e n t
SERVICE
Men w h o were mirrefinful In t h e Written E x a m ran expert t o be called i h o r l l y
f o r t h e riiysii'ul Te>«lw. AKIioukU t h e IMiyMlral U a Qiiallfylnic Te»t YUU MUtil'
PASS I T OK YOU W & L HAVK VAILEU T H E E N T I K f i EXAM I It Involrea S
dift'erent featg t h a t ileiiiaud a h i g h degree of StreiiKth, E n d u r a n c e and Agllltf
t h a t can only be a t t a i n e d throuKh Siieclulized TralnlnK over a period of t i m e
In f u l l y eqnlpped Byninaslunig. Experlenred Iniitrnrtor* of long experience will
help you t o achieve huccca* la tUU i n i p o r t a u t phaiie of your e x a m . Moderate
fee, luHtalnientii.
Convenient Classei —
Day or I v . —
M a n h a t t a n or Jamaico
POST OFFICE CLERK-CARRIER BOOK
On sale a t our offices or by mall. No C.O.D.'s. Refund
In S days If not »ati«tied. Send check or money ordler.
v f
T C
• I M
VOCATIONAL
COURSES
DRAFTING
AUTO MECHANICS TV SERVICI & REPAIR
U a o h a t t a u A Jauialc*
L o n g I t U n d City
Maahattaa
The DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
MANHATTAN: IIS lAST II STREET
Pkeat GR t-tfOO
JAMAICA: fl-OI MERRICK ILVD.. M Jamaica & HllUld* Av«i.
OPEN MON. TO r K I . • AJI.-» PJf. — CLOSED ON SATVSDATS
CIVIL
Page Six
a
m
^CiAtd i w o i t a .
liEAPER
SERVICE
LETTERS
TO THE
TiieitTar, February 5, 1 9 6 3
LEADER
EDITOR
II iT i
Your Public
Relations IQ
Letters to the editor must be
signed, and names Kill be withheld
from publication upon request.
America's iMrgcBt WeeMy tor PnbUe
Employees They should be no longer than
By LEO J. MARGOLIN
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
300 words and we reserve the right i
to edit published letters as seems
Published
every Tuesday
by
appropriate. Address all letters to:
(Mr. Margolin is Adjunct Professor of Pul)Uo R«lafion8 in the
LEADER PUBLICATIONS. INC.
The Editor. Civil S ^ l c e Leader, New York University School of Public Administration and is Vice
97 Duane Street. New York 7. N. Y.
BEelcmon 3-6010
President. Public Relations, of A. J. Armstrong Co., Inc.
Jerry Finkelstein,
Publisher
Equipment
O
p
e
r
a
t
o
r
The Tiews expressed in this column are those of the writer and do
Pa,il Kyrr, Editor
Joe Deaey, Jr., City Editor
not necessarily constitute the views of this newspaper.
James T . Lawless, Associate Editor
Mary Ann Banks, /Issistant
tdUor Cites TS-Point Plan
N . H . Mager, Business
Manager
Adverlising Keprfsenlnlives:
Editor, The L e a d e r :
I a m g l a d to see in TJie L e a d e r
ALBANY — Joseph T . Bellew — 303 So. Manning Blvil., IV 2-5474
t h a t o n e of t h e fIfteeiTTJOint.s p r e K I N ( ; S T O N . N.Y. - Charles Andrews - - 239 Wall Street, FEderal 8-8350 s e n t e d
to t h e D e p a r t m e n t
of
Public Works Superintendent for
10c per copy. Subscription Price $2.22 to members of the Citil
Service Employees Association. $4.00 to non-members.
his support was the reallocation
of t h e t i t l e s of h i g h w a y e q u i p TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1 9 6 3
ment and construction equipment
o p e r a t o r . E i g h t of t h e t h i r t e e n
years I have been with the Dep a r t m e n t of P u b l i c W o r k s , I c a n '
t r u t h f u l l y say, we deserve c o n siderably m o r e consideration in
deciding o u r g r a d e t h a n we p r e viously b e e n given. B e i n g a good
OVERNOR Rockefeller delivered his annual budget o p e r a t o r u n d e r t h i s t i t l e r e q u i r e s
message to the Legislature last week and it was a g r e a t d e a l of v e r s a t i l i t y a n d
poor listening for most public employees. The prediction that s h o u l d b e c o n s i d e r e d a .skilled
the Rockefeller Administration would hold the line on ex- p o s i t i o n s i n c e a n o p e r a t o r m u s t
penditures this year was borne out graphically by the b a r e - b e a b l e t o a p t l y r u n a n d o p e r a t e
m a n y d i f f e r e n t t y p e s of e q u i p ness of any recommendations for state employees.
m e n t . Also t h e r e Is m u c h d i s Joseph F. Feily, president of the 110,000-member Civil c r e p e n c y i n g r a d e s b e t w e e n N e w
Service Employees Assn., has said state workers face their Y o r k S t a t e T h r u w a y A u t h o r i t y
"toughest fight in years" to gain any important benefits. a n d t h e D e p a r t m e n t ' of P i i b l i c
He has urged that these employees prepare themselves W o r k s . F r i e n d s of m i n e a r e o p e for an all-out drive to accomplish their'^goals through the r a t i n g t h e s a m e e q u i p m e n t a s I
a m are in a m u c h higher grade.
Bare Budget Message
Means Work For Aides
G
Legislature. To gain any success from such a drive, public
employees should begin to prepare themselves npw by making sure they know the names of senators and assemblymen,
the identifying numbers of employee bills needing passage
and be on the alert to contact legislators personally when
they can.
This places a good deal of the responsibility for any
success that may come on each individual state worker.
Each will have to do his part.
Cooperation Can Ease
Problems of Automation
A
UTOMATION is here to stay. Witness the planned conversion of the New York City telephone switchboard systems into one integrated system whereby incoming calls can be connected directly to an extension without
the third party actions of a switchboard operator.
The morale of the switchboard operators could have been
at stake. However, the City reports that no operator will lose
her job through this system. Transfers from one office to
another are possible and even quite probable—but no job will
be lost.
The New York City Transit Authority has been in the
process of automation for several years but, to date, no e m ployee has been laid off or fired.
The simple fact is that automation is replacing future
employees, not current ones. Vacancies through deaths, retirements and other termination of services are not filled. Nevertheless, the number of public employees continues to increase
as services grow.
Although the transition is sometimes difficult and involves a sense of insecurity, this is minimized through meetings with employees, their representatives and City officials.
Terminal Employees Local 832 has arranged speaking engagements for officials to meet with the employees to further
clarify what could be an uneasy situation for civil servants.
Such cooperation between employee groups and City oti
ficials is to be cited in handling the delicate problems of
automation.
Falk's Reappointment
A
LEXANDER Falk has been renamed to the State Civil
Service Commission for a term ending In 1969.
Talk was paid unusual tribute in the State Senate when
his reappointment went directly to the floor for confirmation
Instead of going first through a committee.
Both Republican and Democratic senators lauded Falk
and we certainly add our praises to the good news that
Falk will continue to serve both the government and Its
employees. Six more,
of "Al". Falk. on the Civil Service Commission Is also A-OK to the entire civil service body.
Improving The Climate
THE MORE ONE studies "Governmental Manpower for
Tomorrow's Cities" (McGraw-Hill: $6.95) the more one realize
that public relations is the key to the success of the program
urged by the Municipal Manpower Commission.
, T H R E E YEARS OF study under a Ford Foundation grant
resulted In the report which is now published in book form.
The sum total of what newspapers communicated 'to their
readers was this: independent civil service commissions should
be abolished.
ALMOST COMPLETELY ignored were a long list of steps
to Improve the climate of government service. For example,
the report urged that local governments should:
• Enact an ordinance which endorses merit principles
and places full responsibility for carrying out these principles in the chief executive.
• Develop satisfying career opportunities for .APT
(administrative - professional - technical) personnel by
rapid promotion of qualified employees and by removal
of barriers which, keep out experienced persons for middlerank positions.
• Recruit vigorously both at college level and among
experienced public officials, on a nation-wide, continuing
basis where necessary.
ROBERT A. DUBOIS
• Make salaries for APT positions competitive.
Construction Equipment Operator
•
Provide adequate administrative and financial supDepartment of Public Works
• * •
port to ensure modern personnel administration.
• Establish comprehensive post-entry training proAnswers Protest
grams to prepare APT personnel for higher, broader
responsibilities.
On Clerk Answers
• Undertake much greater cooperation with other
Editor, T h e Leader:
governments to improve any or all of these conditions,
T h i s Is a n o p e n l e t t e r t o L i l l i a n
particularly in training, recruitment, and career developF r a n k , senior clerk, N Y C D e p a r t ment.
m e n t of W e l f a r e , a n d o t h e r s w h o
THE COMMISSION insists that state governments should;
read her letter concerning the ex• Abolish any legal barriers which prevent local gova m i n a t i o n for supervising clerk
printed in T h e Leader o n J a n ernments from fixing responsibiltiy for per.sonnel m a n u a r y 22. 1963. T h e N Y C D e p a r t agement in the chief executive.
m e n t of P e r s o n n e l d o e s n o t n e e d
^ t a b l i s h a state-wide retirement system based on
outsiders to d e f e n d or explain its
transferability of credits so that an employee may move
actions, b u t perhaps the c o m from one public employer to another.
m e n t s of a d i s i n t e r e s t e d
party
• Encourage national efforts toward a nation-wide"^
m i g h t shed m o r e light a n d less
retirement
system for all public employees.
heat on this m a t t e r t h a n those
WE MAKE NO judgment on pro's or con's of these recof o n e of t h e p r i n c i p a l s .
As w e all k n o w , a f o r m a l i z e d ommendations. We do point out that whatever changes are
t e s t i n g p r o g r a m h a s b e e n i n s t i - needed to improve the public relations of civil service must
t u t e d i n t h i s s t a t e f o r t h e p u r - have public understanding and support.
p o s e of e m p h a s i z i n g t h e e l e m e n t
THUS THE Commission says that civic and political
of " m e r i t a n d f i t n e s s " a s t h e leadership should:
basis for e m p l o y m e n t and pro• Insist on quality among APT personnel in local
motion in government agencies.
government.
T h e c i v i l s e r v i c e t e s t , t h e n , is a
• Give aggressive, mature support to movements to
device to d e t e r m i n e who, a m o n g
a l a r g e g r o u p of p e o p l e , a r e m o r e establish management-oriented merit systems.
• Exert influence wherever possible to make m a n ^
likely t o b e b e t t e r a b l e t o h a n d l e
a given job. U n f o r t u n a t e l y , m a n y
power a significant political issue.
civil s e r v i c e e m p l o y e e s t h e m . s e l v e s
d o n o t v i e w t h e civil s e r v i c e t e s t
i n t h i s l i g h t . T h e i r f e e l i n g is t h a t
t h e t e s t is m e r e l y a n i m p e d i m e n t
to their being p r o m o t e d . T h e s e
employees rarely consider
that
they may not have the necessary
abilities to do t h e job to which
they aspire, nor do they accept
failure in a n e x a m i n a t i o n as i n d i c a t i v e of t h i s . S i n c e t h e y v i e w
the test as a hurdle, anything
t h a t help.s t h e m i n s u r m o u n t i n g
i t is c o n s i d e r e d f a i r . T h i s i n c l u d e s
a p p e a l i n g a s m a n y of t h e t e s t
questions as possible i n t h e h o p e
t h a t e n o u g h of t h e s e will b e u p held to yield- a p a s s i n g grade.
W i t h this as t h e approach to the
a p p e a l s y s t e m , i t is n o s u r p r i s e
t h a t " h u n d r e d s of p r o t e s t s o n t h e
tentative key answers" are made.
T h e g o a l Is n o t t h e a c h i e v e m e n t
of a m o r e d i s c r i m i n a t i n g t e s t , b u t
rather
the
overcoming
of
an
cbsttfQle.
r e c o g n i t i o n of t h e a b i l i t y t o d o
a given job, as d e t e r m i n e d , as
n e a r l y as possible, by a n e x a m i n a t i o n . I t s h o u l d n o t be m a d e ,
as Miss F r a n k seems to indicate
as a r e w a r d for "neglect(ing) our
families a n d friends, a n d (going)
to school, study(ing) for the test
after putting in a h a r d and devoted d a y ' s w o r k . "
I do not wish to take up m u c h
m o r e s p a c e , b u t I . w o u l d like t o
c o m m e n t o n a t l e a s t o n e of t h e
q u e s t i o n s M i s s F r a n k is a p p e a l ing. Q u e s t i o n No. 6 r e a d s a s f o l lows: "Suppose t h a t a clerk who
h a s I n j u r e d h i m s e l f o n t h e Job
b e c a u s e of h i s c a r e l e s s n e s s i n f o r m s h i s s u p e r v i s o r of t h e a c c i dent. T h e supervisor h a s been
n e w l y a p p o i n t e d t o h i s j o b a n d is
anxiou* to keep accidents to a
m i n i m u m . T h e a c t i o n t a k e n by
t h e »upfiv.i£or is t o e i i t i c i z e t h e
A p r o m o t i o n s h o u l d be w a d e i n s u b o x i n a t e lor h i s carelessness a n d
to tell h i m t h a t h e lsi
responsible for t h e
the following, it wpul
reasonable to conclude
r e s u l t of t h e s u p e r v i s o r '
his subordinates may
a n s w e r d e s i g n a t e d a s corre^
t h e P e r s o n n e l D e p a r t m e n t is
tend
to
withhold
informatioi
from him about future accidents.'
Miss Fi'ank prefers " ( c ) expect
him
to
supervise
them
more
closely i n t h e f u t u r e . " Miss F r a n k
b a s e s h e r d e f e n s e of h i s s e l e c t i o n
on w h a t she feels the supervisor
should do. However, t h e question
does n o t a s k w h a t t h e s u p e r v i s o r
s h o u l d do. b u t r a t h e r w h a t would
m o s t l i k e l y b e t l i e re.sult of t h e
supervisor's action in this case.
P r o m this standpoint, (a) seem*
m u c h more reasonable a result
t h a n does (o).
RICHARD P. &CHME1DEK,
Senior Personnel Tcchnicl
Tiiesffay, FebniBry i>, 1 9 6 3
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
Page Seven
passing the test, candidates will St., New York 7.
be given City application forms
College secretarial assistant,
which they will then file at the $3,700 to $5,100 per year.
application section of the De$6,890 a year.
Stenographer, $3,500 to $4,580
X-ray technician, $4,000 to $5,- partment of Personnel, 96 Duane per year.
080 a year.
For the following secretarial
positions apply to the Office PerSPECIAL LOW RATES FOR
sonnel Placement Center, 575
STATE EMPLOYEES AT
Lexington Ave., Manhattan. After
File Continuously With City
Applications are being ac- Recreation leader, $5,150 to
cepted on a continuous basis $6,590 a year.
Senior street club worker, $5,for positions in 17 different
job titles offered by the New 150 to $6,950 a year.
York City Personnel Depart- Social investigator trainee, $4,ment. The examinations, held 850 a year.
Social case worker, $5,430 to
on an open-competitive basis,
are for job in various positions and locations.
For most of the exams, applications are available at the
Applications
Section,
New
York City Department of Personnel, 96 Duane St., New
York 7.
Assistant
$8,900
a
architect
Assistant
to
civil
$8,900
a
to
engineer,
$7,100
year.
Assistant
$7,100
$7,100
year.
mechanical
to $8,900 a
ITRACTOR-TRAILER-LRUCFJ
I
Instructions and Road Test
I
DAILY PER PERSON
For Class 1 - 2 - 3 Licenses
Appproved, N.Y,5, Education Dept. & Teamster's Union
Supervising Instructor Formerly Gave Road Tests
* Right a t G r a n d C e n t r a l
* Alrlfne buses a t doer
* AM t r a n s p o r t a t i o n nearby
* O a r a g * service a v a i l a b l e
Have yotir family Jofn yon at special Week-Eod fate® (FrI. thrn S u n . ) —
$7.00 per adult (2 »dult» in room: rhiUiren under 14 free In same room).
Includes private bath and full breaUfaat (50c lor each child'* breakfast).
MODEL AUTO DRIVING ACADEMY
CH 2-7547
•
145 W. 14th St. (Bet. 6 & 7 Aves.)
OPEN DAILY 8 A.M. to 10 P.M., Incl. Sat., Sun., & Holidays
THE HOTEL COMMODORE T i S
f^ MU e^irMo
engineer,
year.
Assistant plan examiner
(build-
i n g ) , $7,450 t o $9,250 a y e a r .
Civil
$5,750
engineering
to
$7,190
Dental
080
a
a
draftsman,
year.
hygienlst,
$4,000
to
$5,-
year.
