Delegates OK Resolutions Asking 12^/2% Pay Increase, Condon — Wadlin Repeal •LEAPER

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•LEAPER
Convention
Report
Americans Largest Weekly for Public Employees
Vol. X X V , No. 6
T u e s d a y , O c t o b e r 15, 1 9 6 3
P r i c e T e n Cents
Delegates OK Resolutions
Asking 12^/2% Pay Increase,
Condon — Wadlin Repeal
Militant Delegates Order
Study Of Possible Removal
Of CSEA No-Strike Pledge
By P A U L
KYER
M o r e t h a n 800 m i l i t a n t delegates a t t e n d i n g the 53rd a n n u a l m e e t i n g of the Civil Service Employees Asssn, last w e e k
s h o u t e d their a p p r o v a l of resolutions t h a t call f o r a
cent, a c r o s s - t h e - b o a r d
pointment
than
Linked
here
are tlie statewide officers of the Civil Service
Employees Association who will lead the CSEA for
the next two years. Seated, from left, is Fred Cave,
Jr., fifth vice president; Hazel Abrams, secretary;
Claude E. Rowell, fourth vice president. Standing,
from left, are John J. Hennessey, Jr., treasurer;
Charles E. Lamb, third vice president; Joseph F.
Feily, president;
president,
and
Raymond
Vernon
A.
G. Castle,
Tapper,
first vice
second
vice
president. John F. Powers, immediate past president, installed the officers at a dinner last week in
the Park Sheraton Hotel, where the Association
held its 53rd annual meeting.
C S E A Election Results
Joseph F. Feily of A l b a n y , a n employee of the D e p a r t m e n t of T a x a t i o n a n d
has
been re-elected
Employees
to a
third
Association, it w a s a n n o u n c e d
RepeatThis!
Keating Dangerous
To J. F. K. In State,
Democrats Fear
Xj^XCEPT
^
two-year
O'Brien,
for
Leo
popular
W.
Albany
e x - n e w s m a n turned C o n g r e s s m a n , everybody w a n t s to r u n
a g a i n s t U.S. S e n a t o r
Kenneth
B . K e a t i n g . L a s t week, O ' B r i e n
a n n o u n c e d that he w a s not a
c a n d i d a t e for the race.
(Continued on Page 14)
term
as
President
last week.
of
the
State
Civil
Finance
Service
a
committee
half-century
pledges
NEW CSEA OFFICERS: Pictured
of
pay
old
to
CSEA
its m e m b e r s n o t to
up
to
the
1 2 p e r
raise for State w o r k e r s and
study
removal
constitutional
of
ap-
the
more
section
that
strike.
committee
study was another resolution callthe Association's pay case. If deleing for repeal of the Condongates should meet in December
Wadlin Law, which forbids public
and vote to remove the no-strike
employee strikes in New York
vow the action could become efx
State. (See editorial on Page 6)
fective at the next regular deleSpecial Meeting; Possible
gate meeting, usually held in late
T o demonstrate how seriously
February or early March whil0
they were considering possible rethe State Legislature is in session.
moval of tlie current no strike
T h e aggressive mood of the delepledge, an additional section was
added to the resolution stating
(Continued on Page 3)
that "if the ( C S E A ) Salary and
Negotiating Committees
declare
on or before December 7 that |
negotiations with the State are,
unsatisfactory, the president shall i
then be authorized to call and finance a special delegate meeting
in Albany so that delegates can
be advised of the feasibility of reJoseph F. Feily, who was
moving the no-strike pledge . . ."
elected last week to his third
T h e CSEA is currently engaged
term as president of the Civil
in a series of meetings with the
Service Employees Assn., reState Division of the Budget on
ceived a personal telegram of
congratulations from U.S. Senator Kenneth Keating. The
wire came during the dinner
session which closed the 53rd
annual meeting of the CSEA,
held in the Park Sheraton
Hotel.
Results
of
the
Association's
biennial elections were made at a
banquet concluding the 115,000member Association's 53rd Annual
Meeting at the Park Sheraton
Hotel here.
T h e contest for T a x Dept. representative was declared undecided and a recount will be made.
Samuel Emmett, Brooklyn, and
Bernard Schmahl, Albany, are
the candidates.
Feily's plurality over Albert D.
T e r m i n g a n o n - c o n t r i b u t o r y R e t i r e m e n t System f o r State
Schuler of the State Motor Vehicle
Department,
Albany,
fell
just Employees as " i n e v i t a b l e , " C o m t p r o l l e r A r t h u r L e v i t t said
last week t h a t such a system w a s a " l o g i c a l e x t e n s i o n " of the
short of 20,000 votes.
five per cent contribution provision e n a c t e d i n 1960.
Others Elected
Addressing nearly 1,000 perOther results for state-wide o f up the first five points of emsons attending the dinner sesfice were:
ployee contributions.
1st Vice President—Raymond G. sion that closed tlie 53rd annual
T h e so-called 5-point plan was
Castle,
Commerce
Department, meeting of the Civil Service Em- developed and sponsored by the
Syracuse over James L. Adams, ployees Assn., held here in tlie Employees Assn. for State perCorrection Department, Slug Sing Park Sheraton Hotel, the Comp- sonnel and has been adopted in
troller declared tliat tlie cost of numerous political subdivisions.
Prison.
Burden
2nd Vice President—Vernon A. a wholly-paid Retirement System
Levitt pointed out that when
Tapper, City Parks Departu\eut, would be less than the amount
(Coutinued ou Paife 3)
needed when the State first picked
(Continued 'ou Page 3)
Delegates Hear Comptroller
Term Wholly-Paid Retirement
System logical, Inevitable'
Keating Sends
Joseph Feily
Good Wishes
Senator Keatings telegram
read:
"My sincere good wishes to
you and the 115,000-members
of the New York State Civil
Service Employees Association
as your 53rd annual meeting
draws to its close.
"The State and local employees are fortunate, indeed,
to have such able and responsible leadership as they have in
you.
"Your organization, with its
dedication to the Merit System,
has performed an outstanding
task for all who believe in good
government.
. . " W i t h warm personal regards." Kenneth B. Keatinr.
CIVIL
Page Two
SERVICE
Tii^f Jay, OcloKer 1
LEADER
Municipal Building Robot Has Mind of Its Own
Told
To Joe
Densy,
Jr.)
IIow docs it feel to join the army of civil service?
What are my impressions after a month of serving
the public and working with public
employees?
In general, I can say that my first reaction is
mixed—I
am understood
and appreciated
by some
and misunderstood
and berated by others. My first
meeting with the American public is quite an emotional
experience.
The new electronic brain I have is a wonderful
thing, of course. It makes it possible, my boss tells
me, to free six elevator operators for other duties in
the Department
of Public Works. .And, with my new
stainless steel sides and pine panels, I am almost as
attractive
as those blonde operators who work on
Madison Avenue. That soft fluorescent lighting helps
of course.
However,
the department
has not yet put up
signs saying "No Smoking" and my beauty is being
marred because of careless smokers grinding butts on
the floor. Another point I have to make is that, although City elevator inspectors ride with me daily, I
Television
to
civil
p r o g r a m s of
service
The
interest
employees
are
broadcast daily o v e r W N Y C , Channel 31.
monthly
mass
The
Columbia
Department
Inc.,
has
Association,
of
Sanitation,
been
changed
to
week's
New
programs
York
City's
telecast
mmmmmamm^mtmmmtm
television
include:
9:30 p.m.—Career D e v e l o p m e n t -
State
and
Federal
Dept.
"Auto
60, died
promotional
Larceny."
•4:30
Mr.
p.m.—The
Big
U S . A r m y f i l m series.
(Continued
on P a g e
of
tative
of
P i c t u r e - dedicated and conscientious service
constitute
a
distinguished
tions,
religious
.\M)
I'EKFOK.MAMK
KCONO.MY
Tills i» liow the Rambler Cliissic
ii Mitcil
by automotive
cxpiitn.
Ko>;il Uliie Classic Custom Kour
Door Srdan—less than l'.1.000 miles.
I'crlrilly tiincil, clean, safety locks.
Amone the other "extras" whic.li
ntUl to the assete of thie lUti'J
beauty
are:
Radio,
.\ntomatlc
Ti-anRmission anil Power Steering.
S . W K OVER $800 on this leesthiin-a year-oUl 'classic'. Call . . .
C I l ? ) BE 3-6103
"28
years
contribution t o law e n f o r c m e n t . "
7)
• Automobile For Sale •
KXCKrrM>N.\L
Finkelstein's
regions of
secutor in the District
Attorney's
varied
occupa-
affiliations
and
the county. U n t i l
the
time of her death, Mrs. E L E A N O R
Among
the
chaired
the
Com-
formal
recommen-
o f f i c e in 1935. A B r o o k l y n resident, dations m a d e by the Commission,
M r , Finkelstein was appointed as as they
accountant as the result of
his work
in the
Frank
appear
report,
in
in civil service. T h e
had
served
in the
the
Commis-
"AMERICAN
Erickson M E N , " is a discussion of
case.
He
sion's
District
A t t o r n e y ' s o f f i c e f o r m o r e than 28
tions read
as
WOwomen
recommenda-
follows:
" A t present, Federal systems of
discourage
working m a n p o w e r utilization
V on the investigation of the State p a r t - t i m e
employement.
Many
able
women,
including
highly
Liquor Authority.
trained professionals, w h o are not
years
and
was
recently
free
USE THIS HANDY
COUPON TO LEARN
OF CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
IN NEW YORK CITY CIVIL SERVICE
For further information and applications for positions
In New York City service, paste this coupon on a 4-cent
post card and mail to Charles S. Lewis, Room 721, 299
Broadway, New York 7, N,Y.
full-time
employment,
the
examination. If this is not available at the present time, please keep me informed on
future tests. Thank you.
Name
Address
State.
policewomen's
to
Third Merit Award
ser-
geant a f t e r receiving a court o r der t o t h a t
effect.
ALBANY,
Oct.
14—Caesar
Coluzza has w o n his t h i r d
* ^ U s e postal zone numbers on
your
mail
to
insure
prompt
delivery.
J.
merit
a w a r d as an e m p l o y e e of the S t a t e
Department
of
Agriculture
and
Markets.
CIVIL SERVICE TRAVEL CLUB
ANNOUNCES
7 DAYS
GALA CHRISTMAS CRUISE
TO BOTH
BERMUDA s NASSAU
on the GREEK LINE'S luxurious
7 DA ITS
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RELIGIOUS A N D FESTIVE CELEBRATIONS
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CIVIL SERVICE CLUB in cooperation wWh
KNICKERBOCKER TRAVEL SERVICE. INC.
Time 4 Life Building, Rockefeller Center
New York.
New York
Telephone PLaia 7-5400
•
JUdson 2-3616
but can work p a r t - t i m e . T h e Civil
Service
Commission
and
the
Bureau of the B u d g e t should f a cilitate the i m a g i n a t i v e and prudent
use
of
throughout
such
personnel
the G o v e r n m e n t
ser-
vice."
Court
ment
for
To Be Fully Prepared for POST OFFICE
SUPERVISORY EXAMS
TO BE HELD ON SAT., NOV. 2
examination,
appoint-
. . . t w o down, one to
New
York
City
go
policewomen
w h o h a v e w o n theh' f i g h t f o r proDepart-
m e n t of Personnel last week o p e n -
Please send me information and application blanks for
Zone
for
m o t i o n rights. T h e N Y C
CHARLES S. LEWIS - Room 721
299 Broadway, New York 7, N.Y.
City
broadly
H e h a d served as an accountant R O O S E V E L T
under T h o m a s D e w e y , special p r o - mission.
chief
the
examination
Women's Editor of the Leader with
course. in Brooklyn, M r . Finkelstein was tion in the following week's paper.
" C r i m i n a l Action . . . Jurisdiction the chief accountant on the staff
T h e report of the special C O M of the M a n h a t t a n District A t t o r of P a r t i e s . "
MISSION ON THE STATUS OF
ney's
o
f
f
i
c
e
.
2:30 p.m. — F i l m F e a t u r e —
W O M E N , appointed by P r e s i d e n t
" C r a s h and L i v e " , H i g h w a y safety
M r . Finkelstein was involved in
John F , K e n n e d y in 1961, was preprogram.
collecting evidence f o r hundred of
sented to the President at a spe•3:00 p . m . — A r m y S p e c i a l — U . S . criminal cases and was instrucial meeting in the W h i t e House
A r m y f i l m series. " I n d u s t r i a l P l a n t m e n t a l in the analysis of this
last F r i d a y , Octobr 11.
Protection".
evidence.
The
26-member
Commission,
4:00 p . m . — A r o u n d the ClockF r a n k H o g a n , M a n h a t t a n Dis- w h i c h held e i g h t meeting during
Police Dept. training
program. tiick A t t o r n e y , said recently t h a t the past 18 months, is represen-
Police
for
promotion
civil
news of interest to women In civil
last service. Deadline f o r this material
week at L e f f e r t s G e n e r a l Hospital is Thursday at noon for publicaFinkelstein,
Within the next year, every elevator in the Municipal Building will be like me. By then I expect New
York City will have the fastest elevator service in the
world.
servants are urged to contact the
Alex Finkelstein
Alex
Tuesday, October 15
posterity.
By MARY ANN BANKS
W e d n e s d a y , October 30.
City,
This
over
regular
m e e t i n g date, October 31, f o r
The Woman's
An^le
for
Sometimes, I'm accused of being like a
woman—
once I start, I won't change my course, except
where
my schedule calls for it. If a passenger changes his
mind over a stop, I'll first stop at the floor he first
requested. After all, I'm not going to get a reputation
as a flibber-de-gibbet.
With me, you have to know
your own mind! In fact, if they give me any more
hard times, I'll give them a piece of my mind.
For several weeks, experts have been trying to
force me to stop at the eleventh floor Fire
Headquarters whenever the Fire Department needs me but
I have been resisting with all my electronic power. I
will not replace the old fashioned fireman's pole! We
filing
of' tradition
Occasionally,
we have a laugh. If too many
heavy people get in the car, I just won't budge.
Something in my brain just won't let me. Lights flash and
bells ring until the heavy-weights
get out and wait
for the next car.
Some people just don't seem to
understand.
When I have to go, I have to go! When
passengers
try to hold my doors open, my very determined
brain
just signals "Close the doors" and I have
to—gently
at first—perhaps
even brushing some people aside. If
people insist on trying to keep my doors open, they
find I have a will of my own and may even find
themselves
with bruised arms. I have iron in my
doors!
ed
portion
While specialists were adjusting my system, there
were some delays and occasionally, I ivas stuck between
floors. That is all history now and I am on a strict
schedule. Today, I'm giving the best service ever.
Another sore point. You should hear the names
I am called by some of the late comers . . . "Hey,
wait for me! . . . Down? . . . Why that so and so didn't
wait for me . . . Those civil service operators
...
Sanitation Columbia
Meeting Time Change
This Week's
Civil Service
Television List
must save some
still have a sign on the wall warning
passengers;
"This elevator is not officially approved
. . . Of
course, passengers cannot see the sign until after they
get in the car . . "
By AUT O'TRONIC
(As
CIVIL S K K V I I U L E A D E R
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Tuesday, Orlolier
IS,
1963
CIVIL
S E R V I C E
L E A D E R
Page Thre*
Feily Wins Third Term;
Hennessey And Cave Are
Elected To State Office
(Continued from P a g e 1)
Syracuse over Arthur J. Miller,
Social W e l f a r e , Sayville, L.I,
3rd Vice President—Charles E.
Lamb,
Correction
Department,
Sing Sing Prison, over Vito J. F e r ro; Gowanda State Hospital, H e l muth.
4th Vice Presitlent—Claude E.
Rowell, Rochester State Hospital,
Rochester, over Henry Shemin,
Division of Employment New Y o r k
City.
Results of State Department
Judiciary—William F. Sullivan,
Representative Elections W e r e :
Brooklyn,
Agriculture & M a r k e t s — W l f Labor—John K . W o l f f , Albany.
liam F. Kuehn, Albany.
L a w — H a r r y L . Ginsburg, A l Audit & Control—Edward G. bany.
Sorenson, Albany.
Legislature—George W . H e i m ,
State Authorities—Raymond L . Albany.
Walker, Batavia,
Mental Hygiene—Joseph BucaBanking—Leonard T . Varmette, ria, Creedmoor State
Hospital,
Albany.
Anna M . Bessette, Harlem Valley
Civil Service—Irving
Handler, State Hospital, Charles J. Ecker,
Albany.
Syracuse State School.
Commerce—Stanley
Freedgood,
Motor Vehicle—Alfred
WeissAlbany.
bard, Albany.
Conservation—Louis P, Oolby,
Public Service—Michael Sewek,
Farmingdale.
New Y o r k City.
5th Vice President—^Frederick
H . Cave, Division of Employment,
New Y o r k City, over W i l l i a m J.
Rossiter, Rochester State Hospital,
Correction—Richard J. Corcoran, Auburn.
T h e amiable group above, seen at the dinner session Rochester.
Secretary—Hazel
G.
Abrams,
Education—Harry
W,
Langwhich closed the 53rd annual dinner of the Civil Service Employees
Albany, worthy, Jr., Albany.
Assn. last week, includes, f r o m left, Civil Service Commissioner M a r y Education Department,
Executive—Jack M. DeLlsi, New
Goode Krone, Ivan Flood, member of the CSEA Social Committee; over Clara L . Boone, Veterans A f Y o r k City.
C S E A President Joseph F . Feily and Attorney General Louis J. fairs, Utica.
Treasurer—John J. Hennessey
H e a l t h — E m m e t t J. Durr, R a y Lefkowitz. T h e dinner and annual meeting were held in the Park
Jr., Department of Public Works brook.
Sheraton Hotel.
B u f f a l o , over Theodore C. Wenzl,
Insurance — Solomon
Bendet,
Education Department, Albany,
New Y o r k .
QUARTET:
Public Works—Nicholas J. C i m l no, Utica.
State—Edward L. Gilchrist, A l bany.
Tax
&
Finance—Undecided.
Social
W e l f a r e — Roland
Spencer, W a r w i c k .
State University—Dr.
Allen, Cortland.
Ross
M.
L.
Delegates OK Resolutions Retirement
(Continued from P a g e 1)
gates was expressed in other areas
during the meeting, which was
held in the Park Sheraton Hotel.
One item that came under heavy
fire was the new State rules on
overtime, promulgated by order of
the Budget Director last M a y .
I n an obvious reference to the
recent pay raise won by New Y o r k
City teachers, one delegate said
on the floor of
the
meeting
" i f people can win a pay raise
merely by threatening to strike,
then it is time we re-examined the
procedures we have been using to
Charging that "thousands of get public employee gains."
public
employees
were
being
General tone of the meeting
forced to work extra hours with- was set in an opening address by
out any kind of fair and reason- C S E A President Joseph F. Felly
able compensation," the delegates when he said that " w e are at an
not only voted to seek legislation important "crossroads." Feily said
curbing the power of the Budget that all the old methods of barDirector
to
establish
overtime gaining need not necessarily be
rules but also asked that funds be thrown out but that new methods
spent to carry the arguments for should certainly be sought.
so doing to the public.
'Cards on the Table'
As for current negotiations with
the Administration over salaries,
Feily declared " I laid my cards
on the table. I t is not my problem
where the money will come f r o m
1. A non-contributory R e t i r e - to supply the salary needs for
ment System which would guar- ( S t a t e ) personnel."
I n contrast to previous years,
:Comptroller Arthur Levitt, left, gave the m a j o r ad- antee a pension of l/60th final
dress at the dinner which ended the 53rd annual meeting of the average salary with no reduction OSEA started its negotiations this
Civil Service Employees Assn., held last week in the Park Sheraton in current benefits. ( T h e legisla- year at an earlier date so that
Hotel. He is seen with Samuel Emmett. who served as toastmaster. latlon would make such a retire- its arguments could be placed bement plan permissive in political fore the Administration while the
I n rear is CSEA President Joseph F. Feily.
1964 budget was In preparation.
subdivisions.)
Pay Resolution
I n giving unanimous approval
to the salary resolution, delegates
authorized their C S E A negotiators
to demand:
SPEAKER
2. A non-contributory healthinsurance plan.
3. Payment of accumulated sick
leave credits upon retirement.
Solomon Bendet, chairman of
the CSEA Salary Committee, reported on tile status of current
negotiations with the Division of
the Budget. He used camera slides
showing salary surveys f o r six
popular titles. T h e y demonstrated
that, in most cases. New Y o r k
fell behind California, Michigan,
the Federal Government and New
Y o r k City in salaries f o r these
titles.
TABLE TRIO :
IVIrs. Joseph F. Feily gets a smiling reaction
f r o m II. Eliot Kaplan, left, president of the Stable Civil Service Commission, as Ur. T . Norman Hurd, director of the State Division of
the Budget, looks on. T h e scene was the dinner that ended the annual
meeting of the Civil Service Employees Assn. in Park Sheratou Hotel.
Speaking
of
budget-making,
Feily told the delegates that " f i r s t
and highest" priority should be
given by the State to its employees
before new, d i f f e r e n t or other
costly programs are embarked on.
T h e C S E A president cautioned
the delegates not to push for
short-run tactics that were not
fully thought out, when considering action by the membership as
a whole.
" W h a t we want to do here,"
Feily said, "is to provide means
of a c t i o n , that will not only be
useful to us now but will be of
Bendet drew a laugh f r o m the help to our successors."
During
the
two-day
session,
delegates when he said that "In
all fairness I must say that there delegates acted on a number of
are some states that do pay less resolutions that either call for
than New Y o r k ; Missis-sippi, A l a - action by the Legislature to improve working conditions, fringe
bama . . ."
If the more aggressive mood benefits, etc., or required Adminisof the delegates was in sharp trative action. Also approved were
contrast to previous years it was resolutions dealing with tlie inno doubt due to two m a j o r factors: ternal operations of the Employees
last years lack of success over Association.
the bargaining table and an increasing awareness of the g r o w ing political Importance of the
more than 115,000-member E m ployees Association.
Prediction
(Continued from Page 1)
employees first began contributing to the Retirement System they
were not burdened with other
heavy pay check deductions as
State and Federal income taxes.
A non-contrbiutory Retirement
System would do much to relieve
this burden, he said.
T h e Comptroller also reiterated
ills proposals for reducing the
eligible age for vesting f r o m 60
to 55 and liberalizing and increasing esupplemental retirement allowances.
Prominent
Guests
Numerous public officials and
prominent persons attended the
dinner. T h e dais was in two sections and seated at the first were
H. Eliot Kaplan, president of the
State Civil Service Commission,
and Mrs. K a p l a n ; Joseph F. Feily,
C S E A president, and Mrs. F e i l y ;
Senate Minority Leader Joseph
Zaretzkl, Lea Lemieux, OSEA S o cial Committee chairman; Dr. T .
N o r m a n Hurd, director of
the
State Division of the Budget: Civil
Service Commissioner M a r y Goode
K r o n e and, briefly, Attorney G e n eral Louis J. Lefkowitz.
Seated at the second dais were
Sidney Sklar, past president of
the Council of State Employees of
New Jersey; N. D. Smith, of the
Civil Service Association of O n tario, Canada;
Louis
Cordona,
National Co-ordinator of Pureto
R i c o ; R. J. Embser, president of
the Association of T o w n s ; M a x well Lehman, Acting City A d m i n istrator of New Y o r k City; N e w
Y o r k City Civil Service C o m m i s sioner
Anthony
M.
Mauriello;
Arnold DeMille, dierctor of recruitment. New Y o r k City D e partment of Personnel; Mrs. I r v ing K r a m e r , director of tlie Area
Five
New
York
State
School
Boards Assn.;
Victor
DeChico,
president of the New Jersey Council of State Employees: M u r r a y
Latimer, retirement consultant t o
the CSEA, and John Powers, past
president of the Employees AssoI elation.
Because of a printers holiday.
T h e Leader was forced to an early
deadline and these resolutions will
Toastmaster for the event was
be printed in their entirety in
Samuel Emmett.
next week's edition.
Page Four
Where fo Apply
For Public Jobs
The
following
directions
tell
where to apply for public Jobs
and how to reach dcstinationfl in
New Yorli City on tht transit
system.
N E W Y O R K C I T Y - T h e Applications Section of the New York
City Department of Personnel is
located at 96 Duane St., New York
7, N.Y. ( M a n i i a t t a n ) . I i Is two
bloclcs north of City Hall. Just
west of Broadway, across from
The Leader office.
CIVIL
The
Applications Section
of
the Personnel Department is near
the Chambers Street stop of the
main subway lines that go through
the area. These are the I R T 7th
Avenue Line and the I N D 8th
Avenue Line, The t R T Lexington
Avenue Line stop to use is the
Brooklyn Bridge stop and the B M T
Brighton local's stop is City Hall
Both lines have exits to Duane
Street, one block f r o m the P e r sonnel Department.
S T A T E — First floor at 270
Broadway. New York 7. N. Y..
corner of Chambers St., telephone
BArclay 7-1616, Governor Alfred
E. Smith State O f f i c e Building and
T h e State Campus, Albany: State
O f f i c e Building. B u f f a l o ; State
O f f ' c e Building. Syracuse:
and
500 Midtown T o w e r . Rochester
(Wednesdays o n l y ) .
Tuesday, Oelolier I S , 1963
L E A D E R
U.S. Service News Items 'People To People Farm ^
Tour Retold At Ceneseo
By MARY A N N BANKS
GENESEO, Oct. 14 — Over
100 memberc of the Civil Service Employees Association,
State University College at
Geneseo chapter, attended the
first meeting for this fiscal
year at the Mary Jemison
Dining Hall on the Geneseo
The new regulations and instructions, authorizing FedCampus recently.
eral agencies to withhold employee-organization dues, which
become effective January 1, were recently released by the
Andrew Macauley, prominent
f a r m e r in the Geneseo area, gave
Civil Service Commission.
Payroll Deduction
Regulations Issued
Hours are 9 A.M. to 4 P.M
T h e regulations were prepared
Monday
through
Friday,
and as a result of President Kennedy's
Saturdays f r o m 9 to 12 noon memorandum to the Commission
Telephone COrtland 7-8880
on M a y 21 which requested that
Mailed requests for application CSC "develop regulations, standblanks must include a stamped, ards, and procedures to permit
self-addressed
business-size
en- departments and agencies to opervelope and must be received by ate a system of voluntary withthe Personnel Department at least holding of employee organization
five days before the closing date dues for members who elect to
pay dues in this fashion. T h e main
for the filing of applications.
Completed
application
forms points of the instructions are pre.swhich are filed by mail must be ented below, as prepaired by the
Bent to the Personnel Department CSC.
and must be postmarked no later
than twelve o'clock midnight on
the day foUowlng the last day of
receipt of applications.
S E R V I C E
• Employees must be members
in good standing of an employee
organization granted exclusive or
forrnal recognition and with which
the Federal agency has agreed in
writing to make payroll deductions for the payment of employeeorganization dues. Allotments are
automatically ended if the employee organization loses its f o r mal or exclusive recognition. I n
considering dues deductions, agencies may deal with employee organizations that have formal recognition at the national or local
level and those with exclusive recognition at the national or local
level.
• Changes in the amount to be
deducted as employee-organization
dues are not permitted more than
once every 12 months.
• Part-time
and intermittent
employees must regularly
earn
enough to cover dues allotments.
• Though an employee who belongs to more than one employee
organization may make more than
one allotment, his agency may
Any of these addresses m « y be limit the number of allotments.
used for jobs with the State. T h e
• Deducted dues cannot include
State's New York City O f f i c e is such items as initiation fees, spetwo blocks south on Broadway cial assessments, back dues, fines,
from the City Personnel Depart- etc.
ment's Broadway entrance, so the
• Dues-withholding
arrangesame trp.nsportation instructions ments between an agency and an
apply. Mailed applications need employee organization must be in
not include return envelopes.
writing. Both groups are to be sure
Candidates may obtain applica- employees and members undertions for State jobs from local stand the voluntary nature of the
offices of the New York State allotment. Employee organizations
E m p l o i m e n t Service.
must purchase f r o m the Government Printing O f f i c e a standard
f o r m for the authorisation of alF E D E R A ' . — Second U.S. Civil lotments and distribute it to their
Service Resion O f f i c e . News Build- members.
ing. 220 E^.'t 42nd Street (at 2nd
• Dues normally will be withAv.\). New York 17. N. Y.. just
held every two weeks, coinciding
wej.t of the United Nations buildwith the regular bi-weekly pay
ing. T a k e the I R T Lexington Ave.
periods. However, an agency may
Line to Gr?nd Central and xvalk
deduct dues on a month'y basis if
two blocks east, or take the shuttle
it is as economical to do so.
from Times Square to Grand
• Allotments are automatically
Central or the I R T Queens-Flushended if an employee transfer to
ing train from any po nt on the
a different Federal agency, or if
line lo the Grand Central stop.
the employee moves within his
Hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., own agency to another segment of
Monday
through
Friday. T e l e - the organization for which the
phone number is Y U 6-2626.
employee organization to which he
Applications are also obtain- belongs has not been granted retble at main post office-s, except cognition.
the New York. N Y., Post O f f i c e
• Through revocations of allotBoards of examiners at the parments by employees are permitted
ticular installations o f f e r i n g the
to be filed any time, the revocatests also may be applied to for
tion will not be e f f e c t i v e until the
further information and applicafirst pay period after March 1 or
tion forms. No return envelopes
September 1, as appropriate.
are required with mailc^d requests
• In order to cover the cost of
for application forms.
payroll deductions, agencies must
The Veterans Administration reFREE B U U K L E T by D. S. G o t f r n m f n l on Social Security. Mail ports that veterans have proved
«nlr> Leailpr, 97 Duane Street, to be extraordinary fine credit
New Yurli 7. N. ¥.
ribks.
charge an employment organization two cents for administering
each payroll deduction f r o m every
employee. I n virtually all cases
this amounts to no more than 52
cents per employee per year.
Postmaster
Reveals
Gronouski
Personnel
Beliefs & Policies
a slide-lecture presentation of
his agricultural and cultural tour
'^Business As IJsuaV*
On Columbus Day
Regular
postal
services
were
maintained last Saturday by the
New Y o r k City Post O f f i c e despite
the f a c t that Saturday was Colum-
bus Day. All stations were open for
T h e new Postmaster General, "business as usual."
John A . Gronouski, has already
announced his personnel policies
and beliefs. He feels that the Post
O f f i c e Department has a "long
history of great respect for civil
service procedures", a "solid comm i t t m e n t " to the labor movement,
and a solid respect for the merit
system.
•
I
WM •
A n d y was one of 34 farmers
throughout New Y o r k State t o
participate
in this tour.
The
group was treated with great r e spect and interest wherever they
went. Macauley said, "mast stops
included
native
entertainment
and abundant refreshments f o r
their enjoyment. Most of
the
f a r m work there is done by horses
but we did see some A m e r i c a n
made f a r m m a c h i n e r y . "
Other guests at this meeting
were president and Mrs. M a c V i t tie, George DeLong, president of
the CSEA Western Conference,
James Powers, field repre-sentative f o r CSEA, and the officers of
the local chapter.
H s t u d y for a h
•
HIGH SCHOOL
•
I n speaking on the controversial work measurement system, he I
said, " S o m e f o r m of evaluating ^
e f f i c i e n c y is neces.sary but the
f o r m it takes can make a world
of difference to the employees involved."
of Europe thi.s past summer. T h e
tour is made possible by the
People
to
People
Foundation,
Kansas City, Mo., which is sponsored by D w i g h t D. Eisenhower
f o r the purpo.se of improving relations between countries.