Junior
civil e n g i n e e r ,
$5,750
to
$7,190 a y e a r .
Junior
670 t o
•
electrical
$7,190
Junior
$5,750
a
mechanical
to
$7,190
Occupational
to
engineer,
$6,290
a
$5,-
year.
a
engineer,
year.
therapist,
$4,850
year.
Patrolman.
$6,132
to
$7,616
a
year.
Public
$6,590
health
a
Mayor
Mayor
the
nurse,
$5,150
to
year.
Honored
Robert
F.
r e c i p i e n t of t h e
Wagner
was
first M a n
of
t h e Year Award presented by
the
Mayor's
As-
Office
sociation
at
Civil
Service
Gasner's
Restaurant,
recently.
BENJAMIN FR.\NKLIN mveiited
-WAREHOUSE SALE —
3 ROOMS OF
FURNITURE
LE 5-5000
Plione Central OiHce Now (or Sun.)
for Information
OUTLET
14S1 ard Ave. at 8lst St., N.Y.C.
CAN BE SEE.N MON. tbru SAT. 9 to »
irinjr Itiis iiotipe to VVliee. Mgr..
Mr, Citrone
re ror
Yoar
HIGH-$35
SCHOOL
DIPLOMA
lis 5
gripped
it since
built.
lightning
to the
His
the
harmlessly
ground,
famous
experiment
liolent
thunderstorm.
first
inventioTif
from
flying
cori"
the top
ni'as inspired
of
primitive
ivhicb
a kite
of a
by
during
his
a
^
J u s t as F r a n k l i n w a s first t o p r o t e c t o u r b u i l d ings against t h e s u d d e n f u r y of l i g h t n i n g . . .
so t h e STATEWIDE PLAN \^'as t h e first p r o g r a m of
p r o t e c t i o n against t h e costs of hospital a n d
m e d i c a l care f o r t h e e m p l o y e e s of t h e S t a t e of
N e w York.
T h i s t h r e e - p a r t p r o g r a m — B l u e Cross, B l u e
Shield a n d M a j o r M e d i c a l . — o f f e r s m o s t S t a t e
employees, active o r retired, t h e m o s t liberal
b e n e f i t s at t h e l o w e s t possible cost. T h a t ' s w h y
m o r e t h a n 4 2 5 , 0 0 0 State e m p l o y e e s a n d tlieir
d e p e n d e n t s are n o w subscribers.
If y o u a r e n o t a s u b s c r i b e r a n d w o u l d l i k e
all t h e f a c t s o n t h e STATEWIDE PLAN, see y o u r
p a y r o l l o r p e r s o n n e l officer.
CAQQ
^tiFU
A few <.< R(»(iM icroups at fSl>8, $:<08,
down parineiit, weekl.v.
Iiniueaiala Delivery or Free Storage
WAREHOUSE
ivere
lights
a fear
Pioneers in Protection
S | 3 9
IS9K—SihhII
CAINE'S
had
ducted
• 3 Rooms N e w : Living- 0 I Q Q
Room, Bdrm, Dinette V •
• 3 Rooms N e w : PHrchsd
f o r Decor. Model A p t .
that
bins
structure
Credit Mitr. dr»>rr« to contact respongtble parlies to take posaesston of entire
3 ROO.M8 tH-' FllRNITWBE NOW IN
WAKROIi(7i!iE. ALI. NEW I'J pc. CONVEKTIRLK MVIXG ROOM. 8 pc.
REDROO.M piiiH 0 pr. DINETTE plus
obioce of rebuilt TV or Refrigerator.
• 3 Rooms. Convertible
Lv. Rm: Bdrm: Din:
the
imig rod hi 1152, he released ?mi}kwdfrovi
WEEKS
GET your Hi^b School Equivalency
Diploma which la tha local aquiva
lent of 4-years of Ulrb School. Tbls
Diploma Is accepted for Civil Ssrvlot
positions and clher purposes.
ROBERTS SCHOOL
517 W. 57tb St.. New York If
PLaia 7-OSOO
Please send mo FREE Information.
BSL
Nam® ——
Address I my
.
BLUE CROSS'
ALSANY •
BUFFAT.O
•
Jamestown
BLUE SHIELD*
of security
•
N E W
YORK
•
llociitsTtK
•
SYBACUSB •
UitCA • W A H U O W I I
CIVIL
Page Elglil
SERVICE
LEADER
File Now For May
Draftsman's Exam
The
Veteran s
Counselor
By FRANK Y. VOTTO"
Director, New York Slate Division of Veterans' Affairs
T h i s p o s i t i o n is In s a l a r y
14, w i t h
Questions on veterans' and servicemen's rights will be answered in this column or by mail by the State Division of Veterans'
Affairs. Address questions to Military Editor, The Leader, 97
Duane Street, New tork 7, N. Y.
to
vity
per
annum.
increments
increment
of
Applicantis w h o
of
electrical
man
are
a
$240
for
are
longe-
each.
attain
the
engineering
eligible
$5,750
There
and
title
drafts-
promotion
t o t h e t i t l e of a s s i s t a n t
electrical
VETERANS FIGURING their Federal Income taxes need e n g i n e e r . T h i s t i t l e h a s a s a l a r y
not count as income any payments they have received for r a n g e o f f r o m $ 7 , 1 0 0 t o $ 8 , 9 0 0
veterans benefits, since these payments are wholly tax-free. p e r y e a r ,
Requirements
Dividends which veterans have received in 1962 on their GI
T h e m i n i m u m requirements for
Insurance policies also are exempt from tax reporting.
ALTHOUGH PAYMENTS for benefits are tax-free and | t h e d r a f t s m a n s p o s i t i o n a r e a
need not be reported on 1962 Federal income tax returns,; b a c c a l a u r e a t e d e g r e e I n e l e c t r i c a l
Interest earned on GI life insurance dividends left on deposit' e n g i n e e r i n g i s s u e d a f t e r c o m p l e t i o n of a f o u r - y e a r c o u r s e
in
Is not a "benefit" and is taxable.
a n accredited college or u n i v e r STILL TAX-FREE are the proceeds of a GI life insurance! s i t y o r f a n A s s o c i a t e i n A p p l i e d
policy, including the dividends themselves.
| Science degree a n d two years In
OTHER BENEFITS which need not be reported on Federal e x p e r i e n c e i n e l e c t r i c a l e n g i n e e r Income tax returns Include:
•
| ing drafting work. These reEducation and training allowances for veterans of the Korean ' q u i r e m e n t s m a y b e s u b s t i t u t e d b y
school
conflict period who are in school or training establishments ! p o s s e s s i o n of a h i g h
under the Korean GI Bill.
i d i p l o m a a n d f o u r y e a r s of s a t Subsistence payments made to disabled World War II and; is>factory e x p e r i e n c e i n di-aifting
work or a n equivalent combinaKorean conflict veterans training under t he Vocational i
t i o n of b o t h e d u c a t i o n a n d
exRehabilitation Acts.
|
perience.
Disability compensation and pension payments received by j A p p l i c a t i o n s w i l l b e i s s u e d a n d
veterans for service-connected and non-service-connected r e c e i v e d M o n d a y t h r o u g h . F r i d a y ,
disabilities.
f r o m 9. a . m . t o 4 p . m . a n d S a t Grants to seriously disabled veterans for homes designed for u r d a y s , u n t i l n o o n , a t t h e a p p l i c a t i o n s e c t i o n of t h e D e p a r t "wheel-chair living."
Grants for motor vehicles to veterans who lost their sight or m e n t of P e r s o n n e l , % D u a n e S t . ,
N e w Y o r k 7.
lost the use of their limbs.
World War I emergency officers' retirement pay.
Death benefits to families of deceased veterans also are ex- HEALTHY AND HAPPY FEET
empt from taxation. They include death compensation and Keep Your Children
They romp around n m l e a few more miles
pension, indemnity and all GI insurance payments.
Hian we adulls They milsl wear shocB
bilill to cushion the shock of t l r e n u o n s
exercise and ruueed eames only the young
heart can stand T h a t ' s why our manuf a c t u r e r installs such f e a t u i e s as the
True-Glide broad base leather wedge heel,
steel shanU and extra-long leather Inside
counter, individual left and right quarterg
conforming to the child'* ankle tione.
POLL I'ARKOT Vita-Poiso shoes
assure
your children evei-y step In c o m f o r t All
«izrs and w i d t h
alway *oonroily fitted
Questions Answered
i s t h e d e f i n i t i o n of a " w a r i — D e c e m b e r
A
=31,
person
including:
served
,
Tiaval
or
in
Air
the
period
of
war
women,
who
active
military,
.
,
.
service during
and
who was
chargod
or
released
ditions
other
than
dis-
under
con-
dishonorable,
1946
7,
1941—December
Korean
Conflict—June
27, 1 9 5 0 — J a n u a r y
What
"
"i^n
31,
1955
Is t h e e f f e c t of
« ^
going
AWOL
out leave)
on
a
service-
(absent
the
JULES
with-
allotment
SHOES
paid !
Family of Fine Shoes
i H KSrO.^TE I'l.AZA SIMI1'1'IN« TEN TKK
to his f a m i l y ?
Colvln Ave. «t Central. Albuny. N.
What
dates
constitute
the
term
"war"?
All
benefits
; allowance
World
War
November
I—April
6,
1917—
11, 1 9 1 8 W o r l d W a r
such
stops
as
for
pays
the
m a n and his dependent
II i also
creases
salary
as the work experience
the individual increases, which
s e c o n d y e a r , $18.32; p e r d a y
year,
$20.48 p e r
day;
y e a r , $22.64 p e r
day.
The
tra^e
fields
of
and
positions
are
blacksmith,
boilermaker,
macliinist
ftftirth
in
fire
ger, sailmaker, s h e e t m e t a l
shlpfitter, shipwright,
Insulator,
joiner,
control
A
welder.
written
test
rig-
worker,
pipecoverer
electrician
and
eligibility
of
mation
write
Board
of
U.
to
the
UNION BOOK CO.
Ini'orporattMl
IIM'.i
237-241 State Street
Schenectady, N. Y.
KX 2-!il41
is b e i n g o f f e r e d t o
inspector. T h e
fluctuat-
salary
title h a s
ranges
(power
according
determine
o.
to
<
location.
For
further
application
O f f i c e of
information
forms
the
and
write ^ to
Civil Service
the
Com-
HOTEL
m i s s i o n , 54 M i n e o l a B l v d . , M i n e o l a
Wellington
D R I V C - I N GARAQC
AIR CONDITIONING • T V
No parking
problsmi at
Atban/i largcct
l i e t s i . . . with
Albany'* only driv«-in
•crag*. You'll like tht comfort and convenience, tool
Family rates. Cocktail loungo.
ALBANY
BRANCH OFFICE
r O R INFOKJVIA riON r e e a r d i m advortlilnf
PIeap« write oi call
JOSKPH T BELLEW
3 0 3 SO MANNING BLVD.
4LBANV 8. N . t .
P b o o n t IV 2 6474
CIVIL
NOW
SERVICE
FOR
136 STATE S T R E E T
EMPLOYEES
THE
FIRST
Sl'htlAL
TO
CIVIL
NEW
NEW
TRAVELERS
$8.00
$14.00
SINGLE ROOM
DOUBLE ROOM
130 W. 49 ST., N.Y.C.
AT
RADIO
18 FLOORS •
OR PHONE
.
TIMES
FREE
IV
9-7431
KESKKVATIONS
600 ROOMS
In Time of Need, Call
M, W. Tebbuft's Sons
State
HO
ARCO
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
ond all tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 Broadway
Albany, N. Y.
Mail & Phone Orders Filled
12 Colvin
Alhiiiiy
3-2179
IV 9-0116
420 Kenwood
Delmor HE 9-2212
. 1 1 Elm Street
Nassau 8-1231
Over ll'> Y«aiii
DlHtlnKuiNlied F u i k i h I
of
Servl<«
TO BUY, RENT OR
SELL A HOME —PAGE 11
COFFEE MIL
FLAVOR
INSTRUCTIONS
FRESH-GROUND FLAVOR
YOU CANT GCT IN A CAN!
41 Grove Avenue, Albany, N.Y.
Near New Scotland Ave.
Tel. 489-2040
Executive
New
ENJOY
Anne's Knitting Noolc
for
Service
York
1.
Mild and
James P.
OWEHS
James J.
KNlalillshrd 1U1A
Albany's Most Centrally
L o i a l c d Home al Time of
Need At No E x t r a Cowt
Air I'unilltioned
I'urklnK
220 9 u a ! l St., Albany, N. Y.
HE 6-1860
1 LB ^
Mallow
EIGHT O'CIOCK bag
| " C 3 LB B A G
1.59
55
Vigorous and Wine/
Mcfc and FuH BodTed
RED CIMIE
U'osr 3
CHADWICK
BOKAR
.':oi.7i
BAG
6r
W
BAG
1.77
MOTEL
1 7 M ft US 6. 2 MILES SO. OF MIDDLETOWN. N. Y.
CMAT ATIANTIC A PACIFIC TIA COMPANY, INC
22
UNITS
$7.00 SINGLE — $10.00 TO $16.00 DOUBLE
(»'i.«« KA. A U U X I'KKSOX)
AIR C O N D . : TILE SHOWER BATHS; TV; PHONES:
I N N R O O M COFFEE: RESTAURANTS NEARBY
VOKIIKKH
!
ArCKI'TKD
Phone DRexel 4-2411 or 3201 — P.O. BOX 332, MIDDLETOWN
SQ.
PHONE CO S-77G0
Fir«<t R u n Motion Pictures At Adjacent
Hellinnn T h e a t r e
orj tlie
rremises.
F«K
CITY
JJ:''-
COCKTAIL LOUNGE — W I T H
ENTERTAINMENT
NIGHTLY!
WRITE
HOTEL
CHESTERFIELD
The Cniiilal D i s l r u f s Finest Luxury
M«(or l u n — ( H l f r i n g Full Hotel AcruiiimoflntioiiH anil I'licllitieg.
DINENG ROOM
STAYS
SPECIAL CIVIL SERVICE
COURTESY RATES
RATES
SERVICE
HAlbS
EXTENDED
MAYFLOWER - ROTAL
COURT
APARTMENTS Furnished, Unfurnushed, and R o o m s . P h o n e H E .
4-1994, ( A l b a n y ) .
WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY
lie Mile-Krom Tliruway Exit S4
O r i ' O S I T E S T A T E CA.AII'l'S S I T E
LOW
if LhAL)
FOR
Hellman's
OFFERS SPECIAL
OPTOSm STATI CAPnOl
^ ^
Seo yoor hiitdly trwl ogmnt.
TIME
SOMETHING NEW
HAS BEEM ADDED!
Neil
**
CIVIL SERVICE KNITTERS!
fcrATK
will
for Civil S e r v i c e E m p l o y e e s
appli-
plumbing
1 0 %
D I S C o r X T on All I'liriliahes
Couiplete Line of Varns, linportt-d &
Uomestio — Xiiblet'lothK, KaKN,
rirtiiri'ii. Needlework StipplicH
Civil
Examinera,
Nassau
c a n t s f o r t h e p o s i t i o n of
ing
S P E C I A L RATES
examina-
*.
r u n HH/H'I in BoiikH — Cillt* —
lireeling Cards — Slutionery
ArtiNlg' SiipitUi'g and Otticr Kquipniriit
allowance
candidates
S.
County
IN RRAH —
Phen* IV 2.7864 or IV 2-9881
HIK
these positions. F o r f u r t h e r inforSecretary,
open-competitive
PARKING
Albany
the
electri-
mechanic, painter, pipefitter,
plant),
are
third
the
An
t i o n f o r legal r e s i d e n t s of
boatbuiider,
coppersmith,
(marine),
of
Shipyard, Brooklyn,
cian, electronics mechanic,
and
in-1
Plumbing Inspector
In Nassau Conty
176
ceases.
Trainees are being sought for 20 trade openings with the
Broolclyn Navy Yard. The positions have starting salary of
$16.16 per day or $80.80, per week for a 40 hour, five day weeic.
The titles require no experience and have no educational
requirements. Filing for these apprentice titles will close
March 14.
additional
FRER
1060 MADISON AVE.
ALBANY
service-
Apprentice Titles
In Brooklyn Navy
Yard; $16.16-Day
are
—
and i
VISIT
There
ACCOMMODATIONS
FOR PARTIES. OUR
COTILLION ROOM, SEATING
200 COMFORTABLY.
COLD BUFFETS. S2.25 UP
FULL COURSE DINNERS, S2.S0 UP
BUSINESS MEN'S L U N C H
OAK R O O M — $1.00
12 TO 2:30
grade
a s a l a r y r a n g e of
$7,190
annual
Tax Benefits
What
PETIT PARIS
RESTAURANT
The New York City Department of Personnel will be accepting open-competative and promotional applications until
February 21 for the electrical engineering draftsman examination which tentatively scheduled for May 22.