.
EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
AT HOME IN SPARE TIME
•
•
WrUe for F R E E Booklet that tplls you how.
Only
monthly cover* all books and instruction.
AMERICAN SCHOOL. Dept. 9AP.19
I
130 \\ 4'-Jnd St., Xew l o r k 3 « , N . Y . Phone BRyant 0-?604 Day or
NUI»t
•
i^ildreos
City
Apt
State
ACCREDITED MEMBER NATIONAL HOME STUDY COUNCIL
A CSEA
ACCIDENT & SICKNESS POLICY
PAID THIS MEMBER
$7,360.00
OVER THE PAST
64 MONTHS
Imagine the relief on this man's face when the postman brings a
monthly check for $115.00. Disabled and out of work as a result of a serious
car accident, this member has been receiving checks for the past 64 months:
checks that help keep his family together until he can return to his job.
This money, plus the other important benefits covered by your State
Health Plan, can mean the difference between extreme hardship—with
staggering debts—and a normal recovery free from major financial worries.
Enroll in the CSEA Accident and Sickness Plan now. Make sure that,
if your salary stopped because of a disability, the postman would ring your
bell with a check each month.
For full details on how you can Join the
CSEA Accident and Sickness Plan contact—
T E R
l ^ S H / A
P O W E L L ,
I N C .
SCHENECTADY
N E W YORK,
BUFFALO
EAST NORTHPORT
SYRACUSE
CIVIL
Tuesday, Oclotier 264, 1963
S E R V I C E
Transit Patrolmen
Start At $6,180;
Filing Open Now
10th Annual State
University Meet
ALBANY,
t i t l e is expected to be used w i t h -
a
parallel
retire-
is 5 feet, 8 inches. M a x i m u m
age
served in the military services to
as
lature.
be deducted f r o m the age.
equal b e n e f i t s w i t h the exception
of
the
retirement
system.
It
is
•iv
Salary
at
for
the
$6,180 and
position
increases
starts
in
three
steps to $7,631. W i t h u n i f o r m a l lowance
salary
Engineering Titles
The
positions
aide
and
are
now
open
October
ing
to
$4,110
565
to
The
earns
per
$3,560
The
en-
earns
$4,-
year.
For
f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n and
applica-
t i o n f o r m s contact the U.S. Civil
S e r v i c e Commission at the B r o o k lyn
Naval Yard, Brooklyn
11251,
N.Y.
Super Steno Job
There
almost
the
$8,000.
equivalent is required b e f o r e
pointment. T h e
minimum
ap-
height
A p p l i c a t i o n s will be accepted by
the
Department
and
Saturdays
of
Personnel
is a v a c a n c y f o r
from
9
n o o n at the applications
a.m.
date
for
filing
Inn.
N.Y. FIRE DEPT.
7,978
S
of
the
A YEAR
AFTER 3 YEARS
(Including Annual
Uniform Allowance)
State
dean
PENSION
Waite On Staff
A.
Waite
has
joined
the
State
U n i v e r s i t y a d m i n i s t r a t i v e s t a f f as
an administrative o f f i c e r . H i s first
assignment
the
will be to
academic
planning
coordinate
phase
the University's construction
of
pro-
g r a m . H e f o r m e r l y was personnel
education
in
the
AFTER
Opportunities
20
YEARS
Ages 20 thru 2 8 - O l d e r for Vets
MIN. HGT. ONLY 5 FT. 6V2 In.
A L B A N Y , Oct. 14—Dr. R i c h a r d
section, E d u c a t i o n
OUR SPECIALIZED TRAINING
Prepares f o r Official Written Test
DON'T DELAY—ENROLL N O W
Be Our Guest
In Manhattan
at a Class Session
MONDAY OCT. 21
at 1:00 P.M. or 6:30 P.M.
Jamaica: WED., OCT. 16 at 6:30 P.M-
DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
Manhattan: 115 t. 15th St.
Jamaica: 89-25 Merrick Blvd.
State
Department.
•> L a n n
3-69011
Classes Now Starting to Prepare for NEXT
is Oct. 31.
Meter Maids Are
Needed By City
Filing for the title of parking meter attendant is
open. The filing for this $4,000 position will remain
until Oct. 22. In conjunction with this announcement
Leader is snow carrying the last examination which
given in this title.
now
open
The
was
N. Y. CITY LICENSE EXAMS
Expert Instructors — EVENING CLASSES — Small Groups
• REFRIGERATION OPERATOR
START C L A S S E S T U E S D A Y . O C T . 15 at 7 P.M.
• STATIONARY ENGINEER
Moderate
START C L A S S E S M O N D A Y . O C T . 21 at 7 P.M.
Fees-Instalments—Be Our Guest at a Class
THE DELEHANTY
115 Eost ISth St., N. Y. 3
Session
INSTITUTE
•
Phone GR 3-&900
super-
in the
tion blanks
666-2135
at f o r p r o m o t i o n to the title of senior
m a k e parking m e t e r a t t e n d a n t ( w o m e n ) .
a n a p p o i n t m e n t f o r a n interview.
A p p l i c a n t s w i l l be required t o
fices
RE
re-
96 Duane St.. N . Y . 7, N . Y . F i n a l
t r a n s f e r m a y call M r s . U l m a n
or
schools was held
community
Excellent Promotional
to higher
T h e a t t e n d a n t position has an pass a q u a l i f y i n g medical
and
c h a r - annual salary r a n g e of $4,000 to
physical e x a m i n a t i o n and also a
t e r code unit in the o f f i c e of the $5,080, a u n i f o r m allowance and
M a y o r . A n y p e r m a n e n t supervis- l o n g e v i t y and annual increments. c o m p e t i t i v e w r i t t e n e x a m i n a t i o n .
Candidates m a y obtain applicai n g s t e n o g r a p h e r Interested in a Employees in this title are eligible
vising s t e n o g r a p h e r
the
director f o r the State Police, and
weekdays f r o m 9 a.m. t o 4 p.m. at one t i m e was assistant f o r
engineer-
annum.
per
reaches
pay,
time
until
from
technician
$8,045
technician
filing
holiday
A h i g h school education or the
engineering
for
10.
aide
gineering
of
sngineering
and
trustees
from
P a u l B. Orvis, S U executive
p a t r o l m e n receive the same salary
receive
college
members
J. W a r r e n , m e m b e r
f o r this position is 29, with
and
council
and
FIREMAN
10th
U n i v e r s i t y B o a r d of Trustees and
m e n t system will be set up in the
policemen
community
Institutes
colleges.
A m o n g the speakers were J a m e i
c o m i n g session of the S t a t e L e g i s -
City
14—The
cently at W h i t e f a c e
Transit
i n the n e x t f e w months.
sity
and
agricultural
T h e current eligible list for the
that
Oct.
for
annual c o n f e r e n c e of State U n i v e r -
October 31 is the final filing date for the position of transit patrolman (Transit
Authority). The title has an annual salary range of $6,180 to $7,631. The Department is
expecting an increase in quota for the position and it is therefore anticipated that an increase in appointments will result.
expected
Page Seven
L E A D E R
2-4040 t o
from
Personnel's
at 96 Duane St., N . Y . ,
OfN.Y.
10007.
The DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
M A N H A T T A N : 115 EAST 15 STREET. Near 4 Ave.
J A M A I C A : 89-25 MERRICK BLVD.. bet. Jamoica
Subways)
Aves.
50 Years of Success in Specialized Education
For C a r e e r Opportunities and Personal
Be Our Guest at a Class S
T h e clean new look in C o o k w a r e
REVERE
(All
& Hillside
WARE
Advancement
' n of Any Delehanty
Course.
Phone or W r i t e f o r Class S. ;£(! iles and FREE GUEST CARD.
START P R E P A R M I O N F 0 R " ^ 0 M I N G
EXAMS:
METER MAID (Parking Meter Attendant)
PATROLMAN^ N.Y. Police Dept.
POLICEWOMAN
TRANSIT PATROLMAN-. Exam Dec. 14
F I R E M A N — N . Y . Fire Dept.
COPPER
CORE STAINLESS
STEEL
CITY PLUMBER — Exam Jan. 18
MASTER ELECTRICIAN LICENSE
MASTER PLUMBER LICENSE
REFRIGERATION OPERATOR LICENSE
STATIONARY ENGINEER LICENSE
HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
Class Forming t o Start Soon
for:
ADMINISTRATIVE AIDE—N.Y. CITY
Enroll N o w f o r Any of A b o v e
PRACTICAL VOCATIONAL
8 " Covered Skill*r^
10" Covtr«d Skiiitt
Now . . . world-famous R«var« Ware introductt a
complcl* n t w lint of low-silhouette cookwore
designed to harmonize with today's modern, work*
Mving kitchensi Gleaming stainless steel inside and
out for easy cleaning . . . with a solid copper
core that spreads heat rapidly, cooks foods faster.
Slim-line Bakelite handles with retractable hanging
rings. Interchangeable covers with safety-grip fmger
guards. On display now I
1-Qt. Cov«r«d Sauc* Pan'
2-Qt. CovAred Souc* Pan
3-Qt. Covtred Sauct Pon
Classes.
COURSES:
Licensed by N.Y. S t a t e — A p p r o v e d f o r Veterans
AUTO MECHANICS SCHOOL
5.01 46 Road a t S St.. Long Island C i t y
Complete Shop Training on "Llv"
Cars
with Speelalliatlon
on Automatic
Transmissions
DRAFTING SCHOOLS
Manhattan: 123 East 12 St. nr. 4 A v e .
Jamaica: 89-25 Merrick Blvd. at 90 A v e .
Archlteetural—Moehanleal—Straetural
Drafting
P/p/ng, Electrical and Machine
Drawing.
RADIO. TV & ELECTRONICS SCHOOL
2-Qt. Covered Double Boiler
5-Qt. Covered Sauc* Pol
S-Qt. Covered Dutch O v t n
DELEHANTY H I G H S C H O O L
(-Cup Percolator'
Accredited by Board of Regents
2-Qt. Whistling Tea Kettle
3-Qt. Whistling Teo Kettle
HOUSE OF ABRAMSONS
1395 FLATBUSH AVENUE
117 East 11 St. nr. 4 Ave.. ManhottaH
Radio and TV Service 6 Repair. Color
TV Servicing. "HAM"
License
Preparation.
BROOKLYN. N.Y.
91-01 Merrick Boulevard, Jamaica
A C o l l e g t Preparatory Co*Educatlonal Academic
High School. Secretarial IraliiiRg Available
f o r Girls as an Elective Supplement. Special
Preparation in Science and Mothematici f o r
Students Who Wish t o p u a l i f y f o r Teclmolegical
and Engineering Colleges. Grades 7 t o 12.
For Informotion on All Courses Phone GR 3-6900
iAAAAAAAAi
CIVIL
r a g e Six
•
l
AmerU'a'n
Largcnt
^
Wpekty
Member Audit Bureau
Pithlishrd
E
for Puhlie
of
Circulations
every Tiirsday
LEADER PUBLICATIONS.
97 Duane Street, New York. N.Y.-10007
S E R V I C E
Your Public
Relations IQ
LEADER
BOX 101
B
EniployppH *
.u
Tii<»8cTay, OcfoTi«»r IS. 7963
L E A D E R
Letters To The Editor -y-
By LRO J. MARGOLIN
Retiree Problems
by
INC.
Box
212-BEekman 3-6010 I
Jerry '-'inkelstcin, Publisher
Paul Kyer, Editor
Joe Dcnsy, Jr., Cily Editor
James T. I.awless, Associute Editor
Mary Ann Bunks, Assistant Editor
N. H . Mager, Business Mnnagcr
Advertising: Representatives:
A L B A N Y — Joseph T. Bcllew — 303 So. Manning Blvd., I V 2-.i474
K I N G S T O N , N.Y. - Charles An<lrcw8 - 239 Wall Street. FE.Ieral 8-8350
10c per copy. Subscription Price $2..55 to members of the Civil
Service Employees Associtaion. $5.00 to non-members.
T U E S D A Y , OC TOBER 15, 1963
Study Doesn't Mean Strike
101:
M r . Margolin is Adjunct Professor of Public Reia^iuns in the
M a y o r W a g n e r on September 30, New York University School of Public Administration and is Vice
told
representatives
of
retii'ed President, Public Relations, of A. J. Armstrong Co., Inc.
policemen
and
fireman
that
soon will request the C i t y
cil to enact local legislation
viding
for
pension
m e m b e r s of
Police
he
Counpro-
increases
to
and F i r e
De-
p a r t m e n t s w h o had retired b e f o r e
The views expressed in this column are those of the writer and do
not necessarily constitute the views of this newspaper.
Abolish Civil Juries?
AN I N T R I G U I N G public relations problem is posed by
Chief Judge Charles S. Desmond of the New York State Court
t h a t their total pension will not of Appeals, who raises the question of abolishing juries in
exceed $2500, a f t e r the increase.
civil actions.
1, 1955. T h e s e
increases
would be a t least $200
January
providing
T h e r e are m a n y old
pensioners
JURY SERVICE has been a source of much antagonism
among citizens tapped for the duty. This is particularly true
of those who run a one-man business, as well as those who
T
AST WEEK, some 800 delegates of the Civil Service Em- c r i m i n a t i o n against those who are
earn their living on a per hour basis—and only when theyn
o
t
members
of
the
police
and
ployees Association met in this city to act in behalf of
actually work.
f i r e m a n r e t i r e m e n t group?
their 115,000 members and one of their first deeds was to
I retired in 1947 f r o m the N e w
FROM OUR OWN limited survey, we found the only ones
approve appointment of a 'Mommittee to study the feasibility
Y o r k C i t y D e p a r t m e n t of C o r - favoring jury duty were employees of public utilities, which,
of removing a no-strike pledge that has been in the CSEA
r e c t i o n and m y pension Is only
as matter of public relations-public service policy, give their
constitution since its founding 53 years ago.
$116.01 a m o n t h . I need a penemployees time off, with pay, for jury duty.
This action does not mean the CSEA intends definitely sion incerase v e r y much.
WE HAVE OBSERVED that for the overwhelming m a T h e police and f i r e m a n retirees
to withdraw the pledge in order to stage public employee
h
a
v
e
a
large
a
m
o
u
n
t
of
force,
jority
of those called, jury service was a waste of their time
fctrikes or demonstrations. Although the delegates also asked
repeal of the Condon-Wadlin Law, which forbids public em- enough to be of political value and of the public money appropriated for jurors' fees.
in
other
need
City
an
departments
increase—why
who
the
dis-
t o the M a y o r should he come up
ployee strikes, they made it clear that they would never take
WE K N O W MANY prospective jurors who spent two
f o r election again. T h e r e f o r e , he
any action that was forbidden by any law now in effect.
weeks in a courthouse waiting room reading the newspapers,
carries f a v o r w i t h the group of
It may happen that the CSEA will remove its no-strike retirees, overlooking the small per- magazines and all the books they missed for two years bepledge. It may not. This is the kind of employee organization c e n t a g e of old retirees in other fore. It seemed that too many were called, but few actually
that by far prefers the bargaining table to marching aggres- C i t y departments w h o have no served.
THE JURY SYSTEM in New York State, particularly in New
sively in the streets. It is the kind of employee organization o r g a n i z a t i o n interested in them.