RnMiitHHrnmNKiMtii
veteran"?
Tuesilay, Frbniary 5, 1 9 6 3
mClS
EFFECTIVE
IN
CAPITAL
DISTRICT
STORES
CIVIL
Tuesday, February J>, 1 % 3
SERVICE
I.EADER
7:30
This Week's Civil Service Television List
Television
programs
of
9:30
n e l 31.
This
week's
New
City's
9:30
p.m.—Career
—Police
promotion
peat
Monday's
of
3:00
with
of
Hos-
Personnel'— with
Louis
Hal-
5:00 p.m.—Nutrition a n d
of
Public
Department
Produced
by
of
the
6:00
You—
New
8:30 p.m.—Looking at
Health—
N.Y.C.
on
5:00
Wednesday February 6
p.m.—Your
Lions
Bureau
Share—
p.m.—^our
Public
Lions
Librai-y
p.m.—The
of
program.
Big
of
Nutrition,
Health
program.
5:15
FoodDi-
Big
Picture—
Lions
Share—
program.
Library
Lion
Share-
program.
p.m.—The
film
Big
Picture—
series.
Monday, Feburary 11
and
4:00
You—
Unit
p.m.—Around
training
D e p a r t m e n t N.Y.C. Police
5:30
the
Clock-
program
of
the
Dept.
p.m.—Career
Development
Litter—Will —N.Y.C. P o l i c e , D e p a r t m e n t
Sanitation Depart- motion course.
p.m.—Have
pro-
aSADXSQK S Q U A R E
Dinner Scheduled
POUGHKEBPSIE,
M.
treasurer
State
Civil
Feb.
Bes.sette,
of
the
Hospital
Service
4—Mrs.
chapter
Employees
of
a
Showplact of the Nation • RoclccfclUr Center • Ci 6 - 4 6 0 0
the
JACK LEMMON • LEE REMICK
As.socia-
**DAYS OF WiXE
unit
d i n n e r o n F e b . 11
* iJcvJplr^ *
AMIOSES''
* ©rienlalia * f^imltiCes * BuHon J *
^ Banfa * erwfin^ ^ards * QIass * Lace * Weajjonj * P«W{«r
Co starring CHARLES BICKFORD . JACK KLUGMAN
at
the White Stag Inn, Dover Plains.
• j^hoi)of^towsQJhfcuihdO
Martin Manulis Production • Directed by Blake Edwards
pntuks
A Warner Bros. Picture
T h e d i n n e r is s c h e d u l e d f o r 7 p . m .
4pfx^el iitfitt if tht ^ppnlstrt ^sstelalkM tf^mtnu^
ON THE GREAT STAGEl
" C U R T A I N S U P " - L i v c l y , colorful
- ,„
revue, featuring glamorous "Great B a l l " h t ^ p ' ^ ,
spectacle. Witt) Rockettes. Ballet Company / W J ' ^ V — guest artists, specialty acts, Symphony
j
rclteslra.and spectacular salute to Red C r o s s / ""oTj^^fl'/) ^
Centennial with huge company.
^ ^ ^
n o .rtI P.M. (DM. •« TJI) M I L WW.. I*L t S«. M I r . n
"OME OF THE AIL-TIME GREAT F I L M S ! »
ollhtN.r.
OARSXN
27 $hars., Jjfar. T
250 EsMVits
RADIO CITY-MUSIC HALL
Valley
tion, h a s announced that_the
will h o l d
gr«(f.,
secretary-
Harlem
course.
Share—
8:30
p.m.—City
Close-up —
p r o g r a m . W e e k l y s e r i e s of i n t e r v i e w s w i t h
P i c t u r e - City officials.
series.
p.m. Nutrition
Travel—N.Y.C.
Anna
motion
series.
p.m.—Your
7:00
Friday, February 8
Health
film
p.m.—Your
U.S. A r m y
U S . Army film
Department.
N.Y.C. Public L i b r a r y
3:00
for j Cornell University Extension Diprogram
on
marketing
Louis vision
Y o r k N.Y.C.
7:00
Health.
Nutrition,
Streams".
Sunday, February 10
p.m.—Focus
values.
Bureau
8:30 p.m.—Career Development
D i r e c t i o n — N . Y . C , P o l i c e D e p a r t m e n t PKO-
marketing
N.YC. Public Library
1:30
5:00
on
p.m.—The
U.S. A r m y
pry n.
Hos-
Program
Job—Fire
values
Food-
of
the
Saturday, February 9
ing
Per-sonnel—with
on
Extension
program
2:00
pitals T r a i n i n g P r o g r a m f o r Nur.s-
(Re-
University
— vision
Development
Halpi-yn.
3:00
Close-up
course
program.)
Training
Nursing
City
p.m.—City
3:00 p . m . — D e p a r t m e n t
5
p.m.—Department
pitals
Cornell
Thursday, February 7
Include:
Tuesday, February
of
You— ment documentary.
N.Y.C. D e 6:00
p.m.—Focusr
t e l e c a s t W e e k l y s e r i e s of I n t e r v i e w s
television N.Y.C. officials.
progranxs
York
pTT).—On
Dept. t i a i n j n g course. "
5:00 p.m.—Nutrition a n d
Interest
to
civil s e r v i c e
employees
a r e B u r e a u of N u t r i t i o n ,
b r o a d c a s t d a l l y o v e r W N Y C , C h a n - p a r t m e n t of H e a l t h .
over
Page Nfwe
fmil
COL
lV
'BI* PC
l IUSfS puMnil
D* S«M SPICMI OAVO
I UAK p<0(lwliM ot
I
1
~ ^
,
i ioii
(^JlT
SAfiT
EXHIBITS
J ^ R E N C E
FICOA
INAA
TO
ECHN
LORR
' SUA
PKRBPA
VISIO.N 70f
RESERVED SEATS NOW AT BOX-OFFICE
BOX OFFICE OPtN 10 A M. DAILY-12 NOON SUNDA*
CRITERION BWtYMMI. .Jt]M79>
Watch a 16 year
old girl set out
io destroy a man...
the new
Automatic Turntable Type A
Deluxe RECORD CHANGER by
Engineered
for stereophonic
and monaural records
completely wired, with
all external leads attached.
T h e n e w T y p « A t u r n t a b l t I t designed t « f u i r i l l e v e r y r e q u i r e m e n t o f a n y fine m u s i c
»y»tem; p a r t i c u l a r l y t h o a * of the most critical and knowledgeable high fidelity ent h u s i a s t * , w h o w i l l f i n d I t u n s u r p a s s e d in p e r f o r m a n c e ,
features and
convenience.
T h i s fine t u r n t a b l e h a t a d y n a m i c a l l y - b a l a n c e d t o n e - a r m
(with a built-in calibrated
pressure g a u g e ) , a f u l l - s i z e , hea>>y-weight p r o f e s s i o n a l t u r n t a b l e , a l a b o r a t o r y - b a l a n c e d
precision m o t o r , . . plus t h e m u c h - w a n t e d convenience of t h * w o r l d ' * finest a u t o m a t i c
' record-player . . .
all In one s u p e r b 4-speed I n s t r u m e n t .
iHiiice Olivier
jlmoneSigiionit
OFTRIAl
iiMiies
GEM ELECTRONICS
stores
throughout
the
metropolitan
area
IMrasM-clW
Pruinted by WARKElf BnOS.B
UNT WU.52.<Sti
Sy ( 43rd St
On Ltxington
7 9400
PL 3-2434
F I K n i K I N S ! Meytrt Bfot. Sp*«41 Cirigt, 314 W 43ri] St. Afltr 6 P.M. Me«ky<. Alter 11 A.M Sunday (limit S Houit) ^
at •el«ct ih««tr«s In
th* Metropolitan Araal
ainpdward Hotel
120 West 44th Street
Th« Cliolc* of Civil
Sorvic*
Employees
Special Weekly Rates
From $25 Wkly
Also Dolly & Group Rotes
300
Room* All
Phone
JU
With
2-3900
Both
BROOKLYN
59 WILLOUGHBY STREET
(one bleck from A & S)
TRiangle 5-3833
open Thurs. nights 'til 9:00 P.M.
» •
lAYSHORE
1261 SUNRISE HIGHWAY
MO 5-8500
lELLEROSE
247-40 JAMAICA AVENUE
open •very Ththi. night 'til 9:00 P.M.
IRONX
565 EAST FORDHAM ROAD
LU 4-1447
cpcn evtry Thurt. night 'til 9:00 P.M.
IRONX
3SI GRAND CONCOURSE
CY 2-1080
NEW YORK,CITY
205 FULTON STREET
BE 3-6220
NEW YORK CITY
202 EAST 44th STREET
!a few doors East of Third Avenue)
YUkon 6-2646
^j^iyif jftwix''"
PARMiNGOALE
34 HEMPSTEAD TURNPIKE
DE 7-3477
open Mon. through Fri. 'til 9:00 P.M.
FOREST HILLS
101-10 QUEENS BOULEVARD
TW 6-2121
•pan tvtry Thurs. night 'til 9:00 P.M.
GREAT NECK
271 NORTHERN BOULEVARD
HN 6-0160
•pan Mon. through Fri. nights 'til 9:00 P.M.
HICKSVILLE
236 BROADWAY
CH 9-1400
HUNTINGTON
on JERICHO TURNPIKE
(500 Feet Wast of Rt. 110)
AR 1-2201
MOUNT VERNON
70 EAST THIRD STREET
MO 4-0747
VALLEY STREAM
218 SUNRISE HIGHWAY
CO 2-5811
opan avary Thurs. & Fri. nights 'til 9:00 P.M.
YONKERS
1937 CENTRAL AVENUE
DE 7-3477
•pan Monday thi-ough Friday nights 'til 9:()0 P.M.
CIVIL
Page Sixteen
SERVICE
LEADER
File Until Feb. 21 For
T.B.T.A. Senior Bridge &
Tunnel Maintainor Exam
YOU AND
THE ARMED SERVICES
This Year's Budget
Calls f o r Fewer
Men in Uniform
This
calls
Applications are now being accepted by the New York City Department of Personnel
for the promotion examination for the title of senior bridge and tunnel maintainer. Filing
will remain open until February 21.
The position has a salary range of $6,726 to $8,375 per annum.
Employees who
achieve this title are required to work shifts as ordered.
of
and
the Triborough
Tunnel
Authority
permanently
employed
t i t l e of
tainer
bridge
or
Bridge
who
are
in
the
and tunnel
motor
vehicle
main-
operator.
Such employees m u s t have
in
that
title
for
a
six
months.
in
period
Any
the
of
employee
tirement
three
who
has
the
test
The
the
in
months
order
adnaission
t i t l e of
to
of
reonly
before
be
eligible.
employees
motor vehicle
plies to this e x a m i n a t i o n
general
bridge
tainer
supervises
related
T.B.T.A.
tasks include
supervising
t h e m a i n t e n a n c e of b u i l d i n g s ,
repairs
tems,
from
maintaining and
and
Monday
9
a.m.
and
application blanks
electrical
ment, and
and
are
T h i s p o s i t i o n is i n s a l a r y
14
which
of
Personnel,
7.
lower
In
titles
is
addition
employment
plicants
from
•
In
six
montlis.
be
affected
will
major
reorganization
tional G u a r d
and
applications
section
of
ards.
The
The
Veterans
supervision,
a
civil
en-
$4,565.
For
Hospital
an
could
lead
R d . , B r o n x , 68,
licensed
is
practical
positions
have
an
of
$3,820
to
from
further
Information
m a i n - gineering
draftsman
performs write to t h e above address rec o n n e c t i o n c i v i l e n g i n e e r i n g d r a f t i n g w o r k of q u e s t i n g a n n o u n c e m e n t n o . N Y buildings. ordinai-y difficulty a n d
r e s p o n - 66-4 ( 6 2 ) .
N.Y.C. Still Offering Saturday
Exams For Patrolmen Titles
are no fees or residency ,
requirements
Personnel
The
for
the
taking
this
Department
ex- [cessful applicants two
of
stressed.
physical
aminations
and
will b e
lowing t h e
The
mental
given
to
exsuc-
weeks
fol- includes
written, test.
starting
salary
overtime
pay,
uniform
allowance a n d paid holidays.
The
for
rookie City's latest offer to the
unip o l i c e m e n is $6,133 w i t h I n c r e - f o r m e d f o r c e s w o u l d I n c r e a s e t h e
m e n t s t o $7,616 In 3 y e a r s . T h i s s t a r t i n g s a l a i y t o a p p r o x i m a t e l y
$6,900 f o r a f o r t y - h o u r w e e k
Those interested in • career with the New York City Police
Department and who live outside the Metropolitan Area may write
for additional information by mailing the coupon printed below to
Arnold DeMille, Director of Recruftment, Department of Personnel,
299 Broadwuy. N.Y. 7, N.Y.
DEPARTMENT OF PERSONNEL,
299 BROADWAY. N.Y. 7, N.Y.
a n d A d d r e s s in Ball P o i n t
ears,
and
State
almost
inclusive
uniform
To
be
$8,000
of
In
paid
three
holidays
allowance.
eligible
for
'
the
police
to
Ink)
Age
each
with
eye
ber
of
ance,
school
needed.
These,
however,
are
appoint-
^.J meAt ifi th^ PQUce •Academy. .
Command,
all
Recruit
Bainbrldge,
and
classification.
Upon
in
for
advance-
U.
S.
Navy
Recruiting
w o m e n serve a n d live In t h e N a v y .
A f t e r all t h e f a c t s a r e u n d e r s t o o d ,
Increased
year
the
parents or
the
more
be
time
In
The
periods
from
will
24
per
has
if
under
re-
turn to the recruiting station
for
for
enlistment.
Raises
suf-
for
technicians
in
the
also A r m y N a t i o n a l G u a r d a n d
School
train- Officer Candidate
large
ficient f u n d s available. It h a s
been rumored t h a t s u m m e r
ing periods m a y be extended
yond
the
present
As
far
as
15
the
reorganization
of
tional Guard
Defense
National
the bership.
The maximum
full
has
Guard,
on
t h e o t h e r h a n d , is also u n d e r
the
of
State
cept
those
physical
to
hibited
by
aircraft
on
law
on
from
combat
shipboard
other
ports and hospital
Women
pro-
serving
In
or
Mate,
Technlcan,
Con-
Storekeeper,
Technician,
Disbursing Clerk, D r a f t s m a n , Electronics
Technician,
Corpsman,
Accountant,
Personnel
Mate.
Serviceman,
Hospital
Instrumentman,
Man,
Radioman,
Storekeeper,
t w e e n t h e a g e s of 1 8 a n d
clusive. T h e
legal
Joui*Optl-
Photog-
NGC-10
their
pay
to
to
$8,480
25
states
criteria
for this
would
scale
from
annually.
Pay-
d r i l l s Is i n
York
eleven
which
a
from
i s o n e of
which
adth^
meej
progrs
2-Foniily
Brick
ALL VACANT, 1.1 roomi, new heatlns
unit, newljr det'oriited, modern kltclienit
and bath*, prime location, low cash.
MUST SICK TO Al'I'KECUTE
2.Family
Brick
»-8T0Ky and bavemrnt,
roomi, !i
Btoderu kKclirim and baths, oil beat.
ALL VACANT
Ship's
Trades-
c o n s e n t of p a r e n t
gi^rdi^,
to
new
promoted
3-Family
Brownstonl
15 KOOMH, all vacant, newlr deeoratH, oil liral, (ood Income.
LIVK KENT FUKU. — LOW CASH
Communications
Dental
NGC-O
be
assist-
the
BROOKL
2-Family With
TWO e ruoniH aiita, 1 Is
modern front, nrw lieatlns unl
location, nr. itruJm-tH, all vara
NU CAMU
in
Electronics
Technician, Aviation
Commissaryman,
Air
OC3
REAL
trans-
ships.
Aviation
will
ditional New
ex-
missions
mem-
for
Staff
meet
m e n t for mlUtary
the following ratings:
Aerographer's
Jobs
criteria
$6,995
a r e eligible t o serve
trolman;
annually.
whose
raise
are
than
$7,920
ants
considerable
but
grade
Na-
recom-
s t a f f a s s i s t a n t s is n o w f r o m $6,435
governors.
requh-ing
strength
Bureau has
m e n d e d in order to increase
Reserve
concerned,
pro-
grams are in the offing. T h e
be-
days.
Army
is
her
and then
Technician's Raises
Recommended f o r H.G
be
evenings
t o 4 8 , if C o n g r e s s
recruit,
guardian
processing
nummay
prospective
2 1 , s h o u l d g e t t h e a p p r o v a l of
diploma,
n o t . n e e d e d u n t i l t i m e of
Navy
a
drills
character. man, Yeoman.
or a n
Any w o m a n who meets the fole q u i v a l e n c y c e r t i f i c a t e , o r a G . E . D . l o w i n g s t a n d a r d s is eligible f o r
certificate issued by t h e A r m e d enlistment In t h e regular N a v y Forces, a n d a driver's license are
A g e : A p p l i c a n t s m u s t be be«
high
to
sent
Army
g l a s s e s , a n d b e of g o o d
A
the
through
referal
units
spend
training
20/ rapher's
without
entering
Maryland, for basic training, guid-
satisfactorily
training.
calman,
in
Applicants •
physical, m e n t Station to learn about t h e
now be opportunities for w o m e n a n d how
will
in both
alist, M a c h i n e
vision
re-
years.
are
Training
chil-
age,
E n l i s t m e n t of w o m e n i s h a n d l e d
automatic
t h e a g e s of 2 0 a n d 2 8 I n c l u s i v e , a t
30
of
stand- Stations. Those interested should
Guard
re- visit t h e i r n e a r e s t N a v y R e c r u i t -
basis
force, candidates m u s t be between
also
City
to
with
least 5 feet, 8 Inches tall, w i t h
Sir: Please send me information on opportunities otTered youar
wen as policemen in New York City.
(Type or Print N a m e
raises
Upon
deals
W o m e n serve in all r a t i n g s
—
must
custody.
for three
women
13-Leader Over
Navy Accepting
Women, 18 To 25
—
18 y e a r s
T e r m of e n l i s t m e n t :
month.
influence
Department of Personnel, as a result of a stepped-up recruitin the City, is offering weekly testing every Saturday for this
at 9 a.m. and will continue to be given until March. The posiof 6,133 per year. Testing is held at Seward Park High School.
under
g a r d l e s s of l e g a l
reservists
to t h e Selective Service w i t h i n
control. T h e
amlnation,
dren
state.
moral
to
pax-t-time
130
Applicants
Re-
change
or even to p e r f o r m
required
at
Aimy
National
Members
Practical Nurses
must
enlistment.
N a - schools, t h r o u g h o n - t h e - j o b t r a i n ing, a n d t h r o u g h the study
of
the
standards —
Department
There
Dependents:
of
t h e c o m p l e t i o n of t h i s p e r i o d , f u r t h e r
the training m a y be obtained at N a v y
of
standards. Failure to attend
same
Saturdays.
can
w i t h a t i g h t e n i n g of r e s e r v e
equal
The
time
provided
on
21.
at
rating.
and
either
single
manuals
major
be
pro-
fact.
ment
Another
or
must
and must
i n t h e n u m b e r of a c t u a l
mental,
have
Applicant
sei-ves. O n e r e s u l t w i l l b e a c h a n g e
s e r v i c e p a r t m e n t of P e r s o n n e l , 9 6 D u a n e
qualifications,
a p - S t . , N . Y . 7, N . Y . u n t i l F e b r u a r y
t o t h e civil
also
the
must
education
have no dependents and no
un-
by
of
the
Marital status: Applicants
be
more
states
Union
cruiting
must
Under
all
De-
1, w i l l
person-
in
at least
required.
school
attest to this
fighter
men,
current
equivalent.
enlist
authorized In each
cepted by the New York City
f r o m a h i g h s c h o o l a n d four> y e a r s
The New York City
ing program for patrolmen
position. The test are held
tions have a starting salary
and
and
Marines—190,000
Reservists
n e l , t e c h n i c a l k n o w l e d g e of
components
men
Selec-
for
v i d e a l i s t of r e f e r e n c e s w h o
665,-
Reorganization Plans
Face National Guard
And Army Reservists
grade
e x p e r i - W. K i n g s b r l d g e
t e n - of s a t i s f a c t o r y p r a c t i c a l
ence In d r a f t i n g work including recruiting f o r
civil
engineeriiig nurses. These
t e s t t h e c a n d i d a t e ' s k n o w l e d g e of t w o y e a i ' s i n
d
r
a
f
t
i
n
g
w
o
r
k
.
supervisory techniques in directa n n u a l salai-y
with
860,000
for transport
Ap-
Armed
Applicants
high
Character:
aircraft,
$5,750
T h e w r i t t e n t e s t , w h i c h is
techniques In
to
money
to siblity a n d p e r f o r m s related work.
per
annum.
Minimum
Applications
for this
promoof
qualification
in
t h e t i o n a l e x a m i n a t i o n will b e
ac-
$7,190
pays
c l e a r - college or university:
an
asso- on
ing the bridges, buildings, a n d a p - ciate in applied science degree in
p r o a c h e s o p e r a t e d b y t h e A u t h o r - t h e f i e l d a n d t w o y e a r s of p r a c ity.
tical experience:
or
graduation
tenance
from
Duane
St., N e w Y o r k
a
the
attain
score
the
Depart-
Aptitude
of g o o d - c h a r a c t e r
the
Department
the
mis-
4
p.m.
have
million
through
to
t u r a l devices; cleaning a n d
i n g t h e w o r k of a s s i g n e d
increase
must
phy-
by
Women.
prescribed
Education:
expan-
conventional
670,000 m e n ,
but
less
96 4 1 3 t o
money for new ship construction.
wiring
tatively scheduled for May
•Navy—An
Women's
minimum
the
Medical
Enlisted
test
use and
from
of
control
Written Test
in
tion
below:
reduction
program
Forces
dif-
free at the application section
s y s - o n e of t h e f o l l o w i n g : a b a c c a l a u - t h e d e p a r t m e n t w i l l b e o p e n f r o m
equip- reate degree in civil engineering 9 a m . to 4 p.m., M o n d a y to F r i mechanical a n d struc- f r o m a four year course in
a day and f r o m 9 a.m. until noon
to
power
presented
for
pro-
four
These more for guns, tanks, and
o b t a i n a b l e siles a n d s m a l l planes.
New York City is accepting applications for the promotional examination for the position of civil engineering draftsman from employees currently holding positions as engineering aides or junior draftsmen.
in
making
of
the
p l i c a n t s will b e g i v e n
980,000 t o 975,000 m e n , a n
sion
of
meet
prescribed
ment
The
the
Must
Budget
Saturdays, until noon.
Daily Through February 23
period
t h e w o r k of a s s i g n e d p e r s o n n e l
tunnels:
areas.
will b e Issued
and
Promotion txam Slated; File
part
performs
is
Manual
changed.
a
work.
Other
related
and
Civil [ngineering Draftsman
operation
and
units
for
Army — A
931
ap-
equip-
uniform.
revision
•
the
Physical:
sical s t a n d a r d s
• A i r Force—^Reduced f r o m 868.-
main-
takes
of t h e v a r i e d f a c i l i t i e s a n d
of
bridges
only.
tunnel
and
in the maintenance and
ment
other
dally
Fiiday,
opera-
direction,
and
and
received
Responsibility
senior
movable
Applications
In
t o r is f o r r e c l a s s i f i c a t i o n a n d
Under
and
tunnels,
been
is r e q u i r e d t o s e r v e
consecutive
fixed
than
reinstated after resignation or
in
in
a p p l i c a n t s u n d e r 21 y e a r s .
number
I^efense
drop
w e a p o n s , a n d n e a r l y $700
served
less
a
men
ferent
department
not
year's
for
posed
T h e e x a m i n a t i o n Is o p e n t o e m p l o y e e s of
Tuesday, February 246, 1 9 6 3
3-Famlly
Brownstone
S-STOKY and bakrmrnt, 14 rooms, oil
heat, H vatancles, vu« decontrolled.
House uewljr docoruted.
£A8¥ TKB1U8
in-
C A L L MISS 6IILAID
or
^
PR
4-212 1
CIVIL
TiiesiTaT, F««l»riiary 5 , 1 9 6 3
REAL
SERVICE
LEADER
Page Eleven
ESTATE
VALUES
BROOKLYN
BROOKLYN
CALL
BE 3-6010
LONG ISLAND
HOMES
THE ADVERTISERS IN THIS SECTION HAVE ALL PLEDGED TO THE SHARKEY-BROWN LAW ON HOUSING
4
INTEGRATED
t
Open 7 days a week from 9:30 A M
DETACHED
Bungalow. 40x100
plot, 5 and bath, plus 2 finisht d rooms in a t t i c , full basement, automatic heat. Priced
for quick sale.
HURRY!
JA 3-3377
RENT or BUY
Open Sundays - Free Parking -
HEMPSTEAD
lY 9-5800
Detached, 7 rooms
Full l a s e m e n t
O v e r s i i e Plot
Excellent Location
Unique Opportunity
No Cash Down
Bring Deposit
$2500 Down
$990 Down
$395 Down
$400 Down
$650 Down
Clinton Hill Vic.
8 Fam, Brick
Gl Homes
Flatbush
Full Price $14,500
3 Fam. All Voc.
2 - 3 - 4 Families
2 Fam, Garage
Senil-dct, 12 mis vac, par- Dccflrntol, oil, 3 lovely bltchs 40 tremendous rmg, vacancies, rnyment as low »« $149
ST balli*. mod.
oil, polentlal money maker. monthly, closing; exp ncc.
quet, fln burnt, oil.
$295 Down
$1800 Down
277 NASSAU ROAD
JA 9-4400
No Money Down
Union St.
Legal Rooming House
E. Flatbush
President St.
Pork PI.
2 Fam, Garages
Moneymaker
4 Fam, Modern
fam, brownBtone, in IrtTnpMtry brk, 20 box rmg, va- Drlvcwii.T, vac, brk, mod, oil, Ifl lice iinlts pins beauty apt 2menilous
rms, varancirH, oil,
fine arra.
^ for owner, vac, dec.
cancies, oil.
mod ilirnout.
MA 3-3800
SO. O Z O N E PARK
$800 Down
$575 Down
5 R O O M Ranch, set back en
40x100
landscaped
plot,
in
beautiful sububran
Roosevelt.
Full basement, g a r a g e , 3 large
bedrooms, redecorated. $70 a
month pays all. Move right in.
NO CASH DOWN
135-19 ROCKAWAY BLVD
Open Sundays - Free Parking -
Linden Blvd. Vic.
Crown Hts. Vic.
Pork PI. Vic.
E. Pkway Vic.
2 Fam, Mod.
3 Fam, All Vac.
3 Fam, 17 Rms.
2 Fam, Playrm
Full price $10,9iTi0, all vacant, Full pri... « I 8 . 8 0 0 , brick, t s - T.ee rmfi, vacnnles, oil, cloHinK [.arjte rms, dec., 3 lovely kltchs,
canficM. oil. a bfaiity.
cxp. nec.
butliH, oil.
oil, moilern.
$9,990
NO CASH DOWN TO ALL
RENT W I T H ' O P T I O N TO
FULL PRICE $12,990
BUY
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Sundays
/
17 South Fronklin St.
JAMAICA
PM Including
Buys a House in Brooklyn
2 - F A M I L Y . first floor, 6 rooms
and bath, second vacant, sec*
ond floor 4 rooms and both,
rented f o r $144 a month. Detached on 60x100 plot, convenient t o
everything.
Take
over existing mortgage. $168
a month t o bank.
H U R R Y I
159-12 HILLSIDE AVE.
8:30
?oVIs $395 CASH DOWN
OFFICES READY TO
SERVE YOU!
Call For Appoinfmenf
SPRINGFIELD GDNS.
$13,500
to
ROOSEVELT
BETTER REALTY
No Money Down
1.
We have oved 500 choice homes to choose from as low as $395 Dn.
2.
3.
-4.
Call
DUMONT NE 8-3731 after 8 P M ^ 5 U PY 1-3857.
Visit DUMONT at 1215 Fulton St.. BftOOKLlTN, (at Bedford Ave.).
FREE PICK-UP SERVICE IN BROOKLYN.
DUMONT
ALL 4 OFFICES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
$1000 Down
NE 8-3731
FROM f : 3 0 A . M . T O 8:30 P.M.
r• IT MAY BE WRONG TO WAIT!
LET US DO THE "DIRTY WORK" i
^Pr
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
^iPr
^
Integrated
j^^^F'^'iP'^^^^^P''
WE CAN GET YOU A "CHAMPAGNE
ON A "BEER INCOME"
NO
CASH
G.
HOME"
I.
• BAISLEY PARK
6'/^ rooms, finished basement, Hollywood kitchen, garage, oil heat, very large rooms. Must sell fast!
$600
Down
—
$16,500
—
$95.29
a
month
pays
all.
• QUEENS VILLAGE
2-family, 5 large rooms down, 3 rooms up, modern,
garage, finished basement, many extras.
$1,500 Down —
$22,300 —
$124 a
month.
HOMEFINDERS,
Ltd.
Fleldstone M 9 5 0
192-05 LINDEN BLVD., ST. ALBANS
Belford
D. H a r t y ,
LONG ISLAND
D BUYS
ELD GDNS.
2-family. stucco
t. 4 rooms up, and
finished basement
, 3 kitchens. 2 full
heat, garage and
Jr..
Broker
i
i
i
i
^
r
•
•
t
Z
Thousands
Dollars
BEAUTIFUL
MODERN HOME!
168-04 Hillside Ave.. Jamaica
NO FINER TUDOR
HOME
MOLLIS
Luxurious brick ivsideiice. Large garden
plot 7 rms, modern kitchen, 2 tone
colored tile bath, finished basement.
Garage. $890 eaph down.
DETACHED, S^A large rooms
w i t h fireplace, extra lav., finished ottic, full basement, breakf a s t nook, 2 car garage, oil unit,
Extras. Top a r e a . C a l l t o see
this outstanding home t o - d a y .
FREEPORT
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS
baflement. G.T. no cash down.
$ 2 1 , 0 0 0
Oth»r
I
I
& 2 famify
Homes
HAZEL B. GRAY
168-33 LIBERTY AVE.
JAMAICA
AX 1-S858 . .9.
I
i
ROOSEVELT
IV 9-8814-8815
U8.I2 Hillside Avt. RE 9-7300
^ Krectiori: Take Southern State Parkway Ext. 19. Penln«uU Boulevird
K ' under tbe bridge to South Franklin Street.
^
«
NO CASH G1
$59.93 Per Month Pays Bank
R A N C H style, 6 rooms, o t t i c
space, full basement, enclosed
porch, 50x140, g a r a g e , oil unit,
Extras. $14,500. A New
Year
b a r g a l n l Don't w a i t .
Ol'EN T OATS A HERK
14 SOUTH FRANKLIN STREET. HEMPSTEAD, L. 1.
LONG ISLAND
HOMES
$9,990
EXCLUSIVE WITH
LIST ONLY!
LIST REALTY CORP.
KEW GARDENS HILLS|
Brick. 6 yrs old. 64 rms. » bedrms.
modern kitchen and ^^th Short ( fctanee from 8th Ave. Bubway. Only
$790 cash down.
INTEGRATED
BAISLEY PARK
G.I. SPECIAL
NO MONEY DOWN
rooms,
de.
3 lEDROOMS
with
enclosed SOLID BRICK, I
home, attic space,
porch, professionaSly decoroted tached
inside,
full
basement,
a t t i c 40x100 plot, full basement, enspoce, 2 car garage, 40x100 closed porch, garage, beautiplot. Many extras. Best Holiday ful surroundings.
Buy.
FREEPORT
STRIDE REALTY
^
For Sale
MILLER PLACE, LI. NORTH SHORE.
5'i acres, 1 mile liom Route 25A.
>riist fell, eickiiess. !fl0,000 cash. As•iHM on jM'operty.
OL 8-6824
^
G.I. NO CASH
rooms of •olid brUk!
2 full hath*, tliilslied basement and
extras with detached Karate.
Only $890 Down
SVJ
HO 4-7630
AX 7-8700 ^
^•AAAi^AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAi5
Farms & Acreage - N.Y.State
.ALBANY-SCHENECTADY COMMUTING
FAR^r. 4S liiway acres. Derp ponil. Dairy
bnvn, g-arase. Well kept 8 room home,
oil fiiniace, \iath, aluminum stormp.
$11,000. MORT AVIMI'LE, REALTOR.
Sloansville, N.Y.
H O LLIS
HEMPSTEAD & VICINITY
UrM
IK
MOLLIS
L O V K L Y ,
i
<
of
on Fine Homes
W i t h $50 d e p o i i t you eon
secur*
a
home
on
these
FORECLOSURES.