I am not against the old r e - York City, is hardly organized to win friends and influence
that will bend every effort to negotiate peacefully and fruitt i r e d Police and F i r e m e n g e t t i n g
people in favor of government generally. Not every county
fully.
only $200 a year more, but w h y
What all this means, as far as we are concerned, is that discriminate against o t h e r pen- in the state has a James V. Mangano, as they do in Kings
our call in these columns last week for definite, honest em- sioners w h o need a pension i n - County. Chief Court Administrator Mangano has made jury
ployee programs—programs that government will have the crease too. W e have to pay i n - duty in his county as palatable as possible.
courage to stick to—becomes more and more urgent. When f l a t e d costs w h e n e v e r we purchase
BUT AS DILIGENT and
government acts in good faith it gets good faith in return. any article the same as policemen dealing with juries, for jurors
and f i r e m e n . I do not even get
The most important part, however, is the fact that if H e a l t h Insurance f r o m the C i t y — inconveniences, time-wasting,
chicanery by the prospective
government does not act at all it is not serving either the
I must pay m y o w n medical bills.
as dedicated as are officials
there are always discomforts,
inefficiency—and even a little
jurors themselves.
public or the public employee. Inaction on the one side inWE HAVE IN MIND the case of prospective juror who
U n f o r t u n a t e l y our pensions h a v e
vites action on the other; a very undesirable action.
little purchasing power these day.s. would appear at the court's October term, and in a loud
The next move, which is needed immediately, is up to T h e r e was no Social Security f o r voice, ringing with sincerity, would say: "Your honor, may
C i t y employees w h e n I retired in I serve in April instead of October." This was a seemingly
government.
1947. T h e Social Security check affirmative, reasonable plea no judge could resist. When
alone is more t h a n m y entire
someone so firmly announces he wants to serve, any judge
pension f o r a lot of City employees
would want to keep that fellow warm.
Twin Kudos
A
YEAR has passed since the Board of Education-Department of Personnel cooperative education program
•was inaugurated.
To date, it has been a success, according to representatives of both departments. It has spurred an interest in civil
service as a career field for high school graduates and,
equally important,, it has served to keep young boys and girls,
potential school drop-outs, behind the desks of New York
City schools.
These youths have worked at various jobs, mostly clerical,
on a part-time basis during the school year, one week in
school, the second at work.
The salary paid, although quite small, is enough in most
cases to keep the student in school. School credit is given
for the work done in the City agency and a passing mark
must be attained before the youth can graduate.
The two major accomplishments foreseen have been attained through the program. They can be measured in visible
human values—less drop-outs from high school, a revived
interest in civil service careers by young people.
Both departments deserve congratulations for a pioneering job well done.
retiring
today.
receive
a pension three times
large
'
"When
should
1 notify
social
"1
am
getting
social
security
addition
wages
have
they
as
tripled
since I retired and I am not eligible for any Health
Insurance.
I trust you can present this in
a
forceful
way
so
that
the
old
timers w h o are still alive can g e t
a little more b e n e f i t f r o m the City,
b e f o r e they
push up the
daisies.
T h e r e is no o r g a n i z a t i o n
inter-
ested in our small group, as
we
are of no political value and too
old
and
decrepit
to
picket
City
H a l l in wheel chairs. T h a n k s
for
your aid in g e t t i n g M a y o r W a g n e r
t o recognize other pensioners besides
Police
Department
sioner of
and
of
Firemen.
Correction
City
Pen-
1947.
S.V.L.,
BROOKLYN
Back Pay
Box
101:
Indeed
ing
Questions Answered
On Social Security
since
In
to
check
it will be v e r y
finally
receive
gratify-
an
extra
due t o the July, 1963 up-
gradings. T h i s letter is written In
r e g a r d t o the grave injustices
to
all employees always upgraded In
July. T h i s Is my
f i f t h such u p -
grading.
E a c h y e a r we lose six
IN APRIL, OUR juror would announce in equally loud
and sincere voice: "Your honor, may I serve in October instead of April." The court's answer was always "yes." And
this went on for 12 years until the court's new electronic
machines caught up with the neat little scheme.
JUDGE DESMOND has a powerful set of arguments
against the civil jury system. He pointed out that 10 years
ago 50,000 cases were pending in State Supreme Court. Today, the backlog is 70,000 and growing. Some counties have
a 21 to 34-month delay in civil jury cases.
WE AGREE WITH Judge Desmond that an experienced
judge can decide a civil case without help from a jury. And,
the distinguished jurist adds, there is substantial evidence
that the trial of a typical personal injury before a judge
alone would require only half the time of a jury trial.
IN ADDITION, reports Judge Desmond, Great Britain—^
where the civil jury system originated—abandoned it years
ago. The United States, the only major country where it is
still used, is "coincidentally the only major country still
suffering from serious delays In the trial of civil law suits."
WHEN A CONDITION in government is an irritant causing bad public relations for the cause of good government,
It should be corrected promptly.
SINCE THE STATE'S civil jury system seems to fall
within this framework, serious consideration should be given,
to prompt action in eliminating the irritant—particularly
when the cure suggested by Judge Desmond would be so
overwhelmingly in the public interest.
months
my checks for my son who will be 18 back pay becau.se those upgraded sonnel departments are, but t o
on September 2nd. Can he con- in January receive back pay r e Address if I receive a benefit
correct this injustice to titles t h a t
tinue to get benefits until he has troactive t o January. T h i s Is a
ALBANY.
Oct.
H—Allen
M.
are consistently laid over is w h y
check each month?"
finished high school this sum- loss to those upgraded In July of
K a y e has been named principal
all upgrading should be m a d e r e a p p r o x i m a t e l y $100 per year. T o
N o t i f y social security as earl:^ in mer?"
of
the
Rehabilitation
Hospital
troactive to January.
date
this
has
been
a
loss
to
me
Sorry, but w h e n your
child
the month as possible, p r e f e r a b l y
School at W e s t H a v e r s t r a w . H e
DEPARTMENT LIBRARY
AIDE
b e f o r e the 10th of the m o n t h , so reaches 18, his p a y m e n t s will be of about $500 because of a July
succeeds R u t h E. W h i t t e n , w h o
upgrading.
t h a t your check will be mailed at stopped. I n your case, this means
. Z i p code numbers help speed retired a f t e r 38 years w i t h t h e
•ecurity
about
t h e usual t l m «
dress.
a
change
in
t o your new
Kaye Named
a d - n o m o r e checks a f t e r the one f o r
August.
I understand how busy the o f - your mail. Use them in your reof the B u d g e t and P e r - turn address.
ficials
school of w h i c h 27 were as p r i n cipal.
CIVIL
Tiies<lay, Ocfolirr 1J>, 1963
SERVICE
LEADER
Page ^evet
TV Column
(Continued
from
Page
2)
•5:30 p . m . — N u t r i t i o n and Y o u —
Miamimchlboand?
I v a Bennett of the Nutrition Bureau a n d guest.
6:30 p . m . — T h e A i r F o r c e S t o r y
— U . S . A i r Force f i l m series.
8:30
p.m.—Army
Special—U.S.
^
A r m y f i l m series.
10:30 p . m . — O p e r a t i o n A l p h a b e t Lesson N o . 12 of the new p r o g r a m
series
promoting
literacy,
sented
in cooperation
THIS FREE
B A H A M A CRUISE •
CHAISE LOUNGES & MATS
PARKING IN OUR LOT
•
•
Special Dlscountt To
CivllServiM Employees
pre-
with N Y C
D e p t . of L a b o r .
MONTHLY RATES
SHOWER OF S T A R S TOP ENTERTAINMENT
WIN A FREE VACATION
TV IN EVERY ROOM
CALL
ONE RATE!
INCLUDES]
EVMYTHINGI
CY 3-4646
W e d n e s d a y , October 16
2:30 p.m.—Nursing T o d a y — N Y C
D e p t . of Hospitals series on n u r sing
care.
" T h e assignement
nursing
personnel."
4:00
p.m.—Around
Police
Lts.
Dept.
"Auto
—Iva
—
Westchester
County
Parkway P a t -
Clock-
rolmen's Benevolent Association and current president of the W e s t -
program.
chester County Police Conference is shown being- sworn in as a s e r -
discuss
geant by Westchester County E.xecutive Edwin G . Michaelian. Looking
the
and Carey
Larceny."
*5:00
NEW SERGEANT
rolman James J. Byrne, former president of the department's P a t -
Training
Mullins
of
|.Jl:U4JU.|i|i!ll.fJfiiillimMI.IM.I|l:UIJ!l
on, his wife, Edythe and Marvin Ericson, police chief.
p.m.—Nutrition
Bennett,
of
and Y o u
the N u t r i t i o n
Bureau, a n d guest.
p.m.—Air
Force
—U.S. Air Force
6:30
Story.
7:30
p.m.—On
Department
the
training
Story—
Job—Fire
course.
10:30 p.m.—-Operation A l p h a b e t Lesson N o . 13 of the n e w p r o g r a m
series p r o m o t i n g literacy presented
w i t h cooperation of N Y C D e p t . of
Labor.
T h u r s d a y , October 17
4:00
p.m.—Around
Police
Department
gram:
"Auto
the Clock-
training p r o -
Larceny".
6:30 p . m . — T h e A i r F o r c e - S t o r y
— U . S . A i r F o r c e f i l m series.
7:30
p.m.—On
the
D e p t . t r a i n i n g course.
Job—Fire
"Transpor-
t a t i o n of the I n j u r e d " .
10:30 p . m . — O p e r a t i o n
Alphabet
— D e p t . of L a b o r series p r o m o t i n g
literacy.
Friday,
1:30
October 18
p.m.—Nursing
Today—
N Y C Dept. of Hospitals series o n
nursing care. " D e v e l o p m e n t of the
N u r s i n g Care
4:00
Plan."
p.m.—Around
Police
Department
gram.
"Auto
the Clock-
Larceny".
•5:00 p . m . — N u t r i t i o n
—Iva
\^^ORKixG TIRELESSLY ill h'ts laboratory,
cheimt
Lows Pasteur not only discovered treatments for
virulent and contagious diseases^ but also experi^
oriented ivitb controls for fermentation and baC'
teria in vcihe, vinegar^ beer and milk ivith such
success that mankind ivill be forever in his debt.
training pro-
Bennet,
of
and Y o u
the
Nutrition
Bureau, a n d guest.
HIGH SCHOOL
OmOMA
Pioneers in Protection
If you arn (iv«>r
you can secure
A IliRli 8clioiil D1|>IOIIIH! Acccptfd
for Civil Wervlce itoHltioiiii. Our
course will iirciiiirp you In n sliort
lliiifi—oiitstiiiidiiig riiculty—low nites
—cull .^Ir. Jt'roMie at Kl ^-nmH).
Just as Pasteur \vas first to learn how treating
certain foods could make them free from disease^
bcaruig bacteria Vithout changing their taste or
MONROE S C H O O L OF BUSINESS
E. Tremont & Boston Rd., Bronx
Kl 2-5600
f o o d vahie . . . . so the STATEWIDE PLAN was the
first program of protection against the costs of
hospital, surgical-medical and major medical carc
for the employees of the State of N e w York.
SPECIAL HOTEL RATES
FOR
STATE
EMPLOYEES
IN
N E W Y O R K
CITY
A N D
R O C H E S T E R
N E W
••.00
YORK
singlm; *14.00
PARIS A V E N U e
•"<! 34in
Blue Cross, Blue
This three-part program
Shield, and Major Medical — offers most State
employees, activc or retired, the most liberal
benefits at the lowest possible cost. That's w h /
more than 425,000 State employees and employees of many local subdivisions of N e w York
State and their dependents arc now subscribers.
CITY
twin
STHetr
I f you arc not a subscriber and would like all
the facts on the STATEWIDE PLAN, see your payroll or personnel officer.
Every room with private bath, radio
and television; most air-conditioned.
(IRT subway at door)
|lVv>uU0t
100 W * « t
s a t h S t ' X t at A . a f v . j c of t n « A m c r i c a t
Every room with private bath, radio
and television. 100% Air Conditioned.
ROCHESTER
•r.OO »lngl0i *1M.00 twin
BLUE CROSS®
svniou
securuy
BLUE SHIELD*
Roch«st«r t lirgMl b««t loMttd hotfl. Ev«ry
room with privil* iMlh. t.v. ind radio; mtny
iir -conditiontU.
i
FOR ReURVATIONS AT ALL
In NCVV Y O M K C I T R
C<
MU"4/
In H O C H K S T t a
H A '1 i o n t - T M O
In AL»ANV-C«11 BNI.'U' M MM
c »
)
AuuNy
• iSutfALo • jAM£SiowM
•
Nbvv
VuitK • KuuitiiuR
• SVRACI/se • Uiic.\ •
WAIUIOWII
C I V I L
Page Eight
S E R V I C E
L E A D E R
Tuesday,
Pjipe Nln«
TS,
O d o W
—.—
A
m
New York City Plays Host To 8 0 0 CSEA Delegates
r n H.. P.H,m
1
conrcntion
relwri
above
of the )
sluncs scenes jrom
mUmcmbcr
the
Civil Service
'Asm . which ivas held last week ,n the I'ark Sheraton
HOU dclciiates,
represaUwg
State,
county
and
annual
fM'ees,
hammered
Kmployees
crease,
improvement
Hotel. Some
municipal
i/u-
conditions
out resolutions
in retirement
dealing
u ith a State salary m-
systems
and
better
working
in both State and local government.
At top left, Harry W. Albri^^ht, Jr., CSEA associate
ansiverh^
delegate.
dette of Albany,
counsel,
officer'
information
At the microph^
speakirr^
on n point
of order
in the next picture
a resolution.
dais. In the center row of pictures,
sought
is Robert
Next photo
by a
Wolff,
Gau-
right, Joseph
shows the
second from left, John
also of Albany,
dent of the Employees
floor.
is seen giving a committee
F, Feily, who was elected
Association,
report.
At far
to a third term as pnsi-
answers
a question
pom
tn,
The remaining
photos
are candul
^iken while the convenliun
camera
was in
s wts o]
.
C I V I L
P a g e Twelve
S E R V I C E
L E A D E R
T u e s d a y , O c t o b e r 268, 1 9 6 3
REAL
ESTATE
SPFLD
$16,990
MOLLIS
4
BEDROOMS
Detached
colonial
on
a
tree-lined
street, l a r g e living- r o o m , f o r m a l dining- r o o m , m o d e r n k i t c h e n 4
bath,
flnlshablo
b a s e m e n t , B a r a j e , a l l appliancefl. M o v e r i g h t i n .
CAMBRIA
HGTS
GDNS
$16,990
SEPARATION
SALE
D E T A C H E D STt'CCO &
BRICK
RANCH
A l l t h e r o o m s on o n e f l o o r ,
plus
extra atlic & flnishable
basement,
m o d e r n k i t c h e n & b a t h , irarafre, o n
large l a n d s c a p e d p l o t w i t h trees &
shrubs.
$22,990
ST.
Solid b r i c k 10 y e a r o l d w i t h a larifo
5 & 3 ' / i r o o m . a p t s p l u s l u l l basement,
garage,
lovely
landscai)ed
fenced-in y a r d , a l l api)liance9.
Both
apts available.
NEW
room
dern
Move
$26,500
ALBANS
BUU.DERS CLOSEOUT
3 family brick with a 0 & 5
a p a r t m e n t a v a i l a b l e , u l t r a mok i t c h e n & b a t h , f u l l b.ificmcnt.
i n 30 days. L a s t O n e .
MANY 1 & 2 FAMILY HOMES AVAILABLE
G.I. N O
CASH
DOWN
FHA
$690
DOWN
QUEENS HOME SALES
170-13
Hillside
Ave.
—
Jamaica
OL 8-7510
^AII
C A D A DDT
OPEN
EVERY
DAY
N O CASH Gl's
REPORT TO MENTAL HYGIENE:
Solomon Bendet, at microphone, chairman of the
CSEA Salary Committee, and Thomas Coyle, far
right, assistant research director for CSEA, gave
reports on the Association salary goals for 1964
and told how pay plans are prepared at a meeting
of Mental Hygiene Dept. delegates attending
the
annual CSEA convention, held last week in the
Park-Sheraton
Hotel.
William
Rossiter,
Mental
Hygiene representative is busy with the water jug
as
Emii
M.
R. Bollman,
also
a
representative,
listens.