Homts
in
n o i l l t l
J T , Alban$
M I W U I I > and
M M - oil
—•
- - Hollls,
St.
sec^^
tion
of
9ueens. C a l l
Mr. ^
Weinberg and make an appt. M
Don't delay. S t a r t a t STRIDE ^
to-day.
faltar 7-4115
l-FAMILY, detached, brick and
stucco. 5 rooms and full bath
on main floor. 2 rooms and V2
bath on 2nd floor, oil heat, wood
burning greplace, 45x100 plot, 2
car garage, many extras, including air>comlition.
CONVENIENT
OFFICES AT
BRING $50 DEPOSIT
5av
RIVGRSIDB DHIVB, m * 2H prlvaU
apartmrata Interracial. FurnUhed TBa-
$ 3 2,0 0 0
INTEGRATED
BUY AT
STRIDE
=
135-30 R O C K A W A Y BLVD., SO. O Z O N E PARK
J A 9-5100
160-13 HILLSIDE AVE., J A M A I C A
OL 7 . 3 8 3 1
OL 7-1034
Forms & Acreage - Ulster Co. ATTRACTIVE DAIRY FARM. $27,600
complete. 35 head itock, 2 tiactorB, faiui
maciiluery, pickup truck, SiipliancfB InMAPI.E Hill Roscndale. 4 rooms trailer
cluded. 1U5 acres, alfalfa, brook. Pretty
buugalow luriiibhfcU on Thruway it
Kout* 82, ball a«re, $2,800. Eaity
modern 7 room home. 37 stbuohlons.
^
• 5 M o d e m Rooms
• Full Basement
terms.
Good income.
MORT WIMPLE, REALTOR. SloaciiviJls,
ROSENDALB en Main Street, 18 room*,
=
• 20.Ft l i v i n g Room
• Convenient t o Schools.
NY.
a-family houie, »11 iuipvti., Xuriiighed.
=
• N e w 60s H e o t
Shopping ft Subwoy
$7,600.
ROSENDALB Helsbts. building' lots 60x150
i
• ASK FOR 1-92$
leet, *250 each, terms.
JOHN
DELLAY, OWNER
Forms-Acreoges • Oronge Co.
143-01 HILLSIDE AVE.
= Rotendale,
Ulster Co., KY Tel. OL 8 67U
MONROE AREA
JAMAICA
^ ~FREE BOOKLET by U.S. Gov8 ROOM bi-level, IVi batbs, slick kitchen,
ernment
on
Social
Security.
Mall
farage, h.w. oil heat, large lot *i«h lake
=
^ib J^re. •]tf Tf«in Sutiiliin Blv4. 8(«tl«>B. Ol'KN If DAYS A WEEK =
rights. $18,BOO - »>1.700 dc»q incJiidt*
only. Leader, 97 Duane Street.
closing costs. S«» Kljnn-Mi-ve In. Inc..
New
York
7,
N.Y.
WasbiugiuuvUi*.
^TiHlintliiililHIiitliiiiHIHiiii AX 7.7900 Hlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli
1 E-S-S-E-X
1
Page Twelve
CIVIL
SERVICE
Engineering Aides
Souglit For City;
Salary $3,930
Promotion Exam For
Structure Maintainor
Positions OfYored
A promotion examination for the position of structure
maintainer—Group G with the New York City Transit Authority, has been opened for filing by the New York City D e partment of Personnel. The filing period for this $2.83 to
$3.15 per hour position will remain open until Feb. 21.
The New York City Department of Personnel is accepting applications for an opencompetitive examination for the title of engineering aide. The department will accept applications until February 21 and will tentatively give the exam May 8. The salary for this
grade 7 position will range annually from $3,750 to $4,830 but appointment is expected to
be made at the first increment level which is $3,930.
Minimum
requirements
are
that the applicant be graduated
Bridge and Tunnel
Sergeant Key Ans.
Candidates
protests
key
who
against
answers
16
to
dence
are
based.
error
until
their
February
the
in
evi-
which
such
protests
Claims
of
manifest
in key
answers
will n o t
'
February
These
January
apply
which
22
and
in
promotional
within
the
1, D ;
6, B ;
7, D ;
3. B ;
12. C ;
21, D ;
B;
A;
A, A ;
13, A ;
22, C ;
or
32,
C
D;
34, B ;
D;
5,
B;
10,
A;
14, B ;
15,
18, B ;
28, A ;
31,
35, C ;
19,
on
B;
23, A ;
24,
29, A ;
30,
Delete;
33,
36,
D;
37,
C;
38, B ;
39, B ;
40, D ;
41, B ;
42,
C;
C;
A;
B;
C;
43,
mechanical
course
designated
27, B ;
D;
a
study
given
9, A ;
17, C ;
20, D ;
25,
which
year's
opportunities
8, B ;
16, D ;
26, A;
requiring
and
or
satisfactory
The
a
in
a
college
from
school
drawing
engineering
choice questions on
science,
aptitude,
mathematics,
elementary
and
multiple
engineering,
Judgement
will
one ' given.
engineering
For
further information
and
level o r a a p p l i c a t i o n f o r m s write or a p p l y
aide
in
Is
re-
44,
45,
46,
47, C ; 48, A ; 49, C ; 5 0 , C .
person
to the
Department,
of
New
York
City
Personnel,
96
supervision. D u a n e St., New York,
7.
C;
64, D ;
O;
52,
65. A ;
69, D ;
73, A ;
C;
C;
Shoppers Service Guide
Help Wanted - Male
MOTELS
NEW YORK STATE vouchers accepted
year round. Beat accommodations —
THE T A X
CENTER
Continental breakfast.
SOUTHSHORE
MOTOR LODGE. INC., Dunkirk. N.Y.
133 East 47th St. (Lex.). N.Y.C.
NEEDS HELP
Full, part-time and e v e n i n g In Manhattan, Brooklyn, Lon? Island and
Rockland County branches. Theao are
permanent seasonal positions.
Write or call BOB BRENNER
PL 5-9;j34
TYPWRITER BARGAINS
Smllh-$17.60: Underwood-$22.60: others
Peurl Bros., 476 Smith, Bkn, TR 5-3094
CHRYSLER - FOR SALE
1058
CHRYSLER.
limousine.
custom
GHIA body; was chauffeur driven.
30,000 miles. Excellent condition Bargain. Murray Hill 6-5320.
Help Wanted - Male
PORTERS - PART TIME
75,
99. B ;
79, B ;
80,
REAL ESTATE Salesmen. Saleswomen,
part-time; full time. Top Commission,
plu bonus: will train. Sterling: Realty,
10 First Ave; Brentwood. N.Y. (518)
BR 3-S415.
83. C ;
91. C ;
95. B ;
Help Wanted - Male & Female
B;
D;
82. D ;
90, C ;
68,
72,
67. C ;
84,
B;
88, B ;
92. A ;
89.
100.
Appliance Services
recond. Refrl^s, Stoves,
C ; Sales 4t Service
Wash Machines, combo sinks. Guaranteed
98.
TRACT REFRIGERATION—CY. X-6900
B 140 St. & 1204 CastU Hills AT. BX
TRACT SEBVICINO C O E P .
93.
96. D ; , 97, D ;
O.
25
AddlRfi M a e h i M t
Typewriters
Mimeographs
Addressing Mackines
OuarantM*. Also Bcii««U, Kepain
ALL U N G U A i E S
/
TYPEWRITER C O .
OHelse* S-8086
l i e W. SSrd ST., NEW YOKE
N. T .
Feb.
Board
of
U.S.
Civil
Office
open
continuous
substitute
carrier
clftM
for
Ulster
pc-at
an
for
first
offices
substitute
and
in
Rockland,
is n o
offic-«i
nouncement
second
Sullivan
and
will
require-
certification
named
be
In
May
em-
ployee
who
em-
Is
permanently
helper
Group-D—for
months
proceeding
the test.
malntainer's
well
at least
chapter.
the
six
date
of
X
spect.
to
test,
subway,
lated
maintain.
alt«r
and
surface,
and
repair
Und
perform
any
appliaction
forms
to the
Department
of
and
w r i t e ' or
New
City
Personnel,
St., N e w Y o r k
7.
96
a
Service
Employees
earned
$150
machine
that
hours
spent
for
by
E.
Gaumer,
M.
They
Noles,
a
a
this
made
o f el<glblft» w h o r e s i d e w i t h i n
to
work
with
one
HITTNER RENT-A-CAR offer*
business minded individuals wltb
a smaU initial investment an opportnity to earn $25,000 or mora
annually. Experience is NOT
necessary. HrJTTNER RENT-ACAR will train you to operata
your OWN HlTa.'NER RENT-ACAR asfCncy. You will havs total
assistance to aid you for ecu. ti^iued growth,
I t you've always dreamed of
beingr your own boss, NOW maka
it a reality. "BE IN BUSINESS
WITH THE COMPANY IN THE
BUSINESS."
anfirst
a
Without
formerly
the
of
two
two employes. Now
worker
one
wri^^y,
FREE nOOKLBT by V. S. Govtrnment on Social Security. Mail
only.
Duane Street,
New York 1, N. Y.
DE 1-6060
KEl'RKMCXTATIVB
Metropoliton Life Insuronce Compoay, New York, N. Y.
takes
B A T E S
SPECIAL
DISCOUNTS
To All
CITY. STATE & FEDERAL
EMPLOYEES ON
1963 RAMBLERS
INVESTIGATE!
TRIAD RAMBLER
1366
39th
•<Bet. 1 3 t h
*
Street
14th
BROOKLYN
AT«I.)
UL 4-3100
^t-YlWoUTH
^^valunt
.
VOLVO
European UeUrerr
FLOOR
it
GRAND C O N C O U R S E a t 144 ST.. BX.
Open Evenings and
Saturdayt
•AAB
GOLDES
Horn* Phone: SL 6-0875
Off let Address 1780 • «7th St.. Bklyn. N.Y.
the
hours
EASY TERMS ARRANGED
^ • O
MURRAY
that
hour.
CMltYSL«lt
priced . „ T
el-ewUe,;?
• • • We'U nror.
'
of
rubber
device,
took
AUTOMOBILE
l you fun details. Inst call €r
DO obligatioi^ of ooiioa.^
and
both
machine
reusability
TO IgTH
.THEIDI '
the
delivery area of t h e p o s t o f f i c e
requeetlnff o e r t i f i o a t l o n , o r a r e
•mployed
at anch p o s t o f f i c e ;
Moond. of ellgtblea r M i d l i t g ebewhere In eaoh ooanty; and t h i r d ,
of all other eliglblee f i l i n g u n d e r
thU ano«uio«iment.
Rus-
61
CHEV
1295
for confidential
You can insurt younelf, your wife and your ddldrta^l^adbuild « cash redicmMit ftuul at lim
' M6t^opQ]itaa'flll0lrjFaIn^yB»-
Depart-
plumber,
nui-se,
designed
the
gloves.
HITTNER RENT-A-CAR la the
answer to filling the sap for
means of transportation on a
daily rental basia to buaineaamen, homeowners, professional
people, commercial and Industrial
firms, etc.
PLUS
more
half.
tests
HITTNRR RKNT-A-CAR, a leader In the vehicle rental busiiiMi,
Binco lOl."}, now has franeliisss
available in the greater NewYork and Metropolitan New Jersey area-i lor qualified person*
•eeking: financial succesa.
Cash at age 65
de-
reduces
Buffalo.
ENTER THE
LUCRATIVE AUTO
RENTAL BUSINESS
^
NOW!!
Call or write
Interview:
Civil
Ros-
Institute
T h e S t a t e Civil Service
apply
York
plumber
m e n t gave t h e cash g r a n t to
r e - sell
Information
4—A
Memorial
have
man
Eva
further
In person
the
the
elevated
work.
For
Assn.,
in- t h a n
Install,
Feb.
Park
veloping
T h e s t r u c t u r e m a i n t a i n e r Is r e sponsible
BUFFALO,
a n d a n u r s e , m e m b e r s of t h e
Now... family insuraim
Dutchess,
residence
however,
is
e x a m Is o p e n t o a n y
City
counties.
There
ment.
all
examination
6. T h e
CashAwardGiven
Two Buffalo Empse
of
examination
and
the
tentative
403 Lafa.vette St.. N.Y.C. S
OK 7-OSOO
announced
clerk
post
Orange,
has
of
The
Service
Examiners, at the New York
Post
date
Authority.
4—Ber-
n a r d Katz, executive secretary
the
only
HITTNER
RENT-A-CAR
SYSTEM. INC.
5 Counties Open
Clerk and Carrier
Post Office Jobs
POUGHKEEPSIE,
is o p e n
Business Opportunity
54,'D;
71, C ;
8 6 , B ; -87. A ;
84, B ;
E;
B;
77, B ; 78. D ;
81, C ;
85, B ;
53,
66, C ;
70,
74, D ;
76, D;
D;
A;
Transit
Duane
EXPERIENCED porters needed to work
various short hours to coincide with
your present job in Manhattan & Quoeus.
5 5 . A ; 56, A ; 5 7 , B ; 5 8 , D ; 5 9 ,
Call ST 0-5009. after 1:30.
B ; 6 0 . C ; 61, B ; 6 2 , D ; 6 3 , A ;
51,
examination
be structures
or
equivalent.
quired to. u n d e r close
A written test covering
department.
2. C ;
11, B ;
C;
work
knowledge
m e c h a n i c a l j skill, as a n a i d e t o a n e n g i n e e r
course was a requirement
f o r e x a m No. 9553 w h i c h w a s h e l d
for
routine
technical
the
was
were
a
a technical or science h i g h
be
to
which
ing experience or graduation
16.
answers
examination
perform
or science high ;some
o r o n e y e a r ' s study in a n engineer-
a c c e p t e d if p o s t m a r k e d a f t e r m i d night,
in
The
to employees in the New York City
p l o y e d i n t h e t i t l e of
drawing course was a requirement , architect and perform related work.
file
protests
a technical
school
tentative
together- with
upon
to
these
have
submit
writing,
wish
from
Tuescfay, February 5, 1 9 6 3
LEADER
CAItS
^
CIVIL
Tiiesffay, February 5, 196S
Vacation Work
Offered
Students And
Teachers
SERVICE
LEADER
Page Thirteen
Student Trainee Exam Offered
For Science, Engineering Posts
The Suffolk County Police Department Is offering posiThe second examination for the student trainee program offered to college students
tions for seasonal patrolmen, during the Christmas holiday
in the fields of science and engineering will be given March 14. These positions offer an
and the summer. The titles are ideally suited to the needs
opportunity for students to attend school and work to gain practical experience at the same
of college students and teachers who would normally not time. The positions pay up to $78 per week.
be working or attending school at these times.
The
student
trainee
program |
In
an
eligible
man
the
effort
list
to
establish
ah
seasonal
patrol-
positioas for Suffolk
County,
Civil
Service
Riverhead
ination
for
is
Commission
offering
to
an
determine
in
eligible
candidate
general
police
summer
and
would
work
the
perform
during
Christmas
the
holi-
d a y s . F i n a l f i l i n g d a t e is M a r c h
Minimum
New
York
Diploma
or
requirements
State
the
are
1.
a
Equivalency
equivalent
and
residence
year
in
for
Nassau
at
least
or
one
Suffolk
Counties.
exam-
candidates.
The
legal
The
examination
knowledge
of
to
ability,
learning
the
will
test
candidate
ability
to
good j u d g m e n t in t h e police
ability
to
others,
and
and
deal
For
further
application
ability
written
with
to
read
material.
Information
forms
write
aa
use
field,
effectively
the
understand
the
and
to
aims
to
and
well-qualified
seniors
recruit
students
high
training
throughout
pational
the
opportunities
sciences,
cultural
in
agri-
vary
among
basic
may
during the
to
attend
there
are
Tests
Students
consistent
alternate
the
> t a Sneolal Tprm, V.nrt IT of t h e Civil h e a d . o r c a l l P A r k 7 - 4 7 0 0 e x t . 2 4 9 .
Conrt of Ihe Ci(y of New York, hpld in
»nfl f o r llie Coiiniy o t New York, at t h e
Court House I h f r p o f , 111 Centre Street.
Jn t h e Horoueh of •Manhattan, City of
New York, on t h e 2.'trfl day of J a n u a r y ,
of s c h o o l
be
re-
the
held
3,
pro-
the
with
for
em-
specialized
apply
field
or
in
information
application
card,
and
Form
Federal .installations,
in-
next
summer.
Additional
their
vacation
summer
attendance a n d employ- 'for the examination
work
pro-
should
apply
by M a r c h
14,
regional
offices, or
Service
25,
placeboards
the
U.S.
Civil
Washington,
C.
Meihanka!
Draftsman;
Rapid Recruiting Plannetl
$6,240 *
For State Entrance Exam;
First Testing In March
r n E S E N T : HON. HAROLD BAER, Jinlge
of t h e Civil Court.
Jn the Alatter of the Applieation of
•MHRRAY J . SCHWARTZ, l-'or Leave to
Chansre hi« N a m e to MICHAEL JAMES
SCHWARTZ. — Order C h a n p i n r Niime.
Upon reaclinsr and m i n e t h e annexed
petition of MURRAY J . SCHWARTZ, duly
verified J a n u a r y 31, lOO.T, prayinR- f o r
leave to assume t h e n a m e of MTCH.^ET,
J A M E S SCHWARTZ in place ^nd stead
of his pre.sent n a m e and upon the anr e x e d consent of Morna R. Schwartz,
petitioner's wife, dated and duly acknowleds-ed J a n u a r y 17, jdOD; and the Court
lieing- satisfied t h a t the said petition is
t r u e and t h a t there is no rea.sonable ohJection to the ehanjre of n a m e proposed;
and it appearinjt tliat the petitioner was
b o m in the Rorbu^rh of Brooklyn. City
and Slate of New York on December 11,
102.3, as appears f r o m a certified copy of
"An important move toward further expediting of the State's recruitment and
Ihe certificate of b i r t h hereto annexed
bp'ritiir n u m b e r
examining practices is in the ofling," H. Eliot Kaplan, president of the State Civil Service
Now, on motion of Van Buren, Schreiber
A Kaplan, attorne.vs f o r the said petitioner, Commission, has announced.
Jt is
Mr. Kaplan revealed that plans are being completed for testing on a regional basis
ORDERED, t h a t the said MURRAY J .
SCHWARTZ be and h e hereby is authorized
for
entrance
level (grades 3 and 4) clerical positions. The first such examination—in
to assume t h e name of MICHAEL JAMES
SCHWARTZ on and a f t e r March 4 t h , 19«.'i,
March,
1963
will
be designed to fill State positions in Albany county only.
Tipon c o m p l y i n t with the provisoins of
Kaplan
pointed
o u t
t h a t
Article B of the Civil Riirhts L a w , n a m e l y :
Tliat this order l)e entered and the said
the
regional
test
will
lay
the i ? ^
"
^dded.
L E G A L NOTICE
petition,
well as the aforementioned
we
ao rv e„
our
anxious
t o mmaakkee
• ongent, tipon which it was srranted be
groundwork for f u r t h e r improveh
i
r
i
n
g
p
r
o
c
e
s
s
e
s
i
n
s
p
e
e
d
and
SERVIC-E
CONNECTIONS
filed within fpn ( 1 0 ) days f r o m the d a t e
m e n t s in rapid reciniitlng
methN C n S E S HOME BtniJDlNG No. lOR
hereof in t h e office of Ihe Clerk of thi«
e f f i c i e n c y c o m p a r a b l e t o t h o s e of
AND K E E N E R BTlILDlNfi No. 64
Court; and t h a t within t w e n t y (301 days
ods. A f t e r t h e regional list
has
MANHATTAN STATE H O S P I T A L
f r o m t h e dale of entr.v of this order t h e
private companies,
WARDS ISLAND, NEW YORK
b e e n established, it will be
an
petitoiner cause a copy thereof to be pubNOTICE T O B i m > E R «
lished at least once in Civil Service Leader,
"There
will
continue
to
be
o p e n r e g i s t e r , " t h a t is. i t will
Sealed Proposals f o r Service Connecllons,
and within f o r t y ( 4 0 ) days of the mak/iiB
of t h i s order proof of said publication by Nui*cs Home Building- No. 108 and Keener b e s u p p l e m e n t e d i n t h e f u t u r e b y m a n y k i n d s o f p o s i t i o n s f o r w h i c h
M a n h a t t a n State Hospital,
affidavit be filed with Ihe Clerk of this Buildine No.
natesting,
adding
suc- the traditional Statewide or
Court, and a f t e r such requirements are Wards Island, New York, in accordance f u r t h e r i n g
examination
would
be
complied with the said petitioner shall with Specification No. ITOfiSCE .nnd accoin- c e s s f u l c a n d i d a t e s t o t h e r e g i s t e r t i o n w i d e
on and a f t e r March 4th, lOfl.'l. be k n o w n panvinir drawinire will he received hy Henry
most suitable," he said.
by
the
name
of
MICHAEL
JAMES A. Cohen, Director, Bureau of Contracts. i n a c c o r d a n c e w i t h t h e i r r e s p e c SCHWARTZ, which h e is hereby authorized Department of P u b l i c Works. T l t h Floor, t i v e r a t i n R S .
T h e n e w s y s t e m is d e s i g n e d t o
Tlie Governor Alfred E, Smith State Office
to assume, and by no other name.
the
employment
of
•Ruildinp, Albany, N.Y.. nn hehalf of the
ENTER:
" O u r eventual goal." Mr. K a p - facilitate
Denartment o t Mental Hveiene until 2 : 0 0
KB.
applicants
a m a n y better qualified
J.C.C. P.M. Eastern Standard Time, on Wednes- l a n e x p l a i n e d , " i s t o p e r m i t
the
dav. Eebriiary 20, 1963, when fhey will be p e r s o n s e e k i n g a c l e r i c a l p o s i t i o n w h o w e r e f o r m e r l y l o s t t o
CITATION — T H E
PEOPLE
O F - T H E publicly opened and re,id.
during the
time
between
t o b e t e s t e d w h e n e v e r h e is a v a i l - S t a t e
S T A T E OB^ NEW YORK, By the Grace of
Ench proposal m u f t be made n p o n t h e
an
examination
God, Free and Independent.
able for employment. He
w o n ' t t h e h o l d i n g of
T o : BARBARA WILEY BACON, Successor form and submitte<1 In thp envelope provided
t h e r e f o r and shall be accompanied h a v e t o w a i t f o r o n e o f o u r p e r - a n d t h e u f i e o f t h e r e . s u i t l n g e l i g i Co-Trustee, BARBARA WILEY BACON,
SUSAN CIINNTNGHAM BACON, LINDA bv a certified check made payable t o Ihe
examination
to
be
a n - ble lists. A h o p e d f o r b y - p r o d u c t
ELIZABETH BACON, FRANCES HOWELL New York State Department of P u b l i c i o d i c
will b e
improved
efficiency
In
BACON. CYNTHIA BLAIR BACON, BLAIR Works in t h e a m o u n t stipulated in the n o u n c e d
and
held.
Itemized
Proposal,
no
a
g
u
a
r
a
n
t
y
t
h
a
t
Ihe
WILEY FISHWICK, beintr the persons inthe
testing
and
hiring
process
terested as creditore, legatees, devisees, bidder will enter into the contract If it be
"Now
that
State salaries
are
beneficiaries, distributees, or otherwise in aw.irded to h i m . T h e wprcificaiton n u m b e r
t h r o u g h r e d u c t i o n of p a p e r w o r k .
the tr\i8t under the last will and testa- must be written on the fi-ont of the en- c o m p a r a b l e t o t h o s e p a i d i n p r i m e n t of Channintr P. Wiley, deceased, who velope. T h e blank spaces in the proposal
T h e r e a r e n e a r l y 7,000 clerical
at the time of his death was a rcijiilent must be filled in and no c ^ a n e e shall be
LEOAL NOTICE
positions
in
State
agencies . at
of Chelsea, Aflantic County, New Jersey, made in the phraseolosry of Ihe proposal.
leaving personal property within the City, Proposals t h a t carry nnv omissions, eraa- File No. P.'!758, I960.—-CITATION.—THE
t h e e n t r a n c e level. A b o u t h a l f of
County and State of New York
uiTs, alterations or additions may be re- P E O P L E OF T H E STATE OF NEW YORK,
Send Greetinirs: jected as i n f o r m a l . The State reserves the By the Grace of God Free and Independent, t e s t s
are
in
Albany,
They
inUpon the petition of United St.\leB T r u s t r i r h t to reiect any or nil bids. Successful To Karl Ke^isler, E r n a Heil, K a t h n r i n a Heil,
Company of New York, a domestic cor- bidders will be required to f i v e a bond Reinhold Kes.sler, A n n a Stengel, Ludwip c l u d e s u c h t i t l e s a s c l e r k a c c o u n t
ratioii, with otlices and principal place ot
Senn. Wilhelm Senn, M a r i a Fettig:, Maria c l e r k , f i l e c l e r k , s t a t i s t i c s
clerk,
45 Wall Street, New York, conditioned for the f a i l h f u l p e r f o r m a n c e Mahlschnee,
Sofie Hommel, Maria Ke«sler,
of United States T r u s t of t h e conti*ct and a ocpai'ate bond f o r
and ' office
machine
operator.
Karl
Dtibelt,
AValter
Debelt.
Wilhelm
Mohr,
t
h
e
p
a
y
m
e
n
t
of
laborers
and
materialmen,
w York and W. Hardin
permanent
lUtors of the Will ot e.ach bond in t h e sum of 100'"-. of the Karl F u n k , Osk.ir Kessler; Friedrich Mohr, N o r m a l l y 5 0 0 t o 8 0 0
^ull. dece."tficd, you and a m o u n t of t h e contract. D-awines and whose place of residence. If living, is un- a p p o i n t m e n t s
are
made
in
Alhereby cited to show «i>cciflcation may be ex.-imined free ot known and cannot a f t e r diiigrent inMniiy he
ascertained and, if dead, to his heirs at b a n y e a c h y e a r t o f i l l p o s i t i o n s
urrofrate's Court of New ch.irpe a t the followinir offices:
law,
next
of
kin,
distributees,
leeal
reprea t the Hall of Records
Stale Architect, 270 roaB4lway, New
sentatives, asaipns, devisees, legatees and i n t h e s e t i t l e s .
New York, on the 3llth York. New York.
succeesors in interest, who and whose
lilO.'l. at ten o'clock in
State Architect. 4th Floor, 488 Broad- names and places ot residence are unKaplan
r e v e a l e d
that
the
' t l i a t day, why tiie account wav, Albany 7, New York.
k n o w n and cannot a f t e r due diliifenco be
j t United States T r u s t ComMarch.
District Supervisor of Buildine Cnnstrnc- ascertained: and M a r t h a Detjen-Lane, non\i- l i s t s r e s u l t i n g f r o m t h e
I'ork and W. Hardie Sliepard, flon. State Otflre Buildinp. H.'l.l K. Wash
nated as executrix in the propouu'lfd 1 9 6 3
the Will of Corinne How-ll
examinations
will
replace
p a p e r writing bearing date September 27,
Trustee, and of United in^rton Street. Syracuse, New York.
District Supervisor of BuiMlner Construc- 1053, whose place ot residence, if livinir. e x i s t i n g l i s t s f o r S t a t e
positions
Tiet Company of New York, as
inder the I.ast Will and T e s t a m e n t tion, Genfsee Valley Repionnl M a r k e t , 000 Is xinknown and cannot a f t e r due diliireiice I n A l b a n y C o u n t y e s t a b l i s h e d
as
Inniiitr P. Wiley, f r o m the 4lli day Jef'erson Road, Rochf^ter "^.T. New York be ascertained. YOU A R E HEREBY CITKD
District Fnirineer, 65 Court Street, B u f - TO SHOW CAUSE b e f o r e the S u r r o K a l e s a r e s u l t o f e x a m i n a t i o n s h e l d I n
f o v e m b c r , IIUIV to Ihe 3 7 t h day ot
;'mbcr, lHO'i should not bo judicially falo. New York.
Court, New York County, at Room .'04
Directi^r,
Manhattan
"tale
Hospital, in the Hail ot Records In the County of M a r c h , 1 9 6 1 . T h o s e w i s h i n g t o b e
and allowed: why I'uited Slates
T r u s t Coiiiiiaiiy of New York, tlie E s t a t e Wards Island
New York.
New Y o r k . New York, on March 5, l!>ii;i. e l i g i b l e
for
such
appointments
of Corinne Howell Bull, deceased, and
Drawinps and specifications, excepliny t h e at 1 0 : 0 0 A.M., wliy a certain writing <lated
United Stales T r u s t Company ot New York State Architect's Standard Specifications, September 27, lOft.'l, which h a s been of- n e x t
spring
should
take
the
and W. Hardrti Shepard, as E x e c u t o w of may be obtained by call'nsr at Hie Bureau fered f o r i)roliate by Ihe P u b l i c .^dniinis.t h e Will of Corinne Howell Bull, deceaKe4l, of Contracts (Branch Ofllce). Department t r a t o r ot the County of New York, hav- M a r c h e x a m i n a t i o n , h e s a i d C u r should not be diKchurged f r o m all f u r l i i e r of P u b l i c Works, 4lh Floor, Arcade Build- ing his otliceti in the Hall ot Records,
lists
for locations
outside
liability, responsibility and accountability ine, I 8 l h Floor, 170 Bio.-idway New York, .SI Chambers Street, New York 7, N.Y., r e n t
fts to all m a t t e r s ertibraoed in saiil accoiinl; N.Y.. and by niaklnc a ilcposil of $.'10.00 should not be probated a C t h e last Will A l b a n y
County
will
remain
in
and why such other and f u r t h e r relief f o r each set, or by niailinir such deposit and Testament, relating to real and pei^on»H the Court may d e e m , j u s t and proper
held
al p r o p e r t y , of Anna Thanim, Deceised. e f f e c t u n t i l n e w t e s t s a r e
to
the
Albany
address.
• hould not be irranted.
Cliecks shall be made pavable to t h e w h o was at the time ot h e r d e a t h a resi- f o r t h e s e a r e a s .
IN TKST1.MONY WHEREOF, we h a v e
dent ot (too West l « 2 n d Street, in t h e
cauiied the seal o t the SurroKute'i Court Slate D e p a r t m e n t of Pulilic Works. Pr >po- County ot New York, New York, and
"This depaiture from
convensal
M.mks and envelopes will be t u r n pf the said County of New York to b«
why I>ettera ot Administration c.t.a. t-hould
islie,! w i t h o u t charge.
h e r e u n t o atlixcd.
examining
approaches
is
n o t bu issued thereon to t h e P u b l i c .Ki\- t i o n a l
The
Stale
A
r
c
h
i
t
e
c
f
s
Standard
Specl(Seal)
WITNESS, Hon. S. SAMUEL Dl
miniatrator ot the County of New York.
s i m i l a r t o t h e a d o p t i o n of
conF.M.CO, a Siirroirale ot our said flr:i'i.ins of J a n u a r y 2, 1f)«0, are reouired
County, at the County of New for this -project and may be purchased
Dated, Attested and Sealed, J a n u a r y 21, t i n u o u s r e c r u i t i n g a n d t e s t i n g I n
York t h e 8th day of J a n u a r y , from the Bureau of Finance, Dep.-ii Imeiit
in the year of our Loril one of Public Works, 14lh Floor. The Oov- 1003.
certain
specialized
fields
which
HON. S. SAMUEL DI FAI-CO.
thoii«und nine h u n d m l and tixly- e n i n r Alfred E. Smith Stale Olllce ftuildinsr,
proven
highly
successful,"
iliM.)
Surrogate. New York C o u n t j h a s
tliife.
Albany. N Y.. f o r the snni o t $5.00.
fbllip A.
DoiiuImih.
I.lT:tnpc
s / l ' H l L I P A. DONAHUE
Kaplan
said.
"In
1961,
and
Clrrk.
DA'lEU: Jiii'uary 23. lUOS
C k i k of the burroviitt: « Court
many
clvll-servioe
Commission,
D,
th«
5000-AB.
M a r c h a r e available f r o m college
No- m e n t offices, post offices,
college
school iterested
asfor
and
high school studies. Applicants
periods [grams
next
may
consideration
of c i v i l - s e r v i c e e x a m l n e i - s a t
must
in
application
greatest^
Jobs
occu-
30.
school
full
under
August
is
and
Earliest
sure
Application Advice
ployment
academic
will
27,
part
school.
grades
options
participate:
regular
employed
examination
all
April
programs
agencies,
ways
be
attending
for
gram.
30,
may
written
vember
work-study
during
IflO.I.
of
physical
and
may
Center,
Most
sciences.
three
Students
are
engineering,
Although
the~ t i m e
Com- year
country.
work
County
or
while
The
and
mission,
time
quii-ed
vacation,
NOTICE
ment,
opportunities
River-
S u f f o l k C o u n t y Civil Service
I-KGAL
school
to be offered by Federal' agencies
the
for
college
A New York State civil
service examination for principal draftsman (mechanical)
will be held March 23. Applications will be accepted until
February 18.