Parking Meter Attendant
Queries Prepare Readers
T h e N e w Y o r k City D e p a r t m e n t of
2 for
the e x a m i n a t i o n
for
the
P e r s o n n e l w a s expected to o p e n filing on October
position of
p a r k i n g meter a t t e n d a n t ( w o m e n ) . T h e e x a m -
i n a t i o n is one of the most p o p u l a r t h a t the City o f f e r s a n d in a n e f f o r t to a i d its r e a d e r s
in p r e p a r a t i o n f o r this test, T h e L e a d e r is p u b l i s h i n g the last e x a m i n a t i o n w h i c h w a s
i n these titles. T h e e x a m a n d the key a n s w e r s w h i c h correlate w i t h
the
given
questions will
be
p u b l i s h e d in p a r t this week a n d continued f o r the n e x t f e w weeks.
Code f o r Types of Absence
Read tiie chart below showing the absences in Unit A for the
X—Saturday or Sunday
period November 1 through November 15, 1959; then answer questions
H—Legal Holiday
66 to 70 according to the information given.
P—Leave without pay
ABSENCE RECORD — U N I T A
M — M i l i t a r y leave
NOVEMBER
15, lf)5»
Date:
1
2
3
4
5
0
7
8
9
10 11 13 13 I t 15 J—Jury duty
Kia|>lo,v)*p«
V—Vacation
X
Ames
X
X
H
s H
X
Bloom
X
X
H
S
3
X
s
H
s
X
S—Sicic leave
X
Deegran
X
X
H
J H J
J
J X
X
X
X
H
X
O—Other leave of absence
Howard
H
X
H
X
X
Jet'sens
M H M U
X
Note: If there Is not entry against
X
X
X
H
Lange
s X
X
X
X
V H
X
V
Morton
an employee's name under a
X
X
H
X
S
o
X
H
date, the employee woriced on
that date.
TO HUP
YOU PASS
GET THE ARCO STUDY BOOK
SURFACE LINE
OPERATOR
66. According
to the
above
chart, no employee in Unit A was
absent on ( A ) leave without pay;
( B ) military leave; ( C ) other
leave of absence; ( D ) vacation.
67. According to the above
ciiart, all but one of the employees in Unit A were present on
the ( A ) 3rd; ( B ) 5th; ( C ) 9th;
( D ) 13th.
68.
According
to
the
above
Farms & Acreage, Orange
ACRKS,
0
room
lioiise,
2
Co.
lireplacea.
bpanis. $17,Ho(l.
OVKRLOOKIXG tlit> river. 0 rooms, fireplace, collar. L o w
taxes. $ 5 , 5 0 0 .
d i e t U u i i i i , B k r , W allien, N V . I ' R 'J-.1081
$3.00
Contains Previous Questions and A n s w e r s and
O t h e r S u i t a b l e S t u d y M a t e r i a l f o r C o m i n g Exam
ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPON
45c for 24 hour ipeci«l delivtry
C.O.D.'t 30c txira
LEADER B O O K STORE
97 Duane St.. N e w York 7. N . Y .
Pl««ta f«nd m«
coplai of books chtckad abovt.
1 •nclof* chack or monay ordar for $
Name
Address
City
State
• • i i i f t io include 4% SaUt Tax
JAXMAN
BRICK! BRICK!
For Sale
ST. ALBANS
B r u k , ranch, large beautiful
rooms,
lavishly
decorated
bathroom,
newly
flnlshed party basement with complete
bur. Private driveway, only
$ 1 5 , 9 9 0
G.T. n o cash d o w n . O t h e r s only JtOOO
down.
Another
GREAT
VALUE
at
E. J . DAVID
159-05 Hillside Ave.
Jamaica
AX 7-21M
H O M E - T O SETTLE E S T A T E
charmins s m a l l upstate village. Quick
d r i v e to R o m e , O n e i d a , Utica, S y r a c u s e .
I d e a l h u n t i n i r , flshingr area. Old, U-story
H o u s e — m o d e r n improvements. 6 rooms
(4 B R ) U a t l i - F u r n a c e • L a r g e F r o n t
Porcli • ;i-iitory G a r a » e • C h i c k e n H o u s e
- Bordering: creek.
Walking:
distance
S c h o o l . C h u r d u ' a . Store. 1 acre l a n d .
$ 3 , 5 0 0 . $1.U00 d o w n .
Mrs
J. M . Fltxcerald,
K.I).
S,
Camden, N V . Tel. 003 J I or ISU
Business
WANTED
(Open
Sat.
every day, IncUidiiig
Sc Hun, 9 : 3 0 to U>
Immediate Occupancy
ADDESLEIGH
CO-OP APARTMENTS
109.15 M E R R I C K
JAMAICA.
BLVD.
QUEENS
E F F I C I E N C I E S f r o m $95
Full cash investment $075
1 B D R M a p t s f r o m $138
Full cash investment $1,170
2 B D R M a p t s f r o m $154
Full cash investment $1,415
3 B D R M o p t s f r o m $171
FuU cash investment $1,660
Included
Sales Office on premises
J A 3-1901
Offering by prospectus only
ALBANY
ATTRACTIVE
HOMES
CALL
W. F. B E N N E n
Multiple Lisflnf Photos
1672 C E N T R A L A V E .
ALBANY
U N 9-5378
Opportunities
T a i l o r > S h o e m a k e r - DruKCixt • B a k e r
L a u n d r o m a t • Bowling: Alley. Uiher small
businuMs i i
factories i n
fast K r o w i i m
K e r h o n k s o i i , Ulster Co., N . V . W e w i l l
assist
tinancially
to Ket y o u
started.
Write:
SecnMary,
KerlionUson
Area
C l u m b e r of Coinmerce. I'.O. Box
181,
K e r h o n k s o n , N . V . , Tel 7UitO.
AX 1 -7400
ROCKLAXD
IN THE C A T S K I L L S —
DELAWARE COUNTY
Y O U H O W K V A C A T I O N P L A ( K OK
HI N T I N G C A M P . 2 ACRKS. HKOOK.
Of.D H O r S K
NEKDS
K I X I N C . Kl»K
y l ICK SAI.K $ l , « 0 0 .
r.U. Bos »38, Hubart, N.Y.
VICINITY
Monroe, N . Y . in
Beautiful
Orange
County
45 miles from N . Y. C . by
Express Highways with frequent buses and trains
Merriewold
Lake
15 acres of recreation for
Merriewold H o m e owners
Revolution
X.
Farms & Acreages
Columbia
County
Ht'NT
N0\V_8wini
l a t e r . C a b i n in
S8
acres o f
WOOUH w i t h
hngre p o n d
for
Hwininiinif. A really b e a u t i f u l l o c a t i o n .
$ 1 4 , 5 0 0 . . \ K T H l R I . K K of R e d R o c k ,
E. Chatham,
N V . C H ^-734^'. I f
no
a n s w e r c a l l C H L> 0 2 0 1 .
HOLLIS
SOLID BRICK — Post War —
Immaculate
rooms. 3 bedrooms, mod. kit. colored tile
bath, fin. basement, garage.
$ 1 8 , 9 9 0
$890 CASH NON VETS
I U 9 - 1 2 HILLSIDE AVENUE. JAMAICA!
Gas & Utilities
(Continued on Page 13)
11
CAMBRIA HGTS.
DETACHED, Colonial. 7 rooms,
'SPIC and SPAN' 3 master bed-;
rms, mod. kitchen, tiled bath,
qaroge, large garden.
$ 1 7 , 9 9 0
$790 CASH NON VETS
OR
Evolution
Neither — Just Prestige
Homes That A r e Years
A h e a d of Its C o n t e m p o raries in Design & Layout
THE KING
THE QUEEN
3 and 4
Bedrooms
Each lot over I / 3 r d a c r e —
Municipal W a t e r
and Sewers
from
$16,790
LOW-LOW
D O W N PAYMT.
LOW-LOW
TAXES
EXCLUSIVE SALES A G T .
A . J. Arons, Monroe, N . Y .
Dial 9 I 4 . S T 3-2231 or
ST 2-8921
N . Y . S . Thru way to Hurrlmaii ( E x i t
1 « ) to Qulckway
(Route 17) 8
nillm to Route » U 8 (Kxit at 1 3 0 ) .
r u n i rlcht on Route 'MH, IVii mile*
to inodelii. Look f o r ttlgii.
" C o u r t JMter with
Bell"
Properties For Sale
N e w York State
PICTURESQUE country estaf*. 3
aerts, b«autifully londteapcd, 4
room houM,
modorn
impvts.
$10,000.
NEW modorn 4 rm bung.,
sulatod. modora hitchon, oloe.
rongo, rofrigorolor. Largo lot.
$«.000.
CHOICE lots. $S00 to $1,000 por
aero. Exeolloot loeatloa, paaor«
amie viows. Off Rt. 28.
M. LOWN, SHANDAKEN. N.Y.
Dial 914 OV I . m 4
* Use postal sone numbers on
your
mall
to
Insure
prompt
delivery.
Tin's Jay, Oolofier 75,
CTVIL
R E A L
S E R V I C E
E I ^ T A T E
LONG ISLAND
ONLY
$.JitO
SPACIOUS, 11 ROOMS, features 2 beautiful science
kitchens, 2 modern baths. Income pays all monthly
costs, full basement, oil heat, many extras. Owner
must sell at once and will moke sacrifice. First $10
deposit will hold to contract.
LIVE RENT FREE
IL 7-3100
OFFICES AT
HEMPSTEAD & VICINITY
STOP! LOOK NO MORE!
WE HAVE HOMES YOU DESIRE
ISLAND
RE
SOLID
MODERN CUSTOM built bung- rooms
olow, 6 extremely large rooms, porch,
plus full attic, basement and 85x100
g a r a g e . This trim house is set
on 50x100 plot. Seeing is believing.
Hurry
before
some
other lucky one buys it. $800
down.
FREEPORT
HOMES
9-7.300
N O C A S H DOWN
DETACHED, ranch styles, huge,
spacious 5 rooms plus extra
kitchen and both in basement
f o r income. Beautiful set-up on
40x100 plot. Owner must sell
at SI2,000 full price.
H U R R Y
JA 9-4400
159-12 HILLSIDE AVE.
135-19 R O C K A W A Y BLVD
JAMAICA
s o . OZONE PARK
BETTER REALTY
FROM 9:30 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.
NO CASH DOWN
home, se^j^scji
2
years
rooms, 6 large
old,
l'^
baths,
modern eat-in
garage
and
kitchen.
9
posit and move in.
277 NASSAU ROAD
17 South Franklin St.
ROOSEVELT
HEMPSTEAD
Ol'EN
INTEGRATED
FANTASTIC
GREAT VALUES!
(>
ruuiiis,
2 FAMILY
6 & 6 RMS.
tliiiKhi'il
liiiKciiieiil, iillru iiKi(lerii
kilchcH
anil
b a t h . GaiaKe.
T A h K OYKK Mi'C.
Income Apt.
Pays All
$99.40
<
MONTIII.Y
u
Kacli apt. u l i n i iiiuileni uiul liiiinai'iilatf.
t'lniftlifU
bahriuciit,
KiiraKe.
ALBANS
4 BEDROOM
DETACHED
COLONIAL
All uvei'Hizetl rooiiDi,
niixlcrii kiti'heii and
bath, Karaite.
$88 Monthly
Mortgage
TRYME REALTY
168-16 Hillside Ave.
01 8-6100
Suffolk County. L.I.. N.Y.
D R K N T W O O I ) foi-einosure. $ 3 0 0 down, $04
nioulli. 4 lu'ilioom rant'h !^8,500. Many
OtheiKi. M.LaiUiiiliii
Kealty.
Fiiol
Ave., ithoiio 516 B H 8-8416.
KIVEUSIDE
•PArtniMiU
DtUVB,
IH
IntarrMlaL
(ftlfv T-illt
*
8H
priTAU
furnlthftd
TB»
FOR
Jamaica
OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
RENT —
WEEK
160-13 HILLSIDE AVE., J A M A I C A
OL 7-3838
OL 7-1034
192-05 LINDEN BLVD.
ST. ALBANS
Bt-lford
W.
Hurty,
.Ir.,
SALE
Ilroker
MOLLIS
GOOD BUY
ALBANY
7 R o o m House • 3 b R - Nicely K i u n i t h e d
(j-E K i t i l i e n • Garage • Kxilubive Reai d f u t i a l Aiva S.'IOO. I'fi- M o n l l i ,
So.
Main
Ave..
Albany
T.-l.
IV
•.••04'/0,
P A T R O N I Z E
OUR
4 D V E R T I S C J I S
A! HOMES AT
LOWEST PRICES
O Z O N E P A R K — H c a u t i f u l 0 room
D u t c h Colonial, garage plus
lull
party
ba^icitif-nt,
immaculate
t h r o u g h o u t . A real buy 1
1 - F , \ M I L Y , shingle, 3 bedrooms,
30xl0U
Price $20,600
OTHER PROPERTIES
IN
QUEENS & NASSAU
$66.27
J I O . TO
BANK
HOLLIS — LIVE RENT F R E E —
Legal '.I-faniily, solid brick, two 5
r o o m apts and garage, nr everything.
$15,990
B A I S L E Y P A R K — f) room mansion, a bedrooms, 'i '.-i baths,
oar garage. The best buy of the
year.
wo.
ABSOLUTELY
No Cash
ONLY
$88.36
G.l.s
TO
BANK
Other OS
Little as
$190
Kingdom Homes
APTS. FOR RENT
CO-OP APTS. FOR SALE
MORTGAGES ARRANGED
OL 8-4646
168-14
HILLSIDE AVE.
J A M A I C A , N.Y.
HAZEL B. GRAY
168-33 LIBERTY AVE.
TAKE YOUR P I C K ^
BRICK
RANCH
A
135-30 R O C K A W A Y BLVD., SO. OZONE PARK
JA 9-5100
plot, g a r a g e , excellent condition.
ALL 5 OFFICES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK; 9:30 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.
ST.
7 DATS
IV 9-8814-8815
QUEENS VILLAGE
oil heat, full basement,
BETTER REALTY
TRULY
FREEPORT
Fieldstone' 1-1950
mum down payment. Bring de-
IV 9-5800
SPLIT LEVEL
MODERN, UP to dote living. Detached, with 3 bedrooms, finish>
ed family room, den, patio,
wall mirror, oil heat, 50x125
plot, wosing machine. A lovely
buy! Will not lost.
Homefinders, Ltd.
bedrooms, full
MA 3-3800
ROOSEVELT
14 SOUTH FRANKLIN STREET, HEMPSTEAD, L. I.
on 1/5 acre plot in fine n b u r - basement, oil heat on 1/4 acre,
ban neighborhood, features 3 nr. everything. Priced f o r quick
large bedrooms, finished play- sole. No cash G.I., FHA miniroom,
BUILT 2-family home,
down, 3 up, enclosed
basement and g a r a g e ,
plot. $800 down.
LIST REALTY CORP. $
Detached, 4 bedroom, brick,
full basement, patio, oil
heat, garage.
Detached, 4 large rooms,
down, 3 modern rooms up,
full basement. 2 cor garage,
heat.- $19 Wk.
Low oilCash
A RETURN FOR YOUR
INVESTMENT
COLONIAL,
NO
BUNK
Low Cash - $30 Wk.
ALL 5 OFFICES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
$14,500
A GREAT BUY!
CAPE CODE, solid brick home
on 60x190 plot with 4 bedrooms, oversized garage, patio,
wall-to-wall carpet. Inter-com
system throughout house. Low
down payment.
ROOSEVELT
CAMBRIA HGTS.
Roosevelt and Hempstead Offices Ad on This Page
LEGAL 2.FAMILY
EXCLUSIVE WITH
LIST
OZONB I'ARK
$M.I»IO
G . I . no cash down I Dctachcd Colonial.
6 b e a u t i f u l rnis.
finishtd
baMmcnt,
garace. Large garden plot. G . l . no
cash down. F H A $;;40 down.