The
lic
State
Works
Department
position
year
to
nual
increases
is
start
one
and
others
and
working
cal
engineering
or
more
ciate
of
a
in
or
college
years'
heating,
mechanical
and
either
drafting
field,
and
for
tech-
two
course
degree
exasso-
engineering
credit
bachelor's
or
of
any
Appli-
on
related
degree
nology,
mechani-'
three
projects,
in
drawings
for
projects.
years
perience
now
(mechani-
revise
have
engineering
There
Albany
experience
plumbing,
two
$7,590.
plans
must
a
an-
anticipated.
and
drafting
five
draftsmen
make
cants
has
in
ai'e
Principal
cal)
to
Pub-
$6,240
and
opening
of
pays
years
leading
in
to
engineering
architecture.
Applications
formation
Recruitment
State
and
may
additional
be
obtained
Unit
45,
E>epartment
ice, T h e
State
of
infrom
New
York
Civil
Serv-
Campus,
Albany
1.
Robert Gay Promoted
By Emigrant Bank
John
the
T.
Madden,
Board
of
chairman
Emigrant
Savings Bank has announced
R o b e r t A. G a y h a s b e e n
to
executive
elected
of
a
thgt
promoted
vice-president
m e m b e r ^of
Ti-ustees
of
the
and
the
Board
Bank.
Mr. Gay became associated
the
bank
came
1939. I n
personnel
1949,
assistant
was
in
in
and
trative
vice
•SO f a r
in
resulted
qf
the
to
meet
in
vice-president.
Hp
to
In
vice-president
1961 t o
adminis-
president.
this
new
process
appointments
better
the
of
the
older
more
qualified
candidates
needs
the
of
service t h a n were possible
tratlitlonal
recruitment
be-
and
1962,
in
with
1947 h e
officer
advanced
1952
of
Industrial
and
still
preserving
our
competitive
State
through
methods
selection,
the
of
while
principle
examination
of
sys-
tem."
Announcements
for
regional
examination
sued
February
scribe
in
the
cations.
date
for
the
Albany
will
be
and
will
filing
ispre-
appli-
CIVIL
Pmfft FourteeA
By CHARLES LAMB
(The views expressed in tliis colamn are those of the writer and
do not necessarily constitute the views of this newspaper or of any
orffanization).
News and Notes
SERVICE
LEADER
CSEA Calls For MENTAL HYGIENE MEMO
Meeting With
Levitt, Hurd
By WILLIAM ROSSITER
CSEA Mental Hygiene Representative
(The views expressed In this column are those of the writer and
do not necessarily constitute the views of this newspaper or of any
organization).
A MOVEMENT has been started to seek reallocation and
(Continued from Pagre 3)
reclassification of institutional clerical employees to compensldize
the state by advancing their
sate them for working 40-hours a week instead of the 371/2hour week enjoyed by their counterpart i)n central office pay- own funds while In travel status
on official state business and
roll—more information on this later.
then wait sometimes considerable
Uniform Supervisors Association of the N. Y. State De- periods before being reimbursed."
partment of Correction will meet with Commissioner Paul D.
In calling for provisions for
McGinnis on February 19 and 20 in Albany.
better commercial lodging, Feily
IF YOU WERE employed prior to 1943 you can figure your stated that, "Interpretation of
annuity portion of your retirement by using the following the Comptroller's rules and regtable. 55 years of age—Men $83. Women $75.—60 years of age ulations should be liberal to
—Men $96.—Women $ 8 5 . - 6 5 years of age Men $113.—Women permit traveling employees to
—$99.—70 years of age—Men $138.—Women $119. You would have the qualitx of lodging communsurate with their Identificamultiply these amounts by thousand dollar units you have on
tion as representative of our
deposit in the Retirement System.
Empire State, On many occasions,
TO DATE, 2,457 measures have been introduced in the employees who represent our
Assembly and 1,604-introduced in the Senate. All CSEA meas- state say they have been forced
to lodge in facilities considerably
ures have been introduced.
DEPUTY SHERIFFS in New York City now receive same inferior to those with whom they
salaries as City correction officers, minimum $6180; maxi- are doing business in order to
comply with our rules and regmum $7630.
ulations. In many cases these emRECRUITMENT problem at Sing Sing and Westfield will
ployees pay the difference out of
surely increase with the passage of a bill by Senator Thomas their own poclcet.
J. Mackell to exempt New York City Correction custodial emIn requesting the joint meeting
ployees from the provisions of the State Public Officers Law to discuss the CSEA recommenrequiring them to live in New York City.
dations In detail and to attain
THE BILL WILL permit these employees to reside in the suggested improvements, Feily
Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester and Rockland Counties. When said, "There Is ample time for
is New York State going to realize that employment in the determination of any necessary
correctional field is in a competitive market and salaries and appropriations to be carried in
fringe benefits for State correction officers must be brought the supplemental budget to underinto line if they expect to obtain and retain qualified per- write the cost of the improvements sought."
sonnel. Candidates for this type position certainly will be
attracted to City correction when a spread of some 26''' exists
between their salaries.
A 2-WAY RADIO in operation at the State Prison in Utah
was seized in a raid by prison officers. It was reported that
the equipment was probably brought in by employees who were
not familiar with the parts or what they were to be used for
Assistant Attorney General Alin the radio class.
fred H. Sarno, newly-elected presTHE LATE JACK Solod's name is being proposed by Wood- ident of the Columbian Associabourne Correctional Institution through the Southern Con- jtion of the State Civil Sei-vice
ference, CSEA, to the Special Plaque Committee, for Inclusion j Employees within The Metropoliof his name on the plaque at CSEA Headquarters. This plaque j tan Area, was recently installed In
contains many names of former dedicated Civil Service Em- I his new office by Judge Carmine
ployees and Jack's name is certainly deserving of such an A. Ventiera, at ceremonies held
in the State building at 80 Centre
honored place.
Street. New York City.
CIVIL SERVICE employment many years ago could boast
The new officers of the Assoproudly of the benefits their employees received, not in ciation, In addition to Sarno
salaries mind you, but in benefits that did not necessarily are: first vice-president, Albert
reflect in the state budget. Many corporations now supple- D'Antoni; second vice-president,
ment their employees' annual salaries with bonuses. They also Josephine Bennett; third viceDomenic
DeRicco;
have excellent hours, vacations, sick time, time and one half president,
or double time for overtime, uniform allowances and even treasurer, Ilario Cella; recording
have redress under the New York State Labor Law to protect secretary, Mary Corchia; coiTethem In many other areas. As an example the "Readers sponding secretary. Viola Dee.
and chairman of the Board of
Digest" magazine granted all their employees a bonus of 15""
Directors, Frank V. Votto.
of their annual salary. This was the 32nd annual bonus.
The new directors are: Joseph
THE NEW STATE University expansion plan will cost Alleva; Anthiny Giusto; Antionmore than one billion dollars. The newly created State Uni- ette Infortunio; Pasquale Longversity Construction Fund will construct the facilities with arzo; James Moretti; Angela
money borrowed through the State Housing Finance Agency Rossi; Attillio Spinelli, and Fred
and if necessary from the State Employees Retirement System. Vieni.
Sarno Installed
As President Of
Columbia Assoc.
Valentine Dance
To Feature Busy
Feb. At Bklyn State
The Brooklyn State Hospital
chapter of the Civil Service
Employees Association will
hold three Important events
during the month of February. The chapter will hold
Feb. 7 its first general memtorshlp meeting at the Assemto, Jiall at 4 p.m.
'so the chapter will hold on
it 15 at 9 p.m. the Valentine's
iC9 In th9 Assembly hall. Music
be provided throughout the
^hlng.and all members are in^'d to attend.
Ibert Traynor, membership
committee chairman, has announced that the chapter will
open its annual membership drive
dui-ing the month of Feb. Ail
members are ui'ged to give this
committee full support.
Mi-s. Ingebourg Brennen, who
was head nurse at the hospital for
many years, recently died. Dr.
Theodore P. Goldstein recently
lost his brother. Dr. Paul Tarantola, recently lost his sister. Mrs.
Sarah Harris's father recently
died. The chapter would liice to
extend its deepest sympathy to tiie
relatives and friends of tiiese
people.
Walter J. Lynch has been appointed to tlie position of busrness officer of the hospital.
As a part of its charity projects for the year, the chapter
has installed a television set in
the sick bay of tiie hospital.
TiiesfTar, Feliruary 5, 1 9 6 3
Delegates to the Grand Council
are: Josephine Bennett, Albert D'Aantoni; Anthony DeRosa; Pasquale Longarzo s^nd Alfred H.
Sarno.
Alternate delegates are: P. Vincent Landi; James P:-inciotta;
Joseph Mastrongelo; Alex. J.
Severi and Attillio Spinelli.
Lt. Mario Biaggi, president of
the Grand Council of Columbia
Associations in Civil Service, presented a plaque to the outgoing
president, Pasquale Longarzo for
"dedicated services" to the asciation.
Walker Named
BUFFALO. Feb 4 — Raymond
L. Walker, of East Bethany, is
the 1963 chairman of the Thruway
Autliorlty Committee of the Civil
Service Employees-Association. He
was appointed by .Joseph P. Feily,
CSEA president.
The MHEA Meeting
THE WINTER meeting of the Mental Hygiene Association
was held on January 2.3, at the Wellington-Hotel, Albany.
Representatives from most of the State's mental Institutions
were present.
DELEGATES busied themselves In the morning contacting
legislators re legislation and other programs affecting institutional employees.
DR. PAUL Hoch, 'commissioner of the New York State
Department of Mental Hygiene, was principal speaker at the
luncheon. Mrs. Hoch also attended. Dr. Hoch devoted most of
his speech to the Department's recently adopted "Master
Plan" re mental hygiene facilities, the progress made thus far,
the work and plans ahead. Some of which consists of: retreatment of chronically ill mental patients, establTshment of more
units in institutions for treating alcoholics, narcotic addicts,
emotionally disturbed children, active and increasing psychiatric services In the community, establishment of a research
center at Staten Island and approval by Governor Rockefeller
of the new program i o r retardees. On decentralization. Dr.
Hoch said "Pilgrim State Hospital (the State's largest mental
hospital) will ultimately wind up as six individual hospitals."
OTHER SPEAKERS Were: Issac Hungerford, administrative director, New York State Retirement System; Joseph F.
Feily, president, CSEA; Charles Lamb, 4th vice president,
CSEA; William Blom, director of research, CSEA; Anna Bessette, mentall hygiene represjentative, CSEA; and this writer.
Emil Bollman was toastmaster and Babs Slazenger, social
chairman, in charge of arrangements. John O'Brien, president, M.H.E.A. thanked all who attended.
THE BUSINESS meeting was held in the afternoon. In
addition to committee reports and other business, considerable
time was spent in voicing opposition to the Department's recent order forcing the liquidation of days in excess of four by
March 31, 1963 (or loss of same).
APPROVAL WAS given to Investigate the possibility of
Increasing accumulation of pass days up to 15 or 20 days and
that time to use up large excesses of credits be increased from
6 to 12 months. Also approved was a motion for the payment
of overtime credits up to 50 days. A financial hardship on the
State, a little possibly, but how about the work hardship on
the individual who because of a shortage of personnel worked
this overtime so that services could continue satisfactorily.
MANY INSTITUTIONS permit little or no pass time or
overtime credits to accumulate and many representatives were
shocked when they heard that in some institutions this has
been the policy for a long time. Something is wrong in Denmark when employees are permitted to accumulate 75 to 100
days of pass and overtime credits, on one hand, and then are
told to speedily use up these credits and that payment of overtime is mostly out of the question. This business poses many
questions—the anwers to which will require investigation and
study.
CSEAProtestsExam
Senior Praised
(Continued from Page 3)
didates had their scores lowered
and the others received higiier
revised scores.
"The Commission directed that
all candidates be re-rated on these
questions, their scores recpmputed
and the list revised in accordance
with the revised scoresr" he said.
It was the rerating and the
subsequent procedure that led to
the complaints received by the
Association.
It was the re-rating and the
said, "We feel that a more careful
review of tlie contents of examinations should be made to prevent
this sort of^ thing In the future.
We are not against deletion of
improper contents, buf feel that
a greater effort should be made
to delete this material before the
examination is given."
Feily said further, "a more
careful review of examination
contents should be made before
they are given because the confidence of the public, generally,
in tile use of competitive written
examWiations, is not enhanced by
situations such as this."
(Continued from Page 3)
and be assigned to other bureaus^
and offices of the Board.
Interests Agree
Colonel Senior acknc
Costa's letter by staj
"Board Staff ant;
been in full agree
best interests of all^
are Identical with
citizenry of our great^
favorable acknowledgr
efforts to bring about'
comprehensible plan for er
advancement and betterment
be an impetus to securing furtl
improvements."
"I shall continue jto welcome
any constructive advices your organization may have to offer."
"To the members of your cliapter, the executive council and you,
I extend deep gratitude along
with the assurance of redoubled
efforts."
FREE BOOKLET by U. S. Gorernment on Social Security. Mail
only. Leader, 97 Uuane Street,
New York 7, N. T.
Tueiday, February 5, 1963
CIVIL
SERVICE
L E A D E R
Paffr Fifleen
STOP WORRYING ABOUT No Transit Worries
YOUR CIVIL SERVICE TEST In Campus Move—
PASS HIGH
the EASY
ARCO WAY
Apprentice 4th Class Mechanic
$3.00
I
Civil Service Arithmetic & Vocabulary
$2.00
Civil Engineer
$4.00
Civil Service Handbook
$100
Cashier
$3.00
(New York City)
Claim Examiner Unemployment Insurance
$4.00
Clerk G.S. 1-4
$3.00
Clerk N.Y.C
$3.00
Clerk Senior & Supervising
$4.00
Court Attendant
$4.00
Employment lnt»»rviewer
$4.00
Federal Serv?r«» Entrance Examinotions
$4.00
Fireman (F.D.)
$4.00
Foreman
$4-00
High School Dioloma Test .
.$4.00
Home Studv Course for Civil Service Jobs
s
$4.^5
Insurance Agent & Broker
$4.00
Janitor Custodian
$3 00
Maintanance Man
$3 00
Motor Vehicle License Examiner
$4.00
Notary Public
$2.50
Parole Officer
$4.00
Patrolman
$400
Personnel Examiner
$5.00
Postal Clerk Carrier
$3.00
Real Estate Broker
'...$3.50
School Crossing Guard
$3.00
Senior File Clerk
$4.00
Social Investigator
$4.00
Social Worker
$4.00
Senior Clerk N.Y.C
$4.00
State Trooper
$4.00
Stationary Engineer & Fireman
$4.00
Stenotypist (N.Y.S.)
$3.00
Stenotypist (G.S. 1-7)
$3.00
^tengrapher G.S. 3-4
$4.00
tone Operator
$3.00
Spelling and Grammar
$1.50
You Will Receive an Invaluable
New Arco "Outline Chart of
New York City Government."
With Every N.Y.C. Arco Boole—
\ ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPON
45c for 24 hour tpiciAl delivery
C.O.D.'» 30c e i i r *
LEADER BOOK STORE
97 Duane St.. Now York 7. N. Y.
PUasa tend ma
coplat of book* ckockMl • b o v * .
I anclott check or monay ordar for
•
*
ALBANY, Feb. 4—Despite the state's relocation plan t h a t
will transfer some twelve t h o u s a n d workers from downtown
o f f i c e sp^ce to t h e new 400-acre S t a t e Campus by September
of 1964, there appears to be n o Immediate transportation
problem for employees going to a n d from their jobs via
public vehicles.
This was the finding of a, recent inspection made by the Civil to set up a tentative program to
Service Employees Association b submitted and accepted. Mr.
; after a number of workers af- Hennessey thanked the Social
jfected by the move contacted the Committee and all the delegates
j Association expressing their con- for helping to make the ChristI cern about bus transportation to mas Party one of the largest ever
• the Campus when the transfer is held by the Buffalo Chapter. Over
complete.
250
members
attended
this
The CSEA inspection-revealed function.
The place and time of the next
that the State has a contract
with the United Traction Com- meeting for February will be anpany of Albany to fui-nish a nounced later.
minimum number of buses per
day, depending on the estimated
number of users. At the present
Quigley Named
time, the contract which was esALBANY, Feb. 4—Former Retablished by the Division of
Standards and Purchase several publican Assemblyman Robert M.
years ago and has been kept in Quigley of Ontario County has
force 4>y the Office of General been named an assistant counsel
Services, provides for 42 trips to Lt. Gov. Malcolm Wilson. He
daily. However, it has been es- will receive $6,000 a year for
timated that there are actually parttime services. Mr. Quigley
between 40 and 50 buses per day lost a primary battle for the
serving the Campus, depending on Republican nomination for Congress last fall.
the expected demand.
Addreu
.
Stafe.