Hillside Ave., J a m .
JA 3-3377
MAGNIFICENT
CONVENIENT
l . A l ' R K l . T O N — G . l . no cash d o w n .
Dctached Col. 8 rnis, 'i full bths, futuristic kitchf-n with wall oven. '.^4' living rm, f u l l (linrm. OOxlOO garden
plot. Garage. Inime<Iate O'-cup. Very
reasonable.
CORONA
LEVEL
DOWN 1
H O I . I J S — G.T. no oafh down. W a l k
to .subway. Brick. Practically
m-w I
Ma^nilicpnt rnia, 2 tone colored tile
ball), (raraire. Overeizcd (rai'dcn.
LONG
103-09 NORTHERN BLVD.
SPLIT
CASH
INTEORATED
liOM.IS
$18,OHO
G.I. no fasli. F H A SOOO d o w n . Hiiilt
dclaclicil '(• inin, 4 b»;drniH. laruc liv
rm
with
circular
stairway,
niodi'm
kilclicn,
tone «'ol tile bath, snnipnioiis bafcnient. all a p p l i a m e " in<lMded. 10x100. Garage.
LEGAL 2 FAMILY
Price $14,000
No Cash Down
DETACHED
BUNGALOW
on
oversized plot, boots 5'/^ modern rooms and both, full basement, automatic heat. No down
payment to all, only $83.36
monthly to bank.
Long Island
IIKI.I.AIKK
I'ARK
)|tl»!,!M»0
Lnxiiriotis all t)ii<'k I'PBiden.'e. Only H
yrs old. t) '/j lai tre rnis, 2 tone col.
l i l f b a l h , )in bsnit.
OFFICES READY TO
SERVE YOU! ,
Call For
Appoinfmenf
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
$12,500
V A L U E D
Long Island
INTEGRATED
5
Pag« Eleven
L E A D E R
169th St. IND Subway Sta.
Open 7 Doys a Week
JAMAICA
AX 1-5858 - 9
SO. OZONE PARK
BEAUTIFUL TO SEE!
HERE IS A truly gracious
Colonial home. Very modern with
pine finished basement, garage,
private
driveway
and
patio.
Many extras f o r the lucky buyer.
Only $16,490. Low cosh. Ask f o r
item 0-450.
For these and many more llst/ngs In all sections of L.I., call
CORWIN-GUTIEBER, RItrs.
96-21 Rockowoy Blvd. Ml MOOO
139-50 Hillside A v o .
AX 7-3320
INTEGRATED
I
I
OVER 1300 HOMES SOLD
IN 12 YEARS!!!
=
~
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
$16,900
N O C A S H G.l.
MOVE IN TODAY
=
8 ROOMS
FINISH BASEMENT
I E-S-S-E-X
ZSZ
A C C E S S I B L E wooik'il acreage, loins 40.000
acreg »tute owned fore«t; huntinir and
fishing: area. Terun. HowaiU Terwilliger.
K«rh«iUsou, N.V.
=
=
LARGE PLOT
^
JAMAICA
=
Take 8tb Ave. ' E ' Train to Sutphin Blvd. Station. OI'EN 7 OAVS A W E E K
^lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll AX 7-7900
Houses - Brooklyn
EAST
NEW
YORK,
owner
sacridcing
2-
' E A S T N E W Y O R K , owner m u s t bell 4ftiuiily
b r i i k , pos^t -sion 6 room
apt,
paraiiuet, brass, a u t o m a t i c burner and
lights,
caxh alMiVt> single mtge.
Call eve« and weekeudt, UA 6-U;jl6.
=
i;
LAURELTON
lajuily,
brifk, double garage,
modern
b a t h s , brubs, p a n u i u e t , all v a c a n t
cash
above
single
nitge,
t'all
evee
=
143-01 HILLSIDE AVE.
_
& Weekends, BA 6-9315.
Farms & A c r e a g e s - Ulster Co.
|
|
RANCH
Beautiful
bedroom ranch with wooU
burning
lireplace
ia
living
room,
formal dining
room, large
moileni
kitchen with breakfast nook, Hollywood b a f h , oversize^! garage,
tally
landscaped — $17,Ut»0.
MENTONE REALTY
rjT-Otl
MEKKKK
LA
1MW0
BLVV.
CIVIL
Page Twelve
S E R V I C E
Tuesday, October 15, 1963
L E A D E R
ARCUS RADIO &
GIVE
YOU
THESE
FINE
PRODUCTS
OPENS UP A NEW WORLD OF
O P E N S UP A NEW WORLD OF
CLOCK-RADIO
WITH SNOOZ-ALARM®
RP2160 Series
limhiW
Model
C465
STEREOPHONIC PHONOGRAPH
Canyon Black—Model RP2160
Antique Leather—Model RP2161
• Washable, scuff-proof
vinyl-clad steel case
• Hinged, detachable speaker
wings can be separated up
to 3 3 '
'Jiimim'WO'
STEREOPHONIC
• 4-speed automatic
FLIP-DOWN changer with 11"
turntable accommodates
6 records
PHONOGRAPH
Driftwood B r o w n — M o d e l RP2153
Antelope W h i t e — M o d e l R P 2 1 5 8
•
Washable, scuff-proof vinyl-clad case
•
Hinged, detachable speaker wings can be separated
up to 2 5 '
Separate volume, channel-balance and continuous
variable tone controls
•
•
• G-E C-lOOA stereophonic
cartridge with long-life,
record-saving diamond stylus
for 16", 33-, 4 5 rpm records;
synthetic sapphire for 7 8 rpm
uecords
• G E Tonal 1 tone arm
prevents resonance problems,
protects records
Dual channel amplifier for true fidelity
• Tape and speaker jacks
allow added versatility
• Tape and speaker jacks allow added versatility
•
4 5 - r p m spindle at no extra cost
PLUS THESE
•k Four e V a "
voice coils
EXTRA-VALUE
Dynapower
Speakers with
• 8- and S inch Dynapower
Speakers in each wing, with
electronic crossover
aluminum
•k 4 speed automatic FLIP-DOWN changer with
turntable accommodates 6 records
•
P L U S THESE EXTRA-VALUE FEATURES
FEATURES
11*
Beautiful, low priced
r'
ir*
Wakes you to music and/or alarm.
>>
Turns itself off quietly.
^^^ •
Snooz-Alarm gives you an extra forty winks.
; •
Powerful G-E Dynapower speaker.
i •
Choice of Antique White, Pink, or Brown.
r 90-DA Y W A R R A H T Y OH BOTH P A R T S AHD L A B O R
-k Dual channel stereo
amplifier with 5 watts music
power, 10 watts peak power
G-E C-IOOA ceramic stereo cartridge for flawless
performance of monaural and stereo records
• Separate, compensated
volume, bass, treble and
channel-balance controls
Diamond stylus for 16-, 33-, and 4 5 - r p m records;
synthetic sapphire for 78-rpm records
G-E Tonal 1 tone arm prevents resonance problems,
protects records
©
A U T O M A T I C TOAST-R*
OVEN
• A "Pop-up" Toaster
• "Oven" Drawer Below
• Tempcraiure Control
AUTOMATIC
SKILLET
MODEL CI 14
•
Complete with Control,
• Accurate—Dependable
Cordset and Lid
C-E Control
• Completely immersible for easy cleaning
MODEL F80
S T E A M A N D DRY W O N
•
Opens cans—quickly, easily,
safely
•
Life-time magnet
during cutting
•
Mounts on wall or use on
counter stand
•
Finest
blade
quality
holds
steel
lid
cutting
• 2 Irons in One
• New Cord-lift
• Even-Flow Steam
KEK*A*BREWr»
COFFEE M A K E R
• Brews3TolOCupi
• Automatic Brew
Selector
• Built-in Gauge
ARCUS RADIO
SEE
YOUR
US
LOW
FOR
PRICE
-EL5-1572
241 East 59th Srreet Corner 2nd Avenue
1 Block East
of Bloomlngdale
TnpftJay, Oclobcr 15, 1963
CIVIL
S E R V I C E
L E A D E R
Thfrteen
New Buffalo CSEA Unit Starts Off Witfi 800 Members
(From Leader Correspondent)
BUFFALO, Oct. 14 — The
newest chapter in the Western Conference of the CSEA
Is going strong with an initial
enrollment
of
about
800
members.
It
is
the
Buffalo
State
chapter
University
and
of
represents
university employees. T h e U n i v e r sity
of
vate
Buffalo, formerly
institution,
the
is- now
State University
Temporary
The
CSEA
a
pri-
part
of
system.
Officers
granted
new
worked
only
employees
when
and O ' S h e a ;
(D)
(C)
Morton
27.
offi-
Members
of
belonged
the
to
new
Buffalo
chapter,
CSEA.
B u f f a l o chapter
recently , only. Leader, 97 Duane
t o g i v e the new unit a p r o - r a t a N e w York 7, N . Y .
share of m o n e y already paid into
B u f f a l o chapter
treasury
in
(A)
(C)
The
a
Saturday,
holiday
Manhattan;
(B)
Richmond;
(D)
the
headquarters
(C)
Secretary
(A)
(C)
or
legal
Bloom;
(B)
Morton;
(D)
(D)
Henry
Cabot
of
State
of
Lodge.
77. L i n c o l n S q u a r e is the n a m e
is being developed as a ( A )
70.
h a d ; ter f o r concerts and operas; ( B )
else h o m e f o r delinquent adolescents;
more
are
employees
absences t h a n
(A)
anyone
B l o o m and D e e g a n ;
Bloom, Deegan
Deegan
who
and
Jergens
and Jergen.s;
(D)
(B)
(C)
(C)
aged
Deeg-
71. W h i c h one of t h e
following
Is a m e m b e r of the B o a r d of
timate?
(A)
Borough
of M a n h a t t a n ;
tor;
of
(C)
Es-
President
( B ) Budget Direc-
President
Education;
of
(D)
the
Board
Secretary
to
72. F a r e s o n N e w Y o r k C i t y
S u b w a y s are set by the ( A ) B o a r d
o f E s t i m a t e ; ( B ) C i t y Council;
( C ) Mayor; ( D ) Transit Authority.
73. W h i c h one of the
tax
of
government;
the
ity
tax;
74. L a
(D)
New
following
York
City
( A ) Income t a x ;
real estate t a x ;
surance
housing
persons;
baseball
(D)
and
project
for
stadium
for
other
iMinKton « i'«rk
H A V E
Open
sporting
H A D
A
WASSERMAN LATELY?
WE HAVE THE
for
DOBBS & RALEIGH
HATS
50
(Parking Meter Attendant)
mi
Y O U
*7
a Week
Full Civil S t r v i c e Benefits
PENSION. Social Security- stc.
N A T I O N A L BRAND HATS
W e Prepare You f o r Written Exam
Be Our Giiest at a Class Session
EVERY SIZE AVAILABLE
TUES.orFRI.at6:30 P.M.
You can 5AVB MONEY af
Fill
in
and
Bring
the
Coupon
DELEHANTY
INSTITUTE.
115 Eaet
L ii5
Street, near 4 Ave..
Mew York 3.
Admit F R E E to One Meter Maid (lH«fi.
Clnns.
Name
••
Latest
Colors
ABE WASSERMAN
HOUSE OF HATS
46 BOWERY
W O 4-0215
Open till 6 e v e r y day, Saturdays 9 A.M. t o 4 P.M.
Address
City
(Please P r i n t
Zone
Clearly)
The discount house f o r men's haberdashery
78. O n his D e c e m b e r 1959 g o o d will
tour.
President
Eisenhower
visited countries in ( A )
Europe;
(B)
America;
Indies;
Central
fC)
(D)
Asia and
and
South
the East and
the
The Finest in SPEAKER SYSTEMS
West
Philippines
and
Indonesia.
the Mayor.
Is a
model
cen-
events
an, Jergens a n d O ' S h e a .
Now
of an area of N e w Y o r k C i t y t h a t
O'Shea.
The
THE HOTEL COMMODORE*-'"'
METER MAID
Salary
the
Sunday
was
Howard;
to
Right a t Grand Central
G a r a g e service available
All transportation nearby
Airline buses at door
Hare your family Join you at eppolal WecU Rnd ratei (Trl. f h n i Snn ) —
$7.00 per adult (3 adults in room; phlldren nnder 14 free In «ani« ronm^.
Includea private bath and full breakfast (50c for each cliild'a b r e a k f a f t ) .
WOMEN ....r.
Applications
( B ) L o s Angeles;
L a n g e : Geneva;
and N e w Y o r k C i t y ; ( D ) Paris.
76. T h e
According
Street,
Wanted by the City of New York
Bronx.
75.
DAILY PER PERSON
*
*
*
*
by
m e m b e r s w h o n o w belong to the
Queens;
i
I
;
I
F R E E B O O K L E T by U.S. G o v -
voted
John
above ; the U n i t e d S t a t e s Is ( A )
chart, the e m p l o y e e w h o was ab-1 F o s t e r Dulles; ( B ) M a r i o n F u l <C) Christian A . H e r t e r ;
sent only on a d a y that was either som;
69.
I n s t a l l m e n t s will be paid as the
ernment on Social Security. Mail
(A)
O'Shea.
about $1700.
chapter
the
(B)
university chapter. I t amounts t o
is t e m p o r a r y treasurer, and D o - i n e w c h a p t e r needs f u n d s and
1
lores M o b i u s is acting secretary. • f i n a l p a y m e n t will be m a d e w h e n
I
P e r m a n e n t o f f i c e r s are e x p e c - the c h a p t e r is f u l l y organized.
ted t o be elected later this m o n t h .
of
are <A) D e e g a n and M o r t o n ;
Morton;
Aug.
U n i t e d N a t i o n s is located in
the others employees w e r e absent
and
on
ary c h a p t e r president; A l e x W e l k
cated
who
on a legal h o l i d a y
Howard
charter
Questions
(Continued from P a g e 10)
the
a
cer a t the university, is t e m p o r -
the
the
Sample
chart,
chapter
E u g e n e J. M u r r a y , security
SPECIAL L O W RATES FOR
STATE EMPLOYEES A T
(C)
(B)
social secur-
unemployment
in-
York
Guardia
Airport
is
lo-
voters
at
the
(A)
ted
Comptroller;
the
(B)
office
of
increased
municipal
the
court
elimina-
number
judges;
(C)
In-
T h r u w a y ; ( D ) p r o v i d e d additional
f u n d s f o r school
80. T h e
the
Industry in w h i c h
recently
anti-strike
bile;
( B ) coal;
T h e cone of a n a c o u s t i c suspension speaker is
m o u n t e d on v e r y f r e e suspensions, so compliant t h a t
they are unable to provide the elastic restoring f o r c e
required In a speaker system.
construction.
made
the
use
of
of
the
provisions
automo-
( C ) railroad;
This missing restoring force is then r e - i n t r o d u c e d by
the cushion of air enclosed in the sealed cabinet.
T h e speaker cone works a g a i n s t the elastic air
cushion instead of against its o w n m e c h a n i c a l
suspensions.
(D)
riTATIO>\ _ File No. r ; n 5 « . lltii.3.
_ steel.
Til." People o f tlie St.ilo of Kew York
the (jraoe of God Free niul liulcprn•loiit. To M R S . PATSY H K R K I N U . M R S .
C-ARr.OTTA
ROZAH.
MRS.
MARTHA
<;RANT. M A R I O N SHTU'K. FAITTI DKTWILT.KR.
DAVID
TYSON.
HAROLD
vou
rrYSON, D O L O R E S B O W M A N , named in
PAY
v i l l :iK Dolly Bowman: R I J S S K L L HURST
JR.. W A Y N E
HURST, SUSAN TYSON^
itilanl I S years of age. re^idine with
111 r niollier;
AMY SHOKMAKKR.