Be tura to includa 3 %
Salai Ta«
The Health Insurance Plan of
Greater New York <HIP) now
provides certain applicances on
loan to subscribers. There »is no
charge to the patient for this new
service.
The medical groups affiliated
with HIP will make available
such items as crutches, wheelchairs, walkers and canes when
ordered by an HIP physician.
The medical groups may require a small deposit to assure
jthe return of the appliances. The
plan will study its experience in
the use of the appliances to
determine whether it is feasible
to proyide other such physical
aids at a later date.
Earn Your
High School
Equivalency
Diploma
for cfvil service
for personal satisfaction
Class Tues. A Thnrs. at 6:30
Write or Phone for Information
Eastern School AL 4-5029
721 Broadway N.V. 3 (at 8 St.)
Pleaae writ* me fre« about the HIrb
School EquiTAlencjr cJaaa.
Name
Although at present, the transAddress
TRACTOR • TRAILER
portation service appears to be
Boro
PZ.,.1.3
& TRUCKS
adequate, the Association plans
Available For Road Tests.
$20
to continue its surveillance of
EV 5-8526
the situation, if needed, because
City Exam Coining Soon For
of the l?irge number of workers
to be affected by the move in
future months.
PriDtinr olTerH yon oareer ap|)or(unI(lP!t,
First to enter the new quarters
Security, (Jooil I'ay or
$3,500 to $4,580
were the Department of Taxation
Vaiir Own Kiisiness.
and Finance administrative ofJOB TRAINING
IN
INTENSIVE COUflSE
fices and miscellaneous bureau.
COMPLETE
PREPARATION
• PRINTING
• LINOTYPE
Their move started December 22.
• OFFSET L I T H O G R A P H Y
Class Meets Wed. 6:30-8:30
• MULTILITH
• SILK SCREEN
It's expected that more than
Beginning: Feb. 27
FRKK l'I,.\tK.MKNT SKKVICE
4,000 workers will be relocated
DAY OR KVE. CLASHES STAKTING
Wi-ite or p h o n e f o r i n f o n n a l i o n
to the Campus site during the
next three months.
SCHOOLS
E a s t e r n School
AL 4-5029
The next move, scheduled for
OF
721 Broailway, N. Y. 3. (iirar « St.)
Februray 1, will Involve some
Please write me, Jree, a b o u t t h e
Under the Supervision of N. Y.
1400 Public Works employees,
CLKRK course.
STATE—EDUCATION
DEI'AIITMENT
followed by a Feb. 15 move of an
8 8 W E S T B R O A D W A Y , N . Y.
Name
(Cor. Chambers St. Sta. Nr. Oily H a l l )
additional 1200 workers from the
A L L SUBV^^AYS AT OUR DOORS
Address
same Department.
Telephone—WO 2-4330
Boro
PZ...L2
Herman Spector, District SuNEW JERSEY BR.^NOH
214 MARKET .STKEET, NEWARK
pervisor of Motor Vehicles, spoke
Visitoi-8 Welcome 0 A.M. to 9 P.M.
to the Buffalo Chapter, C.S.E.A.
Civil Service Coaching
at their dinner meeting held on
COMMERCIAL
City, State, F«J & Promotion Exams
Wednesday, January 16th at MacJr Jk Asst Civil, M u h . Klei-t £ n »
DRIVER TRAINING
NAVV I'ARiyAl'I'KENTK'E
Doel's Restaurant.
TRACTOR - T R A I L K R AND TRUCK
ClaiiNes Days, EvenineH. Satrdays
A L L CLASSES
His topic on "Highway Safety"
ELECTRICAL INNI'ECTOKN
Road Test Vehicle Aavailable.
Monday & Thumduy « : l f t to 0:1.% PM
was studded with alarming staIiistructort PAUL HEINKICH E S
Driver Training Institute
PoHtal Clerii-Carrier. City ( i r r k
tistics on both the nun;ber of acN.Y.C.
GL 2-0100
Federal Entrance Examinations
cidents and deaths occuring on
H.S. EQUIVALENCY DIPLO.MA
Supt
of Constretion
Ener
the highways of the Nation and
CuKtodian Engr
stationary Fireman
New York State. Of Interest to
Math, Arith, Alg, Oeoni, XriK, Physics
LicenKe Stat, RefriK, RIcrtr'n Portable
the group were such facts as:
ClatiseH Days, EvenlnKS, Saturdays
driver improvement clinics' and
MONDELL
INSTITUTE
this department's all out drive in
S30 W 41st St. (Time Hg) H I
If jroa are over
you cun nee u re
the promotion of safety through
1 5 4 W 1 4 8 t (cor 7th Ave) CH :)-:i87e
• HIkIi Hcbool Diploma! Acceptcil
Over 5 0 yra trainins Civ 8er Pooitions
for Civil
Service position. Our
driver education, distribution of
course will prepare you in a short
safety literature to local papers
Ume—outstaiuliiiK faculty—low rates
—call Mr. Jerome a t KI !i-SUOO.
and the showing of films to safety
FREE BOOKLET by U.S. Govcommunity groups.
M O N R O E S C H O O L OF B U S I N E S S
ernment on Social Security. Mall
President John J. Hennessey
E. Tremont & Boston Rd. Bronx
only. Leader, 97 Duane Street,
urged all of his committee chairKt 2.56P0
New York 7, N.Y.
men to work with their delegates
assigned to them on promoting
Interest in the organization. He
pointed out that this past year
has shown a marked increased d
IttHtMCUtt (tCUUUUt
persons attending the monthly
meetings and participating In the
social functions. It is Mr. Hen- MONROE S C H O O U - I B M COURSES SpTR^kTlS^N
VICE IBM TESTS. (Approved for Vets.), switchboard, typinr, NCR Bookkeepinv
nessey's belief that this can be macbine,
H.S. £<iuivalency, English for Voreign born. Med. Legal and S|ianii>h seeretaria).
Day uitl Eve Clatises. East Tremont Ave., Bostoa Road, Bronx. Kl 2-5(}00.
nurtmed by all Individual delegates becoming active and workSPECIAL IBM EASTER OFFER—Complete fl Weeks
IBM Key Punch Course.— (Reg. $ 6 . U 0 ) — H 5 . 0 0 —
ing closely with committee chair(Supplies $ 5 . 0 0 ) — S a t u r d a y s , only Ironi 1 to 6 p m.
Class UegiiiH Sat., Marih Itl, ends Hat., April 20. li>«8
men.
—College Typing and Spelling inilukive. Knroli now—>
The Chapter is busily planning
COMBINATION BUSINESS SCHOOL, 130 West 186tb
their program for the rest of the St.. UN 4-3170. Send $a.00 Mor Class Refiervalion.
year and Mrs. Maiv Gormley.
SHOPPING FOR LAND OR HOMES
Social Chairman, is meeting with
her committee this coming week
LOOK AT PAGE 11 FOR LISTINGS
$$$ EARN MORE $$$
CLERK
MANHATTAN
PRINTING
///(?// smol
DIPLOMA
SCHOOL DIRECTORY
IBM
Name .
City
Inspection Shows
Medical Aid Loan
Service New O f f e r
By Health Ins. Plan
CIVIL
Page Sixteea
Suggestion Awards
Earn $270 For Nine
SMe Employees
(From Leader Correspondent)
ALBANY Feb. 4—Nine employees of t h e S t a t e of New
York are o n t h e Employee Suggestion Program's first 1963
lt3t of c a s h award recipients. T h e y earned a total of $270.
T e n others received Certificates of Merit w i t h o u t c a s h grants
for their ideas.
Top awards are two of $50 each.
E d w a r d H e n r y , S c h e n e c t a d y , l i - local Civil Service Commissions.
There were also two $25 awards.
c e n s e i n v e s t i g a t o r . D e p a r t m e n t of
State, earned that amount for , They went to Walter E. Trombley,
design of a form to be used in j Albany, senior income tax examhlj agency's new program of in- | iner. Department of Taxation and
spection of offices, employees and ] Finance, and Frances M. Foley,
business practices of private in- j Schenectady, compensation claims
vestigation and protection agen- ' examiner. Labor Department's
cles.
Workmen's Compensation Board.
Another Capital District resiAlso earning $50 is Arthur E.
Knlght. North Syracuse, carpenter at the Department of Mental
Hygiene's Syracuse State School.
He proposed that Icey plates at
hij institution be made from
scraps of hardboard instead of
from more expensive cast bronze.
$40 awards went to two Albany
residents; Grace Marie Fischer,
stenographer, Conservation Department of Civil Service. Their
Ideas have resulted in elimination
of much unnecessary and timeconsuming communication with,
respectively.
hunting
trapping
and fishing license applicants and
Falk Draws Praise
(Continued from Page 1 )
When his name came up for a
new six year term on the commission, wiiich keeps tabs on the
state's merit system, it went directly to the Senate floor. There
was no need for the usual investigation or scrutiny by the
Senate Finance Committee.
Falk, well known throughout
the state In government circles
and well liked by state employees,
is a graduate of Fordham University School of Law. He served
in the State Assembly before being
elected to the Senate.
His new term will run through
Feb. 1, 1969.
dent, Salvadore De Russo, Jr.,
Albany, purchasing agent, executive Department's Office of General Services, earned a $15 award.
as did Mary D. Llchoray, Westbury, supervising nurse. Department of Mental Hygiene's Creedmoor State Hospital.
Bernlce M. Duchmann, Buffalo,
senior engineering
technician.
Department of Public Works, received a $10 award.
Seven Capital District residents
were awarded Certificates of
, Merit. They are Leo Boland, Troy,
!
^rieary, Albany, Paul Feeley,
Rensselaer, and William J. Miller, Troy, all mall and supply
helpers with the Department of
Public Service: Nathan Rubin,
Albany, senior income tax examiner, and' Meyei* Hartzman,
Albany, senior clerk, both of the
; Department of Taxation and
Finance; and William J. Walsh,
Albany, head offset printiag machine operator. Department of
Motor Vehicles.
Other January Certificates of
Merit went to Brooklyn residents:
Max Stenzler, and Freida Berlin,
both unemployment
iiisurance
claims clerks with tlve Labor Department's Division of Employment; and Betsey Kimmel, dlctatjing machine transcriber, Execuitive Department's Commission for
i Human Rights.
SERVICE
LEADER
Westchester Chapter
Elects Maffei Pres.
POUGHKEE^SIE, Feb. 4 —
Michael J. M a f f e i w a s elected
president of t h e Westchester
County Chapter Civil Service
Employees Association a t a
r e c e n t meeting. M a f f e i resides
i n Yonkers a n d is employed
by t h e Westchester County
D e p a r t m e n t of Public Works
as a civil engineer.
others elected were Edward
Seminara, first vice president;
Emma Mazzeo, second vice president; Marie Pagen, secretary;
James Bell, treasurer, and James
Beckett, sergeant-at-arms.
Directors for a three year term
are Arthur Gozmalan, Vincent
Hough. Michael Del Vecchio and
Vit Joseph Rusclgno. Ruth Starobln was elected to fill a two-year
unexpired term as director.
Maffei, after being Installed as
the new president of the Westchester County Chapter, CSEA,
addressed the group and assured
the members that the policy of
the Association would continue
along the same lines that have
proven successful in the past. He
alM reminded members that to
achieve the goals, cooperation of
all the members and representatives is needed. This cooperation
can be assured by their attendance at the monthly meetings and
their willingness to work on appointed committees.
Edward Seminara, first vice
president, thanked the past president Michael Del Vecchio for
the splendid record he had
achieved during his period in office. Seminara stated that Del
Vecchio gave not only of his time
but also made many sacrifices to
endeavor to please the membership as a whole.
C a r b e r r y Retires
ALBANY, Feb. 4—Col. Francis
P. Carberry is retiring as senior
army advisor for the New York
Army National Guard at the end
of the month. A testimonial
dinner was held in his honor
recently at Duncan's Inn.
Tiifgifay, February 5, 1963
Onondaga Names Bernstein
Personnel Tediniiian;
First To Get Sr. Post
( F r o m Leader Correspondent)
SYRACUSE, Feb. 4—Seymour B e r n s t e i n of Rlverhead.
L.I., w h o w a s Instrumental in evolving a Civil Service s y s t e m
for SufTolk County's n e w county police force, has b e e n n a m e d
Onondaga County's first senior personnel t e c h n i c i a n .
Personnel Commissioner Louis
Harrolds, who announced the ap- technician for the State Civil Serpointment, aaid Bernstein was re- vice Department in Albany from
cruited through the municipal 1957 to 1961. Last year,- he was
division of the State Civil Service Suffolk County's principal perCommission.
sonnel technician.
Commissioner Harrolds said
Bernstein's position was created
Bernstein's experience in develop-* under the new Onondaga County
ing a system of frequent Civil Personnel Department, which beService testing will be used to re- came effective Jan. 1 as part of
duce and eliminate Onondaga the new County Charter. Harrolds
County's numerous provisional heads the department, which reappointments.
places the old County Civil SerBernstein, 29, will receive a vice Commission.
starting salary of $9,100 with four
Provisional appointments have
annual Increments of $250 each
been a problem In Onondaga
to a maximum of $10,100.
Harrolds said the State Civil County for, some time. A check of
Service unit considers Bernstein city and county worker rolls has
one of the foremost personnel revealed several hundred employees who have held their jobs
technicians In the State."
A graduate of Brooklyn College, for years without ever taking a
Bernstein served as a personnel Civil Service examination.
State Employees Credit
Union Pays 4% Dividend
A dividend of 4 percent on shares w a s recently declared
a t t h e 28th a n n u a l m e e t i n g of the New York State Employees Federal Credit Union. Assets for the group now total
more t h a n $300,000.
At the same- meeting officers
were elected for the coming year. to any eligible employee of the
They are: Henry N. Smith, presi- State and offers interest accumudent, executive vice president of lating fix)m the first of the month
the Amalgamated Mutual Casu- on any deposit made by the fiftli
alty Co.: Hai-ry Hlrsch, vice of the month.
president, former deputy commissioner of the New York State
Department of Social Welfare;
Morris Gimpelson, vice president,
regional director of the Jamaica
office of the New York state
In an unusual move in the
Motor Vehicle Department; and
Elmira Reformatoi-y, three offiSolomon Bendet, treasurer;-chief
cers from the prison have been
of the Complaint Bmeau, New
promoted to the . title of deputy
York State Insurance Department,
warden. The tluee are Captain
I. Martin Ballot, secretary and
Edward Schuster, Lt. Clarence J.
assistant treasurer, senior insurBeckerman and Lt. Clifton G.
ance examiner, New York State
Bradshaw.
Insurance Department.
Schusler will assume his duties
The credit union operates three
at Dannemora State Hosp., Beckoffices In the New York City area
man at Aubuin Prison and Bradat: Room 900, 80 Centre St..,
shaw will remain at Elmira,
New York; Room 504, 50 Park
The titles have an annual salPI., New York; and Room 1115,
ary of from $9,010 to $10,840.
270 Broadway, New York.
The credit union offers loans
Elmira Produces
Three Wardens
CollegeGra
Levitt Submits Bills
(Continued from Page 1)
with the plan to which they have
been contributing.
Annuity Option
Another bill would extend to
beneficiaries of retirees who
elected option one or one-half,
the privilege of receiving the
amounts payable to them under
these options in the form of an
annuity. The present law states
that such beneficiaries must receive tlieir payments in a lump
sum.
WESTCHESTER
ELECTS
—
IiuUUed at • recent meeting of the Westchester
€«unty OlrH Service Employees Association hf
©SEA Fie\d Representative Thomas J. Luposello.
right, were, left to right, James Beckett, sergeantat-arms; Emma Bfaneo, second vice president;
Edward Seminara. first vice president; Michael J.
Maffei, president; Marie Pagen, secretary; and
James Belt treasurer.
T h e c o m p t r o l l e r also proposes
increasing
supplemental
retirem e n t allowances a n d eliminating
any age requirement for the rec e i p t of s u c h b e n e f i t s , a n d r e c o m mended the ordinary d e a t h benef i t provision be m a d e a per^^ian•nt p a r t of tti9 law.
(Continued frot
they are as well-ti-ail
physical education te£^
have to be, or they cc
tjje civil service requirf
The CSEA chapter
also pointed out that mos?
are hard-pressed financially
"couldn't afford" higher salaril
that would be necessai7 if alf
recreation personnel were collegeti-alned.
Mineo's plan also drew a blast
from Supervisor Gus Franczyk,
who holds a Buffalo Civil Service rating as a recreation supervisor.
F r a n c z y k cliided Mineo for his
concern
about
politics i n
the
Recreation Department. He
recalled t h a t M i n e o w a s a p p o i n t e d
to
a
recreation
post
several
y e a r s a g o a n d It w a s a political
appointmeut.
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