YOU
AUK HKRKin- ClTf:D TO SHOW CAUSK
before ilie Surroeale's Court, New Y o r k
INSURANCE COMPANY
f'omily, at Room .'iO-l in the H.all of
Keoordu in the County of New
York,
CITY HALL
OFFICE
on November
] !)ll;l, at 10:00 A.^^.,
3 2 5 B R O A D W A Y , N.Y. C.
^vhy a <erlain writing dated Ausrust I T l h ,
l O i l l . whioh hufl been olfered for probate
by M I L O M I L O R A D O V K . H , renidinr at
5.*;t.'. Kast 7;(rd Street, New York, N.Y..
should not he probated a-s the last W i l l
Prepare Koi Your
and To^tament, relating to I'eal and pereonal property, of INA S I G R I D LINDM A N , also known as INA S. L I N D M A N ,
Deceased, ^vho was at the time of hep
tieath
a resident
of 53
(iRAMKRCY
I ' A U K NORTH, in the County of New
York, New York. Dated, .Attested and
Pealed, September
litO.'l.
HON. J O S K P H A. r o x . Siirropate. New
Tork
rounty,
PHILIP
A
DONAHUE.
Clerk. (L.S.)
20% OFF
Auto insurance
S TAT E - W I D E
$35- h i g h -$35
R K K P E N , H E N R Y . — C I T A T I O N . File No.
1' '.•K;itl, lOd.J. — The People of the State
of New Y'ork, By the (Jraee of (iod Free
and Indep< ndent. To B E R T J . W I L L I A M S ,
CRETCllEN ROTTER,
YOU A R E H E R E B Y C I T E D TO SHOW
T A I ' S E before the Surrofate'B Court, N i w
York County, at Room 504 in the Hall
of Reeortlu in the County of New York.
Is'ew York, on November 7, lOtill, at 10
A .M., why a eertain writing- dated March
20, l!>(t;i, whioh has been offered for probate by H E N R Y C. E I L E R S and HER"BK R T AHBE, reBidlng- at .'114 WdliH Avenue,
Bronx, New York, and 511) Koff Avenuf,
I'al.uadis Park, New Jer»«iy, rei»pe< lively,
• h o u l d not be probated as the last W i l l
and Tetsament, relatinir to real anil personal properly, of H E N R Y R E E i ' E N , Deteased, who wax at the time of biv death
« reBidentB of S41 East 7;»rd Street, In
till' County of New York, New York.
Dated. AltesleU and Sealed, September
S:i. 1U03.
H O N . J O S E l ' H A. COX.
(L.S )
Surrogate, New York County.
P H I L I P A. DONAHUE.
Clorli.
AR ACOUSTIC SUSPENSION PRINCIPLE
of
creased the tolls on the N e w Y o r k
T a f t - H a r t l e y law is ( A )
XOTICB
last
election would have
President
tax.
with the exclusive
79. A n a m e n d m e n t d e f e a t e d b y
New
SCHOOL
DIPLOMA
The AR-2 is a lower cost version of
our basic acoustic suspension design, with a 10-inch woofer and
two 5 inch, specially treated cone
tweeters to cover the treble range.
The AR-2a consists of an AR-2 speaker systenn to which the AR 1 3/8inch super-tweeter (the same one
used in the AR-3) has been added
to e x t e n d the extreme high-frequncy response. Mid-range u n i t s
a n d super-tweeters a r e independently adjustable.
SIZE: 13'/2" X 24" X 111/2" depth
SUGGESTED AMPLIFIER POWER
(RMS): 20 w a t t s minimum per
cliannel
i!\ 5 WEEKS
GET your Bleh School
Equivalency
Diploma
which It the legal eQulvalent o l 4-years of H l r h School. ThU
Oliiloina is accepted for Civil Service
poeltloDs and ether purpoaei.
ROBERTS
SCHOOL
517 W. 57tb St.. New York 19
PLaia 7-0300
P.lease send me FREE information.
BSL
Name
Jity
-Ph.
I n 1955, speaker systems designed f o r highest quality bass reproduction r a n g e d in size f r o m 6 to 15
cubic f e e t , and their prices r a n g e d f r o m $400 to
$800. T o d a y , o w i n g m a i n l y to A R ' s introduction of
the acoustic suspension design, the g i a n t enclosure
has almost passed f r o m the 'scene, and speaker
prices are a quarter of w h a t they were. Most i m portant of all, it Is possible to achieve an undistorted
naturalness in musical reproduction t h a t was not
previously attainable.
You'll Find A Complete Selection of
Quality AR Speaker Systems at
CARSTON STUDIOS
125 EAST 88th STREET
NEW YORK
Address
A n acoustic suspension cabinet must be relatively
small in order t o provide the necessary air-spring.
( T h e enclosed air in a larger cabinet would not f o r m
a cushion springy enough to be e f f e c t i v e . ) Since this
a i r - s p r i n g Introdnces less distortion t h a n m e c h a n ical suspensions do, the .small enclosure size is acc o m p a n i e d by Increased r a t h e r t h a n compromised
reproducing quality, especially in the bass.
EN 9-6212
CIVIL
Page Fourteen
SERVICE
LEADER
N Y C Chapter To Fete Sam Emmett
DON'T REPEAT THIS
(Continued
from
Page
n o reason w h y B r o n x
1)
TuesJav, Oclol>er IS, 1963
Seymour
the
New
S h a p i r o , president
York
City
chapter
of
behalf
of
the N e w
the Civil S e r v i c e E m p l o y e e s Asso-
powerhouse would be h a p p y to " g r a b " the
B r o o k l y n n o m i n a t i o n . H e relies on the f a c t
ciation,
announced
that
Its
next
m e e t i n g will be held on T h u r s d a y ,
the
of civil service
York
employees,
City chapter,
and
Association.
A l l m e m b e r s a n d friends are I n -
to attend. T i c k e t s f o r t h e
else leader
Stanley
Steingut
would t h a t he Is U n d e r s e c r e t a r y of C o m - October 24, at Gasner's R e s t a u r - dinner preceding the m e e t i n g a t
and is an i n t i m a t e
of ant, 76 Duane S t r e e t .
w a n t s to get o n the b a n d w a g o n is n o t like to see h i m do so and do merce
6 p.m. Is priced at f i v e dollars.
t w o - f o l d : — 1 ) President John F . all in their power to assist him in President K e n n e d y .
I n addition to regular busines.s, Including all gratuities. T h o s e i n K e n n e d y and 2) S e n a t o r B a r r y a t t a i n i n g his goal. T h e y w a n t h i m
terested in a t t e n d i n g are urged t o
M a n h a t t a n ' s able District A t - the chapter will h o n o r its I m m e G o l d water. Even though the pro- out of the C i t y !
c o n t a c t Miss Jurczyn, C O 7-9800,
diate
past
president,
S
a
m
E
m
torney P r a n k H o g a n , one of the
spective candidates realize t h a t
Upstaters think W a g n e r would most eloquent speakers in N e w mett, In appreciation of his m a n y E x t e n s i o n 7152.
K e a t i n g will be most d i f f i c u l t to be a strong candidate and a proven
Y o r k S t a t e and a close f r i e n d of years of d e v o t i o n and e f f o r t on
f i g h t , they still w a n t to go against v o t e - g e t t e r and M a n h a t t a n C o u n U.S. A t t o r n e y G e n e r a l R o b e r t F .
h i m . T h i s n o t w i t h s t a n d i n g a g r e a t t y Chief
Ed Costkyian
surely K e n n e d y ,
has
seemingly
exSHOW
YOUR
CSEA
CARD
respect f o r his v o t e - g e t t i n g power would be a true-blue supporter.
STATE & EAGLE STS., ALBANY
pressed no personal desire to run
A KNOTT HOTEL
and prestige.
Congressman S a m S t r a t t o n w h o f o r the post. H o w e v e r , he would
Charlie
The
reason
that
Buckley
and
vited
everyone
DEWITT CLINTON
New Y o r k City's M a y o r
R o b e r t has shown himself to be a f i g h t i n g
P . W a g n e r , doesn't say -.vhether he candidate in past c a m p a i g n s
wants
he
to go
to W a s h i n g t o n ,
has political
City.
He
may
but f i g h t
problems in
want
to
give
just
as
hard
this
will
time
to
the a t t a i n the nomination. His strong
the f i g h t f o r the gubernatorial
change
his
present
plans
and
f i g h t a good f i g h t if the A t t o r n e y
General
should request
it.
T h e stature of d i g n i f i e d states-
nomi-
DUNLOP
TIRES
impression that he will hold on n a t i o n during the last primaries m a n W . A v e r e l l H a r r l m a n has int o the patronage reins f o r another and his congressional upset in a creased considerably because of
f o u r years. But his heart is set t r a d i t i o n a l l y
GOP
district
c e r - his e f f o r t s f o r peace. H o p e f o r
peace is on the public m i n d and
o n W a s h i n g t o n — a s it has been tainly are good indications of his
could be of prime consideration at
f o r many years.
mettle.
the polls. H e is, t h e r e f o r e , a f r o n t
Aid for Wagner
F r a n k l i n D. Roosevelt, Jr. claims
runner of the W a s h i n g t o n group.
I f W a g n e r wants to go, there is he does not w a n t the nod but he
T w o o t h e r representatives of
New
York
State
in
A FAVORITE FOR
YKARS WITH STATE
STATE RATE
PRICED
TO PLEASE
also
look
in
Demo-
cratic circles a f t e r upsetting their
opponents
healthy
Of
in
GOP
districts
by
BANQUET FACILITIES TAILORED
TO A N Y SIZE PARTY
BUILT TO
WEAR
FREE TELETYPE
RESERVATIONS
TO AN Y KNOTT H O T E L , I N C L l D I N G
(at State Kates)
possibility
of
42-44 BROADWAY
ALBANY - MENANDS
margins.
course,
the
Adlai Stevenson—now
a
resident
of N e w Y o r k S t a t e — r e t u r n i n g
to
CIVIL
NOW
Stevenson
a
great
obviously
candidate
would
and
make
a
SERVICE
FOR
EI^PLOYEES
THE
FIRST
TIME
"STAY AT THE BEST
FORGET THE REST"
the spotlight cannot be overlooked. |
New Weston. NYC.
Call Albany HE 4-6111
THOMAS
BUSINESS MEN'S L U N C H
11:30 TO 2:30 — $1.00
have
.# J
not expressed their desires t o w a r d
the race include M a n h a t t a n
ing Justice of the A p p e l l a t e D i v i sion B e r n a r d B o t e i n ;
U.S.
curities
sion
and
Exchange
Chairman
Commis-
William
T h e s e men have been
"it has AM, FM, short wave. TV,
stereophonic, a tape recorder, and a section
reserved for whatever comes next,"
but have not spoken
Carey.
mentioned
out.
Courtesy TRUE The Man's Magazine
of
candidate
State
f o r the
Comptroller,
considered
anything
position j
cannot
but a
be i
party
s t r o n g m a n in terms of voter
What's next in the way of electric comfort and
convenience? So many appliances enjoyed today
- T V . . . air conditioning.,. dishwashers... elec»
trie frypans — were practically unknown only 15
years ago.
Naturally, as people use more electricity to
run these wonderful conveniences, their bills are
higher. For example, the average home now uses
twice as much electricity as it did 15 years ago.
But though use has doubled, bills are NOT twice
as high. For with Con Edison's step-down rates,
the more electricity you use, the
lower the cost per kilowatt-hour.
Electricity's a big bargain—does so
much for you.
ap-
a major
he
cannot
be
situation.
Statewide
elec-
In
overlooked
addition,
in
he
any
looks
good to private B r o o k l y n pollsters.
The Heavy
Odds
W h y would anyone w a n t to run
against K e a t i n g
in f a c e of
heavy
Goldwater,
same • could
Romney,
hold
TYI'WRITKR
get on a winning
they
•aiilh $17 50.
r^rt
BitM.,
(Iddeiw.ioil $','2 60;
416 S m t l l i ,
Bkii.
TB
uu.
6-au;i4
119 W
voting
independently
these
nedy
running
against
a
EOK
KESEItVATIONS
SPECIAL
RATES
for Civil Service Employees
No
High
GOP
figures—but
most
I m p o r t a n t l y most democratic leaders
in
New
Keating
as
York
the
top
State
f i g u r e in state Republican
problami
out
of
the
don't
that
York
to
come
Republican
National
C o n v e n t i o n Is K e a t i n g . H e is the
only one that could give President
T
K e n n e d y a hard race in the
pire State, they say.
SCHLVE
CONTINUE
Hotel
MANAGEMENT
HOTELS
TO
WILL
HONOR
SPECIAL RATES
FOR N.Y.S. EMPLOYEES
ALL
THESE
FACILITIES
• Free Parking
• Free Limousine Service from
Albany Airport
• Free Launderinn Lounge
• Free Coffee Makers in the
Rooms
• Free Self-Servics Ice Cube
Machines
• Free Use of Electric Shavers
SCHINE
TEN EYGK HOTEL
s t a t e & Chapel Sti. Albany, N.Y.
. . .
with
ARCO
A l b a n y ' t o n l y drlvt-ln
g o r o g t . You'll Ilk* th« comfort a n d
convtnianct,
tool
Family rates. C o c k t a i l l o u n g t .
136 STATE STREET
CTPOSITI STATI CAPITOL
t— rovr frhndly travel agwitt.
SPECIAL
FOli
WtLULY
EXTENDED
HATHS
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
ond all tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 Broadway
Albany, N. Y.
Mail & Phone Orders Filled
STAYS
M A Y F L O W E R - R O I A L COURT
A P A R T M E N T S ~ Purnlshed. Unfurnished. and Rooms. Phone H E
the 4-1994. (Albany).
New
want
NEW
circles
national circles is not clear.
horse
OF
THE
at
enthusiasm has been picked up In
dark
TEN EYGK
UNDER
largetl
today. W h e t h e r or not this same
Democrats
Kepkir*
see
vote-getting
But the f a c t remains t h a t
_
pic-
Plione IV 2.7864 or IV 2-9881
parking
Aibony'i
hotal
ture could be c h a n g e d .
one
I . N.
DRIVE-IN QARAQE
AIR CONDITIONINQ . TV
ling."
to appear on the scene, the
—
Make Your Reservation
Early By Calling
HE 4-1111
Wellington
Ken-
Clay or some other new f a c e were
IN REAR
In N.Y.C. Call MU 8-0110
"weak-
* Conceivably if G e n e r a l Lucius
FREE PARKING
1060 MADISON AVE.
ALBANY
PLUS
WRITE OR PHONE 459-3100
bandwagon?"
a powerhouse like President
ALL L A N G U A i E S
TYPEWRITER C O .
CHcltea 8-80H«
«Sr<4 H T . N K W V U B S
Per Person
SING
Scran-
hopefuls, although
—
OCCUPANCY
ton. M a n y h o p e f u l s feel " W h y not
Adding Macnmc
Typtwriitrs
Mimeographs
Addrtssing Machintk
BAKCJAIN8
'8
IN A ROOM
Per Person
against
and
days, feel it does not hurt to have
Beiivaa,
$"700^
TRAVELERS
Kennedy
true
Rockefeller
DAILY EXCEPT MONDAY,
SUNDAY AT 2 P.M.
The
RATES
SERVICE
could sweep N e w Y o r k State. T h e
are
4Ua
7'
CIVIL
^ T E f>
* Against
S
Ouaraat<?«d.
LOW
TO
OPEN
OFFERS SPECIAL NEW
odds?-
Wi: AKK l.OOKINfi I'OU
MAX who IH Sales & Service
reooiid. Retrlga, Stoves.
prtMi'iUl.v ii'lliiii; Id now I'ai' dealers— Wash Muchinea, combo stnlcs. tiuaraiiteeO
III iKiiiilie .1 new pi'otii uialuiiK: item, THACY UKb'RlUKRATlON—Ci'. 2-5900
n'alit'- liiit (eii iiiitiiiIeK lo ileiiiotistntle. 240 B 140 St & 1204 Cuslle HilU A.v. Bx
Fiiii' ^ti") rtale^ a iley nets you over
TBArV S|.|MM|\«; roBP.
$(>11 111 coiiimisMoiis. Repeal orilei's
follow .Mlrac'live iiienOiamllsinK aiiln
(iirnlslieil you ami your luslomers. We
l.iUe ( lie ot all liiiaiuiiitf - shippiiiB: ('(•lleiiioiH. ('oiniHission paiil weekly.
I>4lt laled concei'ii - eslablislied UI04.
Wnle lo I'onsoliilaleil I'liiul i Vaiiiisli
Coi'i*.. Hepl. (il'C. KiiKt Ohio Hlds.,
Clfvelaml, Ohio 44111
AlHtlti:-<^IN<; eiiM'lope^ al homo on typewi'ilor -tiJ.Ull .1 lluiiiKaiul. Wrilo I'.O.
Bo\
o/o The Loiwlor. HT Duane SI.,
N.V. 7. N Y .
COCKTAIL LOUNGE — WITH
ENTERTAINMENT
NIGHTLY!
Plret Run Motion Pictures At Adjacent
Hellnian Tlieatre on the Premises.
SOOO
take
tive o f f i c e in a " R e p u b l i c a n y e a r " ,
Appliance Services
P ^ t Time Help Wanted
Female
DINING ROOM
•
SI'ECLVLIZIXG. AS A L W A Y S . IN
PARTIES, KANQLETS & MEETINGS.
COMFORTABLE ACCOMMODATIONS
F R O M 10 TO '-iOO
C . A M P t S " 81TB
PRESTIGE
HOME
I R O M IIO.UE
was the only m e m b e r of his party
to
Shoppers Service Guide
Help Wanted - Male
AI.B.ANY'S
A\\\\
SINGLE
realize that more and more people
P R O Q R E
STATE
peal. Ill view of the f a c t t h a t he
^ The
POWER
OPPOSITE
A r t h u r L e v i t t , successful D e m o - i
cratic
Il^isr
}h Mile from Thruwoy Exit =24
Attor-
ney R o b e r t M o r g a n t h a u ; and Se-
M O T O R ,
Washington Avenue — Albany
Sur-
Presid-
M«:r.
PETIT PARIS
RESTAURANT
contender.
r o g a t e S. S a m u e l D i F a l c o ;
H. G O R M A N , Gen.
YOUR H O S T MICHAEL FLANAGAN
strong
F o u r o t h e r s t a t e m e n who
AVAILABLE
Cocktqil Lounge • Dancing Nightly
Washington,
good
DOUBLE
TV or RADIO
Congressmen Otis Pike and H u g h
Carey,
SINGLE
$7
$12
'
OVER
30
TRAVELERS
Em-
ALBANY
BRANCH OFFICE
rOH INB'UHMAX'IUN revarUinK aUvui tlalnf
Pleatie write or call
JOSEPH T BEIXEW
803 80 MANNING BLVD.
ALBAN* 8. N.»,
FUoout IV 8 6474
In Time of Need, Call
M. W. Tebbuffs Sons
176 State
12 Colvin
Albany
Albany
HO 3-2179
459-6630
420 Kenwood
Delmar HE 9-2212
Over
l>Utlii(uUtie4
VeurN o f
ruueml
Hervlee
TueiJay, Oclober
15,
CIVIL
1963
S E R V I C E
L E A D E R
Paare FJfipen
Fair Treatment Will Avoid
Demonstrations By Public
Employees, Says Flamenbaum
(From
Leader
Correspondent)
proaching
by
en
masse
and
forcing
threats."
" I f it develops, h o w e v e r , " a d d e d
Flaumenbaum:"
that the
peaceful
business-like presentation of
em-
ployees' requests, c o n f e r e n c e
consultation,
around
give
the
and
and
table
have
take
become
outmoded, are n o l o n g e r successf u l in the p r o m o t i o n of
benefits,
then
must
employee
be
a
reas-
sessment of our t h i n k i n g . T h i s is
BALDWIN, Oct. 14—Irving Flaumenbaum, president of a n e v e n t u a l i t y w h i c h w e do n o t
the Nassau chapter, Civil Service Employees Association has c o n t e m p l a t e w i t h a n y degree o f
put Nassau County officials on notice that the CSEA will h a p p i n e s s . "
avoid public demonstrations as long as employee problems
City E x a m Comingr Soon For
can be negotiated in a sympathetic manner with municipal
officials.
Flaumenbaum
Nassau
CONFERENCE
These
dele8:ates
f r o m Lonir
Island
are
seen pondering a resolution to be presented at the annual meeting
of the Civil Service Employees Assn., held last tveek in the
Park
Sheraton Hotel. From the Long Island State Parkway Police chapter
are, left, Richard Borchers, Barney Aversano, chapter president, and
George Koch, listen
to Irving
Flaumenbaum,
president
of
Nassau
County chapter.
STOP WORRYING ABOUT
YOUR CIVIL SERVICE TEST
spoke
Chapter's
15th
dinner, held a t Carl H o p p l ' s R e s - publicly opposed such t a c t i c s . "
t a u r a n t In B a l d w i n . T h e dinner,
H e added, " t h i s is a p r a g m a t i c
w h i c h a t t r a c t e d 450 guests, was
w o r l d and m a n y people believe
attended by Nassau C o u n t y E x e c u t h a t a n y t h i n g t h a t succeeds, t h a t
tive E u g e n e H . Nickerson a n d the
works, t h a t accomplishes its purmembers of the Nassau County
pose, is proper. T h i s I do not b e B o a r d of Supervisors as well as
lieve a n d I a m positive t h a t our
o t h e r t o w n and county o f f i c i a l s .
elected o f f i c i a l s , m e n of h o n o r
T h e Nassau chapter,
Flaumenand i n t e g r i t y and sound t h i n k i n g ,
baum noted, has g r o w n in 15 years
do n o t subscribe t o such a p h i l o f r o m 20 members to nearly 9,000
sophy of a p p r o a c h f o r c i n g — a p members.
Chapter
Complimented
Nickerson and H e m p s t e a d
PASS HIGH
the EASY
ARCO WAY
both
complimented
Nassau chapter f o r its activity
the county and t o w n
F l a u m e m b a u m said he
that
the
helped
Nassau
its
at
believed
Chapter,
members
DRAKE
"has
without
dignified
in
the
presentation
our requests, h a v e been
out
intimidation,"
New
he
$2.00
Cashier
$3 00
( N e w York C i t y )
Civil Service Handbook
$100
Clerk G.S. 1-4
$3 00
Clerk N.Y.C.
$3-00
and
local
b o t h labor
scenes,
in
matters
and m a n a g e m e n t
lations and in the
public
of
demonstrations.
of
appointees will serve on the
High School Diploma Test
$4.00
Joint
Home Study Course f o r Civil Service Jobs
$4.95
Law.
Patrolman
54.00
Personnel Examiner
$5-00
A L B A N Y , O c t . 14—These
Legislative
new
were
named
by
the
D r . James E. A l l e n , S t a t e
edu-
cation
commissioner:
Remington,
Thomas
Rochester
R.
Postal Clerk Carrier
$3 00
Real Estate Broker
$3 50
School Crossing Guard
$3*00
Senior File Clerk
$4 00
ernment on Social Security. Mail
$4 00
only.
Social
Investigator
Trainee
$4 00
Senior Clerk N.Y.C
$4-00
Stenotypist (N.Y.S.)
$3.00
Stenotypist (G.S. 1-7)
$3.00
Surface Line Operator
$4.00
U
Wu
f *
! •
L
P "
! •
^
I
f
m
Paltz.
F R E E B O O K L E T by U. S. G o v Leader,
97
Duane
Street,
New York 7, N. Y .
^••••••••TYTTYTfTTTfTTT^
ploma
is ihe
legale
^
equivalent
of
gradu-^
Nation from a 4-year High School.^
^ I t it valuable to non-graduafet o f ^
^ H i g h School for:
^
^
• Enoployment
• Promotion
^
• Advanced Educational Training 2
* Personal Satisfaction
^
Our Intensive S-Week Course pre-^
;,pares for official exams conducted]^
at regular intervals by N. Y. State
Dept. of Education.
^Classes In Manhattan or Jamalc
^ ENROLL N O W ! Start Classes
You Will Receive an Invaluable
New Arco "Outline Chart of
New York City Government."
With Every N.Y.C. Arco Book-
ORDER Dmi'CT—MAIL COUPON
S5c f o r 24-hour special
pro-
fessor at the State College at N e w
$4.00
Social Worker
• •
b
I
a n d D r . W i l l i a m J. H a g e n y ,
delivtry
C.O.D.'i 40c M t r a
• In M A N H A T T A N , WED., OCT. 16^
LEADER BOOK STORE
97 Duane St.. New York 7. N. Y.
•Meet
Mon
& Wed 8:30 or 7 : 30
PM^
the
PZ. .. . L i
for personal
satisfaction
Tues. and Tliurs., 6:30-8:30
Write or Phone for Information
Eastern School
AL 4-5029
721 Broadway N . Y . 3 (at 8 St.)
Pieaae write me free about tbe H I r b
School EquiTalency class.
Name
Addresi
Boro
S A T U R D A Y 9 AM-1 P M
MarhlnUt
A d m i n Aide
Uulldlni; Siipt
Aerountant
Steam Fitter Helper
Plumber
Foreman Carpenter Traniiit P a t r o l m a n
Engineer, Arrhlteot, Surveyors
LICENSE PREPARATION
Stationary Refrigeration Pctrtable
PZ
L3
TRACTOR TRAILERS,
TRUCKS Available for
instructions & Road Tests
For Class 1-2-3 Licenses
Model Auto Driving Scliool
MONDELL INSTITUTE
CH 2-7547 145 W 14 St. <e*7 Ave.)
Open D a i l y 8 AJM. to 10 P . M .
Incl. Sat. & Sun.
l.VI W 14 St (7tli Ave) CH S-.^STO
•r.lO W 41 St. (Times S<|) W I l - ' i o m
Ove/ 69 Years Civil Service Training
DIRECTORY
ai/HINIi^UH
dCHUUUt
M
O N R O E S C H O O L — I B M COURSES Keypunch. Tab W m n c ai'ICC'lAI,
M V / N N W E A V N W S / B — I D M W W W R ^ E ^ PKEPARAXION KOU CIVU. sea-
^ O r J A M A I C A . THURS.. OCT. 17^
^
w
•
Pleat* tend me
coplet of bookt checlod • b o v t .
I enclote check or money order for $
—,
Name
Meet Tiiei t, Tluirs at 7 P M
Be Uur Gue«t at an Uiieiiliir C l a u
Fill in und Bring; Coupon
DELEHANTY
i.e.*
INSTITUTE.
VICB IBM TESTS. (Approved for Vets.), iwltcbboard, t y p l o r , N C R
Bookkeeplnf
^ machine, U.S. Equivalency, BnKlltb for Foreign born. Med. Legal and Spaninb lec^ retarlai. Day and Eve Ciasae*. East Treinont Ave., Boeton Boad, Bronx. K1 2-6600.
L116
115 East I S St., .Manhattan er
SO-'iS Merrick Blvd., J a m a i c a
Address
Name
Addresa
City
St.)
for civil service
C I V I L SERVICK COACHING
State Fed & Promotion Kxums
CITY E L K C T R I C I A N
EI.ECTKICAL INSPECTOR
KI.ECTRICIAN.S L I C E N S E
TiieMliiy, Friday Eve (SU.'S-U:!/}
J R Si AHST C I V I L E N d l N E K R
( I V I L EXGR & DRAFTSMEN
Tuesday & Thurvday EvpnlnKii
ASST M E C H A N I C A L E X G R
TIESDAY
EVENINGS
FEm':RAL ENTRANCE EXAMS
TueHday & Friday EvenlnRB
H I G H SCHOOL D I P L O M A
Tuesday & Thursday Kveningg
POSTAL CLERK
CARRIER
Wednesday Evenings
.AIETRR M A I D
P A R K I N G A T T E N D A N T — M o n d a y Kve
MAIL
HANDLER
Friday Evenings
MATHEMATICS - ENGLISH
D A I L Y 0 AM-1 P M & 0 P.M-10 P M
Cily,
SCHOOL
8tli
about
High School
Equivalency
Diploma
Shortlianil, Typing, Brush-Up, Etc.
ABC B U S I N E S S SCHOOL
130 W . 43 St.
0th Floor
O X 5-7240
attorney,
(at
Earn Your
Instructions
INTENSIVE T R A I N I N G
Governor:
AL 4-5029
3
Address
Request Booklet L
to
X.Y.
Please write me free
METER, M A I D class.
SCHOOL OF PRINTING
222 Park A v e . So.. N.Y.C.
R e v i s e and S i m p l i f y the E d u c a t i o n
All
Broadway,
Boro
EMPIRE
three
Committee
Eastern School
721
Name
Lie. by the State of N.Y.
Three To Serve
54.00
PREPARATION
Write or Phone for I n f e i m a t i o n
Come in or Phone OR 4-7076
Fireman (F.D.)
Attendant
Class meets Wed. 6:30-8:30
Free Placement Service
The
$4.00
Meter
INTENSIVE COURSE
EVAL COMPLETE PHOTO OFFSET
CAMERA - STRIPPING . PRESS
COMPOSITION
HAND . LINOTYPE - LUDLOW
pattern
Federal Service Entrance Examinations
Social Investigator
Parking
ONE WEEK FREE TRIAL
re-
promotion
civil r i g h t s issues, a new
of
METER
MAID
Boroughs
PRINTING
" B u t there appears," he added,
Civil Service Arithmetic & Vocabulary
Coming Soon for
COMPLETE
" t o be developing on our n a t i o n a l
the
rZ....Ll
City E x a m
said.
Pattern
St.)
Please wrte me, free, a b o u t
A D M I N I S T R A T I E A I D E class.
Earn M o r e $ $ $
with-
AL 4-5029
721 Broadway, N . T . 3 (near 8
of
insistent
w i t h o u t impertinence, f i r m
Eastern School
1.'54 N.AS.S.AO ST.
(Opi» NVC Hall)
B E e k m a n 3-1840
Schools in All
h u r t i n g its friends. W e h a v e been
Write or phone for Information
Bore
Also Beeinner and Review Classes In
STENO. T Y P I N G
BOOKKEEPING
COMPTOMETRY, CLERICAL
D A Y : AFTER BUSINESS: EVENING
levels.
PREPARATION
Address
PmiAN
GREGG
the
INTENSIVE COURSE
COMPUTE
Name
GRADED DICTATION
Pre-
siding Supervisor P a l m e r D . F a r rington
ADMINISTRATIVE
AIDE
Nassau C S E A has never a d v o c a t e d
the such demonstrations a n d in one
annual p a r t i c u l a r instance, a y e a r ago,
at
Staff
Be ture to Include 3 % Salet Tai
'
Zone
City
A d m i t F K E K to one U.S. E q u i v . i'labl |
1B.M—Keypunch, Sorter, T a b i , Collator. Reproducer,
Operation, Wiring. S E C R E T A R I A L — M e d . , Leg., E x e t .
C C M O O L C
'^yp- Swtcbbrd, Comptometry, All Stenoa, D i c t a p h .
a w n w w b a
S T E N O T Y P Y ( l l a c h . S h o r t h n d ) . P R E P , lor C I V I L
F R E E Piaomnt 1713 Kinge Hwry. Bklyn. (Next to Avalon T h e a t . )
Mineola Blvd.. Mineola, L . L (al bus & L I R R depot*). CH 8-8900
ADELPHI
RIIQIMFC<k
DWainEas
SVCE. Day Eve.
DU 0-7200. 47
SHOPPING FOR LAND OR HOMES
LOOK AT PAGE 11 FOR LISTINGS
Page Sixteen
CIVIL
SERVICE
L E A D E R
Tuesilay, October 15, 1963
CANDID CAMERA VIEW OF CONVENTION
